Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Michigan takes Big Ten in rout

- Michael Marot

INDIANAPOL­IS – Michigan ignored the preseason prediction­s, the early poll snub and especially the critics who thought the program’s best days were long gone.

Instead they set out to prove everybody wrong. On Saturday, they did.

Hassan Haskins ran for two scores and broke a longtime school record leading No. 2 Michigan past Iowa 42-3 while clinching their first Big Ten title in 17 years and likely the first playoff berth in school history.

“We defied all expectatio­ns,” recordsett­ing Wolverines end Aidan Hutchinson said after becoming the first defensive player to earn game MVP honors. “Nobody ever thought we could do this, especially this season and we did it – in dominant fashion.”

Earning the ring they’ve been craving – and into position for their first national championsh­ip since 1997 – sure didn’t come easily. The Wolverines (12-1, No. 2 CFP) had to overcome a midseason loss to in-state rival Michigan State and end the futility against Ohio State for a chance to end their conference title drought.

And then on championsh­ip week, the whole state was shocked by the shooting tragedy that took the lives of four high school students in Oxford, Michigan, including Tate Myre, a football player and wrestler.

Michigan honored the victims of the school about an hour away from its campus by wearing a patch on their right shoulder with Myre’s jersey No. 42 and four hearts – one for each student who died – inside the school’s traditiona­l block ‘O’ logo.

Myre’s family also joined the Wolverines captains at midfield for the pregame coin toss and, perhaps fittingly, the Wolverines final score gave them 42 points.

“It was Aidan who came to me and wanted to dedicate this game to Tate Myre and ‘yes, let’s do that,’ that was huge,“coach Jim Harbaugh said. “Tate was a warrior … Best athlete in the school could have easily made it out of that school and been the first one out but you just know while people were running away from that fire, he was running into it. He’s a hero. I’m glad our players got sold on it.”

Resurgent Michigan (12-1, No. 2 CFP) has won five straight and if it makes the playoff, as expected, one more win would send it back to Indianapol­is for an even bigger championsh­ip game in January.

The Hawkeyes (10-3, No. 13) lost their second straight title game, preventing coach Kirk Ferentz from capturing his first conference crown since 2004. Iowa lost to Michigan State in the 2015 title game and this one came on a night both quarterbac­ks, Spencer Petras and Alex Padilla, struggled. They were a combined 19 of 37 with 175 yards and one intercepti­on.

“One thing just leads to another sometimes, there are games like that unfortunat­ely,” Ferentz said. “They’re not much fun. I’m not sure the score is totally representa­tive of the two teams.” This one got away quickly. Blake Corum made two cuts to the right and sprinted 67 yards to make it 7-0. On Michigan’s next offensive play, Cade McNamara lateraled to Donovan Edwards and the freshman running back threw a perfect 75-yard TD pass to a wide open Roman Wilson for a 75-yard score and a 14-0 lead.

Iowa finally answered with a 22-yard field goal but the Hawkeyes offense couldn’t stay on the field.

Hawkins finally broke open the game with a 4-yard TD run midway through the third quarter then sealed the victory with a 1-yard run that gave him 20 rushing TDs in a single season, one more than Ron Johnson had in his record-setting 1968 season.

 ?? AJ MAST/AP ?? Michigan running back Hassan Haskins scores on a 4-yard touchdown run against Iowa on Saturday in the Big Ten championsh­ip game.
AJ MAST/AP Michigan running back Hassan Haskins scores on a 4-yard touchdown run against Iowa on Saturday in the Big Ten championsh­ip game.

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