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Michigan Film Study: Breaking down everything that went wrong against Texas
We’ve seen this movie before. It’s been a while, but we have. Going back to New Year’s Eve 2021, the Michigan Wolverines clashed with the Georgia Bulldogs in the opening round of the College Football Playoff (CFP). The buzz around Michigan was deafening coming off its first victory against Ohio State since 2011 and first out-right Big Ten championship since 2003. But before the Wolverines could blink, they trailed Georgia, 27-3, at the half before ultimately falling, 34-11, in the Orange Bowl.
The performance was far from what fans had grown used to from a typical Michigan game that season. The Wolverines only averaged 5.2 yards per play (6.6 per pass, 3.4 per rush) and turned the ball over three times (two interceptions and one uncharacteristic fumble from Blake Corum).
Defensively, Michigan generated zero sacks and allowed Georgia to convert 10-of-16 third downs. The Wolverines were RPO’d and quick-gamed to death and although the defense held the Bulldogs to only seven second-half points, it didn’t matter.
The Orange Bowl defeat alerted the Wolverines to the level they needed to reach to win a national championship. Following that loss, Michigan reeled off a 28-1 record over the next two seasons, culminating in finally reaching the sport’s summit eight months ago. On Saturday, we rewound the tape to 2021 to remember what it takes to reach the top.
The clash with Texas was billed as the biggest game of the young season between two blue-blood programs. But before the Wolverines could blink they trailed, 24-3, at the half before ultimately falling, 31-12.
The performance was far from what fans had grown used to from a typical Michigan game the last two years. The Wolverines only averaged 5.1 yards per play (6.2 per pass, 3.7 per rush) and turned the ball over three times (two interceptions and one uncharacteristic fumble from Colston Loveland).
Defensively, Michigan generated limited pressure resulting in zero sacks, and allowed Texas to convert 10-of-16 third downs. The Wolverines were RPO’d and quick-gamed to death and although the defense held the Longhorns to only seven second-half points, it didn’t matter.
Saturday was a sobering reminder of the level the Wolverines need to reach to repeat as national champions. It remains to be seen if they can develop and grow on the fly, but it is always easier to return to the top of the mountain after you have already seen the view.
Let’s check the tape to see where it went wrong for the Wolverines before focusing on the path to improvement.
Cover 3 Simulated Pressure vs. Stop & Go
The Wolverine defense struggled on Saturday, but the unit is not shouldering the lion’s share of the blame for this one. Michigan’s offense turned the ball over three times and each turnover came after the Wolverines possessed the ball for 101 seconds or fewer. One interception came after a three-second possession. With no time to collect its breath, the unit was running on fumes before halftime.
That said, there are still several aspects where the defense needs to improve regardless of offensive support: tackling (pursuit angles), run fits, forcing turnovers, generating pressure and third-down stops.
On the first drive, Texas made it abundantly clear what it was going to do. Head coach Steve Sarkisian copied Georgia’s game plan from the Orange Bowl and showed remarkable poise as a play-caller. Abandoning his love for shot plays, Sark avoided Michigan’s strengths — Will Johnson and Mason Graham — and attacked its vulnerabilities a few yards at a time. In this instance, Sark targeted Michigan’s other corner, Jyaire Hill, for a big gain.
On the third play of the game, Texas faced a third-and-11 from its own 21. Michigan lined up with six across the line of scrimmage insinuating early pressure was coming, but at the snap, two Wolverines dropped back into a disguised Cover 3 variation and Michigan only brought four rushers.
The Longhorns — who are in a seven-man, max-protect 11-personnel look — easily pick up the rush, including a looping Jaishawn Barham who twisted into the field-side D-gap. The lone receiver (Isaiah Bond) to the boundary is working on Hill, and the ball was never going anywhere else.
Bond sprints hard nine yards down the field and hesitates to sell a stick or an out route before taking off on a “Go” route. Hill turns his hips and bites on the fake, decently recovers, but stumbles trying to catch up. Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers easily delivers a strike to Bond a half step before safety Makari Paige can get there.
Third-down conversions were back-breaking, and Hill was too often the victim. In two weeks against USC, look for Wink Martindale to consistently shade a safety to Hill’s side to take away this glaring weakness in the back end.
Speaking of third downs…
Davis Warren’s First Interception
Facing a third-and-two, offensive coordinator Kirk Campbell elected to pass instead of run, but that’s an argument for another day. Campbell dials up a fly motion switch-release Hank concept designed for a quick strike first down.
Loveland comes in motion and works into the flat with the slot receiver (Marlin Klein) running a curl route just beyond the sticks. On the far side, the two receivers switch release (inside receiver goes outside and outside receiver goes inside) with Peyton O’Leary working the middle hook (mirroring Klein) and Tyler Morris running a five-yard curl. This is designed to create separation in man-to-man, but Texas isn’t running man-to-man coverage.
The Longhorns simply rushed four, played shallow Cover 3 with six defenders around the first down marker, and kept one safety deep as a security blanket. The best option on this play is Loveland in the flat — who is the hot option, but technically option three in the progression — but Warren looks him off and works back toward his first two reads. Klein is blanketed, so Warren progresses to his secondary option, Morris.
Now, this is a tight throw where you’d still like to see Morris fight back for the ball more to open up a bigger window. The ball still hits Morris in the hands but, in his defense, this would have been a difficult reception for any receiver to haul in with two defenders draped over him.
Instead, the ball is tipped and eventually intercepted for Warren’s first of the day — for the record, Warren was far from great on Saturday, but the second interception was on Loveland running the wrong route — and put the defense back on the field after a 94-second drive.
This play was doomed from the beginning and could have been avoid by simply running the damn ball. Michigan’s identity crisis is growing more glaring every week, but more on that later. For now, let’s end with something semi-positive.
Jet Motion Fake Reverse CH Counter
On the second drive of the game, Michigan found some rhythm as it marched down the field for its first points of the game. Two plays after a well-executed flea flicker, the Wolverines got back to one of their bread-and-butter run plays, counter.
The Wolverines have practically run every variation of counter imaginable the last three years, and this iteration involves the center and H-back with a little window dressing thrown in for added misdirection.
Just before the snap, Semaj Morgan comes in motion to sell the reverse. Warren fakes the give to Morgan, continues to pivot, and hands the ball off inside to Donovan Edwards.
Center Dom Giudice and Loveland pull, with Giudice tasked with kicking out the defensive end, while Loveland leads through the hole to take out the linebacker or the first player to show. Giudice looked more comfortable on the move in his second start, but his pad level still needs improvement. He is out-leveraged when he cracks the end, leading to Loveland having to help double-team instead of working to the second level.
But wait, I thought this was a positive play? Hold fast.
Edwards reads the backside of this play beautifully, cuts off Loveland’s hip and heads toward the open field. Edwards tries to cut to the sideline for a chance to score a touchdown, but the backside safety just gets enough of his shoelace to bring him down for a gain of 12 yards.
Even when a run play wasn’t executed perfectly, Michigan turned it into chicken salad.
The Wolverines had three running backs average 4.2 yards or more per carry, with Edwards leading the room with 5.1. However, no running back had more than nine carries and the Wolverines as a team only registered 22 rushing attempts. This is not the way.
Heading into Week 3, there are myriad improvements needed for this team to take the next step. Winning third down and protecting the football are simpler places to start, but I think two massive underlying issues need to be addressed before this season slips away.
Commit to an identity
When Sherrone Moore took over as interim head coach for Michigan last season, it was established that it was going to be business as usual until Jim Harbaugh returned. And it was. Moore went undefeated as acting head coach and performed so well that he was named the permanent head coach once Harbaugh returned to the NFL. However, Moore is still treating this position like a substitute teacher, filling in until Harbaugh returns.
But Harbaugh isn’t coming back to Ann Arbor. Neither are J.J. McCarthy, Blake Corum, Junior Colson, Roman Wilson, Trevor Keegan, Zak Zinter or Mike Sainristil. This is a new team that needs a new identity, and that starts from the top down with Moore.
Moore needs to put his original stamp on this program and carve his own path instead of trying to cosplay as the third Harbaugh brother. What is this team’s identity going to be? If it’s truly going to be Moore’s catchphrase “SMASH,” then this team needs to commit to running the football and be more creative and resolute in doing so. If this team wants to focus on balance, then Kirk Campbell needs to call plays specifically for Warren’s skillset instead of treating him like McCarthy who constantly bailed Michigan out on third downs.
Once Moore and this team understand and commit to who they are, everything on the field will begin to take care of itself.
Player Leadership
Michigan prides itself on being a player-led team and locker room. Now, who are the leaders of this team? We know who the team captains are, but which players will speak up and be heard by the collective that this level of execution is unacceptable?
In 2021, Aidan Hutchinson and Josh Ross demanded more accountability from the defense, and center Andrew Vastardis reshaped the offensive line’s mentality in the trenches. In 2022, we saw Sainristil step up to galvanize this team on the sidelines in Columbus. And in 2023, the Wolverines had team leaders at every positional unit.
But now those guys are all gone and someone else needs to step up and demand more. It could be a team captain or it could be a freshman, but accountability needs to be a top priority.
Week 2 Superlatives
The Best Actor in a Bad Movie Award also known as Ewan McGregor in Attack of the Clones
Thank the Arkansas State gods that kicker Dominic Zvada wanted to move north. Zvada was perfect for the second consecutive week, connecting on field goals of 37 and 52 yards. The constant scoring bright spot for the Wolverines, Zvada has been flawless to begin his tenure in Ann Arbor. Of the 13 kickers in college football with five or more makes this season, Zvada is one of only four without a miss.
Could Zvada be Michigan’s second Lou Groza Award winner in three years?
The Come On Do Something Award
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Michigan defensive tackle Kenneth Grant is on pace for six tackles, zero sacks, and zero tackles for loss this season. Now, production isn’t the end all, be all, but SIX and nothing behind the line of scrimmage?! This is by far the worst two-game stretch for Grant since he entered the rotation at the beginning of last season.
Three weeks ago, Grant was being touted as a first-rounder with freakish traits. But at this pace, are we sure he leaves for the NFL at the end of this season? Grant is far too talented to let this continue, but if it does, it will be one of the most disappointing individual regressions in recent Michigan history.
This Mean Something to Me Award
Wide receiver Semaj Morgan did not have a great game. He struggled to get open consistently, misread blocks and even dropped a pass. But the effort and fight Morgan displayed on Michigan’s lone scoring drive late in the fourth quarter were commendable.
Facing a fourth-and-five, Warren connected with Morgan short of the sticks, but Morgan fought off the defender and extended the drive. Two plays later, the duo connected again.
Rolling out to his right, Warren connected with Morgan — who was masterfully working back to his quarterback — for his best throw of the game, and Morgan fought to extend the ball to break the plane. Despite the game being out of hand, Morgan still cared enough to fight for every inch to extend the drive and get the ball across the goal line. Perhaps, even as a sophomore, he’s the fiery leader this team needs to help save its season.
This fourth-quarter drive was reminiscent of McCarthy connecting with Andrel Anthony in the fourth quarter against Georgia for Michigan’s lone touchdown. It was too late, but it was encouraging to see it still meant something to a few players.
Texas
National reaction as Texas Tech tops No. 1 Arizona: ‘A dog fight team in the best way’
Grant McCasland is elite.
JUCO national title, D2 Elite Eight, won an NCAA tourney game + a 30-win, NIT-title season at North Texas, Elite Eight last year at Texas Tech.
Now his team has wins this season at Houston, at Arizona, vs Duke at MSG. Absurd trio of wins.
— Kyle Tucker (@KyleTuckerCBB) February 15, 2026
Texas
Plano dispensary becomes one of first in North Texas to offer medical marijuana onsite
Customers lined up inside Goodblend in Plano at 10 a.m. Friday, waiting to buy medical marijuana available in gummies, tinctures and chocolate bars.
A rush of customers isn’t unusual for the shop, which opened in 2023. But this morning was different: After last year’s expansion of the Texas Compassionate Use Program for medical marijuana, Goodblend can now keep inventory onsite, allowing patients to fill prescriptions and pick up products the same day. It is one of the first dispensaries in North Texas to offer this option.
Goodblend is one of three companies authorized to sell medical marijuana in Texas, the others being Texas Original and Fluent. Goodblend received its license in 2017, began deliveries in 2019 and opened its first retail store in Austin in 2023. It expanded to North Texas later that year, setting up a location along State Highway 121 in Plano.
Customers wait in line to purchase medical marijuana at Goodblend medical marijuana dispensary, Friday, Feb. 13, 2026, in Plano. Elías Valverde II / Staff Photographer
Under previous legislation, patients eligible under the Texas Compassionate Use Act could visit the Plano store to place or pick up orders. But the shop couldn’t keep items overnight, said Nick Fallon, Goodblend’s market president for Texas. Instead, orders were delivered each morning from the company’s distribution facility in Austin and any that weren’t picked up made the three-hour trip back at night.
“You could barely call it a store,” Fallon said, noting it was just a place “where you would pick up your order. Now we built a vault in the back, and we store product there, enough for a few weeks.”
“This is a really good moment for us,” said Jervonne Singletary, vice president of compliance and government relations at Parallel, Goodblend’s parent company. “We fought for this for an entire year with the state Legislature just to be able to have overnight storage.”
Quick relief
For Leslie Lewis, being able to see medical marijuana products in person — and buy them that day — is a game changer. The 37-year-old, who lives near Goodblend’s Plano location, uses the drug to manage her pain from multiple sclerosis.
“Tylenol can barely touch the type of neuropathic pain that I have, so this typically helps a lot,” she said. “If I run out, I have to wait until the order comes in and then pick up. Being available the same day, that’s very helpful.”
Leslie Lewis of Plano checks out a bottle of CBD and THC tincture oil at Goodblend medical marijuana dispensary, Friday, Feb. 13, 2026, in Plano. Lewis said she uses medical marijuana for her pain from multiple sclerosis.
Elías Valverde II / Staff Photographer
Julie Espinoza, 60, uses medical marijuana in the form of edibles and tinctures to manage her pain from arthritis. It also helps with her anxiety, which she said developed after surviving melanoma and cervical cancer.
The Frisco resident visited Goodblend’s Plano store with her husband, Tracy, to pick up her prescription. She recently began obtaining her medical marijuana from Goodblend after going nearly two weeks without it because of the winter storm.
Receiving medical marijuana through the mail could take weeks, she said, adding “it’s such a great mental relief” to simply go to the store instead.
Any permanent Texas resident with a qualifying condition can get medical marijuana through a physician registered in the state’s Compassionate Use Program. Medical conditions include epilepsy, multiple sclerosis and cancer. Last year’s expansion of the state’s Compassionate Use Act through House Bill 46 added traumatic brain injury, Crohn’s disease and chronic pain to the list.
Cannabis-infused gummies are seen for sale at Goodblend medical marijuana dispensary, Friday, Feb. 13, 2026, in Plano.
Elías Valverde II / Staff Photographer
HB 46 also broadens the types of products dispensaries can offer. Goodblend sells edibles, THC-infused beverages, tinctures and topicals. The dispensary hopes to offer an inhaler in the coming months, Singletary said, and is working with regulatory agencies to get approval.
In December, the Texas Department of Public Safety issued conditional licenses to nine new medical marijuana distributors, with three more expected by April. Those companies cannot begin operating until they receive full approval by the agency.
If all are approved, Texas would have 15 dispensaries statewide — an expansion that supporters of the program told The Dallas Morning News could improve access to medical marijuana for patients.
Miriam Fauzia is a science reporting fellow at The Dallas Morning News. Her fellowship is supported by the University of Texas at Dallas. The News makes all editorial decisions.
Texas
Texas GOP chairman confident Republican voters will show up in November
DALLAS – Despite a surprising loss already in the 2026 election cycle, the chairman of the Texas GOP is confident Republican voters will turn out when the votes matter most in November.
What we know:
Republicans currently hold a majority in both the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives, as well as the White House. But the party that holds the White House typically loses one of the two houses of Congress in the midterm election.
We’ve already seen an early example of that in Texas. In January, Democrat Taylor Rehmet won a special election runoff for Texas Senate District 9 in Fort Worth, a seat that has been held by Republicans for decades.
Rehmet beat Republican Leigh Wambsganss with 57% of the vote, despite his opponent having the backing of President Donald Trump and being outspent by a considerable margin.
He will have to win a full term for the seat in the November election under the runoff rules, but the shocking result has Democrats thinking of big things to come.
What they’re saying:
Abraham George, chairman of the Texas GOP, told FOX 4’s Steven Dial he’s confident that the GOP will win back that Senate seat and others when the votes matter the most.
“People are looking at it and saying, we’re kind of tired of this, a lot of the policies,” Abraham told Dial. “Then you add personalities like Talarico. Who thinks Jesus is not really God, and quotes the Bible every three minutes he gets to do it. So they just can’t come together on those, get behind these people anymore.”
George also doesn’t think that recent developments with ICE in Minnesota will negatively impact Republicans in the race.
“So I was at a town hall in South Texas. The biggest thing I heard was not about ICE. It was all about property tax.” George said. “Because we asked, and I even kind of preempted in my speech saying, I know some of you may be looking at, and your neighbors are saying something bad about Republicans. And they said, no, we support legal immigration. We support deportation of illegal immigrants.”
What’s next:
Early voting starts Tuesday, Feb. 17 and goes until Feb. 27. Primary election day is on March 3.
Every weekday in February, you can watch Steven Dial and other Texas political correspondents from FOX discuss Texas primary races on Battleground Texas.
The Source: Information in this story came from FOX 4 reporting.
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