View from the Sidelines: How Michigan found a way, and saved its season Comment Count

Ethan Sears September 30th, 2018 at 12:29 PM

[Barron]

EVANSTON — Following Jim Harbaugh, Warde Manuel squeezed into a back room within the bowels of Ryan Field with a security escort, the door nearly hitting a plastic chair, the room itself with barely enough room to fit another person.

 

Unlike Michigan’s head coach, Manuel didn’t have an obligation — he was here of his own volition, walking into a cramped press conference instead of taking an early seat on the bus and avoiding the hassle.

 

“We gonna find a way,” he said to nobody in particular, evangelizing.

 

The Wolverines haven’t always lived up to that. Four weeks ago, it was Notre Dame they found a way. Countless times, it has been Ohio State, Michigan State, Iowa that has found a way, with a special emphasis on doing so of late. On Saturday, it was Michigan that found a way, eking out its biggest comeback since 2011 and beating Northwestern 20-17.

 

[After THE JUMP: Keep reading and find out]

 

In the locker room at halftime, the Wolverines down 10 points and lucky Pat Fitzgerald hadn’t tried to make it more, Don Brown told a defense that had looked completely out of place early, as the Wildcats drove seemingly at will, to just play its game.

 

“He just knew what we were capable of,” Josh Uche said. “He just told us to settle down, go out there and play our ball. Play the ball that we’ve been practicing since who knows when — since the last season was over.”

 

In the second half, Michigan’s pass rush was at Clayton Thorson in seeming instants. The Wolverines ended five of Northwestern’s six drives in sacks, including the last of the game. When the Wildcats got the ball with four minutes to go and timeouts to play with, Brown dialed up blitz after blitz and was duly rewarded.

 

After getting torched by slants during the first half, MIchigan’s secondary got physical. Northwestern failed to do much from then forward, as the slants stopped hitting and its run game never found rhythm. It finished the game averaging 3.2 yards per play, including the first half.

 

Michigan’s defense found a way.

 

“When we were down, I looked each person in the eye, because I didn’t want the message to be dispelled,” Chase Winovich, who had nine tackles, three TFLs and a sack to his name, said. “I said, ‘This is the point where we’ve gotta double down on all the hard work that we’ve done, and the preparation that we’ve gone through. And they can’t take this from us.’ Even when we were losing I said that. It was our game.”

 

One of those people was Shea Patterson. Well on his way to completing the worst game of his career at Michigan, failing to take advantage of good protection and seeming to just miss a few receivers even when catches were made, Patterson turned his game on a dime.

 

With 10 minutes to go, his best drives of the second half having been two missed red zone opportunities (one of which included a dropped interception in the end zone), Patterson seized the moment in a way the Wolverines’ quarterbacks simply haven’t been able to in the past.

 

“We kinda looked each other in the eyes,” Winovich said, “and he said, ‘Pass it back and forth, can you take care of what you need to take care of? We’re gonna score this ball. We’re gonna score this touchdown.’ ”

 

Patterson had run over to a few defensive huddles over the course of the second half, he said, telling them, “Hey, I got you. Just a few more stops and we’ll play through it.”

 

On third down, the Wildcats’ pass rush at his feet, Patterson took it himself. He scrambled for nine all-important yards, both taking Michigan well into field goal range and saving a drive — and within it, a game the Wolverines simply could not afford to lose.

 

Two plays later, Patterson found Zach Gentry down the seam, exploiting the tiniest of windows. Sitting in the press box, it seemed, for a brief second, as though Northwestern had intercepted the ball, because there was no possible other outcome for a pass like that, or at least there’s not supposed to be.

 

“I just saw them drop into two-high, it was a two-shell, possibly Cover-4,” Patterson said. “We had Gentry, he’s 6-foot-8, over the middle. And I think they gave up a lotta stuff over the middle and I think we adjusted in the second half. Just let your guy go make a play. Put it in the vicinity. That’s the type of guy Zach Gentry is, and he made a big play by coming up with that ball.”

 

Shea Patterson found a way.

 

Think, for a minute, about where the conversation around Michigan football would be, collectively, had the Wolverines failed to come back. Think, what the rational extrapolation from the gauntlet staring Michigan in the face after playing Maryland next week — Wisconsin, at Michigan State, Penn State — would be.

 

Think, for a minute, about the possibility of 7-5, because had the Wolverines lost this game, that would have been staring them in the face.

 

“On the road, down 17-0 at one point, we needed to lay down and take a beating or come together and fight through adversity,” Patterson said. “And I think all around, collectively, we just did a tremendous job of doing that tonight.”

 

Saturday, in a dingy little stadium against an overachieving opponent, the choice was to find a way or change this season’s outlook, and lower its ceiling, drastically. Michigan found a way.

Comments

MGrether

September 30th, 2018 at 5:41 PM ^

Agreed. I am glad they finally caught the DEFENSE holding our linemen from going to the 2nd level.... but they need to step it up especially with calling holding on our Defensive ends. I also saw BLATANT holds where Thomas was getting de-shirted because the NW guy had a hold of Thomas' shirt. I get that there are holding on every play... but getting tackled and stripped of your clothes with no call while your team gets called for phantom calls that blow the mind of the announcers == a new level of awful that needs addressed. ASAP.

charblue.

September 30th, 2018 at 8:40 PM ^

Your contention is actually based on factual evidence.  I am so sick of the bullshit calls being made this year, I decided to investigate Michigan's penalty record. 

Michigan is ranked ranked 118th among 130 college teams in most penalties assessed. Michigan has had more than 30 penalties called against it over the past three games, averaging more than 104 yards per game. Yesterday, Michigan was flagged 11 times for 100 yards while Northwestern was penalized twice for 25. Northwestern is ranked 5th in fewest number of penalties called. And Notre Dame is ranked 16th.

By contrast, Michigan is ranked 99th in opponent penalty calls. Officiating crews are flagging Michigan about 6 more times a game this year than last year and the difference is about 30 yards more, the equivalent of three holding calls or two major personal fouls, like targeting.

Now, part of this is clearly explained by the aggressive nature of Michigan's defense and style of play. Part of it is probably related to Michigan's reputation over time and Harbaugh's on-field berating of officials. He's obviously toned down his behavior, since his blowup in Columbus two years ago. But everyone remembers and that includes officials who clearly officiate games based on reputation.

Northwestern averaged 3.2 penalties a game last season. The Wildcats averaging fewer than that this season and their average yards per penalty is also less this year. Yesterday's penalty yard difference was 75. And Michigan averaged slightly more than 9 yards per penalty.

Of the calls made, two were phantom fouls. The first one occurred in the first half when Rashan Gary was flagged for hands-to-the-face during a sideline pass play where he rushed from his end position and used a swim move to get past Northwestern's left tackle. As he made his move, the tackle blocking him lost leverage and began slipping dipping his head in the process, Gary simply moved him aside and he fell to the ground as Thorson threw from the pocket. There was no foul, period. I have no idea which officiel threw the flag. But the result was a call that extended a first half scoring drive.

The other phantom call was pointed out by the Fox broadcast which demonstrated in replay that Higdon was called for holding after completing a fake hand-off into the line and was then tackled by a defender as Patterson skirted the end for a 21-yard gain. Michigan confirmed after the call was made that No. 22,  was the number flagged on the play. The side judge apparently confirmed the call. Why he might have made that call is beyond me, since the center official and umpire had better looks at the play and thus were in better position to make a call. The umpire didn't throw a flag and neither did the center official. So it had to be the side judge who did.

Finally, Michigan's Dline was held periodically throughout the game. And Winovich was both held and taken down on Thorson's final completion with seconds left in the game on a play that moved the ball near midfield. The center official was looking directly at the play and made no call. I guess it's because you can probably call holding on lots of plays and not wanting to impact Northwestern's final game-ending offensive opportunity, he just didn't throw a flag. Who knows what prompts a call and what doesn't? That's really the issue, not knowing what gets called even when obvious and what doesn't.

What is unmistakale and on record is that Michigan is getting flagged more often and for more yardage than last year, and sometimes for both iffy and phantom fouls.

georgetm2000

October 1st, 2018 at 7:37 AM ^

I agree. UM is getting shafted. I think mostly from the non calls on the other team. The only thing I could think of that could explain the Higdon penalty was that it was a "make up" call from the previous third down slant where UM could have been flagged for PI. That is the only thing I thought of is that the officials thought they missed it and were set and determined to stop our drive. Interested in your thoughts. 

Also don't know if you watched replay of the NB game but there was one play near the beginning of the first half. UM threw to the flat and they stopped us for a loss or no gain. Can't remember which but it looked to me like a helmet to helmet tackle that didn't get flagged. Wondering if you noticed or saw it. 

Mongo

September 30th, 2018 at 1:56 PM ^

Great write-up !  Gritty win for the good guys, against a bunch of adversity.  This is the type of game that builds team character.  Come backs are key for togetherness.  Go Blue !!!

bluepow

September 30th, 2018 at 2:12 PM ^

Who represents college football better than Chase Winovich?  Commercials and rule changes have wounded the game but it is 5th year passion like his that keeps me sucked-in.

M-Dog

September 30th, 2018 at 2:14 PM ^

Nico Collins needs to be coached on what the 1st down yard marker looks like, and that he's supposed to run past it.  I counted at least 2 first downs he left on the field that he could have easily picked up.

rice4114

September 30th, 2018 at 2:35 PM ^

Ill never forget coaches calling for 7 HB dives on our final 7 first downs at the end. Net total of 3 yards. Shea Patterson won it with our defense in spite of the offensive play calling. Proud of team, proud of all of our players, and especially proud of each and everyone involved on defense. Our offensive play calling will take us out of 3 games this year. Superior talent amd defensive coaching will carry us to 8 wins. 

SunDiegoBlue

September 30th, 2018 at 4:11 PM ^

Gritty win for the good guys.  Def had my stomach in a knot while on vacation in Europe. 

It felt like a well prepared, desperate, emotional home team v’s a business as usual team. I am not sure what it is, but I feel like the Michigan football team other than the front 7, doesn’t bring its swagger on the road. I don’t know if they just get tight, but it just never has that feeling, we are here to shut up the crowd and celebrate away from our home (Canes of the 80’s but less hip thrusting). In college i loved playing on the road other than the refs. It was easier to get hype. 

Nofx1728

September 30th, 2018 at 5:02 PM ^

Shea definitely had some wide open receivers across the middle that he didn’t throw to. Seen higdon and dpj wide open multiple times.  Those are our playmakers with a lot of space.  Also seemed late on several throws that were open on the outside.  

Those scrambles and zone reads were clutch though.

the amount of commercials were ridiculous. The replay on Fox was over 5 hours (including intro and exit but still)

MGrether

September 30th, 2018 at 5:44 PM ^

A special kudos to NW for their tackling. If Fitzgerald ever wants to stop being a head coach, he could be my LB coach in a heart beat. Their tackling was brilliant. When an LB or S hit our boys, we didn't move an inch further. 

Mongo

September 30th, 2018 at 10:48 PM ^

I was just listening to the Chris Balas and Doug Skene podcast.  Chris is a total dumbshit.  Doug is a naysayer who is not very good.  Last year he had a film breakdown which was insightful but now he just makes these sweeping generalizations that are complete dung.  

MGOBLOG ... the best site in the biz.  Rivals sucks.

Rufus X

October 1st, 2018 at 9:12 AM ^

I have been more and more enamored with Shea's play this year as the games have gone on - but mostly his pure skills - the NFL arm, the pocket presence (knowing when to stand in there and when to take off).  But the broadcast of NW game really showed off his leadership. You could see him keeping his teammates in the game and visiting the defensive sideline huddle, and his teammates responding to him.  

With the transfer drama, I wondered what kind of a leader he might be. In the back of my mind I was trying to figure out what kind of kid would allow himself to get pulled into that program to begin with.  This game resolved those unfounded concerns.  

He played poorly, missed some open looks, had his teammates let him down with drops and penalties, and in the end made it happen.  He really has been a difference maker, as advertised.  Really looking forward to the big tests coming up.

DELRIO1978

October 1st, 2018 at 11:32 AM ^

I hope the Michigan players also learn to FOCUS on the next game, unlike after the Cornhusker game when they ran their mouths about the Huskers 'quitting" instead of already setting their minds to the next game up and it showed in the 1st quarter.  

nb

October 1st, 2018 at 12:02 PM ^

This was a valuable team building experience that we didn’t need to pay for with a loss. The twitter video in the tunnel shows what playing for each other means. They dug deep and experienced the joy after. This team needs to find consistency to be great, but you can’t buy those teaching moments with 4 hr practices or trips to Paris. We will keep building and getting better.

My only criticism is that we need to create more possessions when we’re down by multiple scores. We seem to be letting opponents grind us into short games when we’re down. At Notre Dame, we ran out of time. At Northwestern we had a near perfect 2nd half and still only won by 3. Touchdowns would have helped, but I think we only punted twice in the second half.

bacon

October 1st, 2018 at 11:42 PM ^

You know, teams need to learn to win when they have bad starts. We’ve seen this a 3 of 5 games with Michigan this year: they come out flat, turn it on late. We haven’t been the type of team to come back from deficits recently, so it’s an encouraging sign. 

Blueballs

October 2nd, 2018 at 10:29 AM ^

Michigan cannot continue to start a game flat like that especially on the road. MSU and OSU have much more talent than NW to attempt to recover from a 17 point deficit.