Our conversation with John U. Bacon, Michigan Radio's sports commentator
Aside from Western Michigan beating Toledo to finish the regular season undefeated, and Eastern Michigan clinching their first bowl game in nearly 20 years earlier in the week, it was a pretty rough week for most Michigan college football fans.
John U. Bacon joined Stateside for his weekly sports roundup and it was all about football.
On Thursday, the eyes of the nation were on the Detroit Lions coming back to win in the fourth quarter for the seventh time this season. When the dust settled, the Lions were all alone in first place in the NFC North with a one game lead over the Minnesota Vikings (and Detroit owns the tiebreaker over Minnesota after winning both games this year).
Two days later, the eyes of the nation were fixed upon "The Game" between Michigan and Ohio State and it lived up to the hype.
Unfortunately for Wolverine fans, it was the Buckeyes who prevailed, winning 30-27 in double overtime.
Saturday's contest was the 113th meeting between the two schools and it was the first time that the game went into overtime.
While Michigan's play on the field is partly to blame for the loss, Bacon echoed the post-game thoughts of Jim Harbaugh who made headlines for complaining about the quality of the officials.
The play that is getting the most attention is Ohio State's controversial fourth-down conversion in overtime, which fans and the media have analyzed over and over this weekend.
Take a look for yourself:
It was reviewed and the officials ruled that the Buckeyes got the first down, which allowed them to score the game-winning touchdown on the next play. Had they ruled that Ohio State QB J.T. Barrett didn't get the first down, the game would have ended and Michigan would have won.
Michigan Coach Jim Harbaugh was none too pleased:
https://youtu.be/XfgeLGRsvu8
Listen to the full interview to hear Bacon's thoughts on the questionable officiating crew for the Michigan-OSU game, how Western Michigan could have a Heisman Trophy candidate on their hands, and the biggest reason why the Lions are in first place with five games left.
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