Michigan 72, Northwestern 70 (OT) Comment Count

Ace

It wasn't easy. It was, in fact, excruciatingly difficult to watch. In the end, however, Michigan survived a borderline-comedic series of late-game issues to eke past Northwestern, and they'll play for their NCAA Tournament lives tomorrow at noon against top-seeded Indiana.

In a tight game late in the second half, Michigan twice split a pair of free throws that could've helped seal the deal, first by Zak Irvin then Duncan Robinson. On the first occasion, Northwestern capitalized with an Alex Olah three-pointer. On the second, which kept the Wildcats within two points after the shot clock was turned off, Olah put back a Tre Demps miss with 0.1 seconds remaining to force overtime. Robinson shouldn't even have had the chance to extend M's lead in the first place; after Michigan burned two timeouts trying to get the ball inbounds, Northwestern trapped Robinson in the corner on M's third attempt, and before they fouled him the officials missed an obvious travel.

Robinson went off for 14 first-half points then was silent in the second half before his ill-fated trip to the line; his miss there was just his third of the season. That didn't shake the shooter's confidence, however. Robinson opened the scoring in overtime with a triple from above the break, and after Tre Demps and Nathan Taphorn put the Wildcats ahead by three, he knotted the ballgame at 70 with 46 seconds to go with another bomb off a well-designed sideline inbounds play.

After Bryant McIntosh missed a shot on Northwestern's ensuing possession and the ball grazed Taphorn on its way out of bounds to give Michigan the rock, Irvin rose above McIntosh for a long two and the lead with only three seconds left. The game appeared to be over when Irvin tipped Northwestern's desperation inbounds pass to Derrick Walton, who seemingly dribbled out the clock. Since nothing can be easy, though, an official review revealed Walton stepped on the baseline with 0.6 seconds left.

Mercifully, Walton was spared an ignominous fate when Taphorn's three-point attempt at the buzzer clanged harmlessly off the front of the rim.

Robinson finished with a team-high 21 points, Irvin added 16 points and 8 rebounds, and Abdur-Rahkman had 14 and 8. Walton had seven boards and five assists but couldn't get his shot to fall, scoring his only two points at the line while going 0/7 from the field. Michigan's big men were once again dominated by Olah, who put up 20 and 13 despite a quiet first half; Mark Donnal and Ricky Doyle combined for just 8 and 6.

Michigan's postseason dreams are still alive for now. If they turn in a similar performance against Indiana, however, the NIT beckons.

Comments

Stevo1980

March 10th, 2016 at 3:07 PM ^

Man.... Coach B has got to get this ball club in shape. Far cry from a few years ago. Is it he talent? The assistant coaching? El Niño? I'm baffled.

Trader Jack

March 10th, 2016 at 3:14 PM ^

Misses in recruiting have definitely hurt, but the biggest problem right now is a lack of depth. There's not one player who inspires any sort of confidence when you see them check into the game. The lack of development from Dawkins, Doyle, Irvin, Chatman (though I actually think he's played well recently), and Wilson has been disappointing. Finally (the most obvious point), injuries have been a killer. Without Spike we basically don't have a backup at the 1 or the 2, and Caris was our best player by far.



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Richard75

March 10th, 2016 at 5:35 PM ^

The lack of options at the 1 and 2 isn't just because of injuries; it's also a roster construction problem. We're underweight on ballhandlers and overweight on bigs (especially for such a perimeter-oriented team).

Look at it this way: Next season, if Walton hurts his ankle again, Simpson will be our only PG. Meanwhile we'll have 5 or 6 centers. Now would that be bad luck or bad roster management?



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BuckNekked

March 10th, 2016 at 6:11 PM ^

This team doesnt truly have a pg either if you ask me. Walton plays it but in my amateur opinion hes a sg. So we have a ton of wings and 4/5 tweeners who all basically suck. Poor roster management is killing them. Simpson better be the second coming of Trey Burke or we wont make the tourney next year either.

AlwaysBlue

March 10th, 2016 at 3:30 PM ^

it's the inability of Irvin and Walton to step up for Spike and Caris and run any kind of offense. I can't blame Beilein for that, he has too long of a history and reputation as an elite offensive coach. He will run his offense through multiple positions but it seems he has no options with this group. And a poor shooting offense puts even more pressure on the defense.

BuckNekked

March 10th, 2016 at 6:14 PM ^

Injuries are an excuse. We have 2 years worth of games where we sucked whether those guys were playing or not. Levert is as flawed as the others and in no way would have been the savior.

StephenRKass

March 10th, 2016 at 4:26 PM ^

It isn't the coaching. And the talent can always improve, but it isn't that either. It is the injuries to LeVert and to Spike. Losing your two seniors, your two best guards, the team's best NBA talent, is too much to overcome. Ask yourself where MSU would be without Valentine. Where Indiana would be without Ferrell. It drives me crazy when so many people question Beilein, considering the injuries and the losses to the NBA he has had.

Stringer Bell

March 11th, 2016 at 3:01 AM ^

Offensively, we were 7 points more efficient without Levert, and vice versa defensively.  This also came against better competition without Levert.  It matches the eye test.  The ball moves better without Levert on the floor, there's more player movement, better shot selection.  As opposed to everyone else standing around and waiting for Caris to make something happen.  If you watched the games you probably noticed that as well.  At the end of the day, it resulted in some big wins against awful teams (which was most of our noncon schedule), and some blowout losses against decent to good teams.  We were no better and no worse without Levert, and the stats, record, and eye test backs that up.  Your whole argument boils down to "we're better with Levert because", but ultimately that's just an excuse that isn't grounded in any sort of reality.

Last of the Me…

March 10th, 2016 at 5:34 PM ^

I think the real answer is between blaming solely injuries and blaming solely coaching. Injuries of course have made us a worst team, but I feel like part of why we are in such rough shape is coaching or lack of player development. We look really sloppy at times to the point where it is hard to watch.

pescadero

March 10th, 2016 at 5:45 PM ^

Spike should have been an expected loss.

Depending on a guy who had two hip surgeries over the summer to play significant minutes is a coaching failure.

 

A number of the NBA entries also should have been expected.

 

That those injuries and expected players leaving causes a roster issue is a recuiting problem, and recruiting problems are coaching problems.

jmblue

March 10th, 2016 at 3:08 PM ^

If only Duncan could have found his stroke a couple of weeks ago . . . oh well, better late than never.  Let's pull a rabbit out of a hat tomorrow.

 

BornInAA

March 10th, 2016 at 3:10 PM ^

Well, Go Blue tomorrow! Maybe Indiana will mail it in and get picked off.

But if I had to put money on it, we will probably lose worse than the 13 points the last time we played.

db012031

March 10th, 2016 at 3:14 PM ^

This game was so maddening....Not sure sometimes if it is Coach B, the Players or Both.

My two biggest issues for this game were the following:

1) We get to the Bonus with about 11 minutes left in the second half and we don't shoot a single free-throw the rest of the game.  That is totally unacceptable.  I understand what our offense is but damn, you get a team in foul trouble that early, you get your ass to the paint and get to the line.  You adjust the style of play.

2) Final 21 seconds of the game, we are up 2 and we have 2 fouls to give before NW gets to the 1 and 1.  So...Why the hell are we not fouling and forcing NW to have to readjust and call new plays from the sideline.  There severl times in that last 21 seconds we could have fouled, forced NW to inbound and really change the outcome.  We possibly never would have even gotten to OT, we could have won in regulation.

Indiana Blue

March 10th, 2016 at 3:22 PM ^

hey Zak .... you can run the baseline after a made FG (Zak called the first of 2 straight TO's in the fnal seconds of regulation).

The end was essentially unwatchable ... NU goes on a 7-0 run late in OT to tie the game.  Sorry, but NU is not a good BB team .....

Go Blue!