Michigan 69, Indiana 55 Comment Count

Ace


Jordan Poole saw an opportunity and seized it. [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Fifteen seconds into today's game, Michigan star wing Charles Matthews picked up a foul on a rebound attempt. John Beilein sent him to the bench. It was an inauspicious start to Big Ten play against an Indiana squad coming off a tough battle with top-ranked Duke.

Jordan Poole, who'd barely played significant minutes, entered for Matthews. Despite playing untested freshman in place of the team's leading scorer and best defender, Michigan didn't miss a beat, jumping out to a 14-2 lead with four three-pointers. Poole drained two of those triples and didn't stop there; he'd make three more on his way to a team-high 19 points, looking like a major difference-maker for a team that could use an outside shooting boost.

"Today I was getting a lot of open looks," said Poole. "[The coaches] constantly stress 'shoot the open shots,' and not hesitate and try to make a play. If I'm open, shoot it. You don't need to tell me twice."

With Poole leading the charge, Michigan controlled the game from start to finish. The team moved the ball beautifully, tallying 16 assists on 26 field goals and creating open look after open look with crisp passing. A disjointed IU offense couldn't keep up. Only Juwan Morgan (24 points, 9/14 FG) scored in double figures, the Hoosiers had more turnovers (11) than assists (7), and they only got off seven three-point attempts.

"DeAndre Haynes did a great job with the scouting report and our kids lived that scouting report," said John Beilien. "They did a great job."


Eli Brooks did a great job moving the ball around. [Campredon]

While the expected titanic post matchup between Moe Wagner and De'Ron Davis didn't quite come to fruition, Wagner fared better among the centers, scoring 13 points and adding seven rebounds, three assits, three blocks, and a steal. Davis, limited by fouls, scored only four, but Morgan proved a much harder guard for Wagner in the post.

Morgan couldn't keep IU in it on his own, however, while Michigan gave Poole and Wagner plenty of support. Eli Brooks played 22 strong minutes, dishing out six assists to no turnovers, going 2-for-4 from the field, and swiping a couple steals. While John Beilein wouldn't go so far in the postgame press conference, Brooks looks to have taken control of the point guard job with Zavier Simpson as his primary backup; Jaaron Simmons didn't see the floor this afternoon.

Another freshman, Isaiah Livers, contributed four points in ten minutes with Duncan Robinson in foul trouble. Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman had eight points and a career-high 11 rebounds. Jon Teske had six points, three boards, and a steal. Only Robinson, who went 2-for-10 from the field, seriously struggled among the rotation players, and his were uncharacteristic misses on good looks.

After going with a disjointed 11-man rotation in the loss to North Carolina, tightening things up a bit—and featuring Poole as the primary backup wing—paid serious dividends today. There's still plenty of work to do; as Beilein noted, Michigan's had only one practice in the last couple weeks that wasn't entirely geared towards preparing for the next game.

There will be more lineup combinations (yes, he mentioned playing two bigs); Simmons will still get a shot to crack the rotation. Today still gave a good idea of what this team will look like in a couple months, and the freshman class of Poole, Brooks, and Livers is going to be a big part of it.

"I love these three freshmen," Beilein said. "I love them."

"They still make me angry every day," he added with a laugh.

He's still John Beilein, after all.

[Hit THE JUMP for the box score.]

Comments

TrueBlue2003

December 2nd, 2017 at 11:00 PM ^

had nothing to do with Wednesday.  It was a combination of foul trouble in the first half, Poole having a great game in his place, and the team having a comfortable double digit lead throughout.

He still had 8 points on just 6 shots, had two OREBs and played pretty good defense. IU was playing an aggressive help defense and giving up threes fairly easily so Matthews was kicking. He will be just fine....but if Poole keeps playing like this and cuts his minutes a little, I won't mind.

MGoBender

December 3rd, 2017 at 8:56 AM ^

Beilein did say this in his presser, so I was off. Still odd to pull a guy after 1 foul so early, but that was Beilein's explanation and he's been consistent about auto-bench throughout his tenure here.

There's no doubt Matthews shot selection can improve, though. Yes, IU was sending the wing help early, but there were two instances where Matthews could have gotten to the rim, I thought.

Zeke21

December 2nd, 2017 at 9:29 PM ^

Ace.

Of note, the three freshman were terrific, Brooks, Livers and especially Poole. Poole shows star ability, but as a freshmen is prone to be, he is too loose out there and makes tons of freshmen mistakes.  Still, I love the guy.

I watched the first half live, and thought it to be terrible basketball, mistakes, no flow.

I watched the second half on tape and enjoyed it much much more. No commercials, no promos and even though I love Raferty, less announcers.

This team will improve greatly as the season goes on.

Year of Revenge II

December 3rd, 2017 at 7:24 AM ^

And justifiably so.  He is so lousy on defense that if he cannot  hit his shot and has a, say 2-10 game from the field, he is a huge liability.  The points you give up count just as much as the ones you score.

If he comes in off the bench and start hitting his shots, say 6 or 7 of 10, we can play with anybody. I expect this to happen towards the end of the season.  We will be much improved.

tpilews

December 4th, 2017 at 3:23 PM ^

Glad more people are getting on the Poole bandwagon. I've been pleased with his defense. He's very active and a willing rebounder. I think he's potentially all conference next year. I'm really excited about the freshmen class. Brooks and Livers are going to be great, along with Poole. Just need one of the big men to step up.