Michigan 28, Penn State 16 Comment Count

Ace


The difference. [Eric Upchurch/MGoBlog]

There were shades of the dark, recent past. A non-existent running game. An ugly interception. Catching seemingly all the bad breaks.

One particularly bad aspect of that past was missing, however. While James Franklin cost Penn State a chance to win by kicking a field goal from the one and mismanaging their timeouts, Jim Harbaugh stood opposite him, competent and then some.

Michigan won this game due to coaching and finishing drives, and the two were inextricably linked. Both teams had one touchdown from outside the red zone, Michigan's a 26-yard pass from Jake Rudock to Jake Butt before PSU responded with a 25-yard fade to Saeed Blacknail. The Wolverines converted all three* of their red zone chances into touchdowns. Penn State also had three, but ultimately settled for three field goals, stymied by a stout Wolverine defense and their own conservative playcalling.


James Ross laid some licks. He wasn't alone. [Upchurch]

While the game remained close throughout, Michigan controlled most of the action, outgaining PSU 343-207. Outside of a bad pick, Jake Rudock continued his pinpoint ways of the last couple games, throwing for 256 yards and a pair of scores on 36 attempts. Amara Darboh moved the chains and earned a hard-fought touchdown on a steady diet of wide receiver screens and added a remarkable sideline snag; Butt found open spaces for 66 yards; Chesson stretched the field and chipped in M's best run of the day on a 20-yard end-around. While it was a frustrating day on the ground, the weapons in the passing game again proved their steadily increasing worth.

On the other side, Michigan allowed an early 56-yard run to standout freshman back Saquon Barkley and otherwise limited him to 12 yards on 14 carries. The defensive front beat up quarterback Christian Hackenberg, who managed just 131 yards on 37 attempts and took four sacks among many, many hits. By PSU's last-gasp drive, Hackenberg seemed out of it—quite possibly injured—and even started trotting off the field before barely getting the play off on fourth down; his final throw sailed harmlessly out of bounds.

If you're looking for the moment that turned around the game, the muffed punt that Chesson recovered inside the ten, setting up a one-yard Sione Houma plunge for a 21-10 lead, is the simplest answer. But if you'd like to say it's the moment Michigan hired Harbaugh, whose timely aggressiveness got the Wolverines a critical score late in the first half for the second straight game, it'd be hard to argue.

Ultimately, that's why this game will be fondly remembered—if quickly lost in the excitement of the week to come—instead of another nightmare in Happy Valley. Be gone, ever-fuzzier recollections of McGloin and Floyd and 27-for-27 and missed overtime field goals. Michigan is one Ohio State victory away from playing for the Big Ten East.

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*Not including the game's final drive, when Michigan kneeled out the clock while inside the PSU five.

Comments

MaizeNBlueTexan

November 21st, 2015 at 4:52 PM ^

The huge run play on Penn Sate's first drive and Peppers giving up a TD were the only 2 big plays I remember.

There might be more. But more importantly the goal line stands, and giving up field goals instead of TD's were huge for this game.

Overall not the best outting, but definetly a good outting for the D on the road against a team with NFL talent.

Ali G Bomaye

November 22nd, 2015 at 12:53 PM ^

That was a brilliant play, and exactly what the punt coverage team should do.  Natural instinct is to go for the ball, but the coverage team will almost certainly have more guys in the area than the receiving team.  If the first guy there takes out the returner instead of going for the ball, the coverage team is almost certain to recover.

AlwaysBlue

November 21st, 2015 at 5:05 PM ^

Yes, but this game it was about Rudock and his receivers. Michigan isn't winning the turnover battles, they can't run, special teams are a little less special lately and the Wolverines must be setting records with penalties. Rudock and his receivers seemed like the difference to me.

UNCWolverine

November 21st, 2015 at 5:13 PM ^

Not sure how you failed to mention even a sentence on the penalties today. That to me was what stands out most from this game. It was absurd, definitely my biggest takeaway.....

Go Blue.

One Inch Woody…

November 21st, 2015 at 5:16 PM ^

I don't think running the ball was the game plan at all. We had to keep them honest with a couple vanilla runs, but this game was always going through Rudock and the air. Opponents are going to keep playing like we have a 70/30 run/pass split when Harbaugh's gunning for 70/30 pass to run.

In that respect, this game was successful.

MMBisthebest

November 21st, 2015 at 6:07 PM ^

It's amazing to watch the transformation. PSU looked like we have in the recent past with the hapless run game. And yes, the officiating was awful, but in the end, the better team pulled out the win.

Blue from Ohio

November 21st, 2015 at 6:20 PM ^

Jeez the one time you pull for this team and they'll find a way to screw it up.  On the bright side, they're offense looks like a tire fire.  I really hope thats the offens that shows up next week.  Of course I'm sure for next week OSU will realize they have 5 star kids and actually play to their potential during the game.  Ugh I hate pulling for OSU with my OSU fan wife.

RJWolvie

November 21st, 2015 at 7:17 PM ^

Yep. But fact is: MSU went into the shoe And flat stuffed them. I hate giving props to MSU even more than to OSU or ND (although ND has never earned props in my lifetime, well not since Montana when I was a kid anyway). But props to MSU. That was flat out great defense & O line play they laid on OSU right there. You know, I have a theory about the disrespekt, it's not just that they've been nothing except a 7year stretch in the 60s and now the 2000/10s. It's that media never gives props to teams led by D and O-line. It's always flashy O. Even though it's always D that wins in the end.



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lou apo

November 21st, 2015 at 8:54 PM ^

So now that OSU played a hapless game against MSU and lost by a score that was way closer than the game actually was, what happens to us after we beat OSU next week?  I'm just assuming that MSU beats PSU at home, though who knows.  Do we have any shot at a BCS game at all?  I'm thinking if Iowa wins out, they get a top 4 slot and if MSU wins out, there is a pretty good chance they  get a top 4 slot.  So the Rose Bowl is open.  Who goes then?  Any other BCS games on the table?