Parris Campbell outruns Michigan's Devin Bush; Bush was injured on the play
gone [Eric Upchurch]

Ohio State 62, Michigan 39 Comment Count

Adam Schnepp November 24th, 2018 at 5:20 PM

There’s a door just off the eating area in Ohio State’s press box, the frame of which is plastered with small pieces of red “evidence” tape on its left side. I did not understand this at halftime. I get it now: Ohio Stadium is a crime scene.

An inauspicious three-play, one-yard drive to open the contest was the harbinger of things to come in a game so nightmarish the only thing recognizable as belonging to this 2018 Michigan team were white uniforms and winged helmets. And that was with the fourth quarter left to play.

The nation’s best defense was shredded time and again by crossing routes and could generate no pressure; the passing game saw Michigan’s surehanded tight ends suddenly dropping passes while predictable passing situations allowed Ohio State to get pressure on Shea Patterson much of the afternoon; and even special teams played a part with a blocked punt that seemed to hang in the air for eternity before dropping into the waiting arms of Sevyn Banks, who jogged 33 yards into the end zone. You play the game to keep your goals in front of you and Michigan did that for 11 games. Then, in The Game with the most optimistic forecast in almost two decades, the wheels came off in spectacular fashion.

[After THE JUMP: words]

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[Upchurch]

Michigan’s man coverage could not handle Ohio State’s crossers on their first drive of the game, ceding 16 and 11 yards on such routes before true freshman Chris Olave got a step on fifth-year senior Brandon Watson on a 3rd-and-4 crossing route and turned it into a 24-yard touchdown reception.

The offense responded with two third-down conversions but was unable to procure a third, as Donovan Peoples-Jones dove for a Patterson pass on an out but came up two yards short of the sticks. Freshman kicker Jake Moody grooved a 39-yard kick through the uprights to put Michigan’s first points on the board in what was a continuation of last week’s offensive pattern.

Moody recorded the game’s next points as well after Michigan’s defense forced Ohio State into a three-and-out; Michigan’s offense subsequently went on one of their infini-drives, using up the last 5:32 of the first quarter and nine seconds of the second quarter, with Patterson putting a perfectly-placed ball in a basket for Zach Gentry only to have it ripped away by a defensive back on 3rd-and-6.

Michigan showed life after two drives on which the offense flat-lined and the defense’s sore spots were stabbed repeatedly en route to two scores. Down 21-6, Patterson and the passing game took over. Patterson hit Sean McKeon, who had stayed in to block before leaking to the flat, then found Donovan Peoples-Jones twice. A defensive pass interference call converted a third down for Michigan, a 15-yard Patterson tuck-and-run moved Michigan to just outside the red zone, and a beautiful leaping back-shoulder grab by Nico Collins closed the gap to 21-13.

Demario McCall let the ball hit him on the following kickoff, and the fumble was recovered by Nate Schoenle at the 9-yard line. Patterson hit Chris Evans on a tiny wheel route, the two-point conversion was blown up, and Michigan somehow trailed by just two.

Ohio State received the ball with 41 seconds remaining in the half. Three Michigan penalties pushed them down the field before a sorta-goal-line stand ended with a field goal.

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[Bryan Fuller]

It was a tale of two halves for Michigan, only this tale is one that had yet to be told this season or under this coaching staff. Adjustments to the coverage worked on Ohio State’s first drive; Michigan’s offense followed with an incomplete pass, a one-yard run, and a short pass jarred loose after Karan Higdon got lit up in the flat.

Ohio State against got into a goal-to-go situation and again found themselves held out, a field goal their consolation on a run-centric drive that Michigan contained but for a 31-yard completion to Parris Campbell.

Michigan’s next drive ended with the aforementioned blocked punt returned for a touchdown. Their following drive lasted three plays, a three-and-pick turned into seven points after another crossing route put Ohio State a yard out, an option pitch the finisher. The game was over after Ohio State’s next drive, a one-play, 78-run from Parris Campbell on a jet sweep.

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[Patrick Barron]

At this point, Zach Gentry had left the game with a concussion, Devin Bush was carried off with a hip flexor issue, David Long was carted away with something similar. Everything that could go wrong did go wrong, and then some. Patterson got hurt. Brandon Peters came in. Ben Mason scored. Joe Milton went in. Everything else is a blur, save this: damn near the entirety of Ohio Stadium on the field, a roiling red wave rejoicing to one of stadium rock’s most grating anthems, Neil Diamond’s “Sweet Caroline.”

I have no idea where Michigan goes from here. There’s a bowl game to be played, the emotional letdown of which is similar to but an order of magnitude greater than 2016. The Revenge Tour flopped, replaced by Urban’s Redemption Tour. That’s bullshit. So was this game. 

Comments

Go Blue 80

November 25th, 2018 at 7:50 AM ^

Jim, what do you say to the fans who dedicate 4 hours every Saturday to your team and spend countless dollars supporting your program, only to be rewarded with an effortless garbage performance with high school level preparation by the coaching staff in the biggest game in 2 years?

Khaleke The Freak

November 25th, 2018 at 7:53 AM ^

Please don’t give anyone the satisfaction of calling this “The Urban Meyer Redemption Tour” disgusting

Perkis-Size Me

November 25th, 2018 at 9:10 AM ^

Sam Webb’s been harping and spouting on his podcast for the last 2-3 weeks about how OSU needed to win out so we’d have the highest possible ranked OSU team to face to impress the playoff committee with a win over. Hope he’s happy with what he got, because I guess he forgot that Meyer is the best motivator in the game. Add to it that OSU had everything on the line and everything to play for, and his proven record of dominance in rivalry games. I think that played a big part in how well OSU played yesterday.

 

Merlin.64

November 25th, 2018 at 10:45 AM ^

Ouch, that hurt.

Well, it did not take long for the nay-sayers to come out of the woodwork, did it? Heaping blame and ridicule on players, coaches, other fans. Hello darkness, my old friend . . . .

I must say, though, that the person who wondered what Harbaugh would say to fans who dedicate four hours to watching the team every Saturday deserves a prize for the most indignant, and no, don't bother to offer other nominations. (Imagine, four whole hours!)

The uncomfortable reality is that they played their best game of the season, while we did not. That does happen, especially when one encounters highly motivated opponents. 

Still, not without hope we suffer and we mourn. Next year we play in Ann Arbor, and the inevitability of defeat against OSU is as unlikely as any other prediction, in sports or anything else.

As my avatar would tell you.

 

tybott

November 25th, 2018 at 12:35 PM ^

Mack Brown was talking on TV last night about how you end a long rivalry losing streak.  He said it only happens when you are the better team and you are tired of hearing about the streak.  Simple really - I guess Michigan (and when I say Michigan, I mean here most precisely the institution) fails to meet one or both of those stipulations.

I've seen this as a big fan (and graduate) of Army West Point (I will be conflicted next year - hope to go to the game).  From 2002 - 2015, Army West Point as an institution lacked the will to be competitive against Navy.  The Superintendent (3-star General who just retired after his 4 year stint starting in 2015) came in, issued a detailed plan of action of how the institution from the top down would compete (amid explaining why winning matters) to the entire Army, fan base, and alumni, and went from losing to Navy in 2015 to (at bare minimum this year) keeping the CIC trophy at West Point and winning 9 games with potential for beating Navy for the 3rd year in a row and winning 11 games (Michigan needs to watch out in Week 2 next year).  The rivalry losing streak was darkest before the light broke through.  2002 - 2015 was desolate.  I despise Navy and OSU fans equally.

But bottom line - the football program can internally spin their wheels and do the right thing (which I don't think they even got that right yesterday) but it's apparent to me that OSU as an institution is committed to winning football games and beating Michigan, while not so much at UM.  I think Jim is soft, too.  He used to be the whole jackhammer thing, but came to Michigan and has approached it for balance, meanwhile Urban Meyer coaches himself to death.  I'm not saying Jim needs to coach himself to death, but he's gotta step his game up.  When you hear him talk to the media and team to get them pumped up, he barely makes sense and sounds like he's distracted.  You are fooling yourself if you think kids want to play for the source of the quiet, quirky, reserved, distracted sound bytes we mostly hear out of him.    

 

P.S. - the problem is bigger than what we see apparent to us yesterday.  Just like it was unacceptable for Army to approach it's football program with no wins against Navy 2002 - 2015, the more unacceptable thing to me than not beating OSU since 2011 is that Michigan State, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Ohio State, Iowa, Penn State, and Northwestern have all participated in the B1G championship game before Michigan.

 

       

mgoblue98

November 25th, 2018 at 9:47 PM ^

I talked to a good friend of mine tonight about the Ohio State game since he is a fan of theirs. 

He said he couldn't believe how well their OL played because they have been terrible all year.

msmitty269

November 26th, 2018 at 10:40 AM ^

It's simple really, Ohio State cares more about this game than Michigan does. When asked after the game about his dominance over Michigan, Meyer responded with "Just an incredible amount of respect for this rivalry that drives us to prepare for this game 364 days out of the year." Harbaugh doesn't have the same respect for "The Game" as Meyer does. Harbaugh will NEVER beat Ohio State as long as Urban Meyer is there because Meyer wants it more.