You’d have to go back to 2014 to find the last time Michigan scored fewer points than it did on Saturday against Illinois. The Wolverines’ 21-7 loss to the Illini was their lowest scoring output since a 31-0 defeat against Notre Dame in Brady Hoke’s final season.
Michigan started that horrendous 2014 season 3-4. Ten years later, Michigan is sitting at 4-3 and the Wolverines are truly in unfamiliar territory. When Sherrone Moore accepted the head coaching job at the University of Michigan, the Wolverines went through the best three-year stretch you can recall. Under Jim Harbaugh, Michigan went to three-straight Playoffs, beat Ohio State three years in a row, and won the national championship last season before leaving for the NFL.
Moore took the job — which appeared to be the correct choice — with the hopes of keeping roster continuity at Michigan and in hopes of keeping most of Harbaugh’s staff around. We know how that went. The Wolverines didn’t lose too much talent to the transfer portal, but a ton of staff left with Harbaugh or for the NFL. We all thought Michigan had enough talent returning to stay relevant in 2024 and contend for the 12-team Playoff.
But this level of play in 2024 is not up to par — some will say unacceptable for Michigan’s standard. The Wolverines have the 112th-ranked scoring offense, the 119th-ranked total offense, and the 129th-ranked passing offense in the nation. That isn’t ‘Michigan football’, or is it?
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Through seven games, this is what Michigan football looks like. It’s undisciplined, it’s being out-coached, and it’s coming off of a bye week looking as unprepared as you possibly can. The Wolverines spent an entire week preparing for Illinois and the Wolverines’ offense looked arguably more inept than it has all season.
Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images / Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images
Sherrone Moore is the head coach and while some might not think it’s fair, he is going to take the brunt of the blame for the Wolverines’ performance. Moore put together this staff in a hurry because there wasn’t much time to wait around. Jim Harbaugh left Michigan at a bad time — very poor timing for Moore — and he tried to make the most of it. But as he said after the 14-point loss to Illinois, there isn’t any finger-pointing.
“I think we just have to reevaluate and see and look,” Moore said following the loss to Illinois. “You know, we had a bye week. I feel disappointed in myself as the head coach that we didn’t come out and execute at a better level. There’s too many bits and pieces. Not enough consistency. So, you know, I have to look at myself, too. So there’s no finger-pointing. I’m gonna reevaluate myself and see what I need to do to be better for them, for the players, and coaches as well.”
The Michigan defense has plenty of faults as well, but the Wolverines’ defense allowed 21 points to Illinois on Saturday and they did enough to allow Michigan to win the game. But this quarterback conundrum continues in Ann Arbor. Through seven weeks, Michigan has started three different quarterbacks and none of them are ready to start for the maize and blue. The Michigan coaching staff doesn’t appear to trust Alex Orji to throw the football, while both Davis Warren and Jack Tuttle turn the ball over at alarming rates.
No matter how you try to slice it, this is what Michigan football is in 2024. It’s a team that doesn’t have enough playmakers on the offensive side of the ball, without a capable quarterback, and a coaching staff that doesn’t appear to be good enough to correct any of the mistakes that happen week after week.
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Let me say, for those of you who want Moore gone after seven games — it’s not happening, nor should it. Moore should be given a chance to correct his wrongs and become the next successful coach at Michigan, but it will come by making difficult decisions. Being the head coach at Michigan isn’t easy. If you don’t win, you’re going to receive backlash, and a ton of it. The thing about Moore, he’s been around for a while and knows it wasn’t always sunshine for Jim Harbaugh in his early years at Michigan — there was a large portion of the fanbase who also wanted him fired after consistently losing to Ohio State and following the 2020 season. But Moore also realizes what the standard at Michigan is and that’s winning games.
“Yeah, I mean, I have extreme high expectations for the program,” said Moore. “Going on year seven, I’ve seen where we’ve been, what we’ve done, and this is not indicative of who we are and what we should be. And it’s my job to fix it, and we will.”
Every game this season seems to be the next ‘big game’ for Michigan. Almost all of Michigan’s goals are now off the table. No Playoff, no Big Ten Championship, and almost certainly no beating Ohio State — not happening with what we’ve seen through seven weeks. If Michigan and Moore have any mettle whatsoever and pride themselves on playing and coaching at Michigan, these last five games are going to be telling. Can this coaching staff get these players ready to play rival Michigan State at home? That’s going to be the start.
But if we continue to see the same results the last five weeks, fans are really going to start thinking Michigan may have turned back the clock toward that 2014 season when Hoke was on his way out of Ann Arbor. That’s when Moore will certainly be faced with making some altering changes if he’s going to compete in 2025.
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Takeaways: Michigan football gets out-dueled once again, takes loss to Illinois
PFF grades: Michigan football high/low player grades, snap counts to know after loss to Illinois
National media react to Michigan football losing to Illinois, question future with Sherrone Moore
Michigan Wolverines (11-3, 3-0 Big Ten) at UCLA Bruins (11-3, 2-1 Big Ten)
Los Angeles; Tuesday, 10 p.m. EST
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BOTTOM LINE: Michigan visits No. 15 UCLA after Danny Wolf scored 21 points in Michigan’s 85-74 victory against the USC Trojans.
The Bruins have gone 8-0 in home games. UCLA is 10-2 when it has fewer turnovers than its opponents and averages 11.1 turnovers per game.
The Wolverines are 3-0 against Big Ten opponents. Michigan has a 2-3 record in games decided by less than 4 points.
UCLA’s average of 7.4 made 3-pointers per game this season is just 0.5 more made shots on average than the 6.9 per game Michigan gives up. Michigan averages 24.9 more points per game (84.1) than UCLA gives up (59.2).
The Bruins and Wolverines face off Tuesday for the first time in conference play this season.
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TOP PERFORMERS: Tyler Bilodeau is scoring 14.5 points per game with 5.2 rebounds and 1.3 assists for the Bruins.
Vladislav Goldin is averaging 13.7 points, 5.6 rebounds and 1.8 blocks for the Wolverines.
LAST 10 GAMES: Bruins: 8-2, averaging 75.9 points, 29.4 rebounds, 16.7 assists, 8.9 steals and 2.3 blocks per game while shooting 46.9% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 62.2 points per game.
Wolverines: 8-2, averaging 83.6 points, 36.3 rebounds, 17.0 assists, 6.2 steals and 5.0 blocks per game while shooting 49.9% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 68.4 points.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
Sunday was supposed to be rookie Blake Corum’s chance to step into a featured role in the Los Angeles Rams backfield.
But the former Michigan running back didn’t get much of an opportunity, suffering a fractured forearm in the second quarter of a 30-25 loss to the Seattle Seahawks.
Rams head coach Sean McVay confirmed the injury after the game.
“He’s a tough, resilient guy,” McVay said. “He’s going to be a really good player for us for a long time, but he will miss the postseason.”
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With the Rams having already clinched the NFC West crown entering Sunday, they rested No. 1 running back Kyren Williams, paving the way for Corum to handle a larger workload in the team’s regular-season finale.
Michigan’s all-time rushing touchdowns leader received just two carries for 10 yards and one catch for 12 yards before exiting. The 2024 third-round pick was on the sideline in the second half wearing a sling, finishing the year with 58 carries for 207 yards and seven receptions for 58 yards.
The Rams will host the loser of the Lions and Vikings’ Sunday night matchup in next week’s Wild Card round.
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Michigan knocked off USC in Los Angeles on Saturday night to move to 3-0 in the Big Ten. It was a game of runs, with Michigan stringing together three different 10-0 kill shots, but USC never went away. The Trojans consistently battled back into the game all night, forcing Michigan to execute down the stretch.
Here are Five Key Plays from the win featuring Danny Wolf, Vlad Goldin, Tre Donaldson, Roddy Gayle Jr., and more.
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1. First half 3-point barrage
Michigan was on fire from 3-point range in its final two home games of the year and carried that momentum into the Galen Center. On Saturday night, the Wolverines got off to a terrific shooting start, knocking down their first five 3-pointers and finishing with ten made threes in the opening half.
The Wolverines have been a volatile 3-point shooting team all year. They’ve hit double-digit threes in eight of 14 games but shot worse than 30% from three in five games. They shoot 36.6% from three (54th nationally) as a team but have shot better than 40% or worse than 30% in 12 of 14 contests.
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In 28 halves of basketball, Michigan has hit seven or more threes nine times (32%). They’ve also hit two or fewer threes in 10 of those 28 halves (36%) — including last night’s 0-of-8 second-half performance.
Michigan’s half-by-half perimeter shooting splits are becoming a trend to watch closely. The Wolverines shoot 40.8% from three in first halves (5.9 for 14.4 attempts) compared to 31.2% in second halves (3.5 of 11.2 attempts).
Michigan survived 0-of-8 3-point shooting to win last night, but it is 5-of-36 (14%) from 3-point range in the second halves of its three losses — a particularly painful stat given that those defeats came by five points total.
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