San Antonio Express-News

Michigan, Iowa seek first conference crown since ’04

- By Michael Marot

INDIANAPOL­IS — Iowa opened this season as the trendy pick to finish second in the Big Ten West. Michigan was unranked in the preseason poll and wasn’t even supposed to contend for the East Division title. So much for prediction­s. Two of the conference’s traditiona­l powers will play Saturday in Indianapol­is for their first conference crowns since sharing the title in 2004 — and in Michigan’s case a possible playoff bid.

It’s the title game almost nobody expected.

“A lot of people were pretty low on us,” Iowa safety Jack Koerner said. “They were saying we were overrated, things like that. We knew who we were, we knew our identity as a team.”

Outsiders didn’t think much of the second-ranked Wolverines (11-1, 8-1), either. Lingering questions about coach Jim Harbaugh’s future prompted him to accept a pay cut and change defensive coordinato­rs after going a dismal 2-4 in a fanless 2020 season.

Prognostic­ators didn’t believe much would change. Narrow escapes against Rutgers and Nebraska and what seemed like a disastrous loss to Michigan State only reinforced those notions.

“There was a lot of noise on the outside,” center Andrew Vastardis said. “But on the inside, we trusted each other, trusted the coaches.”

It made a difference.

The Wolverines rebounded from their only loss with three straight wins. Then, just when the critics figured they’d lose yet again to archrival Ohio State, Michigan surprised everyone except themselves with a dominant performanc­e against the Buckeyes to clinch its first trip to the Big Ten title game, which began in 2011.

Michigan inexplicab­ly finds itself one win away from Harbaugh’s first Big Ten title and potentiall­y two wins away from a January return to Indy for a shot at its first national championsh­ip since 1997.

“Everything we envisioned — all the goals as a defense, all the goals as a team we envisioned — we’re accomplish­ing those things,” linebacker Josh Ross said. “Everything’s in front of us,and now it’s just so exciting to be in this opportunit­y this week.”

Koener and his Iowa teammates understand.

But instead of cashing it in following a demoralizi­ng 24-7 home loss against Purdue, a 20-point loss at Wisconsin two weeks later and a shoulder injury that sidelined quarterbac­k Spencer Petras against Northweste­rn, the 13th-ranked Hawkeyes (10-2, 7-2) rallied.

Backup quarterbac­k Alex Padilla won three straight before Petras returned in the second half last weekend and bailed Iowa out of a 15-point deficit at Nebraska. Wisconsin’s loss at Minnesota sealed the division title and now the Hawkeyes believe they can end their title drought.

“November football tends to be the most important time, and right now it shows for us,” Hawkeyes running back Tyler Goodson said. “We’re undefeated in November. We’ve been strong. We’ve faced a lot of adversity, whether it’s losing two games in a row, or the injuries we’ve had. No matter what it is, we find a way to fight back.“

Wolverines vow no hangover

Some wonder how the Wolverines will react to last week’s emotional win, their first in a decade over the Buckeyes and just their second in 17 meetings. While fans stormed the field and Michigan savored the postgame party, Harbaugh said this week has been all business. There’s a good reason for it.

“There’s not one dude on this team that has a ring,” quarterbac­k Cade Mcnamara said.

Takeaways at a record rate

Iowa is well-known for producing stout defenses under longtime coach Kirk Ferentz.

And in a league full of suffocatin­g units, this year’s defense stands apart for a major reason — takeaways.

The Hawkeyes lead the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n with 22 intercepti­ons and are tied for third with 27 overall turnovers. Eleven players picked off at least one pass this season, and with two more intercepti­ons, Iowa can break the single-season school record set in 1986 and matched in 1987 and 2008.

Harbaugh helping Harbaugh

Michigan’s revamped defense delivered against the Buckeyes, and Harbaugh credited the addition of new defensive coordinato­r Mike Macdonald for the turnaround.

When Harbaugh started searching for a replacemen­t for veteran defensive coordinato­r Don Brown, he called his brother. Baltimore Ravens coach John Harbaugh recommende­d Macdonald, his linebacker­s coach.

“He said, ‘I’ve got the guy for you,’ ” Jim Harbaugh said. “I talked to a lot of people, listened to a lot of people that I trust in the game of football, but none I value more than my brother’s opinion. And, he was right.”

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