© 2024 MICHIGAN PUBLIC
91.7 Ann Arbor/Detroit 104.1 Grand Rapids 91.3 Port Huron 89.7 Lansing 91.1 Flint
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

The greatest finish in Big House history

Denard Robinson drops back before he throws the game winning touchdown to receiver Roy Roundtree.
screen grab from mgoblue.com video
Denard Robinson drops back before he throws the game winning touchdown to receiver Roy Roundtree.

What if you had a night game, and nobody came?

Well, that wasn’t the problem.

The game attracted more than 114,000 people, an NCAA record.

To commemorate the event, Michigan wore “throwback jerseys” – which went back all the way to September 10, 2011.  Michigan’s jerseys never had stripes – and when you saw them Saturday night, you appreciated just how wise Michigan’s founders had been.  It was less about tradition than trade.   

But what if you invited the entire nation to watch your big game, and you laid an egg?  In the first half, Michigan couldn’t have looked worse, trailing Notre Dame in first downs, 15-3.  The only stat that was even close was the only one that mattered: the score.  Notre Dame dominated, but led only 17-7.

If lightning had been sighted near the end of the third quarter, with Notre Dame ahead 24-7, you could make a case for calling this game early, too. 

Michigan started the fourth quarter with the ball on Notre Dame’s one-yard line – when the runner fumbled.  If the ball bounced toward the Irish, fans would have headed for the aisles, with the first night game declared a failure. 

But the luck of the Irish switched to the Wolverines’ side this time.  The ball bounced right to quarterback Denard Robinson, who did what he does: trotted into the endzone for an easy touchdown. 

What happened next is hard to believe, even now.  The same team that couldn’t do anything right for three quarters, suddenly couldn’t do anything wrong.  The Wolverines caught fire, scoring touchdown after touchdown, taking the lead for the first time with just 1:12 left.  But Notre Dame finally woke up, and scored its first touchdown of the quarter, leaving the Wolverines stuck with a 31-28 deficit, and just 30 seconds left. 

When you lose, no matter how heroically you played, people talk about what you did wrong.  The critics would have asked what happened to the high-powered offense the team inherited, and why the defense wasn’t any better than the disastrous one from the year before.  But when you win, all people talk about is what you did right.  And Michigan did a lot right. 

Amazingly, with just eight seconds left, Michigan gave itself a chance to win the game.  Roy Roundtree hadn’t caught a pass all night, but in the huddle, the normally unassuming man told Robinson, “Give me the ball.”

And that’s what Robinson did, sending a pass soaring to the edge of the endzone.  The defender was all over Roundtree – but it didn’t matter.  That ball was his.  And the game was Michigan’s.  

It’s fashionable to say Michigan Stadium is home to the quietest 100,000 people in the world.  But thanks to a full day of partying, the new acoustics, and the almost surreal feeling that night, no crowd could have been louder.

And the fans didn’t stop.  Not when the players jumped into the student section to sing “The Victors.”  Not when Denard actually skipped off the field.  Not when he returned for a post-game interview.  Not even when they turned out the lights.  The fans just moved their celebrations elsewhere. 

It hasn’t stopped all week!  People are still buzzing about it.

Winning solves a lot of problems, but not all of them.  This team has a lot of work to do.  But, who cares?  I can’t imagine the fans ever seeing, hearing, or feeling anything like they did in the old stadium that night.

We don’t have to wait to gain perspective on this one.  We can say, right here, right now, that that was the greatest finish in Big House history.   

Don’t believe me?  Just ask any of the 114,000 people who were there – or the half million folks who will soon be telling you they were.

John U. Bacon has worked nearly three decades as a writer, a public speaker, and a college instructor, winning awards for all three.
Related Content