Hoops Preview: Michigan State Comment Count

Ace

THE ESSENTIALS

WHAT #33 Michigan (14-7, 4-4 B1G) at
#53 Michigan State (12-9, 4-4)
WHERE Breslin Center
East Lansing, Michigan
WHEN 1 pm ET, Sunday
LINE MSU -1 (KenPom)
N/A (Vegas)
TV CBS
PBP: Kevin Harlan
Analyst: Clark Kellogg

Right: Gonna keep rolling with "embarrassing photos of opposing coaches" until that stops working. [Bryan Fuller/MGoBlog]

THE US

Last night's dismantling of Indiana shot Michigan up ten spots on KenPom. While the Bracket Matrix hadn't been updated at the time this was written, it's safe to say the Wolverines couldn't have done much more in that game to improve their tourney hopes; CBS's Jerry Palm moved M up to an 8-seed in today's update.

Going by KenPom's updated numbers, Michigan's win projection has improved substantially:

KenPom projects Sunday's game as a virtual toss-up, giving Michigan a 45% chance to pull off the road win. With four home games and road matchups with Rutgers and Nebraska left on the schedule, that would put a 10-8 conference record (and 20 regular-season wins) very much in play.

THE LINEUP CARD

Projected starters are in bold. Hover over headers for stat explanations. The "Should I Be Mad If He Hits A Three" methodology: we're mad if a guy who's not good at shooting somehow hits one. Yes, you're still allowed to be unhappy if a proven shooter is left open. It's a free country.

Pos. # Name Yr. Ht./Wt. %Min %Poss ORtg SIBMIHHAT
G 11 Tum Tum Nairn Jr. 5'10, 175 60 12 109 Kinda
Decent distributor, but wonky shot has only improved slightly. Tiny usage for PG.
G 14 Eron Harris Sr. 6'3, 190 59 24 107 Not At All
Excellent three-point shooter both on spot-ups and off the bounce.
G 1 Josh Langford Fr. 6'5, 210 51 15 109 Not At All
Good spot-up shooter who sticks to perimeter; one FT attempt in B1G play.
F 22 Miles Bridges Fr. 6'7, 230 51 27 100 Not At All
ORtg doesn't do his all-around game justice. As he goes, so goes MSU.
C 44 Nick Ward Fr. 6'8, 250 48 33 105 Very
Massive-usage post scorer. Great rebounder and shot-blocker. Fouls, FTs can be issues.
G 5 Cassius Winston Fr. 6'0, 185 50 24 104 Kinda
Boasts #1 assist rate in the country, but inconsistent shot and too many TOs.
F 25 Kenny Goins So. 6'6, 230 47 12 98 Very
Former walk-on forced to spot Ward at C. Decent finisher but very TO-prone.
G 3 Alvin Ellis Sr. 6'4, 210 39 20 101 No
Decent outside shooter, disruptive defender getting more time lately.

[Hit THE JUMP for the rest of the preview.]

THE THEM

There's some weird guys out there.

Season-ending injuries to Ben Carter and Gavin Schilling wiped out MSU's frontcout depth before the season began. Tom Izzo has been forced to make do with a freshman, a former walk-on, and a current walk-on at center.

For as bad as that sounds, it could be much worse. The freshman, Nick Ward, has been the surprise of the season in the Big Ten, averaging 13 points, six boards, and two blocks in 19 minutes per game. When he's on the floor, the ball is very likely to go through the post, and he's one of the better pure post scorers Michigan has faced this year. That said, he still has his shortcomings, mainly at the free-throw line (56%, a big issue given how often he draws fouls) and getting into foul trouble.

Don't be surprised if Michigan goes at Ward from the jump. He's had a rough recent stretch, committing 16 fouls and nine turnovers over the last four games while going 15-for-30 from the field. The Spartans lost three of those games in large part because there's a significant dropoff when Ward is on the bench. Former walk-on Kenny Goins does an admirable job of playing center at 6'6", 230, but he can be overwhelmed in the post, and it only gets worse if 6'5", 220-pound walk-on Matt Van Dyk is pressed into service—he's played 22 scoreless minutes in that four-game sample.

Izzo also faces a conundrum at point guard, where he has two flawed options. Junior Lourawls "Tum Tum" Nairn has experience on his side but he's only hit 9-of-24 three-pointers even though opponents are more than willing to let him shoot; his presence kills any spacing MSU hopes to have on offense. Freshman Cassius Winston (yes, the former M recruit) has displayed a ton of potential—he leads the country in assist rate—and is much more involved on offense, but he's struggled with his shot and turns the ball over at an Izzo-tantrum-causing rate.

Two more players in the starting lineup have rather limited games. Junior Eron Harris is a 40% three-point sniper who's otherwise not adding a whole lot; Izzo publicly hoping for more consistency from Harris has been a running theme all season. Freshman Josh Langford (yes, another former M recruit) has a great jump shot—he's top-20 in the conference in eFG%—but he's almost never in attack mode; he's attempted one free throw total in eight Big Ten games. I couldn't find a Michigan rotation player on KenPom with that low a free-throw rate unless you want to count 2001-02 reserve Mike Gotfredson.

That brings us, finally, to the most important player on the Spartans, freshman forward Miles Bridges (yes, yet another former M recruit). Bridges is shooting 54% on twos and 42% on threes and he's nationally ranked in both defensive rebound and block rates. He takes on a huge workload, one that only grows in crunch time. This is an astonishing stat:

MSU let a monster effort from Bridges—33 points (7/9 2P, 5/8 3P), seven rebounds, four blocks—go to waste in their most recent game, a loss to Purdue at home. That goes to show it's possible to beat State when he's on, though it's much easier when he's not: the Spartans are 1-6 in games he's posted an ORtg of 100 or worse, with the lone win against Florida Gulf Coast. 

THE RESUME

The Spartans struggled through a nonconference gauntlet that included losses to four of the top 16 teams in the country and a slip-up against #118 Northeastern. After a 3-0 start in Big Ten play, they've lost four of their last five, though the sole win was an impressive 18-point blowout of Minnesota at the Breslin Center. 

THE TEMPO-FREE

Small sample size caveats apply.


Four Factors explanation

With the center position down to Nick Ward, scotch tape, and some spare paper clips, MSU's offense looks different than any Izzo offense that's preceded it. That's mostly based on their performance on the glass: this is on pace to be Izzo's worst offensive rebounding team in his tenure by some distance. They're more turnover-prone than usual and also more reliant on the outside shot.

The defense has managed to remain strong due to excellent interior defense and rebounding; I realize this is hard to reconcile with the issues on offense. The Spartans block a lot of shots; they also commit a lot of fouls.

THE KEYS

Get Ward off the court. Self-explanatory given everything above. While Michigan doesn't have a pair of behemoths like Isaac Haas and Caleb Swanigan, who bullied Ward into his worst game of the season on Tuesday, the Wagner/Wilson duo could have a similar impact as the Wolverines continue to get more frontcourt-oriented on offense. The good news is even if Ward stays out of foul trouble, Beilein should be able to get Wagner some breathers that aren't disastrous for the team when Ward needs a break and Goins or Van Dyk enters the game.

Provide timely help on Ward/Bridges. Michigan's post defense has improved significantly of late. Wagner and Wilson have done a much better job of communicating on defense and they've held their own against burly post scorers. Part of that has been providing better help defense—Wilson forced a Thomas Bryant travel last night with a perfectly timed double when it looked like Donnal was in trouble—and the guards should be able to help out, too, when Tum Tum is running the point. Getting aggressive against the bigs could lead to some transition opportunities.

Don't let Harris get hot. In general, Eron Harris has been very good in MSU's wins and largely absent in their losses. The key is preventing him from getting decent looks beyond the arc. MAAR is coming off arguably the best defensive performance of his career, holding James Blackmon Jr. to four points and not allowing him to put up even a single three-point attempt. MAAR should draw Harris; that matchup may very determine could the outcome.

THE SECTION WHERE I PREDICT THE SAME THING KENPOM DOES

MSU by 1.

I'll be curious to see how Vegas looks at this game. These teams seem to be heading in opposite directions, though fortunes have a way of changing very quickly in college basketball. At the very least, Ward/Bridges vs. Wagner/Wilson should be a fun matchup to watch.

Comments

MadMatt

January 27th, 2017 at 7:30 PM ^

I think that we will beat these guys easily. The way you describe their team, I see match-ups in Michigan's favor all over the court. Are you going for the best case scenario? Am I reading too much into the Indiana game?

Bertello NC

January 27th, 2017 at 10:42 PM ^

I don't know. A big part of our epic beatdown of IU last night was large in part of our perimeter shooting. Not saying we didn't do other things particularly well, but I feel this is going to be a defensive battle. Road venues are obviously tough. We most likely will not shoot the ball as well as we did against IU and will need to and should rely on the post a bit more for offense as ace stated above to get Ward in a little trouble and exploit them inside some. That is their weakness. If we guard and rebound with intensity like we did last night I think we win this game. We gotta keep that " we're gonna cut your head off and shit down your neck" mentality. We do that and we SHOULD win this game.



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Richard75

January 28th, 2017 at 5:37 PM ^

Remember that Beilein teams over the years have a tendency to play remarkably well when they've had extra rest/prep time, as they did against IU. This figures because it's an intricate offense and Beilein rides his starters.

Both games against MSU, however, are short turnarounds.



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CLord

January 27th, 2017 at 10:30 PM ^

Just can't bring myself to ever watch Big 10 hoops away games any more.  Always feel like I'm watching 5 vs 8 with the state of home cooked refereeing.  I give this game an expected 10 out of 10 on the nausea scale in that department, what with Izzo's bright red, sweat soaked nose parked firmly in the neck of the sideline ref every play.

allintime23

January 28th, 2017 at 9:36 AM ^

Well based on this game at Breslin the last ten years....Harris will go off and have his best game of the year. Michigan will go on a run in the second half and tie the game with six minutes left. Wagner will be in foul trouble from the get go. Michigan will either lose by 20 or by 1.



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greekfreak23

January 28th, 2017 at 11:36 AM ^

If moe Wagner plays as well as he did vs Indiana I think Michigan pulls this one out. Nick ward has been a monster in the low post and Wagner needs to deny the entry pass and force ward to grab the ball away from the basket

Hard-Baughlls

January 28th, 2017 at 4:43 PM ^

I've been critical of his recruiting and "soft teams", but is he off life support now?

How does the future look with Beilein still our head man?

Wolvie3758

January 28th, 2017 at 6:24 PM ^

optomistic even after the Indiana game...With our road woes I expect per usual for MSU to have their best game of the year and throttle us

scottiek65

January 29th, 2017 at 3:30 PM ^

Zak Irvin  0 for 8 ( 0 for 2 3-pt ) 2 rebounds, 2 assists, 3 turnovers, 0 points, 

what were you doing all day Zak? you were invisible.

Walton Jr shot 4 of 12,  Wilson shot 4 of 12, 

Team shooting 34%, shooting 3-pt at 27%