Michigan 27, Indiana 20 (OT) Comment Count

Ace


Tyree Kinnel's fourth-down interception (finally) ended the game. [Bryan Fuller]

Stop me if you've heard this one before: Indiana put a harrowing scare into Michigan, only to lose in heartbreaking fashion.

A game that initially looked like it'd result in a comfortable Wolverines win got increasingly distressful. Two Quinn Nordin field goals and a 12-yard Karan Higdon touchdown run got Michigan out to an early 13-0 lead. While the Hoosiers netted a field goal shortly before halftime, the game felt fully in M's control; they held a 166-112 edge in total yardage and had a huge advantage on the ground. Sure, you could complain about the 11 penalties and the underwhelming passing attack, but the Hoosiers were having trouble just moving the football downfield.

Whatever was said at halftime, however, should probably never be spoken again.

An ugly Michigan three-and-out, capped by a John O'Korn completion to Jim Harbaugh, gave IU the ball with a chance to cut it to a one-score game. They did just that on a drive in which Mike DeBord and his offense utilized tempo to lock backup defensive linemen Aubrey Solomon and Carlo Kemp on the field in place of the dominant duo of Maurice Hurst and Rashan Gary. Hoosiers running back Morgan Ellison rushed for 45 yards on the drive, going virtually untouched on an eight-yard touchdown.

The game slowed to a slog. O'Korn missed a golden opportunity on the ensuing drive when Zach Gentry broke open downfield on a two-man route; O'Korn instead chose to throw at a well-covered Kekoa Crawford, and two plays later Michigan brought on the punt team. That'd become a familar sight for both squads; the next seven drives, four for IU and three for M, went three-and-out.

Higdon, who had a star-making afternoon, finally broke the drought when Michigan went to a ground-only attack. After four rushes gained a pair of first downs, the coaches broke out a slick new counter play to spring Higdon for a 59-yard touchdown early in the fourth quarter.


Dare I say Woodson-esque? [Fuller]

With Michigan now holding a 20-10 advantage, it looked like they'd ice the game when Lavert Hill intercepted Peyton Ramsey on a play reminiscent of the great Michigan cornerbacks of my lifetime. Indiana had already burned two of their timeouts on defense. A first down would've effectively put it away, but the offense bogged down, and the game suddenly turned sphincter-tightening when J-Shun Harris nearly housed Robbins's punt. Josh Metellus made a desperation tackle at the 16-yard line, but six plays later Ramsey hit Whop Philyor (a real name, that) for an eight-yard score.

Then things got really wild. With no timeouts left and 3:28 on the clock, Indiana went for an onsides kick, which took a high bounce that eluded Kekoa Crawford and went straight to IU's Simmie Cobbs for an apparent recovery. Cobbs, however, bobbled the ball ever so slightly as he stepped out of bounds, which the officials spotted live and upheld upon review—Michigan ball.

That allowed Higdon to run the clock down to 1:11, but he didn't convert a first down, and IU got the ball back on their 30-yard line after Michigan's school-record-setting 16th penalty added ten yards to a Robbins touchback. Two big pass plays by Ramsey, one to Luke Timian and the other to Cobbs, gave kicker Griffin Oakes a shot to send the game to overtime; his kick snuck just inside the right upright.


When Karan Higdon saw paydirt, he wouldn't be denied. [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

But Indiana remains Indiana. Michigan started with the ball in overtime and the Hoosiers initially stymied the first play. Higdon, who finished with 200 yards on 25 carries, eluded a defensive lineman in the backfield and bounced to the backside, gaining the edge and bolting down the sideline for his third touchdown.

"He was phenomenal," said Harbaugh. "I don't know how many yards he got after contact but those were tough yards. It looked like there'd be a tackle for loss, a small gain or no gain and he found a way to get four of five yards out of it."

The Hoosiers quickly worked their way to first-and-goal from the three. Gary surged though the line for a tackle for loss on first down, and after Ramsey missed J-Shun Harris in the end zone, he combined with Noah Furbush to stymie a Ramsey keeper. With the game down to one play, Chase Winovich put Ramsey under immediate pressure, and a desperation heave to Cobbs ended up in the hands of Tyree Kinnel. For the second time in as many trips to Memorial Stadium, the defense won the game with a goal-line stand.

"We were going to have to dig down deep to do it," said Harbaugh. "We responded with two tackles for loss, incompletion and an interception on the quarterback option route. It was a great four plays for us."

It sure wasn't pretty, and for large swaths it sure wasn't fun, but Michigan found a way to hold on and move to 5-1 on the season. Next weekend's trip to Happy Valley looms large, however, and could ugly fast if the Wolverines can't get a whole lot more out of John O'Korn, who managed only 58 yards passing on 20 attempts and had a horrible interception negated by an iffy pass interference call. Harbaugh probably has to stick with O'Korn at this point lest he want to throw a redshirt freshman QB behind a porous offensive line on the road against a top-five team. One way or the other, winning at Penn State is a tall order. For the time being, though, Michigan can at least enjoy the ride home.

"We move on to a big road game next week," said Harbaugh. "But this was a big game for our team. Mistakes were made, but it's something we can really grow from."

Comments

jackw8542

October 15th, 2017 at 9:33 AM ^

O'Korn is trying his best, taking hits that would leave most of us hospitalized and getting back up for more, while half of this board wants to crucify him, denigrate him or both.  It is childish and sickening.  As for me, I trust the coaches to be picking the best man available and appreciate the level of effort that O'Korn is showing play after play.  As the announcers said repeatedly, he does not lack courage. 

In case no one has looked at other results from the weekend, a number of the teams ranked above us failed to win a road game this weekend against teams that - based on their records - were not very good.  In addition, MSU barely beat Minnesota (which lost to Purdue a week ago, the same team O'Korn played so well against), and Wisconsin - one of the games many of you are already writing off - was at home and still barely beat Purdue.

There are too many quitters on this board who have given up without taking into account that a win is a win and without looking at what our upcoming opponents are doing.  O'Korn will keep trying to improve, because he is not a quitter, and that seems to be more than can be said about a great many of the commenters happy to rip him.

I certainly have NOT given up on this team.  It gives maximum effort on every single play, and we should not expect anything more than that.

Go Blue!  Beat Penn State!!

Blue Velvet

October 15th, 2017 at 12:47 PM ^

I've been at this for almost 50 years.  I will be a cradle to grave Michigan fan.  Let's lighten up and enjoy the win.  Before 2008, I couldn't imagine a losing season.  A 6-6 record in '84 was a bad as it could get, right?  And at least the 6th loss was to the national champion (BYU).  Well, things can get bad, as we now all know, but they could be much worse.  The team is 5-1.  The loss to State stings, still, and will all season.  But a win is better than a loss so let's happily fly the W this week -- unlike those at Clemson, Washington, etc. -- and hope we can surprise Penn State next week.  Go Blue!  

Soulfire21

October 15th, 2017 at 12:29 PM ^

I thought the Oline had a solid game. No sacks allowed and we had 271 yards on the ground and 3 rushing TDs. Passing game was .. bleak. Unfortunately, Purdue seems to be the outlier and O’Korn isn’t the savior we were hoping for. The penalties were frustrating. 16! Happy Valley will be a tough out but if we get a couple breaks...

Bertello NC

October 15th, 2017 at 2:36 PM ^

OL looked to have made a step. I like JBB in lieu of probably anyone else at this point. Especially in the run game. It gives us a little more experience on that right side. I guess what I’d like to see the offense work on a little more (outside of the run game which is improving) is the RO with OKorn. But imo what needs to happen is when those are called, OKorn needs to be more active and sell the threat of him actually keeping it. If he’s going to struggle some with making appropriate reads in the passing game and locking on to one route than he should take advantage of his running ability. I know he’s not quite a McSorley but he’s got enough athleticism if he commits to it and works on it to be a threat running it. Also know when to get down. Then they can incorporate pass options off of that. But if he’s not able to come off of one route standing in the pocket maybe he’d be more comfortable moving a little more. Rolling out, or passing out of a RPO type of concept. It might also free up routes downfield especially if our OL is hopefully starting to gel. At psu may not be the time to do it but I’d like to see a little more Kareem as well. Higdon, Evans, and maybe have Walker split a few more carries with Issac.

Blue Sharpie

October 15th, 2017 at 5:55 PM ^

Speight, JOK, and even Alex Malzone have been in Harbaugh’s system for all 3 years,I think. I remember at the 1st spring game coming away impressed with Malzone. Why in the heck can we not field a competent QB half way through season 3? We should have multiple dangerous scary competent QB’s by now! I can’t help but think the offense is way too complex and there is way too much to learn to do anything well. Dantonio said post game “we are very well coached...over 40 formations in the first half”! I think he hit the nail on the head and diagnosed our problem. Way too many plays to learn, and not many are executed well. If the best 2 QB’s on the team look confused and are missing easy throws, the only answer seems to dial back what is on their plate and make it simple for them. It is frustrating to see that we don’t trust any of our QB’s to throw over the middle at all, eliminating a large portion of the field to defend. If I am the opposite defensive coordinator, you know you don’t have to defend the middle vs Michigan! I can’t remember running hardly even a slant to anybody. Grant Perry could probably catch 5-10 slants a game. Lots of questions and no answers in sight.

You Only Live Twice

October 15th, 2017 at 9:31 PM ^

bla bla bla YEAR 3 bla bla bla

If either O'Korn or Speight had Chesson or Darboh, yesterday would have looked a whole lot different and so would O'Korn's numbers.

Maybe DPJ makes that catch but he's a true frosh and not Chesson or Darboh.

Maybe Grant Perry times his jump a little differently.  Another completion.

Maybe some of our new WR corps get yards after they catch the ball - in time they will - and the game looks a whole lot different, stats wise, momentum wise, score wise.

Stop saying thoroughly idiotic things like "lots of questions and no answers in sight."  You really aren't interested in the answers to your stupid questions.

 

You Only Live Twice

October 15th, 2017 at 10:32 PM ^

Your post is the opposite of lucid, and you certainly can't claim validity.  Ad hominem applies to you as well as your chosen attack targets.  Do you honestly think that saying lack of competence doesn't equate to you calling someone incompetent?  Someone whose shoes you wouldn't know how to step into.

Adjectives, adverbs and vague unsupported generalizations don't make you lucid or valid.  But I'm guessing you don't like to be called out.

Bertello NC

October 15th, 2017 at 10:00 PM ^

Ya it is somewhat puzzling. Maybe you’re right. Maybe with Jim’s NFL background with offenses it becomes very complex. Complex routes, reads and assignments. Takes all 11 to be totally in sync to make it work. Add in the fact that we have a lot of youth amongst the receivers and TE’s and it turns into the sludgefart we’ve been witnessing. That’s why I was thinking that implementing more RPO concepts into the offense and dial back the formations and routes that our receivers and tight ends have to carry out. JH had said early on in the season or even before the season that -yes, we have a lot of young guys playing pivotal roles, but we cannot dumb down the coaching for them. While he may be right and the offense will eventually maturate into something effective, it seems that there are tweaks that could be made to lessen the learning curve and let athletes be athletes and not have to retain so much. I’m not saying we need to throw the baby out with the bath water by any means but dumbing some things down and or tailoring the offense a bit to the players you have and QB you have might be something to consider. Who am I though.. just an armchair coach with an opinion.

gary3

October 15th, 2017 at 7:24 PM ^

...I'm really happy we beat Indiana. Keeps things even for the basketball disparity (that we're now starting to overcome, got that regulation win in Assembly Hall last year)