The little things they make me so happyAll I wanna do is live by the seaYeah, little things they make me so happyBut it's good, yes it's good, it's good to be free
--"(It's Good) To Be Free" by Oasis, first released as a B-Side to "Whatever."
Yesterday's game was an interesting exercise in paradigms. When Washington got out to their 14-0 lead as Michigan's defense looked slow, slippy, and confused, and sometimes all three at once, there was a willingness to say, "Yep, this is what we were all expecting." The offense looked disorganized. Injuries, including some we did not know about, were piling up. It looked very much like the Huskies could name their number and send Michigan into the bye week limping.
The Jack Tuttle came in. The seventh-year quarterback. The latest in a series of "Well, maybe this could work" options. Indeed, he couldn't be much worse than we had seen this season at the position." Early results were promising. Tuttle hit a couple of little passes, he scrambled for a pair of seven-yard runs on first downs to keep the chains moving and ahead of the sticks, and then Donovan Edwards looked like the Donovan that we've been waiting for all year, a 39 yard TD run, Michigan was back within seven and a game was to be made of it. Michigan forced a three-and-out before a second promising drive in a row stalled out at the Washington 27, but a Dominic Zvada field goal was true, and it was 14-10. Washington would bookend the first half with a second missed field goal, and Michigan would get the ball to start the second half.
One of the biggest things I miss from the Harbaugh years is that Michigan was genuinely a second-half team. Adjustments would be made, the fitness level would show out, and Michigan would look better closing a game out than they did to start. For the first drive, it looked like a little bit of Michigan of old, a methodical, efficient 75-yard drive that ended with a little Tuttle scramble to find Colston Loveland uncovered alone in the end zone, and Michigan took a three-point lead. But that was the last real positive moment on offense. Washington got a long drive to tie it with a field goal, Michigan didn't seem like it had a real plan on offense again, and things looked up when Ernest Hausmann made a spectacular interception in the middle of the field, but the ball went back to Washington five plays later thanks to a Tuttle fumble, which felt like the doom like object everyone watching was waiting for. Washington scored a TD to take the lead, Tuttle threw a backbreaking interception trying to hit Loveland, Washington got a field goal, and that was the ten-point margin of victory for the favored Huskies, leading to a confusing field storming on the Montlake Cut and a bizarre suggestion by Noah Eagle that the Huskies had "avenged" their National Championship game loss. Hmmm...Trophy go Brrr..
This will probably sound strange, but I was disappointed by the loss but almost immediately over it. This Michigan team is so deeply flawed, with various reasons for those flaws that can be explained away, that I just don't feel the angst of years past. Winning solves a lot of problems, and it also solves a lot of future problems if you let it. While it is deeply frustrating and endlessly curious that Michigan's defense looks so middling with three NFL talents on it, well, you know, being very late in the hiring process perhaps left Michigan with an imperfect fit in the name of attempted continuity. There are other areas that further this cause.
But here's the thing. I'm not too broken up about it because it doesn't feel like we're wandering in the desert anymore. Yes, a blue blood should be able to "reload" and stay at the top of the heap, but that isn't how it worked this time. I'm OK with that. I'm still going to enjoy this team for what it is; I'll be disappointed when things don't go right, and I'll still cheer loudly when they are successful. But in the end, it's good to be free.
Tales from the Spreadsheet
- 17-27 is NOT a Scorigami (3rd time, most recently 11/28/2020, against Penn State, which I mean, I wouldn't blame you if you didn't remember)
- 72,132 were in attendance (or about 700 fewer people than the National Championship Game)
- Michigan moves to 9-6-0 all-time against the University of Washington.
- Michigan moves to 16-3 all-time on October 28 (losses to MSU in 1935 and Roger Staubach's Navy team in 1963. The 2019 win over Iowa was the birth of The Spreadsheet.)
- Michigan moves to 18-16-2 when scoring exactly 17 points.
- Michigan moves to 6-15 all-time when allowing 27 points to the opposition.
- Michigan has lost 18 games all-time by precisely 10 points, most recently, the aforementioned 2020 Penn State game.
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