Basketbullets: An Unstoppable Set, Post Defense Follow-Up, Kennesaw Notes Comment Count

Ace


Beilein has drawn up some easy layups for Wagner. [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

I'm gonna try something new here with our hoops coverage. The Basketbullets posts have mostly been game column type things; I'm repurposing the name for what I plan to be a weekly or sometimes semi-weekly post with a couple regular staples—picture page play breakdowns and the KenPom Stat of the Week—and any other items of note. This is a work-in-progress; suggestions for regular features to include are more than welcome in the comments.

Kennesaw State Not-A-Recap

I took a rare weekend off, so I wasn't at the 82-55 Kennesaw State blowout on Saturday, and the time I set aside to go over the game today ended up dedicated to the next section instead. Dylan's recap and Five Key Plays should have you covered.

While rote destructions of teams ranked in the 300s on KenPom are to be expected, this one contained some encouraging signs. Moe Wagner scored a career-high 20 points, making all four his his twos and 3-of-4 three-pointers in 25 minutes; he had no turnovers and one foul. DJ Wilson avoided the foul trouble that plagued him against Virginia Tech and posted an efficient 15-11 double-double. Every Michigan player to see ten minutes of action posted an ORating of at least 106 except Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman, who continued a troubling stretch of poor games with an 0-for-5 performance. HighlightsFull box score.

[Hit THE JUMP for a seemingly unstoppable set, the KenPom Stat of the Week, and more.]

Moving Picture Pages: An Easy Layup

I got too deep into post defense to examine this last week, but a few plays from the Virginia Tech game stood out for the good, as John Beilein's offense did a beautiful job of freeing up Moe Wagner for easy buckets. I've done my best to diagram these in a way that's hopefully not confusing. Orange lines are the ball; green lines are player movement—I made the line solid is a player is getting the ball off a cut and dotted if they aren't. Here's the first of two second-half layups by Wagner [click to embiggen]:

This one is pretty simple. Derrick Walton takes the ball up the floor, passes to DJ Wilson—who's come from the corner to the wing—and clears out to the corner. Wagner starts on the near side of the free-throw line, walks to the other side as if he's preparing to set a high screen for Wilson, then doubles back and pops out to the three-point line as he gets an off-ball screen from MAAR. Wagner's man can't fight over the screen in time to cut off a drive and MAAR's man stays home instead of providing help, leaving Wagner an easy path for a layup.

In addition to potentially freeing up the center for an easy layup, this play has some obvious counters. If Wagner's man ducked under MAAR's screen, he would've had ample space for a three-pointer, and that's no empty threat at the moment—Wagner is 9-for-15 beyond the arc this season. If MAAR's man overplays the screen before the pass, he can slip to the rim for an open layup of his own. Finally (or probably not given the myriad options of every Beilein set), Wagner could kick it out to Walton for a wide open corner three should one of the help defenders successfully cut off his drive; in this case, they were too late to prevent the layup, but Walton was wide open if he was needed.

Moving Picture Pages: A Killer Set

The next set requires its own section because Michigan ran it twice in a row, getting two layups as VT reacted to the success of the first play and in doing so opened up another way to get a bucket from the same set. I've diagrammed the first basket in two parts [click to embiggen].

MAAR starts with the ball and gives it off to Walton, then heads below the free-throw line. Walton swings it to Duncan Robinson, who's arcing to the wing. Walton runs to the corner as Robinson passes it to Wagner, who's popped outside the three-point line. This is where it gets fun.

Wagner pivots to face the near side, causing his defender to take a step in that direction. As he does this, Robinson cuts across the court, which accomplishes two things: he effective sets a screen for Wagner, and as he continues across he clears out enough space that his man can't help on a Wagner drive. Wagner pivots back to face the far side and performs a give-and-go with Walton while MAAR picks off Wagner's man. MAAR's defender is in a tough spot. He doesn't react to the screen and impede Wagner, allowing another open layup.

That is gorgeous.

Beilein dialed up the same set on Michigan's next trip down the floor. This one plays out slightly different and still manages to get a layup. Robinson's cut across the floor is shallower and doesn't impact Wagner's defender as Wagner pivots and gives the ball to Walton. MAAR's defender recognizes the pick this time and helps cut off the potential give-and-go, so MAAR pops out to the top of the key—nobody contests the pass from Walton to MAAR because all the focus is on Wagner's cut.

A better three-point marksman would probably just shoot this; there's enough space to pull without much of a shot contest if MAAR goes right up with it. Even without the shot, this action allows Michigan to reset quickly, and you can see that Beilein has designed this play so there's still ideal spacing to set up the next action from this set, a downhill handoff to Zak Irvin.

MAAR starts to drive left into the heart of the defense, causing a chain reaction. Irvin's defender has to help cut off the drive, but as he's diverting his attention to MAAR, Irvin cuts over the top of MAAR and gets running handoff. The effect is akin to a reverse in football; the defense is all moving one way as Irvin is going the other with a lot of momentum. MAAR's man tries to switch onto Irvin, but with the laws of physics being what they are, he can't prevent Irvin from getting to the rim for a layup—one that's barely contested because Wagner moved to the other side of the pain, taking the rim protector away from the side Michigan wanted to attack.

This is a small part of why Beilein is rightfully regarded as an offensive genius. There are, without a doubt, more wrinkles and counters built into this set; we just happened to see two of them on consecutive plays. If Michigan runs the set correctly, it's remarkably difficult for a defense to shut down all the available options.

It's also a big part of why any "Fire Beilein" talk is still completely, utterly insane. Michigan is only 154th in three-point percentage while attempting the 21st-highest rate of threes in the country. You'd think that would spell doom for a Beilein offense, yet they have the nation's 19th-best adjusted efficiency. They don't have a great shot creator or a dominant post presence. I don't expect Michigan's outside shooting stuggles to continue; once those start falling, M's offense is going to rank among the elite once again.

Meanwhile, Michigan's defensive efficiency has risen from 95th to 41st, which would stand as their best season-long mark since 2012-13 and the third-best of Beilein's ten-year tenure in Ann Arbor. It is way, way too early to dismiss the Wolverines despite the disheartening losses to South Carolina and Virginia Tech. Remember when the 2013-14 team was 6-4 with a neutral-site loss to Charlotte? They turned out okay.

Quick Post Defense Follow-Up


Beilein's preference for Donnal on defense isn't unfounded. [Campredon]

I thought this comment from jackfl33 on last week's post defense, er, post was important, because it demonstrates what Beilein is looking at versus what I'm looking at when evaluating Wagner and Donnal:

Wagner's possession at :47 is so inexcusable it blows my mind. Beilein mentioned it specifically in the post game, it just makes no sense. He is in good position on the line up the line to start but shows zero urgency to get back as the ball swings. He is totally out to lunch.

The possession at 1:09 is much the same thing. He switches from a hedge to an ICE ball screen coverage halfway through and allows penetration as a result. As the big, it is his responsibility to call out the screen and determine coverage.

That is the stuff that I'm sure drives Beilein crazy and makes it feel like he can't play him. If you kill all the X's and O's and preparation the coach puts together, JB can't just watch that happen. It's like a direct slap in the face to him personally regardless of PPP differences.

This is on point. Donnal's issues on defense aren't mental; his problems arise from his relative lack of strength and athleticism in the post. While Wagner is better in both of those areas, he makes some confounding mental errors, and that undoubtedly rankles a tactician like Beilein.

When Beilein says Donnal is the better defender, his focus is on the fact that Donnal makes fewer easily preventable mistakes, and he's sending a message to Wagner—a message he's sent time and again for the last two seasons—that you can't mentally check out of possessions and expect to stay on the floor. That message should help Wagner improve over the course of his career. My issue is that Beilein sometimes chooses the wrong time to send it, and at some point he may have to accept the tradeoff of a few additional tear-your-hair-out plays for Wagner's generally higher level of play on both ends. I'm still hoping that point comes soon.

KenPom Stat of the Week

After Saturday's ten defensive rebounds in 28 minutes, DJ Wilson now boasts a 29.2% defensive rebound rate, which ranks 17th in the country. He's also nationally ranked in offensive rebound rate (10.1%, 258th) and block rate (6.3%, 130th). If the Virginia Tech foul-out was an anomaly—and Wilson's reasonable 3.5 fouls/40 minutes this season suggests it is—then he's doing everything Michigan needs from him.

Comments

Erik_in_Dayton

December 5th, 2016 at 5:16 PM ^

I wonder if they are partly rooted in his German programs not emphasizing defense.  It may be an unfair stereotype, but the European basketball I see tends not to have much defense.

schreibee

December 6th, 2016 at 1:38 AM ^

I can't believe I got more than 2 comments in without someone mentioning Delaware State! Beilein beating Kennesaw provides no more useful data than RichRod beating the Blue Hens or whatever they're called did. I can't believe this blog dedicated that much space to the "positives" gleaned from clubbing a baby seal...

tasnyder01

December 5th, 2016 at 11:59 PM ^

Another way to improve your writing would be to look at b-ball teaching books. (buy the ones for coaches - you're trying to educate the masses, not ball out yourself) The best ones have each movement pictured. Aka, we humans are dumb. I've coached & played (super sub for bad D-I team) and this took me a second to digest.

klctlc

December 5th, 2016 at 5:43 PM ^

Really informative, as always.

In addition, I wanted to comment last week regarding Wagner, but I was so pissed off about the loss and the comments were getting out of hand I did not.  However, JACKFL33 summed up what I wanted to say, much better and more concretely that I could have.

My thoughts are that Beilein knows Wagner gives M a far superior chance to win than Donnal. But he is trying to send a message that effort and "want to" matter.  I don't think he is willing to sacrafice games on purpose, but if that is what happens at this point of the season he will live with it.

Wagner can be special. If he becomes at least consistently average out there defensively then he is in the picture for some post season accolades this year or next. I have not studied all the bigs in the conference, but offensively he has got to be in the top 2 or 3?

Plus with him and Robinson out there at the same time that is two guys who coaches are going to go after hard.  

Still don't know what to think of this team, it seems every year before conference play they have 2 or 3 games where I think they don't deserve to be in the tourney (except for that one magical year!). I don't know if we can consistently overcome nobdoy being able to attack with the dribble (MAAR can sometimes, but he is undersized)

 

TheBigPrince

December 5th, 2016 at 6:19 PM ^

The Big Ten does have some pretty good offensive big men this year. Two that come off the top of my head are Thomas Bryant of Indiana and Ethan Happ of Wisconsin. I haven't followed the middling Big Ten teams as much, but I do think Moe is up there with those guys. They are both more proven, as they were both in the running for Big Ten Freshman of the Year last year, but Moe's outside shooting seems a lot nicer than the two of them. It will be very interesting to see where this season takes him. I think he has the potential to be an elite player if he could work out the mental mistakes.

theytookourjobs

December 5th, 2016 at 5:46 PM ^

Question though.  "They don't have a great shot creator or a dominant post presence."  So who's fault is that?  154th in 3pt percentage while being 21st in the country in attempts.  That could be considered a form of insanity.  I would much rather see Beilein retire than be fired, but I will be curious to see if you still think we're insane after the next 2 games

Greg

December 5th, 2016 at 6:49 PM ^

Ace, I like your analysis and breakdowns. My frustration with Coach Beilein is his teams have, for the most part, shown that they can't guard a dead body. Throw in that he can't seem to recruit athletes and it's more frustration waiting to happen.

AC1997

December 5th, 2016 at 6:57 PM ^

Your two play diagrams and warranted praise for Beilein's offensive prowess just further emphasize how horrific it is when someone - ANYONE - tries the hero ball route for a final shot.  I remember fans getting annoyed when Trey frickin' Burke did the hero ball crap and no one on this roster compares to his ability to create points.  Why on earth wouldn't you draw up a play like one of them shown here?  Especially when Irvin and Walton will often be matched up against the other team's most athletic player and Wagner won't?  

AC1997

December 5th, 2016 at 6:58 PM ^

Ace - Could you make those diagrams of yours almost gile a gif where the lines appear one at a time rather than having them all in place?  There's also a free app you can use called Basketball Dood that is pretty well done for a simple way to diagram plays and set them to motion.  

Bertello NC

December 6th, 2016 at 8:09 AM ^

Beilein needs to kneed out any lapses by Wagner by playing him more. If there are teaching moments where he wants to take him out he needs to make his point then put him right back in.



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Richard75

December 6th, 2016 at 9:49 AM ^

Michigan isn't the only Big Ten team with a surprisingly strong defense. Nine B1G teams are top-50 in kenpom on D, including several you wouldn't expect like Minnesota and Northwestern.

Given that U-M tends to struggle mightily with teams that defend, it'll be fascinating to see how this plays out.



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