Michigan falls 38-17 to No. 1 Oregon: Game recap, final box score
ANN ARBOR – The Michigan Wolverines fell to 5-4 (3-3 in Big Ten play) after a 38-17 loss to No. 1 Oregon at home on Saturday in Ann Arbor.
Michigan had several opportunities to make the game more competitive than it was, but the Ducks came into the Big House on the same mission this program was on last season. The best team in America did what it had to do to walk out with a lopsided win.
Here is the recap from Saturday’s game in Ann Arbor.
First quarter
Oregon won the coin toss and deferred, giving the ball first to the Wolverines. Kick returner Joe Taylor brought the ball out to the 32-yard line, where Michigan would get things started. After losing five yards on the first play, U-M would get the ball back out to the 35-yard line before being forced to punt with 13:30 left in the quarter. The Ducks would take over at their 37-yard line 11 seconds later after a 49 yard punt from Tommy Doman and a 21-yard return from Tez Johnson.
The Ducks would strike first, using a 12-play, 63-yard drive and a 2-yard touchdown pass from Dillon Gabriel to Evan Stewart to take a 7-0 lead after the extra point with 6:53 to go in the quarter. The ball hit the ground on the Stewart touchdown, but the officiating crew elected not to review it. The Michigan offense would respond with another 3-and-out, but a muffed punt by Oregon allowed the Wolverines to get the ball back at the Ducks’ 28-yard line with 4:50 on the clock. Five plays later, U-M would tie the game on a 7-yard touchdown pass from Davis Warren to Tyler Morris, followed by a Dominic Zvada extra point (1:31).
Oregon would run 4 plays for 54 yards – including a 15-yard roughing the passer call on Josaiah Stewart – to end the first quarter on the Michigan 21-yard line.
Michigan 7, Oregon 7
Second quarter
A 20-yard pass from Gabriel to tight end Terrance Ferguson got the quarter started before a 1-yard touchdown from Noah Whittington, which was reviewed and confirmed as a touchdown. The Ducks led 14-7 after the Atticus Sappington extra point. Michigan would pick up a first down on its next drive, but then punt after gaining just 14 yards in the five-play possession. Oregon would fair catch the punt at its own 13-yard line with 11:37 to go in the half.
The Wolverines responded on defense by forcing their first three-and-out of the day, and the subsequent punt took a Michigan bounce to the Oregon 47-yard line with 10:40 on the clock. However, U-M was unable to take advantage, punting back to the Ducks after another three-and-out. Oregon responded with a 10-play, 94-yard drive that ended in Whittington’s second touchdown run of the day, this time from 6 yards out. After the extra point, the Ducks led 21-7 with 4:19 left in the half.
Top 10
- 1New
Bowl insurance
Historic policies for Hunter, Shedeur
- 2Hot
Nick Saban endorsed
Lane Kiffin suggests as commish
- 3
Diego Pavia
Vandy QB ruling forces change
- 4
Notre Dame takes shot
Announcer trolls Fighting Irish
- 5
Stephen A. Smith fires back
Beef with Kirk Herbstreit continues
Get the On3 Top 10 to your inbox every morning
By clicking "Subscribe to Newsletter", I agree to On3's Privacy Notice, Terms, and use of my personal information described therein.
Michigan answered by putting together a 7-play, 55-yard drive that ended in a 38-yard field goal from Zvada, narrowing the Oregon lead to 21-10 with 1:51 left in the half. But the Ducks would punch right back, going 80 yards in 7 plays and getting a touchdown via a 23-yard scramble from Gabriel. After the extra point, the lead was pushed to 28-10, where things would stand heading into the locker room.
Oregon 28, Michigan 10
Third quarter
Michigan’s defense came out of the locker room and got a quick stop on the Ducks, who went three-and-out. After fielding a punt at their 25-yard line, the Wolverines went 75 yards in 10 plays to score their second touchdown of the game, a 6-yard pass from Warren to senior wide receiver Peyton O’Leary. After the extra point, the Oregon lead was trimmed to 28-17 with 7:09 to go.
On the following possession, Michigan was primed to get off the field in Oregon territory, but an illegal procedure penalty on the Wolverines — defensive lineman Trey Pierce was lined up over the long snapper — gave the ball back to the Ducks with a first down at midfield. They would finish the 17-play, 65-yard drive with a field goal to push the lead to 31-17 with 36 seconds left in the quarter.
The third quarter would run out with Michigan facing a third-and-8 from its 27-yard line.
Oregon 31, Michigan 17
Fourth quarter
The Wolverines would punt after a three-and-out, which included an incomplete pass to Colston Loveland that U-M challenged on third down. Oregon would take back over at its 29-yard line with 14:42 to go. The defense got the stop it needed, forcing a punt that bounced through the end zone. Michigan’s offense would take over on its 25-yard line with 12:20 to go in the game.
The Wolverines drove down the field 70 yards in 11 plays, trying to mount a final stand and make it a one-score game. Ultimately, the team botched its opportunity and turned the ball over on downs on an attempted trick pass from Semaj Morgan to Alex Orji with 7:25 to go. Oregon landed the knockout blow with an 11-play, 90-yard drive to move ahead 38-17 with 25 seconds left. Michigan would run three plays for 7 yards before the clock ran out.
FINAL: Oregon 38, Michigan 17