Hamilton Journal News

Michigan QB McCarthy focused on health, Rose Bowl, title hopes

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LOS ANGELES — The biggest question surroundin­g J.J. McCarthy going into the Rose Bowl isn’t if this will be the junior quarterbac­k’s final game in maize and blue.

That one can wait a couple of weeks.

The more immediate concern for the top-ranked Wolverines is making sure McCarthy is healthy after he struggled with a lingering ankle injury during the second half of the season.

On Friday morning, the junior gave himself a clean bill of health as Michigan (13-0) continues preparatio­ns for its College Football Playoff semifinal game against No. 4 Alabama (12-1).

“Everything is great in terms of ankles, knees, head, shoulders,” he said.

Even though Michigan went unbeaten in the regular season for a second straight year, McCarthy and the Wolverines were not firing on all cylinders down the stretch.

McCarthy had 137 yards on 37 carries and three touchdowns in his first nine games. In his past four, he has 9 yards on 20 carries and no TDs.

The ankle injury also had an effect on McCarthy’s passing. He has averaged only 124 passing yards during his past four games and accounted for one touchdown, quite a drop from the 237.1 average and 18 TD tosses to start the season.

Despite the injuries, McCarthy’s poise in the huddle is a huge reason why he is 25-1 as a starter. However, with all the talk about Alabama quarterbac­k Jalen Milroe’s athleticis­m and ability to be elusive under pressure, McCarthy is hoping to show that he shouldn’t be overlooked in those areas.

He realizes he may have to do that plenty against an Alabama pass rush that finished tied for 11th in the nation with 38 sacks.

“I feel like in order to beat this team, when you see the teams that get close to beating them or have beaten them, the quarterbac­k is running the football a lot, and getting those six yards when nothing is to be had,” he said.

Coincident­ally, McCarthy thinks the one area he has improved the most is moving around in the pocket and keep his eyes downfield.

“Making sure when the opportunit­ies are at hand to scramble I am perfect at all hands and making sure we can hurt them in a moment like that,” he said.

McCarthy was 14th among quarterbac­ks from Power Five schools in percentage of short passes (0-9 yards) at 43.9%, but he is also accurate when throwing the deep ball.

He was 24 of 44 with 10 touchdowns passes of 20 air yards or more, with his 54.5% completion rate only being surpassed by Heisman Trophy winner Jayden Daniels of LSU (63.6%).

If Michigan wants to play for its first national title since 1997, McCarthy will need to play mistake-free. Despite throwing for 343 yards, rushing for 52 and accounting for three touchdowns, it was a pick-6 in last year’s semifinal that ended Michigan’s season.

 ?? RYAN SUN / AP ?? Michigan’s J.J. McCarthy throws during practice in Carson, Calif., on
Friday. Michigan will play Alabama in the Rose Bowl on Monday.
RYAN SUN / AP Michigan’s J.J. McCarthy throws during practice in Carson, Calif., on Friday. Michigan will play Alabama in the Rose Bowl on Monday.

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