I am going to provide an alternate opinion. It will be unpopular to some and that’s fine. Like yours, it is just an opinion and in no way meant to correct or dismiss yours or anyone else’s. But that win, as great as it was for us, was a fluke. It was a perfect storm of opportunity that was seized by a group of young men and their coaches through hard work and preparation.NewApp wrote: ↑Wed Apr 15, 2020 7:15 amAppSt94 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 15, 2020 6:27 amTake a look at the picture from the coin toss. This is what he is referring to.
https://andrewjkahn.com/2017/08/28/appa ... igan-2007/
If you mean the desparity in size, I could agree somewhat, except the superior size is what cost the Wolverines the game. We were so much faster coupled with the Spread Offense's inherent reliance on speed that we were in effect superior, not to mention the superior physical condition we possessed. Just my opinion.
Allow me to explain. If you follow Michigan football at all, you would know that they historically play down to the competition of their opening week opponent. Aside from that, Michigan, at that time was always susceptible to spread offenses. Our game was supposed to be a tuneup for their next opponent, Oregon, and help them get ready for Ohio State later in the season. We were the perfect test for them. What they didn’t account for was, to your point, our speed. That, along with a veteran group that knew how to execute what we wanted to do. Despite that, we still had to block a very makeable kick to prevail.
Again, I am not saying that we were lucky. I am saying that we were a very good football team that was able to take advantage of a situation that set up for favorable results. Oregon ran the same offense the week after and destroyed Michigan and the game was never in doubt. Just my opinion.