Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Michigan Overpowers Washington as Harbaugh Delivers a National Title
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 12 months ago on
January 9, 2024

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

HOUSTON — Jim Harbaugh raised the championship trophy as gold and white confetti sprayed over his team and “We Are the Champions” blared.

Nine years after he took over at Michigan, Harbaugh delivered on the lofty expectations he brought with him to his beloved alma mater.

Blake Corum ran for 134 yards and two fourth-quarter touchdowns as Harbaugh and the top-ranked Wolverines — undeterred by suspensions and a sign-stealing case that shadowed the program — completed a three-year surge to a national title by beating No. 2 Washington 34-13 Monday night in the College Football Playoff.

“We’re innocent and we stood strong and tall because we knew we were innocent. And I’d like to point that out,” Harbaugh said when asked about off-field issues, jumping in to answer a question posed to his players. “And these guys are innocent. And overcome that? It wasn’t that hard because we knew we were innocent.

“(The season) went exactly how we wanted it to go. It went exactly how we wanted it to go.”

The Wolverines (15-0) sealed their first national title since 1997 when Corum, who scored the winning touchdown in overtime against Alabama in the Rose Bowl, blasted in from the 1-yard line with 3:37 left to put Michigan up by 21 and set off another rousing rendition of “The Victors” from the band.

After a third consecutive playoff appearance, Harbaugh won the championship so many expected when he took over a struggling powerhouse in 2015 — despite missing six regular-season games this season while serving two suspensions.

“That man, he’s the reason we’re here today,” Michigan quarterback J.J. McCarthy said of his coach.

Michigan’s Performance

And Harbaugh did it with a team his old coach, Bo Schembechler, would have adored. The Wolverines ran for 303 yards against Washington (14-1), and their rugged defense held Michael Penix Jr. and the Huskies’ prolific passing game to just one touchdown while intercepting the Heisman Trophy runner-up twice.

“There are more than 100 Michigan men who are on this team,” Harbaugh said. “What they’ve done is amazing. They will forever be known as national champions.”

Penix’s remarkable six-year college career ended with maybe his worst performance of the season. Usually unfazed by pressure, Penix was not nearly as precise against a Michigan defense that took away his signature deep throws.

“That was a spectacular game by our defense,” Harbaugh said.

The Indiana transfer who came back from two knee surgeries and two shoulder injuries was roughed up by the Wolverines, limping at times, stepped on another time.

Asked how he was feeling, Penix said, still undaunted: “Better than I was three years ago.”

Penix finished 27 for 51 for 255 yards and a touchdown as the Huskies had their 21-game winning streak snapped.

“They’ve given me everything they possible can,” coach Kalen DeBoer said of a group of players who went 4-8 just two seasons ago and 25-3 since he took over in 2022.

McCarthy had a modest game, throwing for 140 yards and running for 31. But it was enough for him to improve to 27-1 as a starter for the Wolverines.

Game Highlights

Michigan gave Washington a taste of life in the Big Ten, where the Pac-12 champions are heading next season, and the Huskies were up for the grind for a while.

Two long touchdown runs by Donovan Edwards and 229 yards rushing in the first quarter put the Wolverines up 17-3 early in the second and conjured up memories of last year’s historic Georgia blowout of TCU.

Washington stabilized and didn’t allow the Wolverines another point in the first half. After the Huskies stopped Michigan on a fourth-and-2 from the UW 38 with 4:46 left in the second quarter, Penix went to work.

He found Jalen McMillan on a fourth-and-goal with 42 seconds left for a 3-yard touchdown. After being on the verge of getting buried by the Wolverines, the Huskies fans sang along to “Who Let the Dogs Out,” happily down only 17-10 at half.

Will Johnson’s interception of Penix on the first play of the second half gave Michigan another opportunity to open up a two-touchdown lead, but the Huskies forced a field goal by James Turner to make it 20-10.

“Today was a complete, complete team effort,” Corum said.

Michigan nursed a touchdown lead until halfway through the fourth quarter, when it put together a 71-yard drive, capped by Corum’s tackle-breaking 12-yard touchdown that finally gave the Wolverines some room with a 27-13 lead and 7:09 left.

Corum, the engine of the ground-and-pound offense and heart and soul of a team loaded with fourth-, fifth- and even sixth-year players, missed the CFP last year with a knee injury. He was named offensive player of the final national title game in before the College Football Playoff expands from four teams to 12 next season.

“Michigan, this is for you,” Corum told the Wolverines fans.

Michigan’s Journey

Michigan seemed to be steaming toward a third consecutive Big Ten championship when in October it was revealed the NCAA was investigating the program for potentially breaking rules that prohibit in-person scouting of opponents and using video equipment to attempt to decode opponents’ play signals.

The scandal turned Connor Stalions, the low-level Michigan recruiting staffer accused of orchestrating the scheme, into a household name and threatened to derail the Wolverines’ season.

The NCAA process will linger well into 2024 and it is unknown what penalties Michigan could face. The Big Ten, though, decided to act quickly and punished Michigan by suspending Harbaugh for the final three games of the regular season, including matchups with Penn State and rival Ohio State.

With offensive coordinator Sherrone Moore taking Harbaugh’s place, it became Michigan vs. Everybody and nobody could stop the Wolverines.

Harbaugh returned for the postseason, completed the mission and got to celebrate with his 84-year-old father, Jack — himself a former college football coach — as he accepted the trophy.

Michigan became the first college football program to record 1,000 victories when it beat Maryland in November and won its third national title in January.

“Who has it better than us?” Jack Harbaugh asked the fans during the trophy ceremony. They replied with a boisterous: “Nobody!”

Now the question is whether Harbaugh has coached the team he once quarterbacked for the last time, with the NFL seemingly beckoning again.

Harbaugh said it felt good to no longer be the only coach in the family without a national championship. His father won a Division I-AA title with Western Kentucky and brother John won a Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens by beating Jim’s San Francisco 49ers 11 years ago.

“I can now sit at the big person’s table in the family,” Harbaugh said.

As for what’s next?

“I just want to enjoy this,” he said. “I hope you give me that. Can I have that? Does it always have to be what’s next, what’s the future?”

 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Justin Verlander and Giants Agree to $15M, 1-Year Deal

DON'T MISS

A’s Ink Slugger Brent Rooker to $60M, 5-Year Deal

DON'T MISS

Los Angeles Officials Order 30,000 Residents to Evacuate as Fire Advances on Homes

DON'T MISS

The 49ers Fire Special Teams Coordinator Brian Schneider, AP Source Says

DON'T MISS

Elon Musk Helped Trump Win. Now He’s Looking at Europe, and Many Politicians Are Alarmed

DON'T MISS

Flying Taxis on the Horizon as Aviation Soars Into a New Frontier

DON'T MISS

Former CEO of Fresno EOC Is Returning to Head Troubled Agency

DON'T MISS

Northern Illinois Will Join Mountain West for Football Only in 2026

DON'T MISS

US Justice Department Accuses Six Major Landlords of Scheming to Keep Rents High

DON'T MISS

Trump Refuses to Rule Out Use of Military Force to Take Control of Greenland and the Panama Canal

UP NEXT

A’s Ink Slugger Brent Rooker to $60M, 5-Year Deal

UP NEXT

The 49ers Fire Special Teams Coordinator Brian Schneider, AP Source Says

UP NEXT

Northern Illinois Will Join Mountain West for Football Only in 2026

UP NEXT

Washington Post Lays Off 4% of Its Workforce

UP NEXT

Raiders Fire Coach Antonio Pierce. Who Will They Hire Next?

UP NEXT

North Dakota St. Wins 10th FCS Title as Miller Accounts for 4 TDs in Win Over Montana St.

UP NEXT

Dodgers Trade Gavin Lux to Reds After Signing Infielder Hyeseong Kim

UP NEXT

Jimmy Carter Will Be Honored in Washington, a City Where He Remained an Outsider

UP NEXT

Chargers Plan to Sign Ezekiel Elliott to Practice Squad

UP NEXT

Fresno State Adds a Sackmaster and Safety from Transfer Portal

The 49ers Fire Special Teams Coordinator Brian Schneider, AP Source Says

3 hours ago

Elon Musk Helped Trump Win. Now He’s Looking at Europe, and Many Politicians Are Alarmed

3 hours ago

Flying Taxis on the Horizon as Aviation Soars Into a New Frontier

3 hours ago

Former CEO of Fresno EOC Is Returning to Head Troubled Agency

3 hours ago

Northern Illinois Will Join Mountain West for Football Only in 2026

3 hours ago

US Justice Department Accuses Six Major Landlords of Scheming to Keep Rents High

3 hours ago

Trump Refuses to Rule Out Use of Military Force to Take Control of Greenland and the Panama Canal

5 hours ago

Bredefeld Tries to ‘Shake up Good Ol’ Boys Club’ on Day One

5 hours ago

Aubrey Plaza Responds to Husband Jeff Baena’s Death: ‘Unimaginable Tragedy’

5 hours ago

Washington Post Lays Off 4% of Its Workforce

5 hours ago

Justin Verlander and Giants Agree to $15M, 1-Year Deal

SAN FRANCISCO  — Justin Verlander and the San Francisco Giants have agreed to a $15 million, one-year contract, according to a person with d...

1 hour ago

Justin Verlander Will Join Giants
1 hour ago

Justin Verlander and Giants Agree to $15M, 1-Year Deal

3 hours ago

A’s Ink Slugger Brent Rooker to $60M, 5-Year Deal

Flames rise as the Palisades Fire advances on homes in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025. (AP/Ethan Swope)
3 hours ago

Los Angeles Officials Order 30,000 Residents to Evacuate as Fire Advances on Homes

3 hours ago

The 49ers Fire Special Teams Coordinator Brian Schneider, AP Source Says

3 hours ago

Elon Musk Helped Trump Win. Now He’s Looking at Europe, and Many Politicians Are Alarmed

3 hours ago

Flying Taxis on the Horizon as Aviation Soars Into a New Frontier

3 hours ago

Former CEO of Fresno EOC Is Returning to Head Troubled Agency

3 hours ago

Northern Illinois Will Join Mountain West for Football Only in 2026

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend