USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Wolverines’ big-boy ball takes it to Alabama

- Shawn Windsor

PASADENA, Calif. – Of course it was gonna come this way, in this season, with all that’s gone on and all this team, and these players, have gone through.

Overtime for the right to play for the national title?

Why not?

And why not the defense of this Michigan football team?

It had to be this defense on the field, needing a stop to win the game, trying to hold a seven-point lead, with Alabama down to its last play. The Crimson Tide needed 4 yards.

Four yards to tie the score and get to another overtime period.

Four yards from the end of the season or a 27-20 victory and a trip to Houston for a Jan. 8 date to win it all.

Jim Harbaugh may be an offensive coach, but he has always been a defensive guy in his soul, and he has never had a better defense than this one.

The Wolverines bullied Alabama all afternoon here in the Rose Bowl, and except for a stretch late in the third quarter and early in the fourth, dominated the Crimson Tide. It’s not any more complicate­d than that. Just the way Harbaugh likes it, right?

Big-boy ball. A rock fight in the trenches. The kind of ball that the Michigan coach believes reveals so much about the inner workings of a person.

The kind of ball he hasn’t been able to play in the College Football Playoff the past two times. But the kind of ball he got to play at the Rose Bowl, against the bullies of the sport.

The truth is, the Wolverines were better up front. Faster, quicker, more relentless­ness and – for all the folks who had wondered about yet another Big Team coming up small in the CFP – shocking.

No, really, U-M’s defensive line was the best unit on the field, and it wasn’t close. And so when Alabama needed those 4 yards, it wasn’t a surprise that the defensive line swallowed Jalen Milroe. Oh, Josaiah Stewart got the official tackle, and he made a terrific play to stop Milroe a couple of yards short of the end zone and seal the game.

But he wasn’t alone in blowing up the offensive line. In the end, everyone did, and everyone kept coming – they sacked Milroe six times. Think about that, and how disruptive that is, and how when the big fellas up front are wrecking things, the offense doesn’t need to do much.

Just a few plays. The Wolverines made them early and late, and then at the end on offense. Blake Corum led the way.

Who else?

Corum, who missed this game a year ago in Arizona, who famously said

to begin this season, who couldn’t find much room in the second half, took the ball on first down on the first series of overtime and bulled his way for 8 yards.

On the next play, he got the ball again, cutting left, then back right, then spinning his way into the end zone on a 17yard run. It was Corum’s best run of the year. The kind of run that has endeared him to so many in Ann Arbor the past four years.

He helped set up the drive that led to the tying TD, too, which began when J.J. McCarthy hit him with a swing pass.

That was followed by a designed run for McCarthy off the right side for 16 yards. A tipped pass that rose high before being brought down by Roman Wilson, who landed, regained his balance and sprinted 29 yards to set up a firstand-goal.

Finally, a 4-yard flip to Wilson again. Touchdown, and after the extra point, tie game. Alabama got the ball back with 1:34 left, a timeout and the best field goal kicker in the country.

Michigan gave up one first down and then rose up – again, forcing a punt. The problem, again, was the special teams. Harbaugh sent Jake Thaw in to receive the punt instead of Semaj Morgan, who had fumbled a punt in the first quarter.

Instead of letting the punt bounce, likely into the end zone, Thaw tried to catch it, dropped it, then fell on it at Michigan’s 2. What might have been a chance to win in regulation disappeare­d.

McCarthy took a knee to set up overtime.

Maybe in another season, or a different kind of season, the special-teams mistakes would have cost the Wolverines. But not this team. Not this time.

Harbaugh has said this is the team all season. That this is his best team. The trick was to get them ready after a month off.

They talked about it last week, these Wolverines, how they spent too much time overthinki­ng during the long gap between the Big Ten title game and the playoffs.

Or over-analyzing. Or over-practicing. They weren’t sure. They just knew something needed to change.

They needed to come out looser, yet

JUNFU HAN/ DETROIT FREE PRESS more focused, and they did for the most part, other than mishandlin­g a punt. But that was more of a tough break, as Morgan had to come up to grab it with the sun in his eyes.

Still, these are the moments that decide these games, the moments that cost U-M in last year’s loss to TCU. And the moments that looked like they might cost the Wolverines against Alabama.

Like passing just behind a receiver, for example, slowing his momentum and giving a defender enough time to catch up and make a tackle a couple of yards short of a first down. Or throwing high. Or missing a block.

The Wolverines may not have elite speed and play making on the outside, but their receivers got open enough to make a few plays, even as McCarthy struggled to get them the ball. He didn’t play poorly. He just didn’t play great, until the end, when games are won.

That’s what matters, right? That’s why Michigan has one more game – against Washington for the national title on Jan. 8 (7:30 ET, ESPN) in Houston.

Corum came back for this. He knew what this team had, and knew, like everyone now knows, that this defense, especially up front, is something to behold, and when it mattered, kept Alabama from those final 4 yards.

 ?? ?? Linebacker Michael Barrett, center, and the Michigan defense made a stand against Alabama during the Rose Bowl.
Linebacker Michael Barrett, center, and the Michigan defense made a stand against Alabama during the Rose Bowl.

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