Why you no play game inside more?

Submitted by Butterfield on

In an effort to be as unproductive as possible my first day back, I thought I would delve into the statistical almanacs to see what Michigan's all-time indoor record was in football.  About the only things I learned are: 1) Minnesota must feel awful never beating us once in the Metrodome, 2) Minnesota's awfulness has remained constant between 1983 and 2011, and 3)Michigan's bowl record indoors is similarly bad compared to their bowl record outdoors.  One interesting factoid: Michigan lost their first ever regular season indoor game and has never lost indoors since (13 consecutive wins).  Conversely, we won our first ever indoor bowl game and haven't won since (3 consecutive losses).  Lets change that tonight, Go Blue!

EDIT Part 2:  I missed the 1897 game at the Chicago Coliseum, so Michigan lost their first two indoor games in the history of the program.  AND we won the 2012 Sugar Bowl!

Regular Season:

  • 1896 @Chicago (Chicago Coliseum):  Chicago 7, Michigan 6
  • 1897 @Chicago (Chicago Coliseum):  Chicago 21, Michigan 12
  • 1983 @Minnesota (Metrodome):  Michigan 58, Minnesota 10
  • 1985 @Minnesota (Metrodome):  Michigan 48, Minnesota 7
  • 1987 @Minnesota (Metrodome):  Michigan 30, Minnesota 20
  • 1989 @Minnesota (Metrodome):  Michigan 49, Minnesota 15
  • 1991 @Minnesota (Metrodome):  Michigan 52, Minnesota 6
  • 1993 @Minnesota (Metrodome):  Michigan 58, Minnesota 7
  • 1996 @Minnesota (Metrodome): Michigan 44, Minnesota 10
  • 1998 @Minnesota (Metrodome): Michigan 15, Minnesota 10
  • 1999 @Syracuse (Carrier Dome):  Michigan 18, Syracuse 13
  • 2002 @Minnesota (Metrodome):  Michigan 41, Minnesota 24
  • 2003 @Minnesota (Navarre Transcontinental Metrodome):  Michigan 38, Minnesota 35
  • 2006 @Minnesota (Metrodome):  Michigan 28, Minnesota 14
  • 2008 @Minnesota (Metrodome):  Michigan 29, Minnesota 6

Edit:  A belated thank you to the 3-9 2008 squad for upholding Michigan's record of perfection in the Metrodome. 

Bowl Games:

  • 1981 Bluebonnet Bowl (Houston Astrodome):  Michigan 33, UCLA 14
  • 1984 Sugar Bowl (New Orleans Superdome):  Auburn 9, Michigan 7
  • 1995 Alamo Bowl (Alamodome):  Texas A&M 22, Michigan 20
  • 2005 Alamo Bowl (Alamodome):  Nebraska 32, Michigan 28
  • 2012 Sugar Bowl (New Orleans Superdome): Michigan 23, Virginia Tech 20 (OT)

 

Butterfield

January 3rd, 2012 at 4:38 PM ^

No, the game happened.  But we're still in a delay while the referees figure out how to assess a thousand-men-on-the-field penalty against Nebraska.  I think Michigan should get the ball on the Nebraska 2 yard line for one untimed down as soon as they get word from upstairs. 

Maize.Blue Wagner

January 3rd, 2012 at 4:42 PM ^

Somehow I had totally forgotten about the second part of that home and home with Syracuse.  Unfortunately, all I can remember is McNabb in '98... Looks like '99 was barely a better result.

saveferris

January 3rd, 2012 at 5:32 PM ^

I was at that '99 Carrier Dome game.  I remember three things about that trip:

1.  Syracuse, the town, has a lot of hills

2.  The Carrier Dome serves beer.

3.  This was the only game of the 1999 season where Drew Henson outplayed Tom Brady.

...I don't remember much more than this (see number 2).

milhouse

January 3rd, 2012 at 4:44 PM ^

Sorry but this thread should be renamed: "DAMN! We can kick some Gopher ass!"  Teams other than Minny that we beat in a Dome, 1981 UCLA and 1999 'Cuse.

NoMoPincherBug

January 3rd, 2012 at 4:45 PM ^

I was at that 1896 Chicago game.  Damn that was a barnbuster of a game.  Course there was not much punting back in those days, and the boys certainly could not kick it very high...so playing indoors under a relatively low ceiling as the Chicago Coliseum had, was not a factor.

UM2k1

January 3rd, 2012 at 5:38 PM ^

But no, you go out of bounds with Steve F*$%&*#G Breaston trailing behind you and no one between him and the endzone (except half the Nebraska team that wasn't on the field when the play started).

 

#I'mnotbitteratall,thankyou

FrankMurphy

January 3rd, 2012 at 6:45 PM ^

I'm pretty sure a chunk of our sideline had also wandered onto the field by the time that play actually ended. If anything, the refs probably should have called offsetting penalties and replayed the down.

In any case, that was the most poorly officiated game I have ever seen.

WolverineHistorian

January 3rd, 2012 at 5:38 PM ^

The Nebraska game was thanks to the Sun Belt refs and us having to waste all our timeouts to get plays reviewed that the refs missed.  No need to go down that path.

The Alamo Bowl against A&M, we came out completely flat.  But it certainly didn't help that our opponent was playing in their home state.  Wasn't the crowd ratio pretty much like last week's insane Baylor/Washington game? 

Anyway, thank you for that disturbing stat of 3 straight bowl losses in domes by 2 points, 2 points and 4 points.  

tylawyer

January 3rd, 2012 at 6:34 PM ^

I felt compelled to seek out footage of the end of the 2005 Alamo Bowl.  God bless the internets.  Here it is: LINK.  The number of yahoos milling about on the field is quite remarkable.  

FrankMurphy

January 3rd, 2012 at 7:23 PM ^

Just watched a longer clip, and this quote from Herbstreit (at the 2:52:25 mark, just before the last fateful play) made me chuckle a little bit: "I just want to congratulate Bill Callahan… For fans of Nebraska, look to the future and be excited because this win, you cannot put into words how big this win is for Bill, and for his staff, and for the future of where they're trying to take this program. Congratulations to Nebraska."