Ugh, even the bye week can’t erase the horrors of South Bend…
After Careful Consideration- To Hell with Notre Dame…
NO LATE GAME HEROICS TO SECURE WIN AS WOLVERINES TAKE LOSS-MICHIGAN 6, NOTRE DAME 13

UMGOBLUE.COM Michigan Wolverine Football & Basketball
By Fans…For Fans Since 1999
Ugh, even the bye week can’t erase the horrors of South Bend…
After Careful Consideration- To Hell with Notre Dame…
NO LATE GAME HEROICS TO SECURE WIN AS WOLVERINES TAKE LOSS-MICHIGAN 6, NOTRE DAME 13
Tradition is one of the main differences between college and professional football.
And there are few college football programs with the long and storied tradition of Michigan and Notre Dame.
It began when the Wolverines visited South Bend to teach the Irish how to play the game over a hundred years ago and has continued on and off since.
Over the years Michigan and Notre Dame have rung up the most wins in college football history and the best winning percentage- with Notre Dame trailing Michigan in both totals.
Both of these teams have had their share of national championships, Heisman trophy winners, and thrilling games. In short, Michigan and Notre Dame often represent the best that college football has to offer.
But it appears that rivalry is about to take another break, and given the attitude displayed by Notre Dame it might be a long time before we see Wolverines play the Fighting Irish on the gridiron again.
Moments before this year’s contest, Michigan Athletic Director David Brandon was handed a letter pulling the plug on the future of the series.
This isn’t how you treat an honored rival.
Notre Dame pink-slipped Michigan with no discussion minutes before kickoff, invoking their three year termination clause in such a way that insures that they have the final home game of the series in 2014.
A classier move would have been for ND to meet with Michigan officials beforehand and discus how to keep the rivalry alive in the future.
But Notre Dame has chosen different course.
It takes to two tango. Michigan can’t force Notre Dame to continue the series and at this point it’s hard for me to argue that they should even try.
Maybe in ten or twenty years, a new generation of leaders at Notre Dame will come realize how important the tradition of the Michigan/Notre Dame is for not only for each university but for college football overall.
Michigan Immortal Fritz Crisler said, “Tradition is something you can’t bottle. You can’t buy it at the corner store. But it is there to sustain you when you need it most…”
Apparently Notre Dame officials believe they have so much of it they can throw out their oldest vintage.
You would think the opportunity to take on the team beating them in overall wins and winning percentage would be too enticing of a challenge to throw away.
I’ll miss playing Notre Dame. I have grave concerns about what teams will take their place on the schedule.
But for now the words of Bo Schembechler come to mind.
“To hell with Notre Dame.”
WOLVERINE MISTAKES GUARANTEE OUTCOME
Recent Wolverine football games against the notorious Irish have produced competitive spectacles featuring last minute victories by the Wolverines as both vaunted programs have been trying to claw back to the top of the college football heap.

But this time, the Wolverines produced no TDs, failed in the red zone twice early, produced five interceptions, fumbled twice, and produced foolish penalties. To their credit Notre Dame produced better defense than they have in the past.
M trailed at the half 10-0, despite good defense. Their offensive failures in the red zone in the first quarter were inexplicable. A Raymon Taylor interception at the ND 27 and an Irish penalty putting the ball at the nine yard line seemed to set them up favorably early. The opportunity died by reason of interception. Later in the quarter RB Vincent Smith threw a pass under pressure, throwing off the mark per Coach Hoke. When that was intercepted another great opportunity was wasted. A field goal was also missed in that quarter. Golden chances wasted. A total of seven turnovers (five interceptions and 2 fumbles) over the course of any game spells defeat for a football team nearly all the time.
Defensively M stopped the run, and forced out the starting ND QB Golson after a couple of interceptions. He was replaced by last year’s starter Tommy Rees. Rees ran for the only TD in the game. Finally, nothing could overcome Michigan’s own gaffs.
FOUR OUT OF SIX OF THE MOST RECENT GAMES AGAINST THE IRISH HAVE BEEN GREAT FOR THE WOLVERINES
In, 2007, both M and ND were struggling with perception of declining national prominence, when Charlie Weise came to Michigan Stadium for what some disparagingly called “the bottom of the barrel bowl.” It was also Lloyd Carr’s last shot at ND as the head man. Hart was hearty, and Mallet hammered. Surprising absolutely everyone, the Wolverines prevailed 38-0. The self-proclaimed “offensive (football) genius”, Charlie Weiss, then owned a notch in his own decline as ND coach, but in 2008, Charlie’ fortunes were rejuvenated, and the Wolverines were dismayed by 6 TOs and a 17 to 35 defeat. Rich Rodriguez owned this one.
Fortunes reversed again in 2009, RR’s charges winning at home, 38-34, and fortunes stayed tuned to the Wolverines for 2010 with a win in ND Stadium, 28 – 24. Denard was superb with 502-yards rushing and passing, and he really hit the big time with this game. Roy Roundtree ran in a 31-yard TD. The only sad note that day was that the great Ron Kramer passed away the day of this game.
In 2011, Brady Hoke won his first Head Coaching game against the Irish, 35-31, in the first night game in program history. Roy Roundtree caught a spectacular TD falling out of bounds with the ball being wrestled by an Irish DB, and again the Wolverines won in the final minutes in spectacular fashion after coming back from behind. Last year the Irish dominated until the final quarter, M having produced only 3 first downs in the 1st half. Denard again proved to be a football weapon of mass production as he engineered another spectacular last minute defeat of the Irish with under thirty seconds remaining.
PRE-GAME PERCEPTIONS OF SATURDAY’S GAME, AND SOME ACUALITIES
There were numerous unanswered questions regarding Wolverine’s Team 133 prior to this contest. The blasting by Alabama, the ball possession of the precise triple option scheme of the cadets of Air Force, and the home opener against winless Massachusetts, did not provide sufficient answers to the following and more.
Almost every one conversant with Wolverine’s football knew that the Notre Dame game was the appropriate litmus test for the early season, and knew that we did not have a handle on the Wolverines standing from the first three games.
Now we do. This year’s version of the Wolverines will struggle to win games, although they will be more competitive once they get a handle on their own mistakes, and young players develop. They blew an opportunity to win a high profile game against a team that does not appear to be significantly better in spite of being ranked at 11 to the Wolverines 18.
Those two red zone failures in the first quarter could have been the ticket to a great win. They changed M’s fortunes big time. A 14 to nothing early lead would have changed things drastically.
To their credit the Wolverines played hard. Post-game Coach Hoke indicated that both sides played hard, and it was obvious. The running game got a little life in the second half, but I had to wonder why the ball kept going down field to be intercepted until the first drive of the second half, when some short passing game appeared.
This team is not going to roll over and play dead. Denard, (and hopefully Coach Borges) will learn and adapt, and they will not disintegrate. Nobody will quit. Maybe the defense came of age a little.
Bring on the Boilermakers in a key B1G game at Purdue. The Boilermakers played Notre Dame better than we did, and may be a contender this year. While this game did nothing at all to improve the perception of the B1G, it appears there is a lot of parity within the League. The Boilers will be tough competition having a good defense and decent offense, in what still appears to be an uncertain year. It is going to be a tough two weeks at Schembechler Hall. Team 133 will have a bye week to lick their wounds, and find some answers. They will find them.
Go Blue!
![]() |
#18 Michigan at #11 Notre Dame
Date: Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012 | Time: 7:30 p.m. ET |
![]() |
| Michigan (2-1) Roster | Schedule/Results Releases/Features Game Notes |
All-Time Series U-M leads, 23-15-1Last Meeting Michigan 35, Notre Dame 31 (9/10/11 – Ann Arbor, Mich.) |
Notre Dame (3-0) www.und.com Roster Schedule/Results |