HOUSTON — There are two ways you can look at the last special teams play of the Rose Bowl: either Michigan football punt returner Jake Thaw nearly cost the Wolverines the game or he saved the maize and blue from losing the game.
Actually, both things are true at the same time. But Thaw isn’t looking at it that way, even now, nearly a week removed.
Alabama punted to Michigan with just under a minute left, and if Thaw — who hadn’t been back at punt return all game — fields the ball cleanly, it could have set the maize and blue up to win the tied game in regulation. But the unthinkable happened: he muffed the punt and then had to scurry to keep the ball from going into the endzone, effectively ending the game on a safety.
Still, Thaw, realizing his mistake, doesn’t count the prescience he had at the time to fall on the football in-bounds. But his training did kick in at a key moment to keep Michigan alive for another play.
“I don’t really think of it as a game-saving play, I think of it a bit more I just — hopefully I didn’t make a bad play worse,” Thaw told WolverinesWire. “Once that ball goes through my hands, I was thinking, ‘Holy cow, this game is on the line, protect that football all costs, get it out of the endzone.’ And I’m just lucky I was able to do so. It was obviously a tough play. And I’m just glad that my team was able to rebound from it.
“I put the offense in a bad situation they still had to get off the half-yard line, and they got off that. So a lot of thanks to that offensive line, to Coach Moore and we’ve finished the job. And now we get to play on Monday.”
Michigan often preaches repetition and fundamentals. ‘You get better at football by playing football’ is an oft-repeated mantra by head coach Jim Harbaugh, and it turns out, the football we don’t see played a…
Source link : https://sports.yahoo.com/confidence-instinct-kicked-calamity-nearly-180217601.html
Author : Wolverines Wire
Publish date : 2024-01-06 18:02:17
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