Michigan 45, Colorado 28 Comment Count

Ace


Jabrill Peppers left the Buffaloes (and his coach) in awe. [Patrick Barron/MGoBlog]

After one quarter, Colorado had a 21-7 lead, outgained Michigan 195 yards to 66, and flat-out looked like the better team.

"We knew it wouldn't be a fairy tale all year," said Jake Butt. "We knew we'd get punched in the face."

Michigan punched back, hard. The Buffaloes gained 130 yards for the rest of the game. Michigan had 331. If Kenny Allen hadn't missed a pair of field goals, the Wolverines even would've covered the 20-point spread.

Early on, Colorado's up-tempo offense and athletic defense caught the Wolverines by surprise. Jabrill Peppers was caught out of position on a deep post for Colorado's first touchdown, then the Buffs went up by 14 less than a minute later when Chidobe Awuzie forced a Wilton Speight fumble that Derek McCartney took back 18 yards for a score. Speight, either shaken or hurt on the hit, had a tough time dialing in after that. If not for a blocked punt by Michael Jocz that Grant Perry took in for a touchdown, Colorado would've exited the first quarter up by 21 after another Sefo Liufao touchdown pass.

Then Michigan adjusted. The defensive front got to Liufau time and again, eventually forcing him out of the game with an apparent ankle injury, though not before Liufau somehow bombed a 70-yard touchdown off one leg to Shay Fields to open the second-half scoring. They shut down the Colorado running game entirely, and the Fields touchdown was the only big play after a first quarter full of them. Don Brown is paid good money for a reason.


[Bryan Fuller/MGoBlog]

The offense slowly but surely picked it up, too. With Khalid Hill leading the way in authoritative fashion, Jehu Chesson got the corner for a 17-yard jet sweep touchdown. Amara Darboh gave Michigan the proverbial momentum swing they needed on a 45-yard screen, stiff-arming a defender to the ground on his way to the end zone with only 33 seconds left in the half. Despite a disastrous start, Michigan led 24-21 at the break.

Colorado landed another big shot with the Fields touchdown. Michigan responded in kind with a pitch to De'Veon Smith on the second play of the ensuing drive; Smith hardly had to do anything on a 42-yard jaunt down the sideline on perhaps the best-blocked run play of this young season. The Wolverines finally grabbed control of the game when a long catch-and-run by Grant Perry set up a one-yard touchdown for Ty Isaac to give M a 38-28 lead heading into the fourth quarter.

Then Jabrill Peppers, having a remarkable all-around game, launched his Heisman campaign. Peppers already had three punt returns and a kickoff return that were a block or two away from reaching the end zone when Colorado lined up to punt from deep in their own territory; a line-drive kick went right to Peppers's chest, and he exploded up the middle, overcoming a cramp at the five-yard line to at long last tally his first return touchdown in a Michigan uniform.

"It was definitely a sense of relief," said Peppers. "If I don't score there, then they needed to put someone else back there."

Peppers's overall stat line boggles the mind: two rushes for 24 yards, four punt returns for 99 yards and a TD, two kickoff returns for 81 yards, nine tackles (six solo), 3.5 TFLs, and a thunderous sack.

"Above all, Jabrill Peppers proved that he was the best player in today's game," said Jim Harbaugh, who praised the talent level on both teams. "We don't win that game without Jabrill Peppers."

"That's a team effort, but... wow," Harbaugh added.

Peppers wasn't the only Paramus Catholic graduate to provide some honest-to-god wow experiences. Rashan Gary recorded 1.5 TFLs and a pair of QB hurries; even better, he eliminated the mental errors that allowed UCF to pick up big gains on the ground last week. 

Michigan leaves this game with plenty to work on. Dymonte Thomas, Delano Hill, and Peppers all had coverage busts that led to big plays. Speight's performance didn't equal those he had in the season's first two weeks. Allen, who looked either injured or overwhelmed by his workload, struggled in all phases of the kicking game.

"To be honest I think we did [need a game like this]," said Butt. "We can look back and learn from this."

With Penn State and Wisconsin up next on the schedule, it won't take long to find out how well they've learned those lessons.

Comments

adcough

September 17th, 2016 at 9:27 PM ^

if their QB doesn't get hurt, not sure about the outcome. if M wins despite his coming back, then we can pat the coaches for adjustments. but big time reality check. watching OSU, UM is not on the same level as those cats. besides Jabrill (who did have some gaffes), UM doesn't have enough playmakers on defense. let's see when Taco/JD/(Mone) come back to see UM legit. right now, not so sure. 

JBombs3224

September 18th, 2016 at 11:28 AM ^

It's nice to see the team make solid adjustments throughout the course of the game. There was some sloppy tackling and some blown coverages but they cleaned things up a bit and responded well to the early deficit. Between coaching adjustments and getting a few key defensive players back, I am expecting even better performances down the road. Our punt return is something special right now. Try to get down field right away to get to Peppers and you risk a punt block. Keep guys in to block and you give up some serious return yardage. I love their aggressiveness and it sure helps to have a game changing player back there.

jmblue

September 17th, 2016 at 9:33 PM ^

For those watching on TV - did they say anything about Speight getting dinged up?  It was clear that we didn't want to throw downfield at all in the second half.

 

jmblue

September 17th, 2016 at 10:41 PM ^

Just watching him throw in the game, it looked like something was wrong.  His velocity didn't seem to be there.  A lot of his passes seemed to flutter.  By the second half our passing offense was basically reduced to a series of screens.   

 

 

 

Brimley

September 18th, 2016 at 12:22 PM ^

In his on-field interview with BTN, he alluded to having something going on.  He said something like, "Our trainers are terrific and I'm sure I'll be ready for next week."  They were working on something under his jersey in-game so maybe a shoulder or ribs??  Obviously not enough to have Harbaugh turn to O'Korn anyway.

Padog

September 17th, 2016 at 9:46 PM ^

I get excited thinking about this defense with Lewis, Taco and Mone. Lewis is a huge asset, being able to practically play 10-10 for the whole game will help a lot moving forward.



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Michigan4Life

September 17th, 2016 at 9:47 PM ^

to launch his Heisman campaign this month considering on how ridiculous Lamar Jackson has been this year so far.

Lamar Jackson's stats:

913 passing yards with 8 TDs

464 rushing yards with 10 TDs

He only played about a game and half worth of PT this season which is ridiculous.

 

Jabrill's punt returns and offensive contribution is going to help his case but if Lamar continues his torrid pace which I imagine he will, it's going to be tough for anyone to beat out Lamar.

BayWolves

September 17th, 2016 at 10:27 PM ^

Peppers is a man among boys. I hope he returns because he is the man, period. Khalid Hill is perhaps the most unsung yet essential player on this team. Guy is making excellent blocks and catches and just destroys fuckers. Once the o line gets rolling and we are healthy again on defense we will be absolutely crushing fools. No joke, B.



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RobM_24

September 17th, 2016 at 10:31 PM ^

People bitch when it's "bend don't break". People bitch when we give up 70+ yard TDs. We're missing 3 of our top defenders, and we won by multiple scores. We may not be Alabama yet, but remember back to the Hoke and RichRod years.

HarleyMarlboro

September 17th, 2016 at 10:36 PM ^

Speight himself said after the game that he had never been hit as hard as he had been in the 1st quarter when he lost that ball.  The kid was rocked hard, and it took a little while for him to recover.  The passing game is still way ahead of where it was last year at this time, and we all know how that turned out.  

Alabama has proven that you don't need a major 1st round QB to win national championships if you have all the other components.  We're close with everything else.  Speight is more than good enough.

Steve333

September 17th, 2016 at 10:50 PM ^

Poggi is not a good run blocker. Watching the game he seems like he's looking to block a stationary guy and then when the guy tries to sidestep, Poggi blocks air.



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MechE

September 17th, 2016 at 10:54 PM ^

Speight's stats through 3 games as a redshirt sophmore: 51/80 (63.8%), 8TD, 1 INT. 

Clearly we should bench him, no sense in developing this underclassman further. Especially considering how successful benching our past starting QBs has been (Benching Gardner for Morris, benching Threet for Sheridan).

CAwolverine

September 18th, 2016 at 10:12 AM ^

You made a good point until your last sentence, that's when the train went off the rails. Comparing O'Korn and today's Morris to previous QBs under a different regime that clearly couldn't develop QBs has zero relevance especially as JH said all three were extremely close to win the starting job unlike last year.

Michifornia

September 17th, 2016 at 10:55 PM ^

Speight will learn from this game.  Jabrill is the man and Rashan is going to be an unbelievable Wolverine.

Take the win.  Big 10 should be intense.  Hate the suckeyes and state.

GO BLUE!!