[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Nebraska 85, Michigan 70 Comment Count

Alex.Drain March 10th, 2024 at 3:00 PM

Michigan Men's Basketball closed out their regular season of the 2023-24 campaign with an eighth straight loss, the team's 13th in 14 games and 18th in 20 games. Matched up against a Nebraska team who eviscerated Michigan's defense in the first meeting between the two teams back in early February, the defense of the Maize & Blue did no better this time. They allowed 50 points in the first half and Nebraska shot 28/36 (77.8%) from two for the game, scoring at a 1.21 PPP clip for the contest. Michigan hung around in the first half but like so many other games this season, were blown out of the water in the second half and the final minutes ticked down without any intrigue. Wash, rinse, repeat. 

The first half was the Keisei Tominaga show, as the Japanese guard piled up 23 points (nearly half of Nebraska's total) on a sizzling 9/12 shooting. Tominaga had his way with the Michigan defense, lethal from downtown with four triples, plus gobs of easy scores inside at the rim. Tominaga led the Nebraska offense that bulldozed the Michigan defense throughout the first half, scoring 70% from the floor and 15/18 from two, numbers that only cooled off slightly in the second half. Even for a Michigan defense that has had plenty of ugly halves this season, this first half effort had to have been among the ugliest. Josiah Allick and Rienk Mast each chipped in seven points as well on a combined 6/7 shooting as Nebraska hung a half-century in the first half. 

To Michigan's credit, they had a lot of offensive success as well in the first half against a Nebraska defense that had been pretty sharp in recent weeks. It wasn't enough to keep up with the way their defense was hemorrhaging points on the other end, but it gave the game a competitive feel, as Michigan only trailed by seven at halftime. While Tominaga dazzled for Nebraska, Dug McDaniel was the star for Michigan, shooting 5/6 from three on his way to 17 points in the first half. There were a couple instances of Tominaga drilling a shot at one end, only for McDaniel to pull up from three and swish it at the other end. Michigan didn't get a ton else of note offensively outside of McDaniel in the first half, but it was enough to keep them within striking distance at the half. 

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Michigan was going to need to defend better in the second half and while they did somewhat, their offense also bogged down and were unable to close the gap. Nebraska's three point shooting cooled off dramatically and Tominaga was held in check, but with Tominaga on the perimeter drawing attention, the Huskers were still able to get inside for too many easy layups and dunks. Nebraska was 11/18 on 2's in the second half, with Josiah Allick standing out as the star in the latter 20 minutes. Allick played good defense, with an excellent recovery and close-out to block a Burnett three early in the second half hanging in the memory. He scored 8 points in the second half to lead the team, same as Brice Williams, as Nebraska put together a rather ensemble offensive performance in the second half. 

For Michigan, the biggest story was the three point shooting vanishing. They made just one out of 13 attempts from deep in the second half, missing a number of pretty wide open looks, Terrance Williams II making their only triple of the second half. McDaniel in particular was ice cold, 0/5 from the floor in the second half and Michigan's best sequence of the second half, when they trimmed the Nebraska lead from 20 back to 12, came with Dug on the bench. That briefly looked like it could give Michigan an opening to charge back into the game, but Nebraska wrestled control back and the two teams were rather lackluster and sloppy late in the game. Michigan never got it back to single digits after Allick's layup to make the score 59-48 and the end of the game was again marked by walk-ons in the game and discussion from the broadcasters of how good Michigan's opponent is playing recently.  

Michigan ends the B1G regular season at 3-17, last place in the conference by four games. Their only conference wins were over Iowa, Ohio State, and Wisconsin, just one coming on the road. Seven of their last eight games have been losses by double digit margins. Last season was a year of repetitive pain after meltdowns in the final minutes of close games. This season, the team was so bad in calendar 2024 there haven't even been close games to meltdown in. Each game is a similar shade to the last one and my recaps have grown shorter and shorter because there are only so many ways you can describe how nonexistent Michigan's defense is or their one-dimensionality sans Olivier Nkamhoua on offense. 

Michigan will play in the (14) vs. (11) game in the B1G Tournament on Wednesday night, with one more loss to end their season. It is not clear who the opponent will be, but we will know by the end of the evening tonight. What we do know is that game will be at roughly 9:00 pm EST and will be broadcast on Peacock. 

[Click the JUMP for the box score]

Comments

colonel

March 10th, 2024 at 7:17 PM ^

The point is well taken that Michigan might struggle to hire an excellent coach, say another John Beilein. Coaches like that are exceptional and hard to find. We were spoiled by Beilein. I hope we can find his equal, but who's to say?

However, surely a program with the history and brand-name of Michigan can hire a coach capable of producing better results than what has transpired this season. I mean, this has been pathetic, like 2010-RichRod-defense bad.

WindyCityBlue

March 10th, 2024 at 8:10 PM ^

surely a program with the history and brand-name of Michigan can hire a coach capable of producing better results than what has transpired this season
 

We’ve been trying to use the “this is Michigan fergodsakes” for basketball and it has resulted in some horrible hires in the past 30 years.  Now, I’m with you, it shouldn’t be hard to find a coach that could get us more than 8 wins a season, but can we find one that can get us to some level of consistent success? Under these systemic issues we currently have, I don’t think so. 
 

EDIT: so I refrained from saying this at first, but I think it’s probably worth a thought. Between my POC Michigan friends, the fact that all the shit basketball coaches have all been black is not a good look. Additionally, that our only good coach in 30 years was white, and that this white coach is considered a racist in some circles doesn’t help the situation. I don’t know how big of an issue this is, but it’s definitely a thing. 

colonel

March 10th, 2024 at 9:11 PM ^

I see your point and I have no counter. I figure Michigan is a football school. Our pride in athletics will always go to the football program first, and so will the big time money therefore. We will burn through football coaches until we find the elite guy to take us to the top of the B1G. Our basketball program is proud but not in the same category of fanaticism. Juwan would have been gone already if it were.

So I agree with your premise. I think the only kind of coach who can win consistently at Michigan, year-over-year, would be a John Beilein type talent. If we can find another, outstanding. Aside from that possibility, we'll have to take the good with the bad. If we find a Chris Collins type (I'm not arguing for Chris Collins himself), a guy who seems to have both up years and down years as unsung talent develops and cycles through his roster, I'd say we have a passable, though not ideal, solution.

I will also say that Juwan's status as a legendary alum and his health condition from the fall make the idea of firing him uncomfortable for me. I wouldn't want to have to do it. But things are such a mess right now. Feels like he's got to go, unfortunate and sad as that is.

Edit of my own: Your point about Michigan's lackluster head basketball coaches all being black guys is a good one. It's shitty, especially given the self-flagellation of the program after the Ed Martin scandal. I don't think of Beilein as a racist, but perhaps I've missed something. You're not referring to the "thugs" episode with the Cavs, are you? I thought he apologized for that and handled it gracefully after the fact. Maybe I am wrong though. 

WindyCityBlue

March 10th, 2024 at 9:35 PM ^

No counter needed my friend. We’re just having a friendly discussion. 
 

As for JB being a racist. Yes, it all stemmed from the “thugs” incident at Cleveland. And let me be clear, I don’t think JB is a racist at all. Just that, me being white and all, I’m really not allowed to have an opinion on what is and what is not racist, especially in front of socially progressive POC. 

colonel

March 10th, 2024 at 10:01 PM ^

You've got another white dude here, and I feel the same way. Not for me to pass judgement on what may or may not offend the sensibilities of black folks. 

My impression was that Beilein's teams sort of "read" as white. I've always wanted for Michigan to have teams that could carry at least a little of the same swagger as the Fab Five, for it to be a program tradition rather than an anomaly, and Beilein, for all his strengths, didn't have the ability to recreate that culture. Juwan's second team seemed to have some of it, and that was the most fun I've ever had watching Michigan basketball. I'm bummed that it's not working out, because I do think Juwan himself matters for the legacy of the program. Finding a graceful exit for him, if possible, would be ideal.

Fezzik

March 10th, 2024 at 10:05 PM ^

Not even Cavs players thought he was racist. They used that BS to push him out because they didn't like him. Beilein's old school fundamental focused approach to coaching will never fit with any modern NBA team. The NBA has become a diva pageantry. 

Pretty strange to be widely considered one of the nicest coaches in all NCAA for many years to suddenly becoming racist a few months later in the NBA. It was and continues to be a crock of shit. 

travesty

March 10th, 2024 at 6:27 PM ^

What we do know is that game will be at roughly 9:00 pm EST and will be broadcast on Peacock.

As my grandmother used to say, "Thank God for small favors."

Ihatebux

March 10th, 2024 at 6:34 PM ^

Blah blah blah, TL;DR, didn't watch, haven't watched a second since November,  UM sucks doesn't really matter because everyone is gone next year.

Perkis-Size Me

March 10th, 2024 at 6:59 PM ^

If Warde just wants to let Howard finish out the season then so be it. Maybe he’s earned the right to finish. That’s not for me to say. 

But if he’s not let go within 24 hours of the season ending, then I don’t even know what we’re doing here. I don’t know how you can possibly defend the product that’s on the court right now, and couple that with the fact that it’s almost a certainty you’re losing your best players after this season anyway, whether that’s to graduation or in Dug’s case, almost certainly transferring out.

If Howard is retained, then we deserve whatever we get. If Crisler is flooded with opposing Sparty fans, Purdue fans, IU fans and makes every home game a virtual road environment for the team, then to me, at that point it’s no longer Juwan’s fault. The blame should be laid at Warde’s feet for allowing an inferior product to continue playing on the court. 
 

KBLOW

March 10th, 2024 at 9:25 PM ^

IMO this is right on the money. It's not like Howard is coaching 2 and 3 star players in a super hard league. This non-boxing out, crap defense, terrible court awareness, poor offensive consistency product is 100% on him. To keep him hired is going to plunge the program into an even deeper hole and take even longer to dig out of. 

remdog

March 10th, 2024 at 7:23 PM ^

This is the worst men's basketball team at Michigan in more than 60 years, the second worst ever.  It will likely only be worse next year.  They were even worse than their final record since they declined over the course of the season.  Based on the incoming class and departures, the talent will be even less.  Juwan will not learn how to coach fundamentals in one off season. His teams have been worsening every year for several seasons.  And then there's his anger management problems with several serious incidents.
 

I love him but Juwan needs to go.  He just isn't a good college basketball coach.  Ideally, Juwan will be persuaded to resign.  It would be a favor to him and the entire program.  He could cite health reasons and he might still have a future coaching in the NBA.

UM Indy

March 10th, 2024 at 11:30 PM ^

The man just doesn’t look well. With that said, it doesn’t excuse anything. The performance of this team has been abysmal. Adjustments and improvements of any kind, regardless of who is coaching, have been nonexistent. The health issue simply shouldn’t be used as a free pass. But that’s exactly how Warde sees it. 

MgoBlueDevil

March 10th, 2024 at 10:21 PM ^

Today was the first game I attended in person all year. I took the wife and kids. Seeing the defense in person made it abundantly clear that a change needs to be made. Looking up the defensive efficiency rankings today, we are ranked 340 out of 368 teams. For those that are afraid of change, how is this acceptable? 

I thought Howard did a good job keeping the recruits we had coming in under Belein and keeping things together the first year or two. Year after year the numbers just get worse and worse. 

Today, watching Nebraska's offense get whatever they wanted all day and running simple stuff was shocking. 

I feel like this team has no accountability and it starts with Howard. He has to go. 

Medic

March 11th, 2024 at 1:10 AM ^

There is nothing to salvage next year. The kids are not well coached. There is no coaching defensive savant behind door #2. You find someone who can rebuild the program from near scratch because that's where we are. 

I watched more of that game today than I should and it was like every other game I've watched this year. Every player looks absolutely lost on defense and they are incapable of playing as a unit. I have no idea what the coaches are practicing each week but the ineffectiveness of it is a sight to behold.