Paul Myerberg USA TODAY Published 2:20 AM EDT Oct 6, 2019 We should take the game tape from Michigan’s 10-3 win against Iowa and bury it deep underground, not for the purposes of creating a time capsule for the future but for the opposite: so that no one person anywhere, at any time, will be able to watch it again. Iowa ran the ball 30 times and gained a yard. Quarterback Nate Stanley was credited with minus-65 rushing yards. (Allowing eight sacks will hurt the per-carry average.) The Hawkeyes turned it over four times, three via interceptions. Michigan gained 267 yards of offense. About a fifth of that total came on a single play in the first quarter, in quarterback Shea Patterson’s 51-yard completion to wide receiver Nico Collins that preceded the game’s only touchdown. Patterson ended with 14 completions in 26 attempts for 147 yards and an interception, marking his third Big Ten game in as many tries with a turnover and the second time in three weeks the Michigan passing game has looked merely average, if not far worse. In all, the two teams combined for 528 yards of offense across 131 plays, which is about 100 yards… Read full this story
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