The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Harbaugh, Frost take parallels into clash

- By Eric Olson

LINCOLN, NEB. » It seems that negativity has swirled around Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh and Nebraska’s Scott Frost since they returned to coach at the schools where they enjoyed so much success as players.

The vibe is decidedly upbeat around both teams this week, just in time for their Oct. 9 meeting of teams in the top five for all-time wins.

Michigan is 5-0, ranked No. 9 and coming off a convincing victory against Wisconsin.

Nebraska is 3-3, believes it could be 5-1 had it not been for special teams meltdowns, and fresh off a 49-point win over Northweste­rn that was the Cornhusker­s’ most lopsided in a Big Ten game since they joined the conference 10 years ago.

For the team that wins this weekend, the belief this will be a breakthrou­gh year will be sustained at least another week. For the team that loses, the mojo will be gone.

Harbaugh and Frost both were seen as saviors for their respective programs, both were given long contracts and both

have yet to deliver on the high expectatio­ns set for them.

“I can see all the potential storylines there for sure,” Nebraska quarterbac­k Adrian Martinez said. “Former quarterbac­ks. Guys who played in the NFL. Alma maters. Respected in their industry. It’s a big game for both of us. I know they’re trying to continue to build momentum and so are we.”

Harbaugh, 57, was Michigan’s quarterbac­k in the mid-1980s. He famously made good on his guarantee to beat Ohio State in 1986, and he finished third in Heisman Trophy voting that year. He had a long NFL career and had success at two college stops

before he coached the San Francisco 49ers to a Super Bowl.

Frost, 46, was Nebraska’s quarterbac­k in the mid-1990s and led the Huskers to a share of the ‘97 national title (with Michigan) after famously lobbying for votes during his post-Orange Bowl TV interview. He spent fourplus years as a backup safety in the NFL.

He was a rising star as an Oregon assistant and orchestrat­ed Central Florida’s quick turnaround in his first head coaching job before he returned to his home state.

“You want to win everywhere. You probably take it a little more personal one way or the other at home,”

Frost said Monday. “There’s nowhere where I would probably despise losing more than here. It’s harder to handle here. But also, I don’t know if I’ve ever enjoyed wins as much somewhere else as I do here.”

Harbaugh and the Wolverines hammered Nebraska 56-10 in 2018 in the Huskers’ third game under Frost. It was part of a 10game Michigan win streak that ended with a 62-39 loss to Ohio State.

And there’s the rub. Harbaugh is 54-22 in his seven seasons, and his team usually wins the games it should — yet hardly ever the ones it shouldn’t. Harbaugh is 0-5 against Ohio State, 2-12 against top-10 teams, 2-8 against ranked teams on the road and 1-4 in bowls.

The 38-17 win over Wisconsin last week gave Harbaugh his first win in 13 tries as an underdog and it ended a 20-year drought against the Badgers on the road. The game brought relief and joy.

Michigan’s players had so much fun when “Jump Around” blared after the third quarter at Camp Randall Stadium that they danced on the sideline as enthusiast­ically as the students in the stands.

 ?? JOHN RAOUX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Jim Harbaugh has Michigan off to a 5-0start this season.
JOHN RAOUX — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Jim Harbaugh has Michigan off to a 5-0start this season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States