Michigan 35, Maryland 10 Comment Count

Ace


[Paul Sherman/MGoBlog]

Jim Harbaugh must be so disappointed.

Once upon a time, when Maryland coach DJ Durkin was Harbaugh's young assistant at Stanford, the two locked horns in one of the most competitive games of one-on-one "basketball" on record.

"It took like an hour and a half, and it ended 4-3 or whatever," recalls former Stanford offensive tackle Ben Muth. "Neither of them would call a foul. Someone did in the first five minutes, the other guy made fun of him, so it was on from there.

"It was like that James Caan 'Rollerball' movie, basically a fight to the death."

Today, Durkin called for not one, but two Sad Field Goals on fourth-and-short situations with his team down 28-0. Henry Darnstadster connected from 20 yards on the second, most depressing attempt with 19 seconds left in the third quarter, ensuring Maryland wouldn't be shut out. James Franklin would be proud.

Given (1) Maryland's white flag, (2) an unfortunate series of hopefully minor injuries, and (3) the desire not to put anything on film for Wisconsin and Ohio State, Michigan went into a shell. The offense went run-run-pass or run-screen-run for most of the fourth quarter, resulting in some quick exits. The Terps put together a couple decent drives, even managing to score a touchdown on one. A certain segment of the fanbase found this quite alarming.

Then Chris Evans jumped over a guy, bulled through two tackles on his way to the end zone on the next play, and kicked the Terrapin corpse.

The game was already over, no matter what Glen Mason said. Michigan jumped all over Maryland from the start, establishing the duo of Karan Higdon and Chris Evans early. The two combined for 44 yards on Michigan's second drive before Henry Poggi, playing in his home state, plunged in from two yards for a 7-0 lead. After Brandon Peters broke the pocket and found Higdon for a 35-yard catch-and-run, Evans covered the remaining 16 yards on four rushes, diving in from a yard out to bring the margin to 14.


The defense held Maryland to 3.0 yards per play in the first half. [Sherman]

The Wolverines broke it wide open four plays later, stuffing Jacquille Veii on an ill-advised fake punt in Maryland territory, then striking on the next snap with a 33-yard touchdown pass from Peters to Zach Gentry. Josh Metellus gave the offense great field position once again with a remarkably casual blocked punt on the following Terrapin drive. After a 16-yard Higdon run to set up first-and-goal, Peters found Sean McKeon wide open on a waggle.

Michigan missed an opportunity to extend the blowout even further before the half. Maryland's best drive of the day got them into a goal-to-go situation, but on third down, fourth-string quarterback Ryan Brand—the latest injury replacement at QB for Maryland—panicked under heavy pressure from Rashan Gary and Josh Uche, throwing a duck that David Long plucked out of the air and ran all the way back to the Maryland 20. The offense went three-and-out; for the third straight game, Quinn Nordin missed a kick, this one from only 31 yards out.

Even so, Michigan held a 212-112 edge in yardage at halftime to go with a 28-0 lead. Peters was averaging ten yards per attempt even though Maryland got away with some very physical coverage early. The backs were plugging along at five yards a pop. The defense was the defense.


Evans' late hurdle and subsequent TD made the final score more fitting. [Sherman]

After stopping Maryland, Michigan went three-and-out on their opening drive of the second half. That'd be the last time this game had a whiff of competitiveness, as Durkin elected to try a 43-yard field goal on fourth-and-two with under eight minutes to play in the third quarter. To cut a four-score game to a four-score game. Some pity points for the home crowd. The kicker missed.

From there, little of actual note occurred. There was a successful Sad Field Goal. The Terps scored a touchdown. Evans responded on the next drive with his leap-and-score sequence. In an unfortunate way to prove why Harbaugh shelved most of the playbook in favor of clock-chewing, multiple Wolverines got dinged up; Higdon exited after the first half with a right ankle injury, Long had to put a brace on his left knee, Lavert Hill suffered a concussion, and Rashan Gary walked off favoring his arm. After the game, Harbaugh said "we'll see" about the status of those four players.

Peters kneeled the game out inside the Maryland ten.

The final stats show a Maryland advantage of 340-305 in total yardage. That's a hollow victory for the Terps in a game that got out of hand early and featured several short fields for Michigan—there were only so many available yards to gain in the first half. Don't be fooled: this was a blowout with nearly a full half of garbage time. Durkin certainly treated it that way.

Next week in Madison, Michigan can start emptying out the playbook.

Comments

Glennsta

November 12th, 2017 at 7:08 AM ^

But I'd feel better about a good shot at the last 2 games had our offense begun to bring out and execute with regularity SOME elements of what we all presume is an infinitely deep playbook.  Tricky things like pass protection and the ability to complete passes downfield would have been nice to see.

But seriously, all you can go by in football is by looking at the past.  It's not rational to presume that things that haven't happened before are suddenly going to start happening, in football or anywhere.  Yes, teams improve (this team has) and lights go on inside heads but until you see the commensurate performance in a game, you can't predict that it will happen. 

And yeah, I know that some of us have a huge element of hope mixed with faith in this coaching staff.  I have some of that too.  But I'm not presuming that we are going to look much better in the passing game in the remainder of the schedule.

SMart WolveFan

November 12th, 2017 at 11:01 AM ^

"It's not rational to presume that things that haven't happened before are suddenly going to start happening, in football or anywhere."

What are you a single cell organism? A Quark? A Big Bang Thingy?

Because we complicated lifeforms are defined by the fact that things that haven't happened before suddenly started happing inside us.

And sports even moreso are enfluenced by this: the cubs, a Cleveland tltle, redsox, lions SB!

 

Johnno123456

November 11th, 2017 at 11:21 PM ^

It strikes me that Peppers, Hudson, and now Bush, among others, could have had game changing plays if the sensitivity of nerve endings in their hands was top-of-brain for them.  Obviously it makes more sense to concentrate on other musculature to stop the run; yet, are there science museum-type hand experiences that might inspire grip alacrity?

Reader71

November 11th, 2017 at 11:26 PM ^

Vanilla playbook is another fan fantasy on the level of great backup QB. And they have the same root — we really want to believe that there’s a quick fix for deeper problems. There usually isn’t, which kinda sucks.

M-Dog

November 12th, 2017 at 12:46 PM ^

Exactly.

Our first, second, and third issues are pass-protection.  That's not fixable on a trick play or two.

That's why our defense can give up a drive or two and still hold the other team to 10 points and 100 yards passing.  The other team can't consistently keep us out of the backfield, even if they can trick us once or twice.

A sophisticated playbook is not sustainable without effective pass-protection.  It's a fantasy that we are stiing on a dozen game-winning plays that we are just not showing yet.

 

 

 

uminks

November 11th, 2017 at 11:32 PM ^

A lot of you are making WI sound as good or better than Alabama.  WI is a good team but there is a chance we could beat them, I'm just hoping we can find a way to win. Our redzone scoring has really improved since Peters has taken over at QB.

WolverineMan1988

November 11th, 2017 at 11:48 PM ^

We can all sit here and say Michigan "went vanilla" in the second half but the reality is they got beat 10-7 in the second half and were outplayed. Those are the facts. What that says about the next two games I have no idea. I am fairly confident that Michigan does not have a ton of formations and plays that they are holding back. I think injuries on offense have continued to mount and limit what this team can do offensively. I anticipate points being hard to come by in our next two games. Defense might be able to keep us in it but I won't be surprised if we open up as two touchdown underdogs to Wisconsin. I desperately want them to pull an upset in one of these last two games but I am certainly not expecting it.

snarling wolverine

November 12th, 2017 at 12:40 AM ^

Well no, the reality is not that we “got beat.” We beat Maryland 35-10. That’s the nice thing about going up 28-0 at half - it makes the second half inconsequential for the winning team. When a game is 28-0 at half, the losing team is thinking “We’ve gotta score at least 28.” The winning team OTOH is just thinking “Win the game.” We need to get better but the “Maryland won the second half” stuff is dumb. If “winning the second half” actually mattered, Jim wouldn’t have taken a knee at the end of the game, when we were inside their five.

Jim HarBo

November 12th, 2017 at 12:01 AM ^

Evans double jump was in the first half of the game, not the lone TD in the second half. The one in the second half involved him running up the middle on a well blocked play.

Blue in PA

November 12th, 2017 at 6:05 AM ^

It was interesting to see us running a read option offense....  When J O'K took over after Wilt's injury, and the O Line was still struggling with run blocking, I thought we'd need to run some read option to generate rushing yards.

 

It sucked that BP missed a wide open DPJ for what would have been a 50+ yard TD, but over all his passing was decent.

 

Is anyone interested in 2 seats for the last game of the year?  

HimJarbaugh

November 12th, 2017 at 7:53 AM ^

I will take no turnovers and one penalty on the road. Metellus had a great game. Higdon is seeing everything and I hope he is ok.

Wisky and OSU are going to try to get after Peters so the screens and quick stuff was good but they will cover those so he has to make good reads nonetheless. I am not concerned about his accuracy that much and loved that he overthrew DPJ. I think they connect soon.

GhostofJermain…

November 12th, 2017 at 8:43 AM ^

Heard both Karan and Long have braces on and walking with assistance?  I think we need them both to win at Wisky.  High ankle is usually 2-3 weeks, but kid is a warrior, any help from MichiganMan would be greatly appreciated.  Or if anyone else has any updates, go blue, beat wisky!

AA Forever

November 12th, 2017 at 9:08 AM ^

of a certain segment of the fanbase that any time the team looks blah and vanilla, it's part of a 11-dimensional master plan to lull the team we're playing four weeks down the road into thinking we only have 4 plays in the playbook.  The reality is more typically that we simply don't have enough well developed and well-coached talent to allow more complex and well-conceived plays.  

Maybe if you're playing a cupcake in game 1 and a top 5 opponent in game 2 you hold back some of your playbook, but after that, it's just bullshit.  

BlockedAccount

November 12th, 2017 at 8:52 AM ^

Lol, can start emptying the playbook? the coaches aren't "keeping anything from going on film". They can't call anything more. the line can't pass pro. the running game is good against bad teams. this team is what was expected, young, learning, etc. stop sitting up on your high horses, Brian and ace, and act like this is all part of a master plan. y'all said the same shit last year, and then the play calling never changed. peppers never got anything more. it's okay. this team is talented, yes, but maybe not ready? let's just sit back and enjoy the ride. the next 2 weeks are the biggest tests to date. let's hope for a split.

brad

November 12th, 2017 at 9:24 AM ^

This is just a friendly heads up to Michigan fans.

If you can’t be satisfied watching M go into halftime with a 28-0 lead after domination in all three phases, and then play to a draw in the second half for the win, you will probably never be satisfied.

The negative reactions to this game are stupefying.

AA Forever

November 12th, 2017 at 9:56 AM ^

And I guarantee that if we go into halftime against Wisconsin and OSU with a 28-0 lead and play even in the second half and finish 10-2, everyone here will be satisfied.  The realists here are simply acknowledging the fact that doing it against Maryland is not that much to be impressed by, and that if we play no better than this the next two weeks, we'll get our asses kicked.

NateVolk

November 12th, 2017 at 10:25 AM ^

We're intelligent enough to know what the team can and can't do at this point (for the most part). 

Passing effectively in obvious passing down and distances is not something we can do from my viewpoint. So take that off the table as something we'll likely do well against way better opponents.

8 wins and maybe 9 with the bowl would be great. Winning one of the next two would be greater than that. But there is zero body of evidence we can achieve balance against quality defenses. 

Pessimism for the next two games is warranted at this point.

But what baffles me is the people on here convinced they know more than Harbaugh and the coaches about effective playcalling and substitutions.  It's been going on for weeks on here. You come off as foolish when you engage in it.

 

SMart WolveFan

November 12th, 2017 at 11:15 AM ^

...it might be easier for all of you to relax and enjoy the ride, how well we have played so far is not a real element in the current chaos of CFB.

The reality was this year UofM had a lot of uncertainty going in and while they haven't answered all of it, they seem to be closer than a lot of teams and have ridden the lows so far, maybe more highs are to come.

So maybe they steal a win at Camp Randall because they are F'n due, and no matter what squad lines up against them at the big house for the game, I don't see OSU coming away with a win.

MGoStrength

November 12th, 2017 at 11:32 AM ^

Why do we have so much trouble getting the ball to our WRs and why do we seem so inept at hitting open WRs on deep balls?  Based on Peters early throws, nice touch, and ability to vary speed and trajectory of his passes I assumed that he'd be a good deep ball thrower, and maybe he still will be, but he continues to miss DPJ on deep balls.  Is this a Peters thing, a DPJ thing, or just a inexperience thing?  It seems unlikely that QB after QB at UM seems to be unable to hit the deep ball.  Maryland is on their 4th? QB this season and they accurately hit a number of deep balls against us.  I find this frustratingly annoying.

 

I don't mean to be doom and gloom in a victory.  We won the game.  Peters has been a clear upgrade from JOK with his accuracy, ability to hit check downs, and way fewer turnovers.  But, eventually we are gonna have to hit some of these deep balls and get the WRs involved more if we're gonna make it a game against Wiscy and OSU.

M-Dog

November 12th, 2017 at 12:14 PM ^

It's a pass-protection issue. 

The QB's are usually under duress immediately, and they are jumpy to get rid of the ball quickly.  Even when they do have the time to wind up and throw, it's unexpected. 

They are not confident that they will have the time when the play starts, and they throw like it.

 

 

M-Dog

November 12th, 2017 at 11:35 AM ^

You can't read anything into the second half of the game.  I was there and it was the most dis-interested 2nd half of a game I've ever seen by everybody in the stadium.

Michigan had a big lead, Maryland was inept, it got very cold, dark, the Michigan fans were checked out, the Maryland fans had already left.  Everybody was just going through the motions. 

Once Maryland got up to 10 points to get within 3 scores in the 4th, Michigan slowly started ramping back up again.  Once Evans got his last TD, mostly on his own, they shut it down again.

Everybody just wanted to go home.

Ajcoss

November 12th, 2017 at 12:45 PM ^

Couldn't watch the game yesterday, had a wedding. I followed on my phone, but see some talking about some key injuries. Anyone know who got hurt and the likelihood of them playing against Wisconsin?

Gary?
Higdon?
L. Hill?
D. Long?

Some big names if these are the guys who got hurt.