Michigan 28, Akron 24 Comment Count

Ace

NOW FOR SALE IN THE MGOSTORE

This afternoon in front of a late-arriving, non-sellout crowd at the Big House, Michigan faced off against an Akron team that went 1-11, 1-11, and 1-11 in the last three seasons, started the year with a 38-7 loss to UCF, spent last weekend getting outgained and nearly outscored by FCS James Madison, and is considered the worst team in the FBS. This was a game to work out the kinks in the playbook, get in some good reps for the backups, and give a good show for the fans who probably paid $5 for a ticket from their friend who likes to sleep in on Saturdays.

OR NOT.

At first, it looked like all would go as expected; Michigan forced an Akron punt on their opening drive, and after Fitz Toussaint rushed for a two-yard loss, Devin Gardner completed five consecutive passes, capped by a 48-yard toss to Devin Funchess, who outran the entire Akron secondary en route to the end zone.

Concern started to grow when Michigan's next drive netted zero yards. The first quarter ended with the score at 7-3, Wolverines; surely, Michigan would pull away any time now.

Then Brendan Gibbons missed a 45-yard field goal to start the second quarter, snapping his streak of 16 consecutive makes. After the defense forced a three-and-out, the Wolverines drove deep into Zips territory, only for Devin Gardner to fumble away the possession on a speed option—a play in which Fitz Toussaint had a clear touchdown if Gardner would've pitched. The defense again picked up the offense, as Blake Countess intercepted a Kyle Pohl pass and returned it all the way to the Akron 20-yard line. Any time now...

Three plays later, Gardner forced a pass into coverage that Akron's DeAndre Scott intercepted easily. The Zips were able to mount a plodding drive that oozed into Michigan territory; after taking a delay of game on fourth-and-one, however, Robert Stein's 45-yard field goal clanged off the left upright. Any time now...

Two plays later, Gardner threw the ball to a well-covered Jeremy Gallon; Akron's Justin March came away with the interception. Luckily for Michigan, only 29 seconds remained on the clock. Stein's 55-yard attempt with 0:05 left in the half went wide left, and the Wolverines were happy to kneel out the clock and regroup at halftime. Any time now...

The second half began inauspiciously, with the Wolverines gaining just one yard on three plays before a Matt Wile punt. Akron's ensuing possession went 75 yards in eight plays, ending in a 28-yard touchdown from Pohl to a wide-open Zach D'Orazio, who went unmolested up the seam as the linebackers failed to get depth on their drops and the safeties couldn't close the gap. Akron 10, Michigan 7. ANY TIME NOW...

Devin Gardner bounced back from his turnovers and gave U-M fans a brief respite from PANIC on the next possession, scoring on a 36-yard inverted veer keeper—for seemingly the first time all day, Michigan got great blocking up front, and Jeremy Jackson guaranteed the score by wiping out three Akron defenders downfield. The defense held up their end, too, forcing another three-and-out, and the Wolverines took a 21-10 lead when Jehu Chesson took his first career reception on a crossing route, broke through a few (poor) tackling attempts by the Akron secondary, and jetted into the corner of the end zone. After Michigan came up with another stop, disaster averted, right?

Wrong. Two plays into the fourth quarter, Al Borges tried to set up a screen pass on third-and-9. Facing heavy pressure, Gardner sidearmed a horribly ill-advised throw directly into the arms of Justin March; as noted earlier, March plays for Akron. He waltzed 27 yards untouched into the end zone. ANY TIME NOW...

Michigan's next drive went nowhere, and Wile didn't help matters by booting a 35-yard punt—not even among his two worst on the day—to set up the Zips on their own 39. A 43-yard pass from Pohl to L.T. Smith set up Akron at the Michigan seven. The Wolverines caught a huge break two plays later, when Pohl threw a play-action pass right to Jarrod Wilson (above, Upchurch). Wilson smartly took a knee in the end zone, giving Michigan the ball on the 20. Time to run out the clock, yes?

Well, not quite. Fitz Toussaint started the drive with a 16-yard run, but his two ensuing carries netted a lone yard. After Gardner's third-down pass to Gallon came up just short of the sticks, Wile shanked a 22-yard punt. The Zips went on an 11-play march down the field, and after getting stuffed twice at the goal line, scored the go-ahead touchdown when they spread the field—Pohl rolled right and found receiver Tyrell Goodman all alone. 24-21, Akron. 4:10 left on the clock. Full-blown PANIC.

Gardner went back to what he'd done best all game, run the football, taking off for a 35-yard gain to move Michigan into Akron territory on the next possession. He found Gallon on the sideline for a 20-yard gain on the very next play, and Michigan got another first down when Gardner's throw to Jake Butt in the end zone drew a pass interference call. Toussaint found a big hole on the left side of the line and took advantage for a two-yard touchdown on the next play. 28-24, Michigan. 2:49 left. Now was the time, yes?

Well, kinda. First, Pohl found Jerrod Dillard for a 24-yard gain, and the Zips moved into Michigan territory two plays later when Blake Countess jumped offsides on a blitz. A 19-yard run by Conor Hundley on third-and-five gave the Zips a first down at the Michigan 27. Despite a holding call moving them back ten yards, Akron kept pushing downfield, with Pohl finding Smith all alone at the 11-yard line after escaping the pocket. Another pass to Smith gave Akron a third-and-one on the Michigan two as the clock ticked down to 0:15. An ill-advised toss play to Jawon Chisholm moved the ball back two yards; the Zips burned their final timeout. Fourth down, five seconds left, ball on the Michigan four.

Greg Mattison dialed up a heavy blitz, and Pohl's desperation pass found only fieldturf, perhaps helped by a missed holding call in the Michigan secondary. The time had finally come, with zero seconds on the clock. Michigan 28, Akron 24, The Horror II narrowly avoided.

In the end, Michigan outgained the worst FBS team outside of Georgia State by seven yards—seven very critical yards, as it turned out. Gardner's 248 passing yards and 103 rushing yards were offset by his four turnovers, including his second pick-six in as many games. The offensive line struggled to open up holes against a very small Akron defensive front. The defense, for their part, allowed far too many passes over the middle and couldn't muster a good pass rush until the game's final play; they gave up big plays, too, as both Raymon Taylor and Jourdan Lewis were beat for big gains over the top.

"This is an embarrassment," Taylor Lewan said after the game. Even with the victory, there's no argument here.

Comments

BraveWolverine730

September 14th, 2013 at 7:54 PM ^

This game sucked. It would have sucked a hell of a lot more had we lost.  The team didn't play well or with focus and it almost cost us. Today was NOT indicative of the talent level the team posesses. No one will or ought to get fired based on this game. If you were expecting us to go 12-0 and roll the Big Ten, then yes you need to adjust your expectations. If you (like me and most fans in the preseason), expected a 9 win season with the possibility of something more if we get lucky and a little less if we're unlucky, nothing really ought to have changed. Season still comes to if we can take at least 2 out of 3 of @MSU, @Northwester, and Nebraska. 

gforsyth4

September 14th, 2013 at 8:50 PM ^

I feel like this game came at a good time. It knocks all the "national title" hopes out of a lot of people's heads. We need to block, tackle, execute and play aggressive , but have to mentally prepare for every game every week more than all of those things.

Go Blue

dragonchild

September 14th, 2013 at 10:50 PM ^

The talent showed in the CMU game.  We basically ran the same play over and over and still kept scoring.  My expectation is not for an undefeated season; my expectation is that these kids play hard, because that's what the coaches preach every chance they get.

Today was indicative of attitude -- sloth, carelessness, lack of cohesion, lack of composure, lack of preparation, immaturity, laziness.  You know, what you'd basically expect from a bunch of 18-22-year-olds that tasted some success.  You know, it happens.

But that's EXACTLY why it needs to be fixed, stat.  Wins aside, boys don't become men by getting away with being irresponsible -- especially when they have as much talent as these kids do.  When a kid's attitude is his own worst enemy, it's well within everyone's rights to be pissed.

xxxxNateDaGreat

September 14th, 2013 at 8:00 PM ^

I just keep telling myself that Alabama almost lost to Georgia Southern once and then I feel better! Sure, I mean, yeah, Alabama built up a 17 point cushion before relaxing a bit... Sure, they also ended up winning by 24 points and the game was never closer than two scores... Sure, they also didn't turn the ball over once... But 'Bama won a championship so just imagine what we can do!

...

...

...

...

(...Look, everyone, I've been drinking heavily for a few hours now and the lady of the house has hidden every sharp object in the house, including the #2 pencils. I need this...)

Der Alte

September 14th, 2013 at 8:26 PM ^

that was bad, Now if any offense coordinator left on M's schedule doesn't know how to attack a M defense he should resign and sell Mary Kay. It's easy --- just block the rushless four and have your QB drop a step or two and dink and dunk your way down the field. And at least a couple times a game you can depend on the M QB to give you good field position through a fumble or an ill-considered INT. Seriously though, I give Raymon Taylor a pass (!) on those two long bombs. They were perfectly thrown and the receiver had to make great catches both times, which he did. Now I'll spend the entire week dreading the mighty Connecticut Huskies, let alone the Gophers and the Lions. I hope Steve Ross doesn't ask for a refund, and I hope Jake Ryan gets well soon.

ThoseWhoStayUofM

September 15th, 2013 at 3:48 AM ^

Boy, if I'm Notre Dame, I'm feeling really fucking incompitent.  They just pulled out a close one against Purdue, who went 6-7 last year and 3-5 in the Big 10... and they lost to Michigan after we all called them chicken for ending the rivalry, and we almost lost to Akron.  I love college football, because these transitive ideas have proven to be valid oh so often.  And by often I mean actually never.

We're 3-0.  We haven't lost a game.  We will never come out with that gameplan (I use that term loosely) again so no coach will benefit from this tape.  This is a wake-up call and Michigan is going to get their act together.  It's a one time thing.  My hand is contently hovering over, but not pressing, the panic button... lol

Double Wolverine

September 14th, 2013 at 9:03 PM ^

It was an awful game, but we got the W. 3 or 4 weeks from now pollsters will be thinking about some upset that actually happened and forget about this game. We may drop to 15 at worst in the rankings but we've got plenty of opportunities to climb up when we play OSU, NW, Neb, MSU, etc.

The only way this hurts us is if we are one of 3 undefeateds we might not get the championship bid. I think we proved today we aren't ready for the big stage quite yet.

dragonchild

September 14th, 2013 at 9:54 PM ^

After barely beating a team that has gone 3-33 over the last three seasons, including a 5-YEAR road losing stream, AT HOME, now is NOT the time to be thinking about rankings.

You know how this hurts us?  It doesn't.  We're just fans.  But that team -- look, what bothers be even more than if they lost is just how immature that was.  THAT was complacence.  Sophomorism.  Slacking off.  It does happen, they're young.  Lord knows I'm in no position to talk.  But it should piss you off to see it every time, because it's not exactly humanity's good side.  Not that they wouldn't want to have won, but THAT unacceptable piece-of-shit performance out there was MORE offensive to Akron than if they beat them by 80 points.  Akron played their goddamn hearts out, and for that (and Michigan's lack of preparation) they deserved to win.  And as a Michigan fan, nothing fills me with more disgust than to have to admit such a thing, because that means Michigan did things to not deserve to win.  And they did.

The rankings are the LEAST of Michigan's worries right now.  This team needs to grow up fast, or they're not going anywhere.  B1G championships shouldn't even be on their minds; they need to play their goddamned best against Connecticut to have a hope of winning.  We all just saw what happens when they don't.

xxxxNateDaGreat

September 14th, 2013 at 11:26 PM ^

There are two ways to look at a game like this:

1) Call the team terrible, the season a bust, fret over it for the next week or so.

or

2) Chalk this up to some combination of the players riding the ND high and just not focusing on the game in front of them and also some crazy voodoo horseshit, proceed to burn the tape and forget this ever happened, and focus like hell on destroying the will of whoever is fool enough to stand in front of our wrath.

I consider myself an optimist, so I'm going to believe in option 2. Plus, I don't want to spend the next week getting myself all worked up by talking myself into believing that this team isn't still the very good outfit who beat a good ND team.

blusage

September 15th, 2013 at 12:49 AM ^

"They're young" is no excuse. Even if a young team might tend to get complacent, a good coaching staff will find ways for that NOT to happen. We were favored by 35 points and almost lost. I don't think complacency and immaturity is even in the ballpark for describing the performance the team displayed.

This is on the coaches and, perhaps, their complacency (some might suggest the word incompetence).

Oh, and please pass the donuts.

ThoseWhoStayUofM

September 15th, 2013 at 3:54 AM ^

No, I don't think you heard him correctly.  He was talking about our chances of being selected to play in the National Championship game by a BCS selection process.  That's like talking about the Detroit Lions' chances of making it to the superbowl after almost losing the third game of the regular season to a less talented opponent.  It is not likely that Michigan will be playing for a BCS National Championship this year.  I'm just going to throw that out there.  Hope it sticks.

B1G_Fan

September 14th, 2013 at 9:05 PM ^

 This should stop all the Gardner to the NFL after this year talk. He's good with a high ceiling but, has a long way to go. He'll give atleast 1 WTF play a game lol or atleast has in the first 3 games. The O line is playing worse than last years unit. Do we look at the staff, the players or strength and conditioning? If a change is needed then make it but getting man handled by Akron is unacceptable. Hopefully this is a wake up call! Hoke should show video of the Horror to every Michigan team before a "cupcake" team. If they would have lost this game I would have sworn off college football

jmblue

September 14th, 2013 at 9:20 PM ^

Well, that was pretty awful - basically, 55 minutes of being annoyed that the game is close followed by five minutes of realizing that we could actually lose.  Ugh.  

Today's performance was unsettling in a lot of ways.  Still, if we come out in seven days and pound the crap out of UConn, we can forget about it.  Sometimes you do just have a terrible game out of nowhere.  The team has the chance next week to prove to us that today was just a fluke.

 

 

CompleteLunacy

September 14th, 2013 at 9:44 PM ^

50 minutes of being annoyed the game was close (the entire first half, most of 3rd quarter, 4th after the pick 6)

5 minutes thinking that good, they're finally pulling away (when it was 21-10)

4 minutes realizing they could actually lose (any time Akron had a lead or was driving for a lead in the 2nd half) 

1 minute thinking they were going to lose. My inner Henri makes an appearance for the first time in a long while.

 

Crime Reporter

September 14th, 2013 at 9:30 PM ^

They are currently laying an egg to a crappy Purdue squad. Point being, you have to bring it every week. Today's game was exhausting to watch, and even now it feels like we lost. But I'm not going to let it ruin my weekend like I would in previous years. I'd expect a much better effort next Saturday.

Nolongerusingaccount

September 14th, 2013 at 9:42 PM ^

I live in Seoul now so I don't watch every game any longer, but I catch most.  I'm glad I didn't watch Akron (mostly because I'm in Honolulu on my way to Maui).  The recap sounded brutal, but it is what it is.  Life is too short to get upset over this especially since a bottle of scotch can make everything all better.  Hopefully, the team learns and improves so I don't have to buy me another bottle of Johnnie Walker Blue.  All in jest of course.  Go Blue! 

AlwaysBlue

September 14th, 2013 at 10:02 PM ^

I will be very curious to see what the Wolverines do next week. That will do more to define if Akron was about being flat and not having the veteran leadership to regroup or something more ominous. I disagree though that the lines won't improve through the course of the season. They will.

gbdub

September 14th, 2013 at 10:09 PM ^

Honestly it's worth remembering were weren't necessarily as bad as we were sloppy. 2 turnovers in the red zone and a pick six are the difference between this being a near disaster and a comfy (if closer than we expected) win.

We should worry a bit about the line play (both sides) but it may be that sloppiness was to blame there as well.

Still not excusable, but "OMG, we need to focus better" is much more fixable than "OMG we're just terrible".

DC_BLUE

September 14th, 2013 at 10:12 PM ^

I remember an Ohio game in 2002 against Cincinnati, and not the recent decent Cincinnati teams, it was the older "Cincinnati has a football team?" type teams.  Cincinnati had the ball late close to the goal down by 4 with less than a mintue, and Ohio had to stop 4 plays into the end zone that they very narrowly did.  My wife (an Ohio fan) watched nervously (and I with glee) - afterward my wife said "I guess they are not very good."  It terms out that 2002 OSU team ended up being alright.

 

 

Elmer

September 14th, 2013 at 10:22 PM ^

I'm glad Borges finally realized that the Akron DE was told not to bite on any play action when Gardner was rolling in his direction.  You can only go to the well so many times.

charliebauman

September 14th, 2013 at 10:48 PM ^

I was shocked and extremely disappointed by todays performance. To save the season I think we might have to tweak it some and be willing to use Gardner similar to the way we used DeRob, just not quite as much. Because he is a better passer than DeRob. 

Lets not forget Gardner was the top rated dual threat qb in the country coming out of high school. To expect him to be mainly a pocket passer is not fair to him and not his strength. When Gardner runs it opens up the offense for better passing plays and rb plays.  

Sure it is a bigger risk for injury. But since that is his strength then thats the chance we take. Shane Morris is the back up and is a pure pocket passer who would be expected to complete more passes, which eliminates the need for a running qb.  

ThoseWhoStayUofM

September 15th, 2013 at 2:40 AM ^

"if it walks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it could probably start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~Bryan Mac
"A penny saved could probably start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~Bryan Mac
"If at first you don’t succeed, you could start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~Bryan Mac
"
Michigan can sleep soundly about: Said ancient Chinese philosopher-general could probably start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~Bryan Mac

"Life is like a box of chocolates which could probably start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~Hobbes217 <--- Side Note: ooh, an intellectual political philosopher.

"
A bird in hand is worth two in the bush which could probably start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~Daniel <-- Side Note: ooh, a jew *I kid*

"
The two birds killed with one stone could start for Michigan State?" ~TWSWBC

"You can't turn a ho into a housewife, but she could start at QB for Michigan State" ~Giordano Bruno <-- active member of Anonymous

"If you have two birds, you don't have any." ~whitedawg Side Note: Liked the effort but that one kinda missed the point entirely... so...

"If my aunt had balls, she could probably start at QB for Michigan State" ~Giordano Bruno

"Make like a tree which could probably start at QB for michigan state" ~jww9

"You can take the girl out of the country..... and she could probably start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~Nickel

"You can't teach an old dog new tricks...... but it could probably start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~Nickel

"Haters gonna probably start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~MGoBkExam

"I came here to do two things: drink beer and be QB1 at MSU.  And I'm just about out of beer...." ~CRISPed in the DIAG Side Note: not exactly an idiom but another nice effort. Maybe you get crisped a little too often in the diag, if you know what I'm sayin'.

"A rolling stone could probably start at quarterback for Michigan State." ~Blue2000

"You can teach a man to fish, and he can start at QB for Michigan St." ~Fields

"If a tree falls in the woods and no one is there to hear it...could it start at QB for Michigan St?" ~Fields

"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, which could start at QB for Michigan State." ~thecool Side Note: ooh, pulling out the transendentalist pholosophers.  Aren't you educated!

_____________________________________________

Michigan State won 55-17 today.  They blew out an inferior opponent today.  Are all of you going to be running laps with the team tomorrow?

ThoseWhoStayUofM

September 16th, 2013 at 3:12 AM ^

What is wrong with you?  Do you wake up every morning and say to yourself, "It's fun to be mean to people I don't like.  I'm going to do that today!"  You're an immature child with the ethical aptitude of a chimpanzee

...allegedly

Edit: I just found this perusing the internet and I thought of you. Shaming language is simply an insult that is used to deflect focus away from a particular discussion/debate topic. When it is used, it almost always means that the person doing the shaming is in the wrong and doesn’t want to deal with it logically or rationally.

ThoseWhoStayUofM

September 15th, 2013 at 2:52 AM ^

"who went unmolested up the seam as the linebackers failed to get depth on their drops and the safeties couldn't close the gap."

Dear God, I hope nobody tried to molest him in front of 100,000 fans in the middle of a football field!  Do you even read this before you post it?  Is it common practice to refer to the concept of molestation in this way?  I'm just saying.

ThoseWhoStayUofM

September 15th, 2013 at 9:55 PM ^

1) When your little sister is bugging you, do you say to her, "stop molesting me!"?  You actually say that frequently?  I'm sorry... you must not be aware.  In fact, I wasn't born yesterday... so...

2) Are you completely unaware of what the word 'amiguous' means?  Here you go, because google is too challenging for you.

Ambiguous - "open to more than one interpretation; having a double meaning."

Please go sulk back in your hole whence you came.

ThoseWhoStayUofM

September 16th, 2013 at 3:25 AM ^

Okay, what I'm going to ask you to do might be a little challenging for you.  I'm going to ask you to take a small step outside of pure logical analysis and into the realm of social acceptability.  What you are doing, talking about rigid definitions of terms, is something computers do.  Unfortunately, this is a blog.  Computers aren't reading this.  People live in societies and societies have norms.  The word 'molest' is a word where its second definition is vastly more frequently used than its first listed definition.  It's also a word that has several synonymous alternatives without undesirable social connotations.  Sorry for attempting to make the author aware of that.

Have a nice day.