Michigan-Maryland: A look back

Submitted by Wolverine Devotee on

Just a little look back at the series history of Michigan-Maryland before they play their first....sigh.....B1G game tomorrow.

 

September 21, 1985---#12 Michigan 20, #17 Maryland 0

You can see highlights of this game via WolverineHistorian

In the first meeting of the two teams, Michigan was fresh off of two upset victories in a row over ranked teams which included the likes of #13 Notre Dame (20-12) and #15 South Carolina (34-3) down in Columbia. Maryland, the preseason #1 according to Sports Illustrated, rolled into Ann Arbor with a 2-1 record. Maryland was ranked #7 in the AP poll to start the season, but lost to Penn State at home, 20-18, in their season opener at Byrd Stadium.

This game was the battle of the 'Baughs: Jim Harbaugh vs Stan Gelbaugh. 

The Baughs combined for 407 passing yards, with Gelbaugh outgaining Harbaugh in passing yards. But Jim Harbaugh's two TD performance along with two Mike Gillette FGs led Michigan to a 20-0 victory over the Terps. Perhaps Michigan would have won by more had they not fumbled 3 times, losing all of them. 

Michigan, who started the season unranked, wound up finishing #2 in the nation with a Fiesta Bowl victory over Nebraska and a 10-1-1 record.

This would not be Maryland's only trip to Michigan that year. The Terps went 7-2 the rest of the way, winning the ACC Championship and making the trek back to Michigan to play against Syracuse in the short-lived Cherry Bowl at the Pontiac Silverdome, which they won.

 

September 30, 1989---#6 Michigan 41, Maryland 21

In the second meeting, Michigan faced a Maryland team with no preseason fanfare like the one they faced in 1985 had. 

Strangely, Michigan was 1-1 when they played Maryland, who was already 1-3. Michigan opened their season two weeks after Maryland had opened theirs. 

This game was not an ugly showing by the Michigan offense. 

A solid day for the RS Freshman Elvis Grbac, who threw for 187 yards and 2 TDs, with 18.7 yards per completion(!). Greg McMurtry caught a 49-yard bomb for a TD, as well as 126 yards on the day.

Michigan had a 38-7 lead in the 4th quarter before Maryland scored a couple TDs while Michigan had their backups in, including a pick-six thrown by third stringer Wilbur Odom. 

This turned out to be Bo's final season as he announced his retirement after the Ohio State game. Michigan won their second consecutive outright Big Ten Championship, and maybe just maybe, could have won the national championship had they won the Rose Bowl that year. 

Maryland continued the suck, going 2-5-1 the rest of the way with their only "upset" being a tie against #13 Penn State in Baltimore.

 

September 29, 1990---#6 Michigan 45 Maryland 17


For some reason, Maryland agreed to two consecutive road trips to Michigan Stadium.

In 1990, Michigan came in sporting a 1-1 record similar to the previous year, while Maryland had a much better start than the previous year with a 3-1 record. 

Michigan was outgained in this game, lost 3 fumbles and threw 1 interception.....yet still won this game by 28. BIG TEHN!

Maryland did pull within 4 during the 3rd quarter when it was 21-17 Michigan, but that was about it for them. Maryland wound up with 6 turnovers, 3 INTs and 3 fumbles.

Grbac thew for 172 and 2 TDs, and backup Ken Sollom threw one pass for 37 yards--which was a touchdown. Michigan rushed for 143 with John Vaughn, Ricky Powers and Allen Jefferson getting the bulk of the yardage. 

Michigan went on to win their 3rd straight Big Ten Championship and finished the with a 9-3 record after demolishing #15 Mississippi in the Mazda Gator Bowl. 

Maryland turned things around that year and wound up making a bowl game at 6-5. I doubt they did much celebrating, though, since they tied Louisiana Tech in the Independence Bowl with a 34-34 final. 

LSAClassOf2000

November 21st, 2014 at 6:52 PM ^

It was the first game that my parents let me attend as well. They would normally go to a few each year, but up until that time, I think they must have assumed that I would be spent sometime during tailgating and they'd end up leaving early. Anyway, I got the chance to see Bo coach against Bobby Ross that day and it is still a day I remember very clearly. 

justingoblue

November 21st, 2014 at 5:13 PM ^

What is Michigan's worst home basketball loss and is there a worse home loss under Beilein than by 23 in 2010/11?

It's not actually a trivia question because I don't know the answer, but I promise I'll upvote someone who answers.

flashOverride

November 21st, 2014 at 5:16 PM ^

The 1990 Maryland game was my first trip to the Big House. Can't wait to revisit tomorrow! Well...with slightly lower temperatures and a slightly higher blood alcohol content...

maizenblue87

November 21st, 2014 at 5:29 PM ^

I went to the 1985 game when I was a student. Michigan climbed to #2 in the polls a few weeks later and faced #1 Iowa. I went to that game as well in Iowa City and we suffered a 12-10 loss on a last-second field goal.

Wolverine Devotee

November 21st, 2014 at 6:20 PM ^

A two point loss on the road to #1 where Iowa won on FGs would've still gave Michigan the national championship that year.

It's that ridiculous 3-3 tie against Illinois that cost them it. I still don't understand how in the world that happened. 

Don

November 21st, 2014 at 6:52 PM ^

1974, Ohio State. Michigan enters the game 10-0 and ranked #3. Tom Klaban kicks 4 FGs for the Buckeyes, the refs blow the call on Mike Lantry's good FG attempt at the end, and Michigan loses 12-10.

Because of the Big Ten's criminally stupid "It's-the-Rose Bowl-or-nothing" bowl policy at the time, Dennis Franklin and the Wolverines get to spend the holidays at home for the third year in a row, despite going 30-2-1 over that span.

M-Dog

November 22nd, 2014 at 12:29 AM ^

I was at all 3 Maryland games.  The '85 game is the only one that really stands out though.
 
Michigan was coming off Bo's worst season ever (6-6) in 1984.  Nobody expected Michigan to do anything in '85.
 
We beat Notre Dame and Gerry Faust in one of the most boring games ever that neither team really deserved to win.  Then we beat heavily-favored South Carolina and their vaunted "Fire Ants" defense down in Columbia SC.  
 
Then came the Maryland game.  Maryland was dubbed the "Beast of the East" by SI, and even though they already lost a close one to Penn State, they were still favored over us.
 
But we completely shut them down.  They could not do anything.  It was after that game that people began to realize that Michigan was for real, QB Harbaugh was for real, and the Defense especially was for real.
 
That was probably Michigan's second strongest team in the last 30 years, behind only 1997.  ('88, '90, '92, and '99 could also be in the conversation . . . all years where we beat Ohio State and won our bowl game.) 

Gulogulo37

November 21st, 2014 at 11:32 PM ^

My first memories of a Michigan game aren't at all sharp, but I vaguely remember beating Maryland by a bunch of points. That '90 game is either my first there, or the first that I have the slightest memories of.

RobSk

November 22nd, 2014 at 10:06 AM ^

I am just at a total loss - Why would someone (much less three someones) downvote somebody going out of their way to present cool info like this in such a good way?

Really strange...

      Rob

PS - The first rule of mgopoints is we do not discuss mgopoints. Yeah, I know. But dang, that's still weird.

Don

November 22nd, 2014 at 10:48 AM ^

There's a portion of MGoBloggers who reflexively disdain anything having to do with history, there are others who disdain anything having to do with our opponents, and there are others who have a personal beef with a poster for some reason. The fact that they rarely have the stones to state why they're negging is what makes it so childish. It's basically the online equivalent of a twelve-year-old soaping somebody's car windows and then running away. The points are irrelevant; it's the motivations for the behavior that are so weird.

bigfan2959

November 22nd, 2014 at 10:28 AM ^

1985 is the one that sticks out in my mind.  That was the year I became a Michigan fan.  We had an awesome defense led by All Americans Mike Hammerstien at DT and Brad Cochran at CB.  Both were great seniors who did nothing of note in the pros.  Michigan lost two starting Offensive linemen on consecutive plays late in this game that hurt them all year.  This was the second best team I have ever seen MIchigan field.  This was back in a time when Michigan played a competitive non=conference schedule every year.  No MAC teams.  Always teams for quality conferences.