The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

■ Michigan defense fails to bounce back from last loss, falters again,

Wolverines have 2nd straight miserable performanc­e on D.

- By Max Marcovitch

Nearly three weeks ago, reflecting shortly after Michigan’s 62-39 drubbing by Ohio State, fifth-year senior defensive end Chase Winovich described his team’s performanc­e as a “mirage.”

“What we’ve built here and what we’ll continue to build is a powerhouse,” he said Dec. 11. “That’s the Michigan I’m leaving.”

The 62 points allowed that day by the previously topranked defense in the country were the most allowed in regulation in program history.

On Saturday afternoon, perhaps humbled by a 41-15 loss to Florida in the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl at Mercedes-Benz Stadium and another poor defensive showing, Winovich struck a softer tone.

“They seemed like they had us,” Winovich said of Florida. “They knew what we were in and how to manipulate it. Hats off to (Florida) coach (Dan) Mullen and their coaching staff.”

The Gators had their way Saturday, notching 427 total yards against a once-vaunted Wolverines defense. Florida found particular success on the ground, running for 257 yards on 40 carries and three touchdowns — each scored by a different player. Quarterbac­k Feleipe Franks ran for the Gators’ first touchdown on a 21-yard scamper late in the second quarter, grabbing a 13-10 lead Florida would never relinquish.

Running backs Lamical Perine and Jordan Scarlett added touchdowns in the third quarter. Perine then offered the exclamatio­n point in the fourth quarter, gashing the Michigan defense for a 53-yard touchdown on third-and-20, turning a comfortabl­e win into a blowout.

Senior linebacker Jordan Glasgow said his team was aware of Florida’s rushing prowess; the Gators entered the game averaging over 200 yards per game on the ground. “Looking at film, we knew their running backs did a good job in terms of breaking tackles and breaking big plays. Usually, we don’t allow that kind of stuff to happen, but that was pretty much the defining factor,” Glasgow said. “Defensivel­y, we can’t allow for missed tackles and for opportunit­ies like that to be wasted.”

Michigan’s defense, once considered among the best in the country, now ends its season with a whimper. After allowing only 149 points in its first 11 games, the Wolverines allowed 103 in the final two. And for the third consecutiv­e season, Michigan heads into the offseason having lost its final two games.

Some players acknowledg­ed the letdown from the loss to the Buckeyes carried over into the bowl period — mentally and emotionall­y. The Wolverines went into that season finale with a chance to play for a Big Ten title with a win, and subsequent­ly left it demoralize­d. Others pushed back on that notion.

“There’s a million things that didn’t go right,” Winovich said of Saturday’s loss. “To blame it on one thing does everything else injustice. (Ohio State) definitely played a role, though. If you just look at it in the context of the whole season and just how high we were on ourselves and how confident we were going into that game, to do a 180 on that and just feel the opposite way, it’s tough to come back from.”

Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh offered little further explanatio­n. “Defensivel­y, it was really the same story,” he said. “We didn’t play as well. Had some — had missed calls, adjustment­s. We left a couple receivers wide open, some things that we don’t normally do.”

Beyond that, Harbaugh simply added, “I thought they were ready.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Florida running back Kadarius Toney is pushed out of bounds by Michigan’s Lavert Hill in the first half of the Peach Bowl on Saturday. The Gators ran for 257 yards on 40 carries and three touchdowns in the game.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Florida running back Kadarius Toney is pushed out of bounds by Michigan’s Lavert Hill in the first half of the Peach Bowl on Saturday. The Gators ran for 257 yards on 40 carries and three touchdowns in the game.

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