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- Finish for the ages: Michigan State stuns Michigan on unbelievable play
Posted by : Unknown
Sunday, October 18, 2015
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — College football, you win.
Move over, Auburn field-goal return.
Step aside, Boise State Statue of Liberty play.
You have company in the HOW COULD THAT HAVE HAPPENED Hall of Fame.
Michigan had a 23–21 lead on rival Michigan State with 10 seconds
left. The Spartans had 11 men on the line of scrimmage—there was no
return and no thought of a return. Michigan just had to get a decent
punt off and stop one desperate, beyond-Hail-Mary-range pass to beat its
rival for the first time in four years and climb into the playoff
picture. Instead …
Instead.
You will not believe the “instead.”
The punt was sideways—the play had collapsed by that point. It went right to Michigan State’s Jalen Watts-Jackson, who didn’t even need to bend down and pick it up. Watts-Jackson took off for the end zone.
On the sideline, Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio looked up. He was hoping this meant his team could at least try a game-winning field goal (though with the state of his kicking game right now, no kick is a sure thing). Then Dantonio saw this:
0:00.
Michigan State would either score a touchdown or lose.
Watts-Jackson made it into the end zone. And apparently as he fell, he either dislocated or broke his hip. He was on his way to the hospital before his teammates left the stadium.
“I didn’t know what was happening, man,” Dantonio said. “I was with all of you. Some green, some blue … everybody’s mouths probably just dropped open.”
So Michigan State won, 27–23. The Spartans remain undefeated and in the national title hunt, though frankly neither team really looked like a national champion for most of the day.
He then added: “I very much respect the University of Michigan and what Coach (Jim) Harbaugh has done here thus far, and the direction they’re going. And they played a great game.”
And Harbaugh said: “What do you say about the final play? It was unfortunate. Didn’t get the result. They played really well played winning football, competed like maniacs, both teams did. It was a heckuva game. Played winning football, didn’t get the result. Welcome to football. Move forward.”
The teams can move forward, but the fan bases will remember this for decades. And it may be the start of the best years of the Michigan State-Michigan rivalry.
It is hard to find an era when both programs were consistent Big Ten contenders. This may be the start of one.
Unlike most of Dantonio’s wins over Michigan, this was not a butt-kicking, and he knows it as well as anybody. Harbaugh and his players can go to sleep tonight knowing that.
Of course, the Wolverines probably won’t be able to sleep.
And the Spartans won’t want to.