USA TODAY Sports Weekly

To understand Michigan, remember the scars

- Jeff Seidel

HOUSTON – The clock was ticking down and J.J. McCarthy took a knee.

Only a few seconds left now, a few seconds to history.

McCarthy hugged Donovan Edwards, his close friend, which seemed so fitting.

One more snap and – look out – here came the Gatorade bath on the sideline. But Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh still has the moves, still has the quickness and ducked away from it, like he was ducking questions about his future.

Now, the confetti was exploding into the air, a wash of Maize covering the field, as Michigan (15-0) celebrated its first national title since 1997 with a 34-13 victory over Washington.

“It’s pretty great,” Harbaugh told a TV reporter. “You watch the confetti. … There’s a story in every one of those pieces.”

In one aspect, you can view this as just one game.

A series of plays and wrinkles, intercepti­ons and brilliant tackles, misplays and touchdowns that determine the outcome.

But it’s not. It’s way bigger than that. This championsh­ip is a story that unfolded over time.

Like a wash of confetti.

So let me take you back four years ago. Edwards, a star running back at West Bloomfield (Michigan) High, was trying to pick a school. At that moment, Michigan football was struggling, Ohio State was dominating, Jim Harbaugh’s future was unclear and Michigan needed talent.

But Edwards loved Michigan. Loved the vibe on the team. And felt a special bond with another high-profile recruit, a kid named McCarthy. Edwards turned down Georgia, turned down Oklahoma and picked Michigan.

He had one goal: To make Michigan great again, to make history. Yes, he used that word, history.

And there he was at NRG Stadium on Jan. 8, making history. In the first quarter, Edwards looked like he ran into a wall. But he stopped, cut to his left and found a massive lane, sprinting 41 yards for a touchdown. It was the second-longest touchdown run in College Football Playoff history.

Then on Michigan’s second possession, he did it again, ripping off a 46-yard touchdown. Through long stretches of this season, Edwards had disappeare­d.

But here he was, making history, and those two runs meant everything in this wild game, where the momentum kept swinging back and forth, and both teams made mistakes.

But Michigan never let go of that lead. But that’s jumping ahead in the story. Because this championsh­ip really started with heartbreak.

Starting with heartbreak

Let’s go back three years ago.

To the scene of the first heartbreak. The first scar.

After Georgia crushed the Wolverines in the 2022 CFP semifinal, three Wolverines stayed on the field to watch the Bulldogs celebrate. Three freshmen. It was

McCarthy, Edwards and Andrel Anthony, a wide receiver from East Lansing. They stood shoulder to shoulder, drinking in the frustratio­n, sucking in the disappoint­ment and pain.

Adding scars and determinat­ion to their hearts.

Little slices of confetti.

A photo went viral and Anthony put it on social media: “Fuel to the fire. We’ll be back.”

Eventually, Anthony transferre­d to Oklahoma, as happens in college football these days. But McCarthy and Edwards stayed. And those who stay will be …

McCarthy became the starting quarterbac­k in 2022, and he led this team to the College Football Playoff for the second straight season. But that ended in more misery. McCarthy melted down, throwing a pair of pick-sixes. He stayed on the field as TCU celebrated.

More scars. More pain stored in the emotional bank.

Which all set up this season. Every player on this team has a story like this. The scars of disappoint­ment. The hours in the weight room. The resilience acquired in summer workouts and extra practices.

Over time, the Wolverines improved their offensive and defensive lines, got stronger and tougher, and all those scars pulled them together. They survived this crazy season that had NCAA investigat­ions and Harbaugh suspension­s and so much uncertaint­y.

But they handled it.

This entire team did.

And on Jan. 8, this Michigan defense handled a team with a future NFL quarterbac­k, a tremendous offensive line and future NFL wide receivers. Because this team was tougher. Because it had all those scars.

It felt like Washington was on the verge of breaking a huge play darn near every time Michael Penix Jr. went back to pass.

Washington certainly had its chances. But Penix missed some open receivers. He didn’t look comfortabl­e, and Michigan’s defensive backs kept slapping the ball loose or making some strong, physical tackles.

It was as if all those disappoint­ments were fueling this team, as they had all season.

All those small moments meant everything.

A great punt here. A drop there. A trip there.

Midway through the fourth quarter, the game still was in doubt and McCarthy had completed just eight passes. But he threw a huge pass to tight end Colston Loveland, and then he hit Roman Wilson. Suddenly, the Wolverines were in the red zone. Suddenly, they were on the doorstep again, and Blake Corum finished it off.

It was as if all that disappoint­ment had changed this team. Changed these players.

It was a pure team win.

“It’s glorious,” McCarthy said. “I love those guys so much. No better way to end it.”

It all started with heartbreak. That’s where all the confetti represente­d.

That’s where this national title was born.

 ?? MELANIE MAXWELL/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Quarterbac­k J.J. McCarthy celebrates with Michigan running back Donovan Edwards after one of Edwards’ two TD gallops.
MELANIE MAXWELL/DETROIT FREE PRESS Quarterbac­k J.J. McCarthy celebrates with Michigan running back Donovan Edwards after one of Edwards’ two TD gallops.

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