Michigan 29, Air Force 13 Comment Count

Ace


Quinn Nordin got his second school record in three games. [Eric Upchurch]

Michigan had their J. Walter Weatherman game today.

You could practically hear "...and that's why you don't schedule Air Force" echoing through the stadium as early as the first quarter, when the Falcons somehow used 6:13 of game clock to drive 24 yards in 12 plays for a field goal to knot the game at three apiece.

While Michigan's defense played up to their lofty standard, Air Force lingered in a contracted game that featured only 11 full drives from each team. The Wolverines could only move the ball in fits and spurts, generally going in the right direction until they hit the red zone, where all-too-familiar problems from the season's first two games cropped up again. Whether it was blown blocks, conservative playcalling, or missed opportunities, those problems forced Michigan to settle for field goals on all four of their trips to the red zone.

"They were doing a really good of disguising coverages, disguising blitzes," quarterback Wilton Speight said, noting Air Force did a particularly good job in the red zone.

"They had a better call than we had most of the time down there in the red zone," said Jim Harbaugh. "We'd like to score more touchdowns in the red zone. I think that'll come. We're moving the ball."

Speight finished an underwhelming 14-of-23 for 169 yards in what's become a typically uneven performance. He had a few excellent throws and lost some yardage to drops—most notably on a third-down pass that clanged off Kekoa Crawford's hands in the fourth quarter—but also missed a couple open receivers and couldn't lead the offense to a touchdown until the game's waning minutes.


DPJ couldn't be stopped once he got his eyes on the end zone. [Upchurch]

Fortunately for Michigan, while the offense found their footing, the other two units were rock solid. Quinn Nordin tied a program record with five field goals in five attempts, including a 49-yarder with room to spare to give Michigan a 9-6 halftime lead.

After the defense forced a three-and-out on the opening possession of the second half, it looked like Michigan would finally break the game open. Donovan Peoples-Jones fielded a Charlie Scott punt that outdistanced the coverage, sprinted past the first wave, reversed field, and then tightroped the sideline for a 79-yard touchdown, the first of his Michigan career.

"My punt return team did a great job of blocking," Peoples-Jones said. "It made my job very easy. It just opened up like the Red Sea."

"I feel like great things are going to happen for Donovan Peoples-Jones," said Harbaugh.

Air Force countered with a rare explosive play, however, as receiver Ronald Cleveland got a step on Tyree Kinnel and took at third-down slant 64 yards to the house only four plays later.

That proved to be Air Force's only completion of the afternoon.


Somewhere in there is Air Force's quarterback. [Upchurch]

The defense, and the defensive line in particular, controlled this game. Against an offense that avoids negative plays at all costs, Michigan recorded nine tackles for loss and had three sacks on just 12 Air Force dropbacks. The three-man line of Rashan Gary, Mo Hurst, and Chase Winovich controlled the A- and B-gaps, allowing the back seven—led by Devin Bush and Mike McCray, who both finished with a team-high 11 tackles—to flow to the ball unencumbered.

By the second half, they were kicking the Falcons off the field with ruthless efficiency. Gary damn near beheaded quarterback Arion Worthman while forcing a third-quarter fumble the Falcons were fortunate to recover, inducing a roar of bloodlust from a previously stagnant crowd.

Their dominance meant two more field goal drives, plus a miss from Air Force's kicker, were enough to all but put the game away. Michigan was in clock-killing mode when Karan Higdon broke down the left sideline for a 36-yard touchdown with 1:02 to play.

"They play a brand of football that I really like, which is keep jabbing away," Harbaugh said. "They make you go beat them. They don't beat themselves."

That held true in this game. Frustratingly, it took the offense far too long to put the game away and still have fans feel comfortable heading into Big Ten play. Next week's trip to Purdue, a reinvigorated program under first-year coach Jeff Brohm, is looking far more perilous than it did a few weeks ago.

"We'll keep forging ahead, keep making improvements," said Harbaugh. "I like where this team is at right now."

Comments

Steve-a-wolverine-o

September 16th, 2017 at 8:32 PM ^

Hail yes.  Gotta love me some bloddy Man Spear Winovich, triple crush tackles, Devin Bush evading blocks and then lion-wrestling-style tackles, getting a view into the mind of Don Brown when there are potential ball carriers running all over the place on our heat seeking missles of a 3-3-5.

Have to give some credit to Air Force for fiesty play, same as Cincinnati.  That's the fun of college football, seeing kids playing their butt off trying to go toe to toe with Michigan's pedigrees.  It forced Michigan to keep the pedal down this whole game.  It also kept it a game.  I didn't become addicted to college football by watching a team go up by 40 and pull the starters.

I would have liked a little more click and sparkle from the offense.  Really liking the Tysaac Attack.  Unlike the trolls' standards, I approve of his, that there should be a touchdown on every offensive play.  I think there is a lot of potential with Speigtht and the receiving corp getting reps.  In the past it seems like he needed to build that connection with Darboh and never found it with Chesson.  I like seeing all of our young guys getting into the action up and down the line.  DPJ.  Give me a break! This is going to be a super fun team next few years.  I liked the game today.  I love rooting for this Michigan!!!!!!!

GO BLUE!

 

 

Sten Carlson

September 16th, 2017 at 9:37 PM ^

Spitballing here, but four likely reasons: 1) the OL doesn't block the screen well enough for the coaches liking; 2) they're using those TE's for max protection to help the OL in pass pro; 3) opposing DC's know Michigan is a big TE passing team and are focusing on taking them away; and, 4) Jake Butt, an amazingly good TE upon whom WS relied up heavily, is in the NFL now. whatcha think?

Amaznbluedoc

September 16th, 2017 at 10:06 PM ^

1) yes 2) probably 3) maybe but I don't think sp8 is getting enough time for te routes? 4) yup. With the young OL, I would like to see,us run more out of play action. It makes sense since the run is credible and it may give sp8 a second longer to throw.

Sten Carlson

September 16th, 2017 at 10:19 PM ^

I was talking about this elsewhere ... it's clear the book on Michigan is load the box and come downhill. Tough to run into that. But, if your OL can't pick up all those rushers -- which has often been the case -- the play fake can actually turn into a liability. It seems like football 101, but it doesn't seem to be working, unfortunately.

iHartHenne

September 16th, 2017 at 9:39 PM ^

I don't know, the offense is flawed the defense seems imperfect but in the end all you have to do is win, and I don't know why but until I'm proved otherwise I'm just going to enjoy this team's nose for the w... could be a hell of a lot worse than 3-0 today

mishler3

September 16th, 2017 at 9:46 PM ^

I like the overall performance of the defense. Not a fan of the 3-4 but the LB's are filling the gaps the front 3 are allowing them to take care of.

Not as confident in the offense especially the QB. Too much thinking and I'm not sure if he trusts himself. Consistent overthrowing is bad footwork not just chucking the ball over the head of a receiver.

Purdue will score next week despite our good defense. First true road game and that joint will be hopping if Speight continues his average play.

pmark1210

September 16th, 2017 at 10:20 PM ^

watching today's offensive derp show made me chug a lava lamp. just because it is blue, doesn't mean it's blueberry flavored. just a heads up.

Navy Wolverine

September 16th, 2017 at 10:58 PM ^

Not many people thought this game would be a cake walk. 

As a Navy alum/fan, I've watched many games where Navy comes close to upsetting ranked teams (Notre Dame, Ohio State among others) in recent years only to come up short in the end. Air Force and Navy are pretty much the same these days. This game was never really in doubt. I think the probability of win calculator on ESPN was never below 80% even when AF was within a field goal.

This is a good win. We will win ugly until the offense starts to click. Hopefully that will happen soon. It probably depends on how fast our receivers improve - so much talent there though.

Bertello NC

September 16th, 2017 at 11:30 PM ^

The problem we're having is we don't have a good enough offensive line for Spieght(a true pocket passer) to just sit back and scan the field for 5 seconds. The play at the end of the 2nd quarter I believe where he scrambled to his left and tried to hit a receiver coming towards him in which that guy was trying to block for him and threw the ball summed it up for me that Speight is what he is. Instead of pump faking and tucking it up and cutting it in and getting into the end zone he throws it to a receiver trying to block for him. He just isn't much of an athlete and cannot improvise when plays break down. He's not a playmaker. He's lacking that IT factor that this offense needs. I think he's a decent QB given different circumstances but for this team right now it isn't working. I don't know what other options if any we have but it's my basic observation. I know it isn't all on the QB but when you handle the ball on every play it raises some concerns.

OkemosBlue

September 17th, 2017 at 6:43 AM ^

All this is interesting and good.  Speight is the QB and he is not as bad as he has seemed the first three games and there is hope but he:

1.  Didn't check into and out of plays very well on Saturday per Harbaugh after the game--although Harbaugh rightly blamed the coaches the most.  

2. Had five overthrows in what, 20 throws.  That's 25%.  Very bad, although he is getting closer.   It's not all Speight, perhaps not mostly Speight, but my hope was that he would carry the young offense until the other young people came togther.  He's not doing that.  Hence one score out of ten red zone trips.  

 Let's hope it all clicks in October.   If it does, none of this will matter.   

bcnihao

September 17th, 2017 at 8:29 AM ^

There's been some progress in cutting down on overthrows, at least when the offense isn't close to the goal line.  For example:  Last week, he overthrew DPJ on a short pass attempt where DPJ had room to run if the ball had been decently thrown; this week, the short pass to DPJ went for a long gain.  There were also other passes this week where receivers at least had a chance to make a play on the ball rather than watch it sail over their heads--unlike last week.  The drop by Crawford this week was bad; the pass went right to him.

In the red zone against Air Force, Speight threw some passes out of bounds when he was trying to hit receivers in the end zone, but he's never been good at throwing a fade.  Maybe--to join the chorus here--TE crossing routes would be a better call in that situation, at least for a bit.

bcnihao

September 17th, 2017 at 8:17 AM ^

Last year:  pitch to Peppers, who threw a lateral back across to Speight, who threw downfield to Chesson. 

Edit:  This was in response to the question about what exotic plays had been run the past wo years.

UM Griff

September 17th, 2017 at 9:08 AM ^

Some things to clean up, which the offense will be working on. OL is still the area of most concern. WR's will learn their patterns, and we will see more completions as this happens. Our D is elite, and special teams are really good. Looking forward to Brian's UFR especially this week.

Blue1995nyc

September 17th, 2017 at 9:45 AM ^

Our punting is awful.

Our Kick Returner is awful.

Our FG kicker is good.

Our kick off coverage is good.

D is really good and can be better.  Smallish for my taste but they cover ground and try to play downhill.  Need those CB to be much much better on toss sweeps and the like.  Safeties /LB can't always get there.

O, well, that has been covered.

Amaznbluedoc

September 17th, 2017 at 10:39 AM ^

1) Freshman punter

2) Freshman returner (on punts) - ran back 80 yds for a TD - longest in years.

3) Yup - redshirt freshman in the groove.

4) Yup.

5) Most CB's are young.

6) Won't comment.

The team has 15 freshmen starters and sometimes I even forget that.  We just expect M to win, win, win after the 7 years in the wilderness.  It's a rebuilding year and we're ahead of the game.

Blue1995nyc

September 17th, 2017 at 9:43 AM ^

While I believe we have good staff, to think some mid-course corrections are not called for is ostrich like attitude.  

 

THe QB play is dreadful for a Pro-Set Offense.  Frankly, poor Gardner with that mess looked better than Sp8.  And that says very little.

 

Secondly, our Playcalling is bad when you know what play they are running based on personnel choices.  Jet sweeps with McDoom.  Screens to McDoom.  Short yard to Hammering Panda.  

 

Lastly, there are some plays we need to scrap cuz they don't work.  We can't power run.  Only time we get good running lanes is when we are pulling folks on the OL or zone blocking.  The thought of our Guards/Center hitting a DL and then getting to the LB .... not working yet.  Teams are simply running down hill at us attacking the A & B gaps with ZERO regard for the play action.

 

So until you get better QB Play and some more creative play calling (a few WCO plays) this won't be a power running team.  Not with 8/9 attacking the box.

 

I think we need more screens, more "picks plays" with horizontal routes, scrap the fade routes entirely,  and find the TE and RBs in the short to intermediate routes.  Also we should run more zone blocking and let the RB use their eyes to find the hole.

MileHighWolverine

September 17th, 2017 at 10:35 AM ^

Playcalling is my biggest concern right now, not Speight. We seemed to be in 3rd and long all day because on 1st and 2nd we would run into a stacked box. Can't recall many 1st down passing plays and the only time we tested quick throws it seemed extremely obvious it was coming and failed. 

Disappointed in Drevno.