Basketbullets: A Un-Beilein Win Comment Count

Brian

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pick me up [Eric Upchurch]

So that was odd. For some reason during this game I thought to myself that this team was a stereotype of Beilein teams, a stereotype of the variety that gets passed around message boards that always, always call Michigan "scUM."

It more or less is. Michigan is 146th in defensive efficiency even after a strong outing against Purdue. They're 12th in the league in two point defense. They don't get to the line and don't get to the offensive boards. All of these things are more or less true every year. They're less easy to stomach when you get hammered over and over by teams that can exploit Michigan's various and sundry flaws. Michigan's been blown out of the building in every loss save Iowa*, often because they've resembled a grim parody of John Beilein basketball.

So I am thinking this and then Michigan wins a game by holding Purdue to 56 points. Michigan is 5/20 from three and significantly outrebounds a gigantic Purdue outfit. Okay. Whatever. In this very stereotypical Beilein year this was a genre-defying game.

*[That game was reasonably competitive despite the 11-point final margin.]

Doubly odd. Meanwhile there was a period in the second half when Michigan's offense devolved into ridiculous heroball. Walton, Irvin, and Robinson all took very bad shots on which they tried to beat guys off the dribble, failed, and shot anyway. This was during a 2/20 run from the floor. It was deeply unpleasant, and then Michigan won anyway.

Walton ain't wiltin'. Takes some cojones to drive in the vicinity of Hammons when you're 0/9 for the game and then aim for contact, but Derrick Walton has always been an assassin at the end of games. As a freshman he closed out wins against MSU and Nebraska with and-one drives; here he pushed Michigan in front on their 11-0 closing spurt. He then made four free throws down the stretch to seal it. I'm not a big fan of "clutch" but in his case I'll allow it.

While we're talking about weird-ass Derrick Walton, should be noted that he's still the top defensive rebouder on the team, and that is a good sign, not an ominous one. Michigan always does this thing where their defensive rebounding looks pretty good through the nonconference season and then they finish 10th or so in the league; not so this year. Michigan is 3rd(!) in the league at defensive rebounding. They haven't managed that since 2009, when Anthony Wright was tossing bombs at Oklahoma in the second round of the tourney instead of at Dan Dakich on Twitter.

Walton appears to have a tangible positive effect on Michigan's team rebounding, which is huge for a team that plays as small as Michigan does. A 6-foot-nothing point guard led all rebounders in a game featuring Purdue with 7 DREBs. Again, Purdue versus Derrick Walton and Walton wins.

Ticket more or less punched. Michigan needed to find a couple wins in a difficult closing stretch to feel secure about a bid; with the Purdue win they have reached 19 wins against a difficult schedule (SMU, Texas, UConn, and Xavier are all top-25 Kenpom teams). They've got three wins that will go on everyone's "good" list and zero bad losses. One of those wins is against a projected one-seed. Even if they had a season-ending skid that is not a profile that gets left out, especially when two programs that would normally be in the tournament (SMU and Lousiville) are taking postseason bans this year. And that's before the committee accounts for the fact that Levert has barely played during the Big Ten schedule.

Michigan would likely have to lose out to be on the bubble.

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[Eric Upchurch]

This is what I am saying about post offense. It's inefficient. Purdue makes it work better than most because they have simply enormous dudes but as Ace pointed out, all those post ups lead to a barrage of two point jumpers that aren't good at scoring points. This game was a good example of why. Hammons got shut out(!!!) on the offensive boards and Haas got just one. Those two combined to go 9/21 from the field and 3/7 from the line, with two of the makes Hammons 15-footers. Hammons turned it over 3 times. All this was against a very bad defense. 

Hammons is 88% at the rim but:

  • 71% of his shots there are assisted
  • another 18% are putbacks, so
  • 11% of his shots at the rim are unassisted non-rebouds, ie, post-ups.

Meanwhile he's hitting 39% on two point jumpers, which comprise the vast majority of shots arising from post ups. Haas is similar but is hitting 48%. And both guys see a lot of assists on their two point makes, which means raw put-it-on-the deck post ups are mostly a waste of time even when you have the biggest damn team in the world against a bad defense.

I am completely fine with the way Michigan has discarded post-ups entirely. I just wish they'd recruit posts based solely on resemblance to Dikembe Mutumbo; all the guy has to do is dunk and wag his finger.

(Other possibility: Purdue is super generous with assists. They're 11th nationally in A/FGM, and I've seen them play. That's not reality.)

Robinson quiet, but occupying people. Purdue has Raphael Davis. Davis is the reigning Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year. Raphael Davis spent most of this game checking Duncan Robinson. This resulted in Robinson not doing much and an ugly offensive game for the rest of the team, but Irvin got loose in part because he got a matchup against Swanigan; only after he'd heated up did Purdue try to match Davis on him.

If Levert does get back to full strength either he occupies the ace defender and Robinson gets loose or he gets to attack those wide open lanes. This is one of two reasons getting LeVert back and functional is so critical; the other is that the committee won't give Michigan the benefit of the doubt for his absence unless he does return.

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[Upchurch]

MAAR, ball-hawk. Abdur-Rahkman helped rescue the game with a couple of key steals late. That's a flash of the perimeter defender we hoped we were getting last year after he shut down DeAngelo Russell; for a lot of reasons that has not really manifested itself. He's probably been Michigan's most consistent defender, but that's not saying much.

While he's not exactly a standout statistically, he's piecing it together this year. He's shooting really well in conference (76%/59%/41%), he's inching up that assist rate, and he's getting to the line. Usage is still in the Spike Albrecht range; that's the main hangup when you're trying to project him. He should be a very solid upperclassman; the ten-point bump in his three point shooting percentage is encouraging.

Okay Caris. Just get right by the Big Ten Tournament. Now that he's seen the court the direst predictions are off the table.

Comments

Stringer Bell

February 15th, 2016 at 1:27 PM ^

Right. But I don't think there's much difference between say Villanova and MSU, or Maryland and Xavier, etc. I think a lot of teams are interchangeable at least for the 1 and 2 seeds. So I wouldn't worry as much about 7 seed vs 8 seed this year. But yes, as you said it's all about matchups.

TrueBlue2003

February 15th, 2016 at 7:31 PM ^

MSU and IU spaced the floor, drove and bombed us from three after quick guards gashed us to make us help.  One could argue the exact opposite about matchups.  Teams with quick athletic guards that can shoot (Xavier and SMU as well) hurt us more than some of the biggest teams we've played: Purdue, Maryland and Texas.

mgobaran

February 15th, 2016 at 1:02 PM ^

Isn't this team like an early-Beilein team? Can surprise and pull of an upset by playing gritty basketball, and doing things like offensive rebounding and limiting offensive rebounds for the other team. Once and a while just shoot the lights out from three. But more often than not are going to be outclassed by the better teams and win the games they are supposed to.

OkemosBlue

February 15th, 2016 at 2:22 PM ^

I'm 80% with you as far as yesterday's game, but this team has not been gritty (it's very young compared to the last two years with Stu Douglass-Novak) and it is with immensely more talented with or without Caris Levert on the floor. Zack is an undersized power foward but no more than Robinson and less than Novak.  He is also much more talented.  Additionally, Donnal is playing pretty well--not as good as Jordan Morgan in his prime--but more than could be expected after the first three games.   

 

ST3

February 15th, 2016 at 1:03 PM ^

If the "vast majority of shots arising from post ups" are two-point jumpers, you are not posting up properly or you have very limited post-up moves. The vast majority should be hook shots, and drop step - turn to the hoop - layups. Purdue's post-ups were inefficient because they didn't react to the double-team very well, and Hammons and Haas had Doyle-hands instead of Donnal-hands near the basket. I'd love for Michigan to have a little post game to go to when they are in the midst of 0-28 runs against Indiana. Think of the Bad Boys Pistons era when they could reliably get a bucket from Dantley or Buddha Edwards down low when the outside shooting went south.

Zenogias

February 15th, 2016 at 1:19 PM ^

Watching on TV, it seemed like we left our fives to deal with Hammons/Haas mostly on their own, but every now and then another player (I saw Robinson do this a couple times) would "half help" them by dropping off their man seemingly just to interfere a bit and then return to guarding their man. I could be wrong here; I definitely miss a lot when I'm watching, but this stuck out to me because it wasn't a straight double team with all the attendant rotations that we seem to be bad at.

zlionsfan

February 15th, 2016 at 1:27 PM ^

is that Purdue doesn't have a lights-out shooter to put in the corner for Hammons et al. (Not that they send a guard to the corner often enough anyway - all too often the "post game" is "dump it in to Hammons and get back on D".) So Michigan's free to double, because so what if you leave someone open?

Still another problem is that Purdue's guards do not get themselves open, and a fourth problem is that all too often they settle for passing the ball on the perimeter aimlessly before jacking up a late two that misses. (That's one of the reasons I think Swanigan has a high turnover rate: when he is on the court with Hammons, he frequently makes it a goal to feed AJ. This results in more quality shots - anything AJ puts up near the rim - but also results in more turnovers. I prefer those to 18-foot bricks.)

For a team that shoots FTs so well (among players who get minutes moving forward, only Cline is under .700, and he's only shot 7), Purdue takes a ridiculous number of shots that will not draw fouls.

Those weaknesses were ripe for exploitation by the right coach, and that's not taking into account Purdue's inability to handle any kind of pressure. I think the anomaly was the game in Mackey rather than the game in Crisler.

MGoBender

February 15th, 2016 at 2:49 PM ^

If the "vast majority of shots arising from post ups" are two-point jumpers, you are not posting up properly or you have very limited post-up moves. The vast majority should be hook shots, and drop step - turn to the hoop - layups. Purdue's post-ups were inefficient because they didn't react to the double-team very well, and Hammons and Haas had Doyle-hands instead of Donnal-hands near the basket. I'd love for Michigan to have a little post game to go to when they are in the midst of 0-28 runs against Indiana. Think of the Bad Boys Pistons era when they could reliably get a bucket from Dantley or Buddha Edwards down low when the outside shooting went south.

The game of basketball has changed. You say "you are not posting properly" like it's a light switch you can just switch. Good teams defend the post well and have help side defense. That usually means fronting the post and having the backside help be there for cover. Quicker defenders can more easily front the post making the "NBA/80s/90s" postup game pretty rare. Reacting to the double-team very well is, again, a product of well-coached and executed defense.  Note: the NBA lane is wider (and shooters much better), making it much more difficult to defend the post with weakside help. That's one reason that you see more post-ups in the NBA.

Now, one thing Michigan could do is post up Caris by pulling Donnal out to the perimeter. In fact, if you remember the early Beilein days, he did this often with Darius Morris. Beilein's offensive system is designed for this: To create space in the lane and allow for drives to the basket and kickouts for 3.  When you have the personel, post guard on guard.  There's a reason D1 coaches name Beilein the best offensive coach.

champswest

February 15th, 2016 at 1:11 PM ^

toward a NCAA bid, but we aren't there yet. We need to win at least one more in the regular season, two would be nice. Also, we are playing for better B1G tournament seed that could help us pick up a win or two and improve our NCAA seed.

Doyle and Donnal did a really good job on Hammons by getting a body on him and not letting him get too comfortable or well positioned. It doesn't show up in the box score, but was important none the less.

Go Blue in MN

February 15th, 2016 at 2:08 PM ^

If we really lose out, including the BIG tourney, we'd be 19-13 and effectively 9-10 in conference.  With only 19 wins, two Top 25 wins and a six-game skid, I think we're out.  With one win we're 20-12 and 10-9; that looks like the bubble to me.  With 21 wins we could avoid the ugly look of a collapse and breathe easily. 

funkywolve

February 15th, 2016 at 2:31 PM ^

Also, while UM has 3 nice wins against teams in the Top 25, those are their only wins against teams in the Top 100.  Their record against teams in the Top 100 is 3-7.  it'd be nice to get one or two more wins against a Top 100 team.  Wisky, Iowa and Maryland would qualify.  OSU is in the 80's so they might, might finish in the Top 100 (they have a pretty brutal closing stretch).

NC State is just outside  the top 100 - it'd be nice if they could pull an upset or two down the stretch.  NU is just outside the top 100 too.

COLBlue

February 15th, 2016 at 3:06 PM ^

I think Michigan has an outside chance to get in the tournament if they go 1-4 the rest of the way, and win at least one Big Ten tournament game, but IF they made it in that way, I'm pretty sure they would be playing a First Four game (not preferable, since Michigan under Coach Beilein seems to play better against teams when Coach Beilein has more time to prepare).

Go at least 2-3, and then win a Big Ten tournament game - should be in and avoid the First Four (though probably still narrowly).

ST3

February 15th, 2016 at 1:20 PM ^

Walton did lead everyone with 7 defensive rebounds. It should be mentioned he got those in 36 minutes while LeVert tallied 5 DREBs in 11 minutes.

Of the remaining games, besides NU, the @Wis and @OSU games are the next most winnable. We need Caris to be integrated back into the offense for those games.

funkywolve

February 15th, 2016 at 1:33 PM ^

The way Wisky is playing, not sure how 'winnable' that game is. Of course all games are winnable, but Wisky might be playing as well as anyone in the Big Ten right now.  They've won 7 straight and three of those wins are against MSU, IU and a convincing win on the road at Maryland.  

 

ST3

February 15th, 2016 at 2:31 PM ^

I'll admit to not paying any attention to them. That recent upset over Maryland is a shocker. I guess I'm hoping they are having a hot streak right now and will suffer a letdown when they play us. They can't keep playing this well with that roster, can they?

Mich OC

February 15th, 2016 at 1:37 PM ^

I'm not sure you can use that methodology to isolate post-ups.  Wouldn't a feed into the post resulting in a straight post-up be considered assisted? Or do those go as unassisted?

"Hammons is 88% at the rim but:

  • 71% of his shots there are assisted
  • another 18% are putbacks, so
  • 11% of his shots at the rim are unassisted non-rebouds, ie, post-ups."

ST3

February 15th, 2016 at 1:58 PM ^

are passes that directly lead to a basket, so if you pass to the post and he makes a move to the basket, that's an assist. If he dribbles a few times or holds the ball and then makes his move, it's not an assist. Purdue's bigs (except for Swanigan) seemed really tentative inside.

Bodogblog

February 15th, 2016 at 1:48 PM ^

"direst predictions off the table."  Are we not a little concerned he couldn't go in the second half?  Critical game, means he really couldn't get back out there.  And an anonymous internet post is nothing to go on, but in one of the threads someone said they saw him limping after the game.  

The former coupled with the latter are enough to trouble my fragile sports mind.  

redjugador24

February 15th, 2016 at 1:59 PM ^

It seems that Beilein has addressed effort, hustle, and the difference between not fouling and not playing defense. That's all you can ask for. Play hard, be in position, beat the teams you're supposed to, and give yourself a chance every time out. If they keep playing like this they will ruin somebody's run.

UMinSF

February 15th, 2016 at 2:26 PM ^

Michigan has now shown they can win an ugly game on grit.  They're capable of beating anybody when they're lighting it up from three.

If Levert is close to 100% by tournament time, that's a huge ugrade in talent and depth.

So, maybe they could squeeze out a few wins in the tourney and have a solid run - Elite 8?

Erik_in_Dayton

February 15th, 2016 at 2:36 PM ^

I'd love to see him play like that the rest of the way. I don't think Michigan can win low-scoring games without that. Another thought: it was nice to see Chatman get some time. I still think he could be a big help to the team eventually. He's not GRIII, but he brings size, rebounding, and passing to the table.

B-Nut-GoBlue

February 15th, 2016 at 5:11 PM ^

It was promising hearing Dakich talk about how LaVall had him out pregame pretty early shooting the ball (and doing well it sounded like) and telling him to "be ready".

Now, I've more or less written him off, but there was something of a spark in his eye I saw Saturday and a touch of confidence in those few minutes we haven't seen out of him.

OkemosBlue

February 15th, 2016 at 2:37 PM ^

With the talent on the outside, a Michigan center must primarily play strong, gritty defense, help organize the defense, and rebond.  But in an ideal world, he also plays a little pick and roll or post up or short jumper game to take the pressure off the outside .  When all this is present, Beilein can go to the final four with his offense and defense.

    So far, Beilein has only had two big men that have worked well.  First, Jordan Morgan who worked his butt off and used his smarts to play a solid center focused on defense and secondarily rolling to the basket.  Second, McGarry, who was uber talented and was  a major plus in the post during one a tourney run.

     He has four big men on the roster now.  Donnal has made surprising improvement on defense and has enough offense to relieve a little pressure on the outside game.  He can add some muscle and make other improvements, but he has made a big difference.  Doyle has also made some modest improvements.  Wilson worked hard to reshape his body--now he needs to learn how to use it.  Wagner needs experience and more muscle, but appears quicker than most centers around.  Two more Bigs are comming in next year.

   In other words, Belein is taking care of business given that he only rarely gets the best of the big men.  Jordan Morgan spoiled us (as did Trey and Nik).  Players just don't develop that rapidly very often.

 

      

    

Rasmus

February 16th, 2016 at 8:06 AM ^

I thought his autobench-fueled appearance in the Purdue game was promising, not so much because of his play, but because of the way the other players on the court with him seemed to work harder when he was out there.

So he may have some leadership qualities that we haven't seen yet, which could emerge next season.