LA Times rips Jimmy

Submitted by arrowhead on September 8th, 2019 at 10:47 AM

By J. BRADY MCCOLLOUGHSTAFF WRITER 

SEP. 7, 2019

 

Two times during the fourth quarter Saturday, Jim Harbaugh made a decision that indicated he did not understand the difference between the type of team he wants Michigan to be and where the Wolverines actually are in Year 5 of his coaching tenure at his alma mater.

Army had pushed seventh-ranked Michigan to the limit with the same brutal efficiency it employed a year ago at Oklahoma before falling to the Sooners in overtime. The Wolverines should have felt fortunate to be tied at 14 with the Black Knights, given the three fumbles and the inability of quarterback Shea Patterson to show real command of the new Michigan offense that was created with his skills in mind.

Yet, facing fourth and two from the Army 19, Harbaugh did not realize his good fortune and take the 36-yard field goal for Michigan’s first lead of the game. He asked a running game that averaged less than three yards per rush on the day to make him feel like these were the good old days at the Big House, when the tough yards were inevitably Michigan’s to be had. Army mobbed Michigan freshman Zach Charbonnet in the backfield, a result Harbaugh easily should have predicted and avoided.

Later, with less than three minutes left, Harbaugh had another fourth-and-two call to make, this time from the Army 43. Instead of pinning Army’s triple-option attack deep and setting up his defense with good field position to get the ball back and at the very least get to overtime, Harbaugh again decided to go for it. Michigan dialed Charbonnet’s number, and again, the former Oaks Christian standout was stuffed.

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Harbaugh’s stubbornness, even confronted with what should have been mounting evidence that this was not a day for bold statements about his team’s backbone, nearly cost Michigan the game and all the good vibes his fan base has been able to muster entering this season with an 0-4 record against Ohio State.

Army missed a 50-yard field goal as the clock ran out in regulation, giving Michigan a second life it didn’t deserve.

Army Michigan Football

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College football: Michigan beats Army in two OTs; LSU prevails at Texas

Sep. 7, 2019

The Wolverines won 24-21 in the second overtime thanks to a gritty effort from an exhausted defense. They won despite their $7.5-million coach.

Another fall is here, and it’s Same Old Michigan, no matter how much the Wolverines try to change.

Harbaugh finally relinquished play-calling to new offensive coordinator Josh Gattis, whom he brought in from Alabama, where Gattis coached the wide receivers during the Crimson Tide’s tactical revolution last year.

Michigan had 340 yards of offense against Army.

There are reasons why the Wolverines haven’t taken off yet in Gattis’ spread attack, which is supposed to take what the defense gives instead of blindly pounding away into a wall, which is what a good portion of Harbaugh‘s offense has looked like in Ann Arbor.

First, Army should be given credit for how tough this was for Michigan. The Black Knights, their ball-control offense sucking up so much game clock, make every possession extra weighty for the opposing offense. When a team fumbles the ball to Army as Michigan did three times, it is asking to find itself in a fourth-quarter brawl.

Plus, Patterson, the hyped Mississippi transfer who led Michigan to a 10-3 season last year, was hurt in the opener and playing with an injured oblique. He was often inaccurate and indecisive, and Gattis tightened up the playbook as the game went on.

Saturday, Michigan ran plenty of read-option with Patterson and Charbonnet — who saved the Wolverines with 33 carries for 100 yards and three touchdowns — but was unwilling to have Patterson keep the ball. That made it easy for Army to key on Charbonnet.

In what has become a trend, Harbaugh made it even harder for Michigan. In Year 5, the Wolverines are supposed to be competing with Ohio State for a spot in the College Football Playoff. As it stands, Michigan runs the risk of being blown out of its next game Sept. 21 at Wisconsin.

This is the definition of a well-placed bye week, for the injured players and the program. A win Saturday kept fan desperation from settling in, but Harbaugh gets paid to know better than to feel relieved. The pain is coming.

Ohio State, with its new coach Ryan Day and new quarterback Justin Fields, demolished a solid Cincinnati team 42-0 down the road in Columbus.

Michigan, with its returning coach and returning senior quarterback, is the team that should be glad it’s only September.

 

Goldenrod Mandude

September 8th, 2019 at 12:21 PM ^

He kinda nailed it though.  Coaches who never should have left the place they enjoyed the most but success. Still love the guy, but hope he doesn’t make the list below anytime soon. Hope the evolution and epiphany happens today.

Rich Rodriquez - West Virginia

Chip Kelly - oregon

Brady Hoke - SDSU

 

Mr. McBlue and…

September 8th, 2019 at 11:44 AM ^

It was likely a game management decision.  If Michigan kicks the field goal and makes it then Michigan kicks off to Army with a lot of time left.  Army would then play up tempo option, which Michigan struggled to defend all day, playing for the touchdown.  Instead Coach Harbaugh rolled the dice and the gamble was easing Army into a “let’s play for field goal” spot where they ate more time on the clock and had to rely on a freshman kicker.  In hindsight it was the right call.  But he makes 7.5 million to make that call, not me.  Game management.  Cahones.  He did it, Michigan won, onward and upward.

NorcalBlue

September 8th, 2019 at 12:11 PM ^

Uhh...how many times did Army drive 80 yards for a TD?  I'll take those odds over sticking it up the god damn gut for the 50th time which was proven not to work.  What a load of shit.  Pathetic decision to go for it - followed by a pathetic play call the whole stadium knew was coming.

borninAnnArbor

September 8th, 2019 at 12:32 PM ^

I had no problem with the decision to go for it.  I had a big problem with the play call.  On replay, it looked like all 11 defenders ran straight for the middle when the ball was hiked.  If Patterson won't keep it, that would have been a perfect time to use McCaffery.  I hope Harbaugh and Gattis had a very heartfelt conversation after the game.

lhglrkwg

September 8th, 2019 at 12:45 PM ^

I am significantly less outraged at the decision to go for it. The defense was extremely bendy yesterday and it felt like the front 7 was getting worse as the game went. I think the defensive UFR will show that things didn't go great. I liked the idea of trying to ice it with a TD.

The play call drove me nuts though. Short yardage running had been poor all game and that play got absolutely blown up

turtleboy

September 8th, 2019 at 1:46 PM ^

Not kicking the field goal was incredibly stupid, the play call they went with instead of kicking was completely insane. They faked the read all game long, that was the perfect time to have Shea pull it.  They eventually ran him in the game anyways, I can't imagine for the life of me why they abandoned desperately needed gimmie points to throw rock again. Unconscionable stupidity. James Franklin probably thought that was dumb. 

Sopwith

September 8th, 2019 at 10:56 AM ^

We're not in the habit of copying and pasting entire articles (two, in this case) around here. Links, a summary, and some pithy commentary is usually the way to go. 

FWIW, his thinking on the first 4th and 2 was probably that the D was wearing down and a FG would just see them march down the field and eat up the last 9 minutes on the way to a 21-17 win. The second was that there was a good chance they'd run out of time before getting into FG range, which made the risk worth it. My problem wasn't so much the decision to go as the Borges-27-for-27 mentality that thought running Charbonnet inside with zero threat of a pull was going to get it done.

snarling wolverine

September 8th, 2019 at 1:10 PM ^

The logic:

This is a game where possessions are at a premium.  You might not return to their red zone again, and Army might only have one more real possession.  But that one Army possession might beat you, if you're only up 3 points.  If you are confident that your offense can convert that 4th down (we were 1-1 at that point), why not go for it and get a more comfortable 7-point lead? 

Imagine if we had lost this game 21-17 on a late Army touchdown.  The MGoBoard refrain would be about how "Jim left his balls in California" and passed up an "easy" fourth down to kick a field goal, because of course it would have succeeded.  "I thought Lloyd retired."

Now, I understand the counterargument too: take the 3 points and trust that your D will keep them off the scoreboard.  I think either is defensible.  

BlueMk1690

September 8th, 2019 at 10:59 AM ^

I'm personally wondering why the flipping L.A. Times would write nearly 800 words about a Midwestern football team they're not covering winning a non-conference game in less than convincing fashion...why not an article about FSU needing a ULM kicker missing an extra point, or Tennessee starting 0-2 or Nebraska throwing away a big lead vs an at-best OK Colorado team or more coverage about Chip Kelly's disastrous start to his 2nd season at UCLA or how USC somehow managed to look like an offensive juggernaut vs Stanford while playing a freshman QB.

Is the writer of the article by any chance a poster on this site?

snarling wolverine

September 8th, 2019 at 12:18 PM ^

Ha, but that was my doing.  I wasn't dedicated enough to put in the time necessary to rise through the ranks.  For the guys who are covering the big sports, it's basically a real job (without real pay) in addition to being a student.  The football writers are seniors who have been doing that for three years already.

For the people who just want to pad their résumé and get their name in the paper a few times (me), there are lots of nonrevenue and IM sports teams to write about.

MichiganStan

September 8th, 2019 at 11:03 AM ^

Agree with the criticism but it's funny how people act as if Armys missed 50 yarder was a gimme and Michigan lucked out when they missed it. That kick is hard for an Nfl kicker let alone some Army freshman kicker