Video: Michigan State Week

Tag: Michigan State


27May 2011
Uncategorized 9 comments

Thanks to Six Zero!

In case you haven’t noticed, Touch the Banner  now has its very own banner.  MGoBlog reader/commenter Six Zero generously offered his designing talents, of which I have none, and designed the banner you see up top.  So thanks to him for helping out a random guy on the internet.

It looks pretty damn cool.

Here, enjoy a beatdown of Michigan State:

I especially enjoy the Clint Copenhaver interception at about 8:53 and then watching Sedrick Irvin’s terror at having to tackle a linebacker.

You can follow Touch the Banner  on Twitter.

28Jan 2011
Uncategorized 3 comments

Michigan 61, Michigan State 57



Zack Novak and Stu Douglass: Yes, Michigan’s part-time power forward looks shorter than its shooting guard.

 Congratulations to the Michigan men’s basketball team, which beat Michigan State at the Breslin Center for the first time in 14 years.

I watched the entire game while doing cardio at the gym.  As you might guess, my legs are tired this morning.

Go Blue!

10Oct 2010
Uncategorized 33 comments

Michigan State 34, Michigan 17



Michael Shaw carried 4 times for 29 yards in Saturday’s loss.


Well, that was ugly.  I guess this is what it looks like when Michigan’s offense gets shut down (or, in this case, shuts itself down).  I predicted an MSU victory in Friday’s game preview, but I didn’t think it would be a blowout.  Unfortunately, Michigan quarterback Denard Robinson reverted back to 2009 form at times on Saturday, throwing 3 interceptions and making poor reads in the running and passing games.  Here are some thoughts on yesterday’s performance.

Denard Robinson was exposed . . . a little bit.  This has been kind of a problem for Robinson all year long, but yesterday Michigan State’s defense took advantage of it: Denard doesn’t have great ball placement.  When defenses play zone coverage, his receivers do a good job of sitting down in a hole and waiting for the ball.  In turn, Denard does a good job of throwing to those holes in the zone, too.  However, when teams play man coverage, Denard’s accuracy on slants and crossing patterns is erratic.  Rather than throwing low and inside, he tends to throw the ball a) high or b) behind the receiver.  That trait was exposed on Saturday when two throws behind receivers were intercepted by trailing defenders.  In addition, another quarterback rule is “Don’t throw late over the middle of the field.”  Late in the game, Denard threw deep down the middle into double coverage after delaying a bit; the ball was intercepted and ended most of my hope that Michigan could pull one out.

Vincent Smith is not a short yardage running back.  He’s not.  Coach Rodriguez, put someone else – anyone – in at running back on 3rd-and-1.  This is just getting ridiculous.  How many times must you fail at gaining a yard with a 5’6″, 180 lb. running back before you put in somebody capable of breaking a tackle or pushing the pile?  Not only has it happened a few times this year, but Rodriguez also failed to put in a bigger, more powerful back in the 2009 Illinois game after Roy Roundtree was caught at the 1-yard line; Rodriguez left in a notoriously soft runner (Carlos Brown) instead of running Kevin Grady or Brandon Minor.  This is becoming a weekly, yearly problem.  Rodriguez obviously trusts freshman Stephen Hopkins enough to play him in a big rivalry game like this (Hopkins’s two carries went for 7 and 6 yards).  He’s 6’0″ and 227 lbs.  Give him the ball.

Run the ball.  Michigan averaged 4.8 yards a carry, and the running backs carried 13 times for 76 yards (5.8 yards per carry).  Late in the game, I understand going away from the pass.  Until then, Michigan should run run run when it’s working.

Maybe Tate Forcier should have played.  Forcier, 2009’s season-long starter, was sitting on the bench.  Robinson, a potential Heisman contender, was having a bad day.  Once the game reached a point where passing the ball every play was a given, I wouldn’t have minded if Forcier was inserted.  He’s a more accomplished passer and has better recognition skills.  He’s also 13-for-13 on the season and has some experience – and success – with late-game heroics (see: Indiana 2009, Notre Dame 2009, Michigan State 2009).  Robinson has improved greatly as a passer, but many of his passing stats can be attributed to the threat of the run.  Once defenses can sit back and play the pass almost exclusively, he’s going to be behind the eight ball.  I don’t think Forcier could have necessarily won the game for Michigan at that point, but he would have given the Wolverines a better chance, in my opinion.

Mike Martin is a beast.  Martin left the game late due to an illegal chop block that caused a lower leg injury.  However, before that he was making Michigan State center John Stipek look like a statue.  Martin repeatedly beat Stipek off the snap and into the A-gap of Martin’s choice.  Hopefully his injury isn’t too serious, because backup nose tackle Adam Patterson isn’t very good at all.

Rich Rodriguez’s clock management needs work. 

  • At the end of the first half, Rodriguez made bad decisions.  After a run play on which the clock was left to run, Rodriguez had two timeouts but ran the ball on first down.  Instead of calling one of those timeouts immediately, he wasted precious seconds before calling the first.  Then Robinson completed a long pass down the right sideline to Martavious Odoms, leaving :03 seconds on the clock.  Really the only choice at that point was to send out Seth Broekhuizen for a field goal, which Broekhuizen made.  However, if the first timeout had been called quicker, Michigan would have had approximately :07 seconds on the clock; they could have taken a shot at the end zone and still had time to kick the field goal if that attempt failed. 
  • At the end of the game, Rodriguez made another mistake.  With about 6 minutes left (if I remember correctly), Michigan was down by three scores and had a 3rd-and-19.  He called for an immediately checkdown to Michael Shaw, which gained 10 yards.  Okay, that’s fine.  I understand the theory.  Get half the yards on 3rd down, and then gain the other 9 yards on 4th down, right?  Nope, after the “give up” pass to Shaw, Rodriguez sent out his punting unit.  Down three scores with six minutes left . . . and you’re going to punt?  Go for the win!  What difference does it make if you fail to get a first down and MSU wins by a score of 41-17?  I’d rather have a chance to win the game than save face.

Michigan’s defense isn’t good enough to give up penalty yards, too.  The team only had three penalties for 35 yards on Saturday, but all three were against the defense.  Obi Ezeh and James Rogers each had a 15-yard facemask penalty, and Tony Anderson’s running into the kicker penalty at the end of the game sealed the Wolverines’ fate.

Michigan’s secondary is S-L-O-W.  Especially once James Rogers exited the game due to cramps, holy cow . . . I’ve never seen a slower secondary at Michigan.  Cam Gordon had no chance to catch Edwin Baker on Baker’s 61-yard touchdown run.  Rogers’s replacement at cornerback, Cullen Christian, has been noted by this blog (and many others’ observations) for his lack of speed; he was almost immediately beaten deep by Spartan receiver Mark Dell.  Cornerback J.T. Floyd and safety Jordan Kovacs both lack speed, too, although neither one was really exposed on Saturday.

Denard Robinson was off.  I don’t know what exactly was wrong.  He seemed to be moving fine.  He just wasn’t making the right reads in the passing or the running game.  It didn’t seem like he was seeing holes as quickly as in previous weeks.  Some credit goes to the Spartans for getting penetration with their defensive front four, but I don’t think Robinson was on top of his game.  And after throwing only one interception in the previous five weeks, he threw three today to an average MSU secondary.  It didn’t help that his receivers had subpar days, either.  I thought Roy Roundtree would have a big day – and he had opportunities – but Roundtree dropped two passes, and Robinson missed him a couple times, too.  He also overthrew a wide open Darryl Stonum in the endzone in the first quarter.  The deep ball needs work.

The defense continues to be crappy.  Michigan State’s quarterbacks completed 73% of their passes for 287 yards, 1 touchdown, and 0 interceptions.  The Spartans averaged 5.9 yards per carry, and running backs Edwin Baker (6.7 yards per carry) and Le’Veon Bell (11.1) were outstanding.  The good news is that since MSU likes to run the ball, Michigan has now moved up to #119 in the country against the pass (ahead of only Tulsa).  The bad news is that Michigan has dropped ten spots to #112 in overall defense (New Mexico is better) since last week, on the strength of MSU’s 536 total yards.

I realize this post is quite negative, but on the heels of a blowout and three straight losses to Michigan State, I have a hard time finding positives.

8Oct 2010
Uncategorized 3 comments

Preview: Michigan State at Michigan

Michigan State freshman running back Le’Veon Bell

Rush Offense vs. Michigan State Rush Defense
Michigan quarterback Denard Robinson is currently the #1 rusher in all of college football, and the Wolverines are the #3 rushing offense in the country.  Co-starting running back Michael Shaw should return from a tweaked knee to help out fellow starter Vincent Smith in the backfield, but neither has been extremely productive this season.  Shaw picked up a good chunk of his numbers against UMass, and Smith was unspectacular until his 56-yard touchdown run last week against Indiana; aside from that outburst, he’s averaging 3.78 yards per carry.  Meanwhile, Michigan State is ranked #20 against the run this season and just finished beating a run-heavy Wisconsin team.  Many media outlets suggested that MSU shut down Wisconsin’s run game, but UW averaged 5.3 yards per carry throughout the contest.  While the Spartans should be the toughest run defense Michigan has seen, no team has been able to come close to shutting down Robinson and his minions in the run game.  Despite the underperforming running backs, Robinson averages 9.2 yards a carry – and that’s despite missing the majority of the BGSU game due to injury.
Advantage: Michigan

Pass Offense vs. Michigan State Pass Defense
It seems that a lot of people are overlooking this aspect of the matchup.  The Wolverines are the #38 passing offense in the country, while MSU lingers at #78.  With all the talent that MSU has recruited up front in the past few years, the secondary is suspect.  Tate Forcier had a subpar day for most of the 2009 game, but he finished with 223 yards and 2 touchdowns last season, including some big plays in the passing game.  If Michigan has early success in the running game, that should open up downfield throws.  Denard Robinson missed a couple streaking, wide open receivers last week against Indiana, and he’ll need to capitalize on those opportunities this week.  I don’t expect that Robinson will end up throwing for 400 yards or anything crazy like that, but big plays are bound to be there for the taking. 
Advantage: Michigan

Rush Defense vs. Michigan State Rush Offense
Michigan is ranked #37 in rush defense, although that statistic is a bit misleading.  With as bad as Michigan’s secondary is, teams like Indiana, Notre Dame, and UConn have been content to chuck the ball all over the field.  Of those top 37 teams, Michigan allows the fourth-highest yards per carry average (3.66).  This might be where the game is won or lost.  MSU’s starting running back, Edwin Baker, is averaging 7.1 yards per carry . . . and there’s not much dropoff when he comes out of the game, with top backup Le’Veon Bell averaging 7.4 yards per carry.  In fact, that’s not a dropoff at all.  Michigan has done a pretty good job of preventing huge runs so far this season, but teams have been able to get yards in chunks.  The difference this week might be that Baker and Bell have the ability to turn 15- or 20-yard runs into 80-yard runs.  Baker has speed that Michigan’s safeties can’t match, and Bell has the power to run through a lot of tackles.  Unlike previous opponents, I wouldn’t be surprised to see MSU run the ball, run the ball, and run it some more.
Advantage: Michigan State

Pass Defense vs. Michigan State Pass Offense
Ugh.  Rushing the ball is probably the safer option, but if the Spartans need to pass, they’ll be able to do so at will.  MSU quarterback Kirk Cousins is completing 67.5% of his passes and has a few good options to whom to throw the ball.  The only good thing is that Cousins has thrown four interceptions in his five games, so Michigan does have a chance to force some turnovers.  However, I truly believe that Michigan needs to rush four or more defenders in order to have a chance against the pass.  If the Wolverines keep rushing three, Cousins will have all day to pick apart Michigan’s makeshift secondary.  Michigan is literally last in the country against the pass, and there’s no reason to believe that Saturday will show any kind of significant turnaround in that area.
Advantage: Michigan State

Final Predictions

  • For the second time this season, Michigan will get outgained by an opponent.
  • Denard Robinson will get injured and miss time . . . again.
  • We see Michigan’s first trick play of the season (double pass, reverse, fake field goal, etc.).
  • Roy Roundtree will have a huge game.
  • Michigan State 38, Michigan 35