Michigan 35, Rutgers 14 Comment Count

Ace


The first of many touchdowns, one hopes. [Patrick Barron]

Welcome to the future.

After four drives for each team, Michigan found itself deadlocked at seven with lowly Rutgers in front of a listless homecoming crowd. Embattled quarterback John O'Korn had completed 3/6 passes for 13 yards with an interception and two dropped snaps. On what turned out to be his final snap of the afternoon, he passed up multiple open receivers to roll out of a clean pocket and throw in the direction of a very well-covered Donovan Peoples-Jones.

When the defense booted Rutgers off the field with 7:01 to play in the first half, ballyhooed redshirt freshman Brandon Peters entered in O'Korn's stead.

"They just told me to get warmed up," said Peters. "When we got the ball I was just standing there next to Harbaugh and he said let's go, you're in."

The crowd instantly came to life. So did the offense. Two Karan Higdon runs picked up 20 yards to open the drive, then Peters got going, connecting on passes to Ty Wheatley Jr., Henry Poggi, and Nico Collins for first downs before Higdon capped the drive with a ten-yard touchdown.

"I wasn't that nervous," said Peters. "Honestly it was a great opportunity to get out there. I was more excited and confident than nervous."

Peters didn't seem nervous. When Michigan got the ball at midfield with 1:49 to go in the half, he marched the team right into the red zone. He had a freshman moment, nearly throwing an interception on a slant to Grant Perry, but that didn't rattle him one bit. On the very next snap, he tossed a near-perfect* lob to Chris Evans on a wheel route for a 20-yard score. With one change in personnel, Michigan went being in a dogfight at home against Rutgers to blowing them out.

"I saw man coverage, one-on-one with Chris," said Peters. "I wanted to give him a chance to make a play and he made a great play on the ball."


The wheel route remains undefeated. [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Michigan had already made needed improvements elsewhere, and the insertion of Peters served to accentuate them. The offensive line had been opening holes in the running game, which featured a diverse array of powers, counters, outside zones, and crack sweeps. With opposition safeties finally forced to respect the pass, the backs found ample room to run. Higdon (158 yards on 18 carries) and Ty Isaac (109 on 14) both cracked the century mark; Michigan averaged 6.5 yards per carry.

The pass protection also looked vastly improved. O'Korn and Peters both consistently operated out of clean pockets; Peters did a better job of standing in and delivering. Michigan didn't take a sack.

Most importantly, Peters continued dealing. He finished 10/14 for 124 yards with a touchdown and no turnovers. He didn't lock on to a favorite target; ten different receivers caught passes for the Wolverines today. While Peters's stat line may not blow anyone away, he made it obvious he's the best option to run this team right now. His coach agreed.

"He really aquitted himself well," said Jim Harbaugh. "Moved the football team. Played very, very well. He did a lot. From the first time he went in there, just feeling the deep zone, feeling the linebackers drop, taking that extra half second to take a breath, take a checkdown. it was good ball. It was good."

Harbaugh probably didn't need to declare Peters the starter for next week's game against Minnesota, but he did so anyway.


Mo Hurst spearheaded another dominant defensive performance. [Campredon]

The defense needed no such fixing. Outside of a long Janarion Grant touchdown out of the wildcat and one drive in which Rutgers QB Giovanni Rescigno uncharacteristically connected on a couple NFL-level throws, they effectively held the Scarlet Knights to nothing. Rescigno dropped back to pass 21 times; he threw for 101 and took five sacks. Rutgers's pair of running backs combined for a mere 45 yards on 18 carries. Rutgers simply couldn't block Maurice Hurst, Rashan Gary, and Chase Winovich, and freshman DT Aubrey Solomon didn't look out of place on that line while getting the most extended playing time of his young career.

Higdon opened the fourth quarter with a 49-yard touchdown jaunt on a perfectly blocked power play to put Michigan up 35-14. A game that had already flown by didn't take long to wrap up from there. Rutgers wanted to get home. Michigan, one would like to think, was champing at the bit to get the Peters Era underway in earnest when he gets his first career start under the lights against Minnesota.

"It was time," said Harbaugh.

*Nitpickers will note it was a little short. Most Michigan fans, however, saw the skies part and heard angels sing.

Comments

NateVolk

October 29th, 2017 at 2:30 AM ^

There is something about "Told you so Harbaugh" that is just as clueless and lame as "Harbaugh's coaching is unacceptable". Both takes have run steady on here from a certain segment of fan since Michigan State.

There are many other far more likely possibilities which account for everything we've seen (including today's game).

As far as reality I'll throw my money on "Harbaugh's timing was 100% correct" or "Peters might prove to actually not be near as ready as playing Rutgers makes him appear" as possibilities as well.

 

 

 

Mr. McBlue and…

October 29th, 2017 at 9:14 AM ^

The 10 other men in Blue seemed to respond to the energy the fan base and Peters brought in after the switch. Not that they’ll ever admit it but I’m curious if O’Korn lost the huddle and Harbaugh sensed it after the second dropped snap. Historically a 7-7 tie has not been the ideal time to bring in a Freshman but with the team not responding well at the time the timing was ripe for a switch. Best thing that could have happened was that first complete pass. After that was just a team playing ball together.

Either way, Rutgers is just one game. Time for the team to get better 1% better today than yesterday and move onward and upward.

Curious about the challenge MN will bring next weekend with Fleck in charge.

Eschstreetalum

October 29th, 2017 at 6:55 AM ^

Under Harbaugh we are finally going to be a bona fide power in the next year or two with a program that reloads every year. Lets not forget the lessons from wandering in the wilderness for the last ten years. And lets not become like OSU fans who bitched all night about the refs until the last 2 minutes where it shifted to a "great game."

EGD

October 29th, 2017 at 9:12 AM ^

Agreed. The PI call that took away Webb's interception was ludicrous. Then the reversal of the simultaneous possession INT/TD was very questionable--I did think the PSU guy had enough of the ball to call it a TD but agreed with Klatt that there wasn't indisputable video evidence. Both of those were huge calls, without which OSU probably wins easily.

gtwill

October 29th, 2017 at 9:40 AM ^

I may have missed this if it was commented already, but there was either a Michigan O lineman or a tight end wearing #97 that had no name on the jersey. Any idea who that was?

RedRum

October 29th, 2017 at 9:58 AM ^

Brandon Peters play. Good win. Does anyone want to second guess why JH waited to play Peters? I don't know where the coaches would be with out us. Anyway, back to YouTube so I can pretend I'm a sophisticated play dissector. Coaching, from my perch, appears pretty easy.

Blue in PA

October 29th, 2017 at 10:41 AM ^

Gunna admit..... I drank a lot when we ran a 4th & 1 with anyone other than Hill..... and we were given a spot that could have gone either way.

I also drank a lot when we gave up a 60+ yard rushing TD.

Silly question..... if the offensive play calling was dumbed down for Peters (as was claimed by the crew calling the game)... Why the fuck didn't they dumb it down for J O'K?

 

Peters benefited from an O line that played much better than it has in the past several weeks, had he been in a few games earlier he would have been just as beat up as J O'K was.

 

Looks good, here's to the Peter's era beginning..

 

GO BLUE

RJWolvie

October 29th, 2017 at 10:14 PM ^

Have I just not noticed this before & lots of players wear pads above knees only? And I’m noticing it on Peters because he also doesn’t wear his socks up? It’s freaking me out, man; we need his knees kept whole, man!