Michigan-Notre Dame Football– Looking Back – 1980

There were a lot of historic moments in 1980 before Michigan traveled to Notre Dame for a September football game. In February, the United States won a Gold Medal in ice hockey when a team of largely unknown amateur hockey players stunned the Soviet Red Army team in one of the greatest upsets in sports history. That was the good news. The big news story of 1980 was the Iran Hostage Crisis, which dominated conversations in every coffee shop in the country.

On the football field, Michigan and Notre Dame played a classic game that featured a number of lead changes in the final minutes, something this rivalry is known for. John Wangler took over at quarterback in the second quarter with Michigan trailing 14-0, and threw a pair of touchdown passes in 1:19 to tie the score by halftime. Momentum put on a winged helmet and a number 1 jersey at the beginning of the third quarter, as Anthony Carter returned the second-half kickoff 67 yards, giving Michigan the ball at the Notre Dame 32. Stanley Edwards scored from two yards out to give Michigan the lead. Notre Dame then scored a pair of touchdowns to take a 26-21 lead with a little more than three minutes to go. On Michigan’s final drive, Butch Woolfolk carried for 36 yards to the Notre Dame 4-yard line, and then tipped a pass that was caught Michigan’s Craig Dunaway for a touchdown, giving the Wolverines a 1-point lead with 41 seconds left. 

On the game’s final drive, Notre Dame freshman quarterback Blair Kiel threw a long pass down the sideline that resulted in a controversial pass interference call against Michigan defensive back Marion Body, putting the ball at the Michigan 48. On the next play, Michigan defensive back Jeff Reeves came ever so close to ending the game with an interception. Two passes later, Kiel connected with Tony Hunter, who inadvertently stepped out of bounds at the 34, setting up one of the fateful kicks of all time. Up to the line stepped left-footed kicked Harry Oliver, who kicked a 51-yard field goal as time expires, sending Notre Dame streaming onto the field. 

As the season went on, Michigan recovered quite nicely, reeling off nine consecutive wins, including a victory over Washington in the Rose Bowl, Notre Dame wound up losing its last two games to USC and Georgia. 

Oliver bravely fought cancer in later years and passed away in 2007 at the age of 47. But on that day in 1980, Oliver earned his spot in immortality in Notre Dame football, and in this rivalry. 

Thanks to youtube poster BlueGoldIlustrated for the footage. As always, I own no rights to this. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdT3w54qElM

 

Michigan-Notre Dame Football – Looking Back – 1992

The 1992 game between Michigan and Notre Dame isn’t reviewed as often as many other games in the series, probably because neither team was able to win, so the game didn’t really add to the glorious tradition of either team. The game ended in a 17-17 tie at South Bend, and both teams to view the game with bittersweet memories.

Early on, it looked as though Notre Dame would pull away. Reggie Brooks ran 20 yards and scored what’s referred to as the “unconscious touchdown” after colliding with Michigan defensive back Coleman Wallace. With Notre Dame leading, 7-0 and threatening, Michigan’s Martin Davis recovered a fumble on a reverse, and the momentum suddenly changed as Michigan went to its two-minute drill, with quarterback Elvis Grbac connecting with tight end Tony McGee and wide receiver Derrick Alexander, arguably two of the most underappreciated players in Michigan history. With a little more than a minute to go, Grbac found Tyrone Wheatley out of the backfield, and Wheatley broke a tackle and skirted 28 yards down the sideline for the tying touchdown. In the third quarter, Michigan made another opportunity for itself when Corwin Brown knocked the ball loose from Jerome Bettis and linebacker Steve Morrison call the ball in midair and returned it near midfield. The drive extended stretched into the fourth quarter, and when Grbac completed a touchdown pass to Alexander in the corner of the end zone, the Wolverines suddenly had a 10-point lead.

The deficit didn’t seem to faze the Irish, who went right back to Bettis, a bulldozer who just happened to hail from Detroit. Following a pass interference penalty on then-freshman cornerback Ty Law, Bettis pounded the ball over the goal line to cut Michigan’s lead to three points. Later, Craig Hentrich made a field goal to tie the score at 17, ending all the scoring, but not the drama.

With Michigan threatening, Notre Dame pressured Grbac, who threw an interception into the waiting arms of Notre Dame defensive back Jeff Burris, giving the Irish the ball with 1:07 left in the game. However, Notre Dame had only one timeout left, while Michigan still had all three. That might have played a part in Irish coach Lou Holtz’s decision to run the ball on back-to-back plays, before quarterback Rick Mirer finally heaved a long pass that was incomplete, leaving only seven seconds on the clock. On the final play of the game, Mirer threw a long pass down the middle of the field that was easily broken up by Brown, ending the game in bizarre fashion.

I was unable to watch the game because of work obligations that day, but I listened to the radio broadcast, and when Michigan was driving with less than two minutes to go, the color commentator on the Notre Dame radio broadcast said that Michigan was “in the catbird’s seat.” Sadly, Grbac’s interception wasted that opportunity. Almost as sad was the fact that I couldn’t get a Michigan radio broadcast in New York City.

From the Notre Dame perspective, fans were thoroughly angry with Holtz, a coach who was revered by the Notre Dame faithful.

At the end of the season, Michigan had finished undefeated, but with three ties to Notre Dame, Illinois and archrival Ohio State. However, the Wolverines won the Rose Bowl, 38-31 over Washington, giving them a final record of 9-0-3. It’s fair to say that team hasn’t received enough recognition over the years. After the 1992 season, Moeller resigned, but he left Lloyd Carr a roster stocked with talent. As we all know, Carr eventually became a living legend in his own right, leading Michigan to a perfect season and a share of the National Championship in the 1997 season. Notre Dame finished the 1992 season with a 10-1-1 record, losing only a midseason game to Stanford. Both teams enjoyed good seasons in 1992, but one team wished that rivalry game in early September had a different ending.

Thanks to NBC and youtube poster Wolverine Devotee. As always, I do not own any rights to this game.

Michigan-Notre Dame Football – Looking Back – 1989

I didn’t see the 1989 game between the two rivals live. My wife and I were on some weekend for engaged Catholic couples, and there were no television sets at the place, which was probably for the best, since people would have watched the game instead of focusing on their relationships, and since I would have likely been the only Michigan fan there. For that matter, let me add a third reason: watching Rocket Ismail return back-to-back kickoffs for touchdowns might have caused a few blood vessels to burst.

Oh yes, Ismail. As individual performances go, his performance in that ’89 game ranks with the greatest individual performances in the history of the series. The shame of it from the Michigan perspective is that the Wolverines had the chance to win that game, but Bo insisted on kicking to Ismail, not once, but twice. Yes, all things considered, it’s probably for the best that I didn’t watch that game.

Still, there were bright spots for Michigan in 1989, such as quarterback Michael Taylor connecting with Chris Calloway on a fade into the corner of the end zone for a touchdown, but even then, Michigan missed the point after, and trailed 7-6. Ismail’s first kickoff return gave the Irish some breathing room as the second half opened, but after Taylor left the game with an injury, freshman quarterback Elvis Grbac led the Wolverines on a touchdown drive, completing six of seven passes, including the scoring pass to Derrick Walker. All of sudden, Michigan was right there.

That’s when Bo made the fateful decision to kick off to Ismail again. Again, Grbac led Michigan on another touchdown drive, but Notre Dame recovered the ensuing onsides kick and ran out the clock.

The ’89 game was the last game Bo coached against the Irish. He retired after the season and turned over the reins to long-time assistant Gary Moeller. It was also the last game the rivals would play on the old artificial turf at Michigan Stadium. By the time the Irish returned in 1991, The Big House returned to real grass. Would a slower, real grass surface have helped on a rainy day against Notre Dame in 1989? Maybe. Would it have helped not to kick to Ismail? Absolutely.

Thanks to youtube poster RocketShark, BlueGoldIllustrated and NBC for the footage. As always, I own nothing.

Michigan-Notre Dame Football– Looking Back – 1978

Over the past few years, I’ve reviewed five games between Michigan and Ohio State leading up to “The Game” itself. With the end of the Michigan-Notre Dame series only a week away, Phil agreed with me that it would be a good idea to review five memorable games from this rivalry.

Michigan and Notre Dame first met on the gridiron back in 1887, but for this series, I’m going to start with 1978, the first game in the modern era between the teams. There were several interesting sports stories in 1978. Affirmed won the Triple Crown, an achievement that seems more impressive since no horse has won the Triple Crown since then. The New York Yankees topped the Boston Red Sox 5-4 in a one-game playoff to decide the championship of the American League East. That game was so dramatic that it made the Yankees’ ensuing World Series championship seem almost anticlimactic by comparison.

Of course, in college football, all the talk centered about Michigan and Notre Dame, who were about to play each other for the first time since 1943, so the game was dubbed “the reunion game.” Notre Dame entered the game as the defending national champion, while Michigan enjoying its own renaissance, with Bo Schembechler having led the Wolverines to victories over Ohio State in each of the two previous seasons. Both teams entered the 1978 game with outstanding quarterbacks. Joe Montana was named the starting quarterback several games in the 1977 and promptly led the Fighting Irish to the National Championship, punctuated by a 38-10 win over Texas in the Cotton Bowl. For Michigan, Rick Leach had emerged as one of the best quarterbacks in school history, establishing himself a threat as both a runner and a passer three decades before that became commonplace. With each team boasting a star quarterback, something had to give.

From the Michigan perspective, the game didn’t start well at all. Notre Dame sandwich a pair of touchdowns around a Rick Leach touchdown run to take a 14-7 lead over Michigan into the locker room at halftime. Michigan took charge in the second half, aided by an opportunistic defense. Leach found Doug Marsh in the corner of the end zone to tie the score at 14, and then linebacker Jerry Meter intercepted a Montana pass, giving the Wolverines the ball at the Notre Dame 35-yard line. As the fourth quarter began, Leach connected with Marsh again on an 18-yard touchdown pass to put Michigan ahead to stay. Nursing a 20-14 lead, Michigan’s Michael Harden stepped in front of a receiver to intercept a Montana pass, setting up Michigan at the Notre Dame 40. Leach didn’t waste any time, finding Ralph Clayton for a 40-yard touchdown pass to give the Blue a 26-14 lead. With a little more than a minute left in the game, Michigan defensive lineman Curtis Greer sacked Montana for a safety, and Michigan celebrated the renewal of an old rivalry with a 28-14 win in South Bend. In later years, Montana became the focal point of the San Francisco 49ers’ dynasty, leading the Niners to three Super Bowl championships. The Denver Broncos drafted Leach, but he chose baseball over football, and played 10 seasons in the Major Leagues for four teams, including the Detroit Tigers.

As always, thanks to ABC and youtube member Wolverine Historian for the video clip below. Naturally, we don’t own any rights to this footage. Enjoy!

M FOOTBALL 2014-A LONG OFF SEASON AFTER A SO-SO CAMPAIGN LEFT SOME FANS WITH EXCESSIVE NEGATIVITY REGARDING TEAM 135’S COMPOSITION, COACHING AND PROSPECTS. SATURDAY SOME OF THOSE CONCERNS WERE RELIEVED AS THE WOLVERINES BEAT DOWN APPALACHIAN STATE, 52 TO 14.

2014-UMAppSt-010Michigan fans are very gratified that the football season has finally arrived, but some Michigan fans were not ecstatic over a return match with ASU as the season opener.  It recalled one of the most humiliating blips in the Wolverine’s past.  There were concerns about the offensive line etc.   This win substitutes a taste of actual game observations for speculation.  Many important questions will be answered next Saturday against the venerable Fighting Irish.

There were concerns the stadium wouldn’t fill, but it did fill with 106,811 fans.  It was not a sell-out, but maintained the consecutive 100,000 fan record.

Seven years ago, Michigan delusions of grandeur were lynched 32-34 on the strength of a Lynch FG, which initiated a deluge of disrespect for M that snapped around the world as fast as a satellite could carry the news.  That put a black mark on Michigan’s permanent football ledger.

Some of those concerns are now assuaged since the Wolverines dominated the pesky Mountaineers, but the mark can never be erased.  Even so, this year’s so-called “no win opener” is over, and won in fine style.

The Mountaineers are now attempting to mine a bigger lode, but were not explosive enough in Ann Arbor Saturday to blast out a victory.  Unfortunately for them, their 2007 team was a better team.

Harbored in a good looking, newly renovated Kidd Brewer stadium , which has been upgraded to contain 23,150 frenzied fans, and with a new 120,000 square foot Appalachian Athletic Center.  ASU considers themselves upwardly mobile, their program soaring to new heights on the ready wings of TV money. They are now in the Sun Belt Conference, and can earn a bowl game next year.

It seems a big stadium is no longer an absolutely necessity to prosper financially for every institution, even if it does help to become top drawer. But a payday from a televised football Saturday in Michigan Stadium will help the Mountaineers to shinny upwards.

While it will never be forgotten entirely, the echo from our ASU past is now muted (at least outside of Boone, N.C.).  There are still areas of concern to be addressed by this year’s Wolverines, and questions to be answered.

One of the biggest is whether the Wolverines can learn to win on the road against good football teams.  Sometimes they have not played up to the same standard of play they present in Michigan Stadium.  Will there be echoes of last year’s Connecticut and Akron games?  OSU, MSU, ND and Nebraska are on the road.  But the first step to a successful season was last Saturday, and it featured:

DEVIN TO DEVIN
Both Funchess and Gardner were outstanding Saturday.  Funchess was considered a tight end in prior seasons, notwithstanding he was utilized as sort of a hybrid, additionally playing some wide receiver.  As a Tight End he wore Ron Kramer’s old number which was 87.  Funchess was honored to wear Number 87 number while a tight end.  But his role has changed.  He now fulfills all the duties expected of a wide receiver.  So he has been assigned the coveted Number 1, the number worn by Anthony Carter and other great receivers.

His style somewhat resembles Braylon Edwards. He is a tremendous leaper.  Like Braylon Edwards, who also wore Number one.  He occasionally muffs the easy catch and makes the spectacular catch.  Like Braylon Edwards.  But he is bigger than Braylon.  He is making us miss Jeremy Gallon’s past production a little less.  He snagged seven for 95 yards with a long of 34.

Saturday he set records, snagging three touchdown passes before the game was 4 minutes into the second quarter.  First, a 9-yard TD catch, then a 34-yard TD reception, and then an 8-yard TD reception.

Hoke on the bestowal of the Number One Jersey … “The young man asked me about it, and I said that’s fine. I said call a member of the Kramer family, ask them, and that’s what he did. Ron Kramer may have been the best player ever to play here, best athlete ever to play here. So he talked to Kurt, his son, and Devin being more of a wide receiver, obviously, he thought that’s what he wanted to do. And believe me I asked him who has worn No. 1, and he started with Anthony Carter and went down the list, so I think that he earned it.”

2014-UMAppSt-03Devin Gardner played an outstanding game.  His ball was on target (except one time) where protection failed.  He stepped up in the pocket well, got rid of the ball quickly, and took a few man sized licks, one a nasty face mask on the sidelines.  When the Devin’s got their pass and catch game going it activated the running game.  Much of the running was from the spread.  Devin deserved some well earned praise for checking down on Green’s 62-yard run.

Hoke on whether the success of the offense early on came because of the shotgun, spread formation or was it a product of the opponent… “Anytime you can run some of those spread things you’ve got a pretty mobile quarterback, one of those dual-threat guys they talk about, and I think having the ability to run some of that, whether you’re going to make it, your backbone of what you’re doing, I think defenses have to prepare for it. I think it’s always good to have that in there.”

Devin was 13 of 14 for 173-yards and 3 TDs, with no interceptions.  He ran five times for 17-yards.  The 17-yards reduced to 9 via an 8-yard sack.

It was gratifying to see Coach Nussmeier on the sidelines actively mentoring his QB. His plan recognized ASU’s weaknesses and attacked them.

OL
The OL enabled 560-yards of offense, with 364-yards rushing.  Derrick Green and De’Veon Smith were both over 100-yards.  Can you remember the last time the Wolverines had two rushers over 100-yards, when one of runners was not named Denard or Devin?  And they helped enable 52 points.

Are there rough spots?  Of course!  They are still a work in progress.  But there is palpable progress.  Coach Hoke cited Center Jack Miller as improving, and Graham Glasgow, considered by some to be among the best offensive linemen, will find employment on the line against ND.

A freshman left tackle started for the first time.  Mason Cole played decently, even if burned on a  few occasions.

Butt Out
Last Saturday, Jake Butt was still on the injured list.  He is the best pass catching tight end, and soon should return. Graham Glasgow was ready to play but prevented from playing as punishment.  Hoke on how the offense will change with Graham Glasgow available to play next week… “How it changes, I’m not sure yet. I think that’s an option that we’re glad we have, but I can’t tell you if it’s going to be a change right yet.”

RBs
2014-UMAppSt-017
Derrick Green rushed for 170-yards on 15 carries, and a TD.  His long run was 62-yards.  Beautiful run even if he did get caught from behind.  Green also had an impressive 59-yard scamper.

De’Veon Smith also scurried for 115-yards on 8 carries and logged a 61-yard jaunt. Another beautiful run even if he too got caught from behind.  He had two TDs.

Both are tough runners and De’Veon said in the presser after that he wants to hit LBs so hard that they shy off the second time.  He had two TDs.

Sometimes vision on the cuts needs work as Coach Hoke has mentioned earlier,

Johnson, Hayes, Gardner all contributed some yards, but Green and Smith were the heavy lifters.

SALT AND PEPPERS
While Jabrill Peppers only played in the first half, being removed from the game at halftime because of a tweaked ankle, he showed all the athleticism with which he has been credited, both as a nickel corner and punt returner.  It appeared to me the tweaked ankle resulted from a low cut block that ought to always be illegal.  He played on it for much of the 1st half.

ASU kicked away from both Peppers and Norfleet.  Peppers is just learning.  He ran hard and dove for a punt which is a high risk.  But he skillfully made the diving  catch, skidding to a stop with the ball, or it would have been a harder lesson.

The defense continues to be the deepest part of this team. Pipkins, Wormley, Bolden, Ryan, Countess, Frank and Jeremy Clark , Gedeon,  T. Charlton, and Henry, among others, poured salt into the ASU wounds.  They produced 4 TFLs, and 2 sacks. Press coverage on the 4 wide outs that ASU usually deployed was in deep contrast to the bend but not break defense of last year.  Greg Mattison was sending them, too.

They played strong active defense.  ASU could not move the ball consistently before late in the third quarter.

ASU did have some success running the ball, was it personnel fits? Coach Hoke’s comment…”I think it’s more about fits; I think it’s about guys didn’t get off blocks. You go another series and all of the sudden the same guy who didn’t get off a block, he was getting off a block, and it’s a plus one or a minus one. So it’s the consistency of doing that every time.” On what he liked about the defense … “I thought they were pretty tight on coverage. I think that part of it, and we have worked real hard on being tighter in the coverage aspect (is good). I think the flow of the linebackers, all three of them, because they rotate, and depending on what defensive package we’re in, James Ross, and James plays some of the normal defense also as an inside guy, but you felt those guys. You felt them as much as anything, breaking on balls and cleaning the hits up.”

SPECIAL TEAMS
Much of their play has already been described.  Will Hargerup punted once for 44 yards.  Matt Wile made some KOs into the end zone.  When he didn’t, some were returned to the thirty.  Some work is needed there.  Matt also hit an upright with a forty-eight yard field goal attempt.  Jehu Chesson made a special teams play that is the dream of all players trying to nail a punt returner.  Right after the catch he dropped the receiver in his tracks, without slowing up.  Perfect timing. Chesson is probably singing Hail To The Violent tonight.  Beautiful timing, hit. A play that every player who ever played that position (gunner) wants to make, but but seldom can.

Mike McCray blocked a Mountaineer punt. Ben Gedeon caught the football, and chugged it 32-yards into the end zone for his first collegiate TD.

NOTRE DAME
Next Saturday night, in Notre Dame Stadium will be the last round with Notre Dame in the most recent series.  The last hiatus was 25 years.  A win or loss to the Irish early in the season sets the tone for that season based on Notre Dame’s reputation, and Michigan’s.  Somewhat mirror football images over the years, these two powerful mid-west teams strive for football supremacy without quarter.

Michigan has won the most college football games, ND has been second most years.  Michigan owned the college winning percentage, but recently ND claims that honor again.  Notre has distained the B1G, and Michigan.  Michigan’s  has famously distained Notre Dame through the comments of the revered Bo Schembechler.

But when toe meets leather in South Bend, none of that will matter.  What will matter is winning a contest against great competition and great tradition.  Both schools, both football teams, need this one badly.  The motivation is there on both sides.  Who will execute?

I believe that Michigan has the talent, coaching,  scheme, and will to surmount this huge obstacle to a successful season, but there is not a pint lifted in any Irish Pub nationwide where the lifter does not believe the exact opposite.

We shall see, and thank you for reading these pages.

Go Blue!