[Patrick Barron]

Michigan 49, Michigan State 0 Comment Count

Alex.Drain October 22nd, 2023 at 1:11 AM

There was little fanfare in this year's edition of the Battle for the Paul Bunyan Trophy. No heart-stopping endings, nor brutality in the catacombs of the stadium afterwards, just a total beatdown by one team of the other. Michigan State did reasonably well against the run but got eviscerated by Michigan's passing offense no matter who the QB was. In the process, Michigan defeated Michigan State 49-0 in a margin that was exceptional for the history of the rivalry and the game itself was arguably even less competitive than the margin suggested. Once again, the opposition did not belong on the same field as the mighty Wolverines but this time, it was the in-state rival. 

Michigan got the ball to start the game, a dubious Semaj Morgan decision to return the kick setting them back at their own 16 to start. MSU got an early opportunity to get off the field with the Wolverine offense facing a 3rd & 14 from the 29, but couldn't get the stop when JJ McCarthy rolled and connected with AJ Barner down the field for a beautiful catch near midfield. Another pass to Roman Wilson across the middle and down the sideline got Michigan in a goal-to-go situation and three Blake Corum runs finished it off. One drive into the game and Michigan had the seven points that would ultimately prove enough to win. 

Michigan State's first drive was one of their most successful of the game, moving up to midfield before being faced with a 4th & 2. The Spartans attempted to run down the throat of Michigan's impeccable defensive interior and found no room to do so, with help from linebacker Junior Colson and DB Mike Sainristil on the stop. Michigan had favorable field position but again got their drive going through a 3rd & long pickup. This time it was a pass to Donovan Edwards and one play later, JJ McCarthy found Roman Wilson for Wilson's 10th receiving TD of the season. That mark is now the high in the Jim Harbaugh era for a receiver, passing the nine for Jehu Chesson in 2015. 

 

[Bryan Fuller]

The visitors had a commanding 14-0 edge and would get the ball back quickly after forcing a three-and-out, a drive ending in a near-interception for Josh Wallace against TE Maliq Carr. Michigan got the ball back on their own 34 for the third drive, cashing in a 3rd & 8 from McCarthy to Colston Loveland on the final play of the first quarter. Blake Corum ran it well to start the second quarter and Donovan Edwards balanced #2 out by getting Michigan into the red zone on a pitch play. McCarthy then took a strange sack that lost eight yards but made up for it by hitting Loveland in the end zone on a jump ball pass down the seam. 21-0. 

The next three drives of the game were all three-and-outs, MSU's offense continually unable to find any traction against the Michigan defense. They had no running room on the ground and Katin Houser had neither the time nor the accuracy to pick up the situations the inept rushing game put them in. Michigan's fourth scoring drive began in MSU territory after a kick-catch interference call on MSU's Alante Brown and only seven plays were necessary to get the Wolverines into the end zone. A JJ McCarthy scramble was perhaps the highlight of that period before the eventual touchdown, another beautiful ball to Colston Loveland for a 22-yard TD pass. 28-0. 

There were now under three minutes to go in the first half and though MSU did gain one first down, Michigan was able to get another stop and use its timeouts to get the ball back with time. The final play of that Spartan drive was Michigan's first sack, credited to Josaiah Stewart but with an assist to Michael Barrett, who helped chip the blocker who Stewart was engaged with.

[Bryan Fuller]

Michigan got the ball on their own 20 with just 99 seconds to go in the half and marched right down the field, getting basically anything they wanted through the air. The tight ends again were the stars, Loveland and Barner each hauling in chunk plays as Michigan drove down near the goal line. Unfortunately, Michigan ran out of time when Donovan Edwards was flagged for a false start, one that was questionable as to whether it was a penalty, as well as whether the 10 second runoff it came with should've ended the half (it seemed the infraction was with 12 seconds left, not eight). Despite the end of half clunkiness, Michigan went into the break up 28-0 on the scoreboard and 339-51 in yardage. 

MSU's first drive of the second half, like their first of the game, was one of their best. They entered Michigan territory, picking up a 3rd & 9 to Maliq Carr and a nice 10 yard run by RB Nathan Carter keeping the chains moving. However, an ineligible man penalty and a false start set MSU behind the sticks and eventually put them in a 4th & 7 from the Michigan 49, which they went for. Katin Houser's pass was intended for Tre Mosley but was horribly thrown, straight into the arms of Sainristil, who galloped down the sideline, barely staying in bounds, 72 yards for a touchdown. While Sainristil was running it back to the house, Spartan OT Spencer Brown mauled Michigan EDGE Braiden McGregor while he was on the ground, a dirty play that was deemed to be a "flagrant" personal foul, leading to the immediate ejection of Brown. 35-0. 

The Spartans got the ball right back and again went three-and-out, Carter losing yards on a pitch play that Michigan had dead to rights. MSU punted and Michigan's first drive of the second half would also be JJ McCarthy's final drive of the game. The game continued to get rougher as Blake Corum's run had 30 extra yards tacked onto it, 15 yards for hands to the face during the play and 15 more for a late hit out of bounds after the play. Corum was facemasked on his next run, zooming Michigan all the way to MSU's 11 and McCarthy hooked up with Barner for a TD right after. 42-0. 

[Patrick Barron]

From this point forward, the game was firmly in garbage time. Michigan's defensive starters began to enter the game, while on offense Corum and McCarthy were lifted for the likes of Ben Hall and Jack Tuttle. MSU had one drive at the end of the third quarter that entered Michigan territory before a failed screen, TFL, and incomplete pass forced a Spartan punt. Tuttle's second drive made progress but a series of penalties, one on Gio El-Hadi and one on Josh Beetham, killed it. The Spartans eventually inserted third string QB Sam Leavitt into the game in an attempt to get him snaps. Leavitt led a drive that trudged into Michigan territory but his 4th & 15 pass to Brennan Parachek came up one yard short of the first down. Michigan inserted Jayden Denegal, who ran a short drive that was unsuccessful. 

The final excitement of the game came at the end, when Leavitt was intercepted by nickel Ja'Den McBurrows, giving Michigan the ball at the MSU 33 with 3:10 to go. Alex Orji made his second appearance of the season at QB and ran QB keepers over and over again. Michigan was content to run the clock out and finish the game, but a personal foul on MSU's Maverick Hansen made Michigan run one more play, which Orji took into the end zone from six yards out with eight seconds left. James Turner split the uprights and Michigan had a final score of 49-0. 

This edition of the rivalry was a complete and utter beatdown. MSU keyed in on the running game and had reasonable success against it, but the passing stats for Michigan shows off the extent of this demolition. Michigan QBs were cumulatively 28/35 for 357 yards and 4 TDs, JJ McCarthy himself responsible for 21/27 for 287 and all the touchdowns. There is a reasonable case for this being McCarthy's best game as a Michigan QB, completely dialed in and dominant in every way. His ability to work off schedule and without structure, scrambling to create for himself, was magnificent. 

[Bryan Fuller]

The heroes on offense outside of McCarthy were the TEs, Barner and Loveland. Barner caught eight passes for 99 yards and a score, Loveland hauling in four for 79 yards and two TDs. Toss in Marlin Klein's garbage time catch and the TEs accounted for nearly half of the Michigan catches in this game. Blake Corum rushed 15 times for 59 yards and a TD as the Michigan offense gained 477 yards on 69 plays, a sizzling 6.9 YPP average. There were few things to complain about tonight on offense, as Michigan could easily have scored into the 60s or 70s had McCarthy and the starters not left the game.

On defense Michigan was dominant, holding MSU to 190 yards at 3.3 YPP, and that's with the second/third-team defense playing an extensive stretch of the game. Katin Houser and Sam Leavitt combined to go 16/29 for 133 (4.6 Y/A) through the air, while MSU rushed for barely 2.0 YPC on the ground. Michigan's defensive line thoroughly whipped the MSU OL and coverage was quite good all-around. Factor in MSU's lack of discipline, 11 penalties for 102 yards, and this was a matchup of two teams that did not belong on the field with each other. 

Michigan's win over MSU gives them two in a row in this rivalry and four out of six dating back to 2018. It was the largest margin of victory for either team in the rivalry in the last half century, passing 2002's 46 points for Michigan (a 49-3 win in Ann Arbor). MSU was shutout in Spartan Stadium for the first time in the rivalry since 1985 and this game was Michigan's first shutout of the 2023 football season. Through eight games, Michigan's defense has allowed 47 points and the opposition has still not run a single play inside the ten this season. 

Jim Harbaugh's Michigan squad goes into the bye week playing as well as any team in America. They are 8-0 for the second consecutive season and riding a lengthy conference regular season winning streak. The next week will be one for rest, before the Wolverines are back in action at Michigan Stadium against Purdue on November 4. That game does not have a time nor a broadcast channel at this time. 

[Click the JUMP for the box score]

Comments

dragonchild

October 22nd, 2023 at 12:37 PM ^

OMG the dirty hits were on another level this time.  So glad no one's seriously hurt (AFAIK).  Michigan also got chippy, which is stupid (I hope Herbert has a word with the team), but I can hardly blame them.  Whenever Michigan got the ball down, they immediately got up and moved away.  Sparty wanted to wrestle on every damn down.  Stupid as it is, I would've cracked in the first quarter.

It even looked to me like Michigan had a "Sparty drill" in place where teammates always hurried to the spot after the whistle to make sure Sparty didn't pull anything, and at times it looked like that was needed.

Crissakes, who were the idiots here saying "move on"?  Sparty clearly hasn't moved on at all; apparently they couldn't even wait until after the game this time.  On some drives the offense was marching down the field because MSU had given up on the game in favor of maiming as many Michigan players as possible.  I don't think the refs were being all that pedantic; MSU was giving them no choice.

That was something.  If you give up on the game to injure the other team, you're not a football player anymore; you're a violent piece of shit in a football uniform.

CGordini

October 22nd, 2023 at 1:16 AM ^

This was the worst beatdown of Michigan State since 1947.

Which would have a better Fun History Fact to display on the scoreboards before the game than what was actually shown.


...


That game was a very long, slow, extended build up until the physical event, which eventually, finally climaxed into a very satisfying release of pent up frustration...and the Spartans phoned it in.

 

stephenrjking

October 22nd, 2023 at 1:25 AM ^

I can't remember the last time I was this satisfied with a win over MSU. 1997? 1996?

Michigan brought with them the memories of last year's ugly tunnel assault. And then had one assistant's apparent attempts to do something every team does, decipher opponent signals, turn into a national controversy.

Michigan responded by carving through MSU's defense like a knife through butter. The defense barely ceded anything. By the time a suboptimal event of any kind happened, Michigan was up 21-0 and the only question to be answered was the final score. 

JJ was absolutely brilliant. No Michigan QB has ever had a better command of the passing offense, been more comfortable making reads, been more adept at moving out of the pocket and then making a pass. The protection was pretty good today, but when JJ broke the pocket and then looked downfield, you knew he was going to complete the pass. I've never seen a Michigan QB who can do that. 

And he has targets. Roman Wilson is great at what he does. The incompletion thrown his way was something that a guy who is better at adjusting to the ball and winning a jump could get, but that's not Roman's game, and that's fine. He still scored a TD, still blows the top off of every defense, still makes room for Michigan's two (and it is definitely two) elite TEs. 

And he still has RBs that are lethal in space to dump off to if he really needs them.

This team has only beaten up on bad teams, but no Michigan team has been more consistently dominant against bad teams than this one. And, if you really want to take something from today, one of Michigan's tests is going to be a tough road trip to Happy Valley. But Michigan's three best games have been on the road; they actually play better away from home, something that a Lloyd Carr team would never be accused of, something that older Harbaugh teams have struggled to do. This Michigan team doesn't struggle at all. They're killers.

And so Michigan is the villain. This week has been kind of ugly and a bit disappointing--you want things to be *good* and *happy*; we all want our team to be the good guys, virtuous and heroic. And now there is controversy and perhaps even scandal. Fair or not, it's there.

I was hoping that if Michigan became a national-level villain it would be because they won a national title. Everyone resents winners and all. Well, it has happened anyway. Michigan is the "bad guy." Usually neutral observers like Stewart Mandel have expressed open hostility toward the program in ways that other programs, even ethically shaky ones, even dominant ones, don't get.

Fine. Michigan's the villain. If we're the villain, we might as well be killers. If we're the villain, we might as well win. If we win, we might as well win big. I'm usually in favor of letting off the gas, but not tonight. Not when you answer a tunnel attack with your play on the field. Not when everyone wants Michigan to be the bad guy.

That last TD felt really, really good. 

Win the games. Win them big. Win them all.

Win with cruelty. 

AlbanyBlue

October 22nd, 2023 at 1:31 AM ^

Yep. I've been watching Michigan since Wangler and Carter, and 2023 JJ is the best Michigan QB I've seen. Better than Henson or college-Brady. Better than Henne, even in the 08 Cap One Bowl. Better than all of them.

With JJ playing this way, this offense is lethal. Lethal to any defense in CFB this year.

Coaches, continue not to overthink it and let JJ sling it. That's it.

Glennsta

October 22nd, 2023 at 8:18 AM ^

I go back to that era as well and agree that JJ is the best I've seen. In addition to being accurate and aware, he is smart

He's playing in an era where offense and defenses are vastly more complicated. He's able to quickly identify coverages. He makes quick decisions on what to do, those decisions are almost always right, and he executes.

Plus his ability to run and get out of trouble is as least as good as Leach. Leach ran triple option, so his TD numbers are gaudy (34 career TDs) and he carried the ball @9 times per game. JJ is faster and way more elusive.

You and I may never see a M QB this good again.

1VaBlue1

October 22nd, 2023 at 9:10 AM ^

Same here, I do remember snippets of Denny Franklin, but Leach is the one with the most clear memory.  What a QB he was, too!  Bo wasn't a believer in the forward pass until AC showed up, but Leach's arm was a lethal change that defenses had to think about on that triple option.  But Leach vs McCarthy?  Dude, this isn't even a question...

Harbaugh himself was probably Michigan's best QB combining the run and pass in the modern era of football.  1984 was going to be special, until he broke his arm.  That 1985 team...  Damn, that was a GOOD team - but the defense carried the water.  Sorry Jimmy, McCarthy has a better arm and more speed running it.

Henne?  Middling teams, he didn't really elevate them like JJ does.  Brady?  LOL - not in college, bro...

Yeah, JJ is the best Michigan QB I've ever seen.  And you know what else?  He's the best QB in college football today and may well be the first draft pick taken.

I Bleed Maize N Blue

October 22nd, 2023 at 2:28 AM ^

IIRC in '97 the State game put Woodson on the national radar. We who had been watching knew how good he was, but when the Sparty QB tried to throw the ball away, Woodson skied to nab the ball with one hand and came down with a foot inbounds. That was a "Whoa, Nelly!" moment.

Lesser satisfaction from Sparty coming into the game riding high with a good record, only to lose to us then losing a bunch more games right after. ESPN's schedule only goes back to 2003, but Sparty was 7-1 & #9, lost to us 27-20, then 33-23 to OSU, and 56-21 to WI. They crushed PSU 41-10, only to lose in the Alamo Bowl to NE 17-3.

In 2005 they were 4-0, lost to us in OT 34-31, then lost to OSU and NU, beat IU, but finish the season losing to Purdue, MN and PSU. There was some season where they were 5-0, lost to us, then had a Michigan hangover in subsequent weeks.

J. Redux

October 22nd, 2023 at 2:44 AM ^

It was most certainly not a "Whoa, Nelly!" moment.  That game was on ESPN, not ABC. :)

The actual playcall was "A leaping interception by Woodson; he got a foot down inbounds… somehow." followed by personal favorite: "He has no idea that Charles Woodson can jump 15 feet in the air, come down acrobatically, get his foot inside this football field. Folks, you can watch football a long, long time before you see another play like that."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jk5u20AuXkE

Something I had forgotten until I looked up the box score earlier today; Michigan got six (!) interceptions that day.

I think Woodson was pretty well-known nationally prior to that game, but obviously that highlight helped considerably.

J. Redux

October 22nd, 2023 at 2:51 PM ^

One honest bit of praise: I was impressed that he went for it on 4th and long instead of kicking a 51-yard field goal..  Their kicker has the leg to make that kick, and we know James Franklin would have done it to avoid the shutout.  He had enough pride to go for the touchdown and come up short instead of taking the coward's way out.

GeraldFord48

October 22nd, 2023 at 1:27 AM ^

One of my favorite Michigan wins, definitely one to be savored. No Kenneth Walker to save them, no trouble with the snap voodoo to steal it, no trash tornadoes in sight, just an absolute domination. After spending most of my adult life assuming the worst happens in these State games, this beat down is a welcome one!

AlbanyBlue

October 22nd, 2023 at 1:35 AM ^

Offense: Lethal. Defense: Suffocating. Coaching: Best in the country.

Who's got it better than us? No one this season, I don't think. 

We just have to hope we get the luck that is always needed for a magical season. 

We certainly deserve it.

WolverineHistorian

October 22nd, 2023 at 1:59 AM ^

Not sure of the proper words to describe this game.  It was just so much damn fun.  And how appropriate that McBurrows should get that interception in the 4th quarter given what happened to him in the tunnel last year?  

The Michigan faithful in the stands looked spread around.  But the "Lets Go Blue" chants came across loud and clear on TV.  Epic.