No Damn Reason At All Comment Count

Brian

11/26/2016 – Michigan 27, Ohio State 30 (2OT) – 10-2, 7-2 Big Ten

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[Eric Upchurch]

After all that, the thing that sticks with me is something much more prosaic than the various outrages everyone's going on about. It's third and four in the fourth quarter. Ohio State literally triple-covers Jake Butt; Wilton Speight finds Amara Darboh open on a quick slant. The ball is behind Darboh, tough but catchable. Darboh does not catch it. Michigan punts with five minutes and change left on the clock.

Why did that happen?

I don't know. Nobody does, but very few people tasked with writing about a thing will tell you that. Everyone else will reach for any explanation of remote plausibility, from an injured shoulder to CHOKING like a CLOWN FRAUD. Whatever, doesn't matter. Just as long as there's a reason a thing occurred, we can go on with our lives.

I think that happened for no damn reason at all. Yes, if you replaced Speight with Tom Brady that pass was more likely to be accurate. If you replaced him with Tyler O'Connor, less likely. It is still a simple five-yard throw that is amongst the easiest in the quarterback's repertoire. It is within the capabilities of the QB. Speight probably hits 90% of them, especially on a day where he is locked in. The most likely explanation for why he did not hit that one is none at all. The most likely reason Darboh did not catch a tough but catchable pass is none at all.

There are entire fields of study dedicated to the fallibility of the human brain, which refuses to operate cleanly. (I just put a D into the word "entire" as I was typing that sentence out.) These exist mostly because planes crash into each other and space shuttles explode and not because football happens sometimes, which just goes to show that people have strange priorities.

--------------------------------------------------

Speaking of the fallibility of the human brain:

It is hard to take that sort of thing. Michigan had just gotten a flag on a similar, but less severe, defensive holding incident on the prior Ohio State drive. That ended a Michigan drive that had reached midfield; if called correctly Michigan has first and ten at the Ohio State 40.

Later in the game the same pattern would repeat. Delano Hill was flagged for pass interference on third and 14 when he unnecessarily grabbed the waist of Curtis Samuel before the ball arrived; the exact same thing happened to Grant Perry on a third down conversion attempt and was ignored. Again, that sets Michigan up with a first down, this one on the ten in the second overtime. Again it was preceded by a call so similar against Michigan it beggars belief that a flag did not come out.

That's tough to get over. The spot was close enough and chaotic enough that it falls within the realm of the unknowable. An MGoUser who knows what parallax is and went over available evidence with a fine-toothed comb thinks Barrett made it by literally an inch or two. While I thought the spot was wrong I knew they would not overturn it, because they never overturn spots without some sort of egregious his-knee-was-down-ten-yards-ago kind of thing. In isolation that call is, in the cold light of day two days later, too close to have a definitive resolution. If it was wrong it very well could have been an honest mistake.

It is difficult to interpret either of the above incidents as honest, or a mistake. It's difficult to see a standard-issue Harbaugh blowup get flagged in the Game when we've seen the same thing tolerated all year. It's difficult to believe that Michigan's defensive line hasn't benefited from a holding call since the Illinois game.

This is the point at which newspapery types come in with the You Had Your Opportunities To Win The Game, an asinine criticism since that's literally true of both teams in every close game ever played. You can believe that Michigan had opportunities to win they did not take and simultaneously believe that the officiating gave you less than a 50/50 shot in a 50/50 game.

And then you're putting guys out on the field from the state of Ohio who were previously banned from working The Game because of how it might look? What the fuck are you even doing, Big Ten?

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[Patrick Barron]

What's that? Counting your money? Right. Well done.

--------------------------------------------

Michigan lost this game. They did so for many reasons.

Their mistakes were punished as ruthlessly as possible. A floating ball goes directly to a defender. A fumbled snap is recovered by the defense. Curtis Samuel escapes a huge loss three times and sets up the fourth down that falls within the margin of error.

They did not take advantage of plays that were there to be made. Speight threw behind Darboh twice; Darboh did not bail him out. Karan Higdon missed a cut on what would have been a huge gain. Smith did not run over a safety prior to the fumble.

They did not get a fair whistle. See above.

All that and it came down to a literal inch. A rivalry classic, and an invitation for a bunch of hooting jackals to hoot some more. As for us on the other side, nothing to do but soldier on in the gray light of morning.

AWARDS

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there is another [Bryan Fuller]

Known Friends And Trusted Agents Of The Week

-2535ac8789d1b499[1]you're the man now, dog

#1 Taco Charlton was the most rampant of Michigan's very rampant defensive line, acquiring two and a half sacks and forcing Barrett to move around several other times.

#2 (tie) Ben Gedeon and Mike McCray shut off the Ohio State edge except on a couple plays where Michigan was successfully out-leveraged pre-snap. It was weird to see neutrals on twitter wondering why anyone would run east-west against The Michigan Defense, but they were, because it didn't work. They picked up 19 tackles between them, two sacks, another TFL, and McCray batted down two passes. McCray also forced a sack when he leapt in the passing lane of a third.

#3 Kenny Allen bombed all but one of his punts; he mastered the Ron Coluzzi hard right turn; he had just one touchback, that on a punt that still had a 40+ yard net; Curtis Samuel had just one quickly snuffed return opportunity; he hit a couple field goals; none of his kickoffs were returnable.

Honorable mention: Channing Stribling broke up the only deep shot on the day; OSU decided they were not going to bother with either him or Jourdan Lewis. The rest of the defensive line was terrific all day; the tackles were very good in pass protection against some tough customers. Peppers had a big KOR, an interception, and was also a major part of the edge being closed down.

KFaTAotW Standings.

10: Wilton Speight (#1 UCF, #1 Illinois, #3 MSU, #1 Maryland), Taco Charlton(three-way T1, PSU, same vs Rutgers, #3 Maryland, #2 Iowa, #2 Indiana, #1 OSU).
9: Jabrill Peppers(T2, Hawaii; #3 UCF, #1 Colorado, #2 Rutgers, #2 MSU)
5: Ryan Glasgow(#2 UCF, #1 UW), Chris Wormley (three-way T1, PSU, same vs Rutgers, #1 Iowa).
4: Jourdan Lewis (#3 UW, #2 Maryland, #3 Indiana), Mike McCray(#1 Hawaii, T2 OSU), Ben Gedeon(#3 Colorado, #3 PSU, three-way T1 Rutgers, T2 OSU).
3.5: De'Veon Smith (four-way T2, PSU, #1 Indiana).
3: Amara Darboh(#1 MSU).
2.5: Karan Higdon(four-way T2, PSU, #2 Illinois).
2: Jake Butt(#2 Colorado), Kyle Kalis (#2 UW)
1: Delano Hill (T2, Hawaii), Chris Evans (T3, Hawaii, four-way T2, PSU),  Maurice Hurst (three-way T1, PSU),  Devin Asiasi(#3 Rutgers), Ben Braden (#3 Illinois), Channing Stribling (#3 Iowa), Kenny Allen (#3 OSU).
0.5: Mason Cole(T3, Hawaii), Ty Isaac (four-way T2, PSU).

Who's Got It Better Than Us Of The Week

This week's best thing ever.

It's a goat in a duck costume!

Honorable mention: is that not sufficient

WGIBTUs Past.

Hawaii: Laughter-inducing Peppers punt return.
UCF: Speight opens his Rex Grossman account.
Colorado: Peppers cashes it in.
PSU: Wormley's sack establishes a theme.
UW: Darboh puts Michigan ahead for good.
Rutgers: Peppers presses "on".
Illinois: TRAIN 2.0.
MSU: lol, two points.
Maryland: very complicated bomb.
Iowa: The touchdown.
Indiana: Smith woodchips Michigan a lead.
OSU: Goat. Duck costume. Yeah.

imageMARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

This week's worst thing ever.

The Spot.

Honorable mention: The ensuing play. Speight fumbles the snap; Speight gets hit on the throw and offers up a pick six; Speight throws an INT that is on him; various refereeing malfeasances.

PREVIOUS EPIC DOUBLE BIRDs

Hawaii: Not Mone again.
UCF: Uh, Dymonte, you may want to either tackle or at least lightly brush that guy.
Colorado: Speight blindsided.
PSU: Clark's noncontact ACL injury.
UW: Newsome joins the ranks of the injured.
Rutgers: you can't call back the Mona Lisa of punt returns, man.
Illinois: They scored a what now? On Michigan? A touchdown?
Michigan State: a terrifying first drive momentarily makes you think you're in the mirror universe.
Maryland: Edge defense is a confirmed issue.
Iowa: Kalis hands Iowa a safety.
Indiana: A legitimate drive.
OSU: The Spot.

[After THE JUMP: ~3000 additional words, 43% of which are swears.]

OFFENSE

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[Upchurch]

Seemed kind of good, and then very bad, and then kind of good again. Wilton Speight has some pretty odd stats for a guy who seemed to carry Michigan's offense by himself: 6.1 yards an attempt, which is bad. Add in two interceptions and it's very bad. Add in a disastrous fumbled snap and... it is not better. That did not make things better.

One of the interceptions was not his fault. Speight IDed Chesson open behind a picket fence zone and threw it to him; Raekwon McMillian, who got in scot free, intervened before he could complete his throwing motion. It's just crap luck the ball went directly to a defender.

The other INT and the fumble are directly on Speight, with Cole maybe factoring in on the fumble. On the one hand, those lost the game. On the other, Michigan was in position to win it because Speight was calm, accurate, and brave.

No deep shots. Part of the reason Michigan's YPA was so low was a total lack of deep balls. A sail route completion to Jake Butt for 22 yards was Michigan's longest gain of the day, and a fair chunk of that was yards after the catch. I have to assume that was due to Speight's injury. Either he couldn't get the necessary oomph on deep balls or Michigan was loathe to expose him to the OSU pass rush because they feared he would get knocked out.

Just not enough. The one position group that was clearly overwhelmed was the offensive line. Smith and Evans combined to average under three yards a carry, and most of that was on the OL unable to generate much of anything.

This was a Hoke legacy Harbaugh was unable to overcome. Whatever improvements Michigan was able to generate in their senior trio did not get them to All Big Ten levels, let alone All America, with the possible exception of Erik Magnuson. (My opinion: meh, but depending on the NFL scout you listen to he's apparently got a chance.) When Grant Newsome, a true sophomore, got knocked out for the year a true freshman replaced him. There was zero depth behind the starters and that bit hard as Ben Bredeson struggled, as true freshmen tend to.

This was partially bad luck. The nature of Logan Tuley-Tillman's departure could not be predicted. It was partially terrible evaluation. Michigan passed on LSU All-American Ethan Pocic because they thought they were full, then took Dan Samuelson towards the end of the cycle. Samuelson quit football soon after realizing he was overmatched in year two. It was partially a lack of ruthlessness: Chris Fox had a terrible knee injury that made him unlikely to work out in college and Michigan still took him. Fox did transition to a medical scholarship relatively quickly, but Michigan didn't react to his inability to play quickly enough. It was partially crappy coaching, because Hoke.

The tackles pass-protected well, though.

Aaargh. Michigan's offset draw worked to near perfection except for one thing. Higdon did not cut behind Cole.

That's a huge, huge gain otherwise.

Smith did not flatten the fishing village. While we're complaining about running backs, Malik Hooker twice hewed down De'Veon Smith in ways I did not think were possible for a safety. The first turned out to be a game changing play, as it came when Smith busted to the second level on a goal-to-go carry. As he did so I thought "YES!!!" because surely this was a touchdown; surely I had seen sufficient Smith-versus-secondary matchups to know that the two safeties coming in at an angle had precious little chance to shut Smith down without YAC.

And yet, Hooker did. Speight fumbled on the ensuing snap. That tackle is the play of the game, along with all the other ones.

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[Patrick Barron]

Perry had a solid day. Grant Perry hadn't had much impact this year, in part due to a mid-season suspension. Against OSU he was open repeatedly and hit for several critical third down conversions. I expect his role will grow considerably next year as Jake Butt's third down skills head to the NFL.

DEFENSE

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[Upchurch]

Can't ask for more. Michigan's defense gave up approximately ten points in regulation. OSU had three field goal drives, two of which their kicker missed, and turned first and ten from the fifteen into a touchdown with assistance from a personal foul on Harbaugh. OSU averaged under 4 yards a play.

Confusion even in game 12. Only two things even slightly ground the ol' gears. One of them was Michigan's confusion at various points during the game. OSU motion was all too frequently met with cabinet meetings amongst the Michigan secondary.

A four-man box against an empty set could not have been correct; it resulted in a 41-yard Barrett draw/scramble. Noah Brown was provided a free first down late in the game when Michigan put two DBs over three WRs. A couple other times Michigan did not get aligned; those instances did not have straight lines between tempo and success but there was a definite correlation. Michigan's rampant pass rush was most frequently nerfed when Michigan could not get set up and fire off on the snap.

I spent the first half of this year cautioning about Don Brown's significant year one costs and hoping they would get fixed over the course of the season. They did. Michigan busts dropped to normal levels by midseason, and whatever confusion they suffered they issued as well. That was the case in this game; I still got a bit frustrated at various ??? moments on OSU motion.

The other thing that rankled. OSU's final drive of regulation did not see Michigan solve their problems with aggression. On one level, I get it. You've been dominant, Barrett's rattled, you're up three. It's a situation where caution is called for early. Once OSU hits midfield it's time to get aggressive, especially since Barrett has done so poorly with pressure. Michigan did not amp it up; they rushed four, played zone, and generally abandoned the approach that had seen them dominate three quarters of the game.

I've defended Harbaugh's approach in a number of games this year, and still think the Lloydball stuff from the offense was justified given game contexts. I absolutely do not get Michigan's passivity on the final drive. I mean, I do. I've seen it time and again.  I was hoping for something else.

Mone with a big play. Bryan Mone's hype petered out thanks to an early season injury; when he did play he was unimpressive, which stoked worries for next year. Watching him obliterate an OSU OL to stuff a third and short Weber run was the best and biggest play of his career to date; hopefully he can follow up on that next year.

SPECIAL TEAMS

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[Upchurch]

PUNTAGEDDON. Put Indiana's punter on either of these teams and this is a 20-point game. Instead, Ron Coluzzi battled Ron Coluzzi atop Mount Puntlympus. Kenny Allen averaged 47 yards a kick with a 67-yarder and five punts inside the 20 against just one touchback, that on a super-long punt. OSU got one return in for two yards.

Cameron Johnston matched him with an average of 46 a pop, a long of 60, and one Peppers return for five yards. He also got run into, so he's got that going for him.

I can't wait to see the PFF grades. They might be positive.

They should get rid of running into the kicker. Roughing should stay. Every running into the kicker penalty I've seen is glancing contact that endangers nobody. Most of them feature the punter falling over theatrically. Running into the kicker is like the five-yard facemask penalty they got rid of a few years ago and should meet the same fate.

Jordan Glasgow, special teams, uh, specialist. The aftermath of OSU's fake punt was fascinating, as it quickly became apparent that Urban Meyer told the ESPN crew that they were going to going to run it against a certain Michigan formation no matter what. They got the formation, they ran it, and Jordan Glasgow stoned it. Glasgow set up outside, got off a block, got held, still got off that block, and make a tackle with help from Chris Wormley to turn OSU over on downs.

That was the most spectacular but far from the only excellent special teams play Glasgow's made over the last couple years. He's made a habit of hewing down kick returners. I wouldn't entirely rule him out from playing time on defense next year. 1) Is Glasgow, 2) you don't make that kind of consistent impact on special teams without being able to read a play and take on a block.

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[Barron]

Peppers: quite good. His kick return to Ohio State territory after the pick six might have stood as Michigan's play of the game in the event of a win. Jourdan Lewis had a momentarily dangerous but ultimately unsuccessful KOR of his own on the last play of regulation, and for a second there I thought Peppers was running to get in a pitch relationship with Lewis; instead he blocked a guy.

MISCELLANEOUS

At least we looked good. Can't say the same about OSU's rollerball-ass helmets.

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[Fuller]

This will console me. Yes.

Harbaugh was wrong about the facemask. Michigan was confused about the aftermath of the Cole facemask call, which ended up as a third and five instead of a first and ten. They were forced to call timeout, and Harbaugh got mad, which eventually ended up in that PF.

In this, at least, the refs were correct. The penalty was a live-ball foul. When it's a live-ball foul the ball is placed where it is after the penalty and then you either give or do not give the first down. If it was a dead ball foul, Michigan would have gotten the ball where Smith went out of bounds minus 15 yards and had first and ten. (This remains one of the oddest rules in football.)

I can only assume that Harbaugh thought the personal foul was something unsportsmanlike after the play because he'd never even thought a screen could see an OL attack the facemask of an opponent. I sure as hell didn't believe it until I saw it.

I don't think Michigan should get in the playoff. They are one of the four best teams. That shouldn't be enough. The committee needs to prioritize making regular season games really count or the whole fury of the regular season descends into a tepid simmer. I fully approve of the focus on championships and hope it would take something extraordinary for a non-champ to get in.

I'd go so far as to assert that Ohio State should not get in over Penn State. If Washington, Clemson, PSU, and Bama win their title games the playoff should be Bama, Clemson, Washington, and Penn State, in that order.

HERE

As mentioned, I think Santy's diary on the spot is the best possible analysis of a razor-close call.

Best And Worst:

Worst:  What Do You Think?

I'm broken.  I mean, not in a real sense:  I'm a grown-ass man with two kids, a beautiful wife, a fulfilling career, and my health (largely) still intact.  I don't have to worry about violent uprisings, disease, radioactive mosquitos, or alien invaders.  In the grand scheme of things, I'm doing fine.

But in sports terms, I'm as broken as Jeff Jarrett's guitar.  I guess I should be used to these types of games against OSU, but I'm not.  Games decided by last-second stands, crucial penalties, and terrible officiating are the norm in college sports, but it's only "chaos" when your passive bystander; when it's one of your teams, it's heartbreak.

Sten Carlson tries to offer some perspective:

I am usually not much for "Perspective Posts" after a loss, but in this instance I think it might be helpful.

24 months ago Michigan was sitting at 5-7 overall, and 3-5 in the Big 10.  Let that sink in for a moment ... and if it doesn't, continue reading.

Michigan started out with a hopeful 52-10 blowout of FCS App. St, only to follow it up with an embarassing 31-0 loss to ND in the last game of that storied rivalry.  Following this humilation, Michigan returned home to face the Miami (OH) Redhawks, whom they dispatched 34-10.  Ok, the ND game was an anomoly, just a bad game, we can overcome it, right?  Nope, the Utah Utes march into the Big House and promptly laid a 26-10 beatdown upon our beloved Wolverines.

Just went we thought things could not possibly get any worse, it seemed Hoke (and likely Brandon) had been listening to the fanbase's collective uproar for Shane Morris to replace Devin Gardner, and well ... it did not end well ... a 30-14 loss to Minnesota and of the oldest trophy in college football, Concussion-Gate, and another complete embarassment to the once proud program.

This was rock bottom, right?  Could it get worse than 2-3 and having Concussion-Gate splashed all over the media?  How's about a 26-24 loss to Rutgers (I mean seriously, FUCKING RUTGERS!!!!) in which we make the Scarlet Knights' inept QB look like freakin' Joe Tom Brady Montana as a salve for those wounds?  This HAD to be rock bottom, right?  Sitting at 2-4, and 0-2 in the Big 10, a ray of hope appeared through the clouds as Michigan was (somehow) able to knock off PSU 18-13, in kinda-sorta-not-so-much convincing fashion.  Hail, Hail ... a conference win!

The State of our Open Threads:

Let's start with something that won't shock anyone at all - we reached a season high for "fuck" and indeed, an all-time high for the four seasons that we've been going through this analysis now. No Ohio State game before yesterday, or indeed any game, can say that it resulted in 785 fucks in a game thread. That blows out the previous record, which was the Iowa game a couple week ago. It was also a season-high for shits given at 228, and that is also a high for shits given in the entire time that this analysis has been done. That won't shock anyone, or course - that was the most consequential game we have played in a long time, and I can only imagine the fucks and shits said aloud and off the record. I may have even contributed to the off the record total myself.....a lot.

CFP contenders breakdown. Going to take a lot.

ELSEWHERE

Fuuuuuuuu. Michigan's win expectancy, per S&P+: 83%.

Genuinely Sarcastic has the various ref outrages catalogued. Bill Connelly on the game, if you can go back over it some more. Why the playoff should stick at four. RIP Doug Lesmerises's mentions. PFF grades:

Jekyll and Hyde from Wolverines offense

One of the big questions entering the game was where the Wolverines would generate offensive production from; would they need to play 30 snaps with Jabrill Peppers at quarterback? Ultimately, they didn’t and they exceeded many expectations for their production but came up short in key moments to clinch their victory their performance deserved. Amara Darboh came up with some big catches, including the overtime TD shaking Marshon Lattimore at the line to get open, but he dropped a pair of passes. Similarly, the ground game was nothing more than steady, keeping the Ohio State defense honest but failing to rip off more than one play of ten yards or more. Will this valiant defeat be enough to keep the Wolverines in the playoff picture?

Kyle Kalis and Tyrone Wheatley made the top five with grades of 54. Ugly all around.

Dr. Sap. TTB. Holdin' the Rope:

Never underestimate the rivalry's ability to find that spot, the one that hurts the most. A well-placed nudge to the unsuspecting elicits a yowl, a yelp, a cringing collapse on the floor.

Just when you thought the rivalry couldn't yield a more painful outcome, it did on Saturday, when No. 2 Ohio State bested No. 3 Michigan, 30-27, in double overtime. It was the first overtime game in the history of the Michigan-Ohio State rivalry, and thus presented Michigan with a chance to lose in a new way.

When the game ended, I quietly checked my phone for 10 minutes, taking in reactions from around the internet, positive and negative. But, eventually, I wondered if this game was even worth the consternation.

Hoover Street Rag:

In retrospect, they should have gone for two.  Speight wanted it.  It would have met with widespread approbation, win or lose, like a similar decision three years ago.  The defense was gassed because of the offense, led by the wounded Wilton Speight; one that managed five meager yards in the fourth quarter.  They had just found Amara Darboh in the back of the end zone at the end of the first overtime period.  But they did not, putting the game back on the offense and it nearly worked until Grant Perry was mugged on third down, forcing Michigan to settle for a field goal.

Orange Bowl the current best guess as to the bowl game. FSU or Louisville are potential matchups. Same. Embarrassed? Embarrassing would have been 3-9.

Comments

MGolem

November 28th, 2016 at 1:48 PM ^

Is like charging/blocking in CBB in that the refs appear to have no fucking clue what it is. That said one could forgive a miss or two here or there but it was obvious early on the refs were not calling anything against OSUs offensive line. On Glasgows sack in the first quarter the lineman grabbed his facemask and held on. The no call didn't affect the play but it was an egregious foul and absolutely shameful that is was missed. Early sign of things to come.

Michigan4Life

November 28th, 2016 at 2:53 PM ^

the refs didn't call a single holding on both teams (twice they called hands on the face on OSU and Michigan player). They're consistent in that regard. Both OSU and Michigan front 7 were dominant. OL are taught to grab the inside of the pads and latch onto them to drive them backward. The refs allow it as long as it's not outside of the shoulder pads.  I've seen a couple of missed obvious holding on both sides that went uncalled which is fair because they weren't going to call it all game long.

DPI on the other hand are inconsistent and rightfully should've been the target of complaint.

Squash34

November 29th, 2016 at 1:54 AM ^

Be consistent. That's all I ask. I was pissed at the DPI call on hill and have called it horrible in multiple threads on here. Because they set the tone with the darboh take and other plays like the butt pictured play in this article. I think it would be iffy in vacuum, hill has clearly going for the ball, which was uncatchable and got there right as the ball did. I don't think it us pi, but would have no problem with it if they were calling it extra tight for both teams. But they let osu mug dufes all game. Then on 3rd and 14 with like 4 min left the osu fan/ref throws a flag on that?! Criminal I also say the face mask on Glasgow, so I was furious when they called one on Cole. My brother and law came in about ten minutes before thst and told me it was the right call. I told him it's a horrible call because they let the other teams lineman get away with one that was more blatent, and more dangerous. Just be consistent, and I won't have problems with refs. Even if they make a few bad calls that hurt Michigan. That's ok, they are human and one or two call don't deter most games. But this was blatent one-sidedness.

Space Coyote

November 28th, 2016 at 2:00 PM ^

But this article really is a perfect summation of my thoughts as well. I think people are so upset about the spot - which was close enough that it was always going to stand with whatever the call on the field was - because just about every time there was gray area on a call it seemed to go OSU's way. That was just the culmination of the frustration. And yet, don't grab the face mask, hit the slant, make the cut, tackle Samuel at any point when the whole defense is around him and he's taken their kicker to the depths of his FG range... just make one play, just have one more thing go your way. It's frustrating as hell. Michigan is one of the four best teams in college football. But they shouldn't be in the CFP. They didn't earn it in the field with the results. As soon as you go by eye test and not results, you've made the regular season and the outcomes of games, including this one for the ages, all but meaningless.

dcmaizeandblue

November 28th, 2016 at 2:13 PM ^

Ok but when the number of calls that could've changed the outcome equals or exceeds the missed plays then I'm not going to focus on stuff that happens in every game. There are plays left on the field all the time, pass interference or late hits or holding are not difficult calls to make. And I'm upset about the spot because the goddamn game should've been over and I should be buying a T-shirt right now about Barrett running into a fucking wall because that's what happened. 

Kevin Holtsberry

November 28th, 2016 at 3:23 PM ^

This is what has Michigan stuck at good and not great and has made The Game a decade and a half torture routine.  Why can't Michigan make the play it needs when these huge games are on the line?  This is what is undercutting the confidence I am trying to bring with me in the aftermath.

Ohio State has beaten Michigan five times in a row twice since 2000.  Michigan hasn't beatn Ohio State five times in a row since the 1920s.  After relative dominance in the 80s and 90s we are in a deep, deep hole.  I thought this was the year to prove we were on our way out.

The inability to make the play needed to win moves from frustrating to depression and near despair.

snarling wolverine

November 28th, 2016 at 5:34 PM ^

This is what has Michigan stuck at good and not great
What? Did you miss 2008-14? We were much worse than "good" for almost all that time. Our record against OSU sucks this century for the very straightforward reason that we've not been very good for much of that time while they have been. Saturday was the first time in awhile that it was an even matchup.

aiglick

November 28th, 2016 at 2:00 PM ^

Interesting viewpoint on the playoffs. If Washington and/or Clemson lose while PSU wins I would hope Michigan gets consideration given all of the regular season results. If ever there were a case to be made for a 2-loss non-champion to be included Michigan would have it in the above scenario. I just need to get past that game which is all that it is.

plamonge

November 28th, 2016 at 2:06 PM ^

At this point in college football I don't care about "what's right etc"--not one other team cares about what's right so why should we? Does the SEC care? Not a chance. By your logic OSU does not deserve to be in, BUT THEY WILL BE. So if them, then why not us? And Penn State? Are you crazy? They're in because of a fluke in schedules? 

Screw that: Michigan deserves to be in the playoffs as much as OSU does. If they go so should we. So start lobbying for it. 

dcmaizeandblue

November 28th, 2016 at 2:06 PM ^

I will say there's one difference. The hooting that will happen will no longer have any teeth or sting because in that same cold light of morning deep down they know they should've lost that game. In their house, Michigan came in and punched them in the face and it wasn't until the refs threw them a fifth lifeline that they did anything about it.

Personally, my irrational fear of that team is gone, it could return with another disappointing defeat by 20+ points but what I saw Saturday was enough for me to believe that won't happen again soon. Let them come, for the first time in a long time, I believe we will be ready.

Glennsta

November 28th, 2016 at 2:30 PM ^

i will try to remember it sort of like last year with MSU, i.e. another game against an  opponent who had had our number, who we had beaten at thee end of the game but who we barely lost to and in the worst (at the time) way possible.

Come back the next year, know that we have nothing to fear from those vermin any more and punch them right in the mouth.

And we have them both in our place. 

M-Dog

November 28th, 2016 at 4:44 PM ^

Sort of . . . we lose a lot next year and their very young team that played lights out this year will be a season older next year.

We could regress to the old days for a season or so.  We are not fully there yet.  But the trend lines are going the right direction.

 

nappa18

November 28th, 2016 at 2:08 PM ^

Of course, the refereeing was "inconsistent". In other words, it sucked. Not so much on the spot, which was close enough to go either way, but on the missed penalties on our receivers. And not one OL holding call on them. Hard to believe. But, we had a bunch of big mistakes. Smith missing the blitzer on the pick 6, Speight not seeing their linebacker on the second INT, the Speight fumble on the 1. Luckily, for us, their failed fake punt set us up for an immediate TD anyway but absent that, that fumble would have been still agonized over. Coles ridiculously stupid and unnecessary face mask penalty, Speight throwing behind Darboh in the fourth quarter late (he threw behind Darboh in Iowa as well), Higdon cutting the wrong way. Defense was great but Ohio did march from their own 17 late to the tying fg. No blitzing, Barrett big run, 3rd and goal, they complete a pass to the 3 for a tying chip shot fg. Playing zone late when our trademark all year was pressure and more pressure. And maybe the biggest play of all, Samuel escaping a huge loss on 3rd down in the second OT. He retreated to maybe the 32 yard line before running through us to the 16 right before "the spot". Otherwise, they would have needed a long fourth down conversion from a shaky kicker. Yes, I and we all are still "sick" over the loss. But getting over it. Blaming this completely on the refs is wrong, sure, they made it that much harder, but we just made too many huge mistakes to assure a win. Sucks. Because we were better this year. Next year??? Oh, last year's loss to MSU was worse. I didn't see that coming when all we needed to do was get a punt away. I saw this coming when we couldn't grind out a few first downs in our last possession. Win our bowl game, finish 11-2. Still satisfying. Just not epic.

saveferris

November 28th, 2016 at 2:08 PM ^

This is the point at which newspapery types come in with the You Had Your Opportunities To Win The Game, an asinine criticism since that's literally true of both teams in every close game ever played. You can believe that Michigan had opportunities to win they did not take and simultaneously believe that the officiating gave you less than a 50/50 shot in a 50/50 game.
Seconded. There's nothing more infuriating than the same trope from the MSM about how Michigan blew their opportunities. Certainly, had we played a flawless game, we win by 2, maybe three scores. All of OSUs points came when Michigan handed them a short field. We keep them pinned deep, Barrett never gets the OSU offense across Michigan's 40. But we didn't play a flawless game, which kept it closer, which made the fact that the referees being bad at their fucking job so much more important to this discussion. We shouldn't have to outplay a team by 2 scores to ensure a victory and make the officiating moot. How about we get fair and balanced officiating, and then let the result speak for itself. Or the very least, balanced shitty officiating; I don't want to over reach or anything. And let's be honest here to all the Buckeye fans cackling over our irritation with how the game was called and Coach having the temerity to call the officials out on it; had the shoe been on the other foot, they would have been outraged, OUTRAGED that the officiating made their ability to come out with a victory that much more difficult. But yeah, we can't contradict the meme that Wolverine fans have a monopoly on complaining. The better team lost on Saturday and it's a bitter fucking pill to swallow. I'm still holding out some slim hope that the Universe will award us justice and have Michigan slip into the Playoff somehow and maybe even get us a rematch against these guys. But it's hard to believe in karma or some kind of cosmic justice when the worst fanbase continually gets rewarded as our expense. Sigh. Is it bad to want to start drinking at 2:00 PM on a Monday?

KC Wolve

November 28th, 2016 at 2:12 PM ^

I somewhat agree on the playoff, however I have always considered bowl games pointless. I know they are fun for the players and the team gets extra practice. Those are good things, but you get those things by going to the Rose Bowl or the insertwhatever.com bowl. The trophies are meaningless. It's playoff or bust and if someone says Michigan should be in, I'm all for it.



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Rabbit21

November 28th, 2016 at 2:12 PM ^

It was a good season and a great, if frustrating game.  The Defense was an all timer and I just hope that MSU, Iowa and OSU this year have given Harbaugh the courage to look the ghost of Lloyd Carr that seems to hover over him in the eye and say, "Go Fuck yourself, I am staying aggressive on offense, because that is what college football is now."

Ultimately I look forward to the bowl game and then seeing how the new team develops next year and to see how well some of the O-Linemen respond to the challenge and opportunity that next year represents.

Rufus X

November 28th, 2016 at 2:16 PM ^

I kinda figured Brian would touch on this.  

Peppers' explosiveness is best used on the edge, in a jet sweep or reverse, or in catching the ball either out of the backfield or as a receiver. The vast majority of his offensive snaps were with him at QB where none of these was possible. I really thought the staff was saving a wrinkle for this game - apparently not. . Since he never threw the ball in any real way all season, and he was either read-optioning or faking the read option with a pre-determined hole to run to, the potential advantage of his incredible gifts on offense never really materialized.  

I am just surprised (and bitterly disappointed) that we never really used him like we could have.

Glennsta

November 28th, 2016 at 2:22 PM ^

I thought the same thing, i.e. that his use had become very predictable.

But i guess I have faith in the coaching staff that they saw enough of him in practice that they weren't going to ask him to do anything in a game that they didn't think he could do productively.  Maybe he couldn't throw the ball effectively or catch slants effectively or run between the tackles effectively.  I don't know.  But I believe that Harbaugh would have used him in any manner that he could have.

caup

November 28th, 2016 at 3:53 PM ^

Those bullshit predictable wildcat plays helped wear him out.  You cannot tell me Peppers wasn't GASSED on the last drive and in OT.  He was unable to make the explosive open field tackles he normally makes.

GAH!!!!!!!!!!!

ColeIsCorky

November 28th, 2016 at 2:22 PM ^

I do miss the other uses of Peppers such as the sweeps/fake sweeps, and I think he is much more effective as a WR/H-Back than the Wildcat QB. They pretty much went completely away from using him as a decoy on the sweep/fake sweep plays that I always thought were extremely effective. I really wish they would have used him in a greater variety of plays as I truly believe he is an insanely impactful offensive player.

 

Glennsta

November 28th, 2016 at 2:16 PM ^

But yes there were reasons for the loss, some of which are within the capability of the coaching staff to try to fix.  Specifically the lack of a consistent running game or possibly the seeming confusion on defense at times.  

Yes, some of them were just not executing plays that were there to be made. Yes, some of were being on the short end of several lousy officiating decisions.

It hurts regardless of the cause.  But the coaches still need to work on what they can.

Change what you can possibly change to make things better and that's it. That's what is left to us, unfortunately.

Perkis-Size Me

November 28th, 2016 at 2:17 PM ^

We didn't deserve to win, and we don't deserve to make the playoff. Plain and simple. Maybe the 4th and 1 call was wrong. Maybe it wasn't. But we put ourselves in that situation because we didn't put OSU away despite the many chances we had to do so. 

We let Curtis Samuel dance around 10 yards backfield, and we couldn't even touch the kid until he'd scooted upfield to make it 4th and 1. Of course at that point, you knew Meyer would go for it. We threw two costly picks that resulted in 14 points for OSU. We failed to convert critical third downs at the end of the game that would've kept the clock going, and it put a tired Michigan defense back on the field. We dropped easy passes. Sometimes our guys got mugged. Other times they just plain dropped it. 

When we're on our game, we're one of the four best teams in the country. Arguably the best behind Alabama. When we're not on our game, we lose to lowly Iowa. OSU was not the better team on Saturday, but they didn't make mistakes. Or not a lot of them, anyway. Michigan made enough mistakes for both teams. That's where we lost it. The better team doesn't always win. 

You eliminate any one of those mistakes, that game probably goes the other way. Instead you're looking at another year of wondering what could've been. 

 

ST3

November 28th, 2016 at 3:10 PM ^

Just beat a top 20 Cornhusker team by 30 to finish the season 8-4. Iowa is now in the top 25. They had a weird early game against Rutgers and got blasted by Penn State. Penn State also blasted MSU, a team that took OSU to the wire. Maybe Penn State is actually pretty good? Hard to believe after we destroyed them by 39.

lilpenny1316

November 28th, 2016 at 3:14 PM ^

OSU was not penalized for their mistakes.  Multiple personal foul calls were missed, as well as the uneven PI calls.  If the calls were made fairly both ways, then neither team could complain.  But the refs were blinded like they were on the road to Damascus.

The 4th and 1 call sucked, but if the refs called the same game both ways, I doubt OT ever happens.

jmblue

November 28th, 2016 at 4:16 PM ^

OSU was not the better team on Saturday, but they didn't make mistakes. Or not a lot of them, anyway

OSU had four functional turnovers: the interception, the fake punt, and two missed field goals. Not to mention their 8 (!) sacks allowed and 3.9 YPA when they managed to get off a pass attempt.  

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

November 28th, 2016 at 2:17 PM ^

If anything in sports happened for A Reason, we'd have won this game as there is no way a program run as SEC-esque as Ohio's deserves to have that much of a golden horseshoe stuffed up their collective asses.

Blue Sharpie

November 28th, 2016 at 2:24 PM ^

If OSU stays at #2 after all championship games are played, I want to hear their reasoning on where Michigan lands. Because a case could be made that Michigan is just as good if not better than OSU after a double OT game in their house. OSU is not better, they just made less mistakes. The game could be looked at as a tie, as it would have been years ago. If all the conference favorites win their championship games, Bama, clemson, Washington, wisconsin, i think they will be forced to move OSU down in the rankings, that will give them an explanation why Michigan is not a 3 or 4 seed. But if they keep OSU at #2, how can Michigan not be a 3 or 4 when the committee consistently says they want the 4 "BEST" teams? That is why I think OSU ends up at 4 and Michigan will end up at 5 just missing the playoffs.

BlueMan80

November 28th, 2016 at 2:25 PM ^

but didn't and that made it possible for the zebras to screw up the game for us.

Darboh's drop was a real downer.  Letting Samuel escape from the 30 yard line and make it 4th and 1 was a bad omen to me.  I knew Urbz would go for it.  That's his thing....make the yard if you are a championship team.

So, disappointed, especially for the seniors and for Speight.  We didn't stand a chance if Speight didn't play based on how O'Korn did vs. Indiana.  He played, but he made several critical mistakes that cost us points and momentum.  Gutsy performance, though.  I winced every time he got hit and feared he'd be knocked out of the game.  That took some heart and courage against a D that wanted to knock him out.

Harbaugh knows how to run an offense and will get it humming once he has all the parts in place.  Will be interesting to see if Brandon Peters gives Speight a real challenge for QB next year.  Don Brown is good against spread teams.  This is our best D performance against OSU in years.  Once everyone gets the system ingrained in them, they'll be better.  He had a lot of talented seniors to work with this year, but I suspect he can get the same results from others once the system is in the D's DNA.

So, while I hate another loss to OSU and the fact the game was close so zebra meddling could make a difference, we are headed in the right direction.  I just wish I didn't have to "wait until next year".

Whoever we play in a bowl game is going to feel some real wrath from Michigan.  Harbaugh and the team will want to wash the bitter taste from this game out of their mouths.  The seniors will want to go out as winners.  Everyone will have more time to learn Don Brown's defense.

Oh...and Warde Manuel needs to have a talk with the B1G about who gets assigned as officials.

dcmaizeandblue

November 28th, 2016 at 2:31 PM ^

Who the hell cares about "deserving" to be in the playoff? If they want to put Michigan there, and there's an extremely easy argument to put them there, then holy shit you take it.

We didn't deserve to sit through LSU play Alabama again a few years ago, we didn't deserve to see OSU jump those teams because Wisconsin laid down. I'm done caring about deserving, you take what get and in this season Michigan is top 4 I don't care about the rest.