PISCATAWAY, N.J. — Michigan had to switch quarterbacks, go three overtimes and play roughly 4 1/2 hours to avoid the football program's worst start in 53 years. It was worth it.
Hassan Haskins dove in from less than a yard out on fourth down in the third overtime and the Wolverines snapped a three-game losing streak by outlasting Rutgers 48-42 on Saturday night.
"This win means a lot," defensive lineman Chris Hinton said. "It's the first step to get back on track. We didn't quit. We just kept swinging."
The guy who delivered the biggest blows was sophomore quarterback Cade McNamara, who replaced starter Joe Milton late in the second quarter. He threw four touchdown passes and ran for another as Michigan (2-3, 2-3 Big Ten) handed Rutgers (1-4, 1-4) its fourth straight loss.
"Cade was outstanding," said Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh, who has been under fire with his team off to its worst start in his now six-year tenure. "Really gritty. Really gritty performance in all ways. His play was inspiring. I can't say enough great things."
Michigan missed the 2-point conversion after Haskins' touchdown, but safety Daxton Hill intercepted Noah Vedral's desperation heave into the end zone from the 24-yard line to end the game.
It marked the second straight week Rutgers coach Greg Schiano saw his team squander a second-half lead.
"There was a bunch of guys that are hurting really bad," Schiano said. "Needless to say, a bunch of guys really spilled their guts out there on the field. It just, you know, we're not there yet. We're just not quite there yet. And we'll keep chopping and keep working. We will get there."