Michigan 77, Nebraska 58 Comment Count

Ace


Hits first three, M goes off. The hypothesis holds. [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

That was pleasantly different.

Michigan played a game entirely unlike both their first matchup with Nebraska and yesterday's overtime win over Iowa, using scorching shooting and suffocating defense to post a 77-58 blowout of the Huskers in the Big Ten quarterfinals.

When these teams last met, Moe Wagner scored only two points in 32 minutes, effectively taken out of the game by Nebraska's all-switch approach on defense. This time around, Wagner and the Wolverines were ready. He surpassed his first-game scoring total within the first two minutes on his way to a monster stat line: 20 points on 18 shot equivalents, a game-high 13 rebounds (three offensive), an assist, two blocks, and a steal in 33 minutes. In case the Huskers weren't fully aware that Wagner had solved their defense, he let them know about it after seemingly every bucket, often removing his mouthguard to let loose the trash talk.

"For him to get 13 rebounds today is exceptional," said John Beilein. "And that's been -- that's one of the things that I think if he's going to play in the pros one day, that was one of the things -- he's a stretch four at that level. Stretch fours have to, they certainly have to rebound. And he's really shown some great growth there."

When Michigan played yesterday, it took them 30 minutes to hit a shot outside the paint. Wagner's triple with 18:18 left in the first half eliminated the possibility of a repeat early and the Wolverines went on to torch the nets. Michigan went 11-for-23 from beyond the arc with Wagner (2-for-4), Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman (a perfect 5-or-5), and Duncan Robinson (4-for-7) accounting for all the makes.


Z repeatedly worked his way to the bucket and converted. [Campredon]

Those three combined for 57 points. Zavier Simpson, showing an impressive array of finishes off the bounce, chipped in 12 points, making 4-of-8 field goals and all four(!) of his free throws while adding a game-high six assists. No other Wolverine hit a shot from the field until a meaningless Jordan Poole putback in the final minute.

Outside of a rough game from Poole (1-for-9 from the field), that was more indicative of the main guys carrying the load than a poor performance from anyone else. Nebraska tried ditching their previously effective all-switch man defense in favor of an extended 1-3-1 zone before the first half even ended. That didn't hold up for long; any attempts to go zone in the second stanza were bombarded.

"I think we've just seen it a lot more," Adbur-Rahkman. "As of late, teams have been trying to switch out their defenses against us. And I think we were just more comfortable with it today and we just picked our poison within our offense and found open shots in slots."

Meanwhile, one holdover from yesterday was Michigan's salty defense, which held the Huskers to .866 points per possession. After Nebraska made four of their first five out of the game, the defense went on full lockdown, forcing misses on 19 of their ensuing 20 shots. The Huskers barely scraped above 30% shooting for the game and had to resort to flinging themselves at the hoop in the hopes of drawing fouls; while that worked to an extent—they went 22-for-27 from the line—it couldn't keep their offense afloat.


Nope. [Campredon]

Wagner, Jon Teske, and Charles Matthews blocked two shots apiece. Simpson harrassed point guard Glynn Watson in a 4-for-12 shooting day with two turnovers canceling out two assists. James Palmer Jr. and Isaiah Roby each managed to score 16 points but combined to go 7-for-18 from the field. There were few easy looks, whether at the basket or beyond the arc.

Heck, the game went so well that Michigan even got an excellent six-minute stint out of Ibi Watson in the first half. Coming off seven straight wins and nine of their last ten, the Wolverines will face Michigan State in tomorrow's 2 pm ET semifinal. There's little need to pump up that game, especially with the Spartans looking to avenge a loss on their home floor in this season's only meeting so far.

"It's going to be a challenge again tomorrow," said Beilein. "But we're better defensively than we were back then. But they're probably better offensively. So who knows what's going to happen."

[Hit THE JUMP for more photos and the box score.]


Late closeouts are death. [Campredon]

Jordan Poole and Isaiah Livers taking a selfy in the locker room after the victory over Nebraska! - Spherical Image - Marc-Gregor Campredon

Comments

charblue.

March 2nd, 2018 at 6:14 PM ^

 whose desire sets me free even if she is a Sparty, from a man who hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest. And in the respite of desire, we choose our connection to prospect and

stephenrjking

March 2nd, 2018 at 6:28 PM ^

Like clockwork, barring catastrophic injuries. 

The odd sort-of exception to most Beilein trends is the 2013 team, which was unusually very young and was great from the get-go but laid an egg or two late before catching fire to win the national title every game they played in the NCAA tournament that officially happened.

Indy Pete - Go Blue

March 2nd, 2018 at 6:57 PM ^

And hearing his comments about where we are and the game tomorrow, I am sensing a lot confidence from him.  He shoots people very straight, and he cannot hide how good he feels about our defense.   Tomorrow should be an epic game.  I really like our chances, and I base a lot of that on the confidence that is oozing out of our future HOF head coach.

Bill22

March 3rd, 2018 at 9:10 AM ^

I’m blown away just by the different weapons and strengths the team has compared with years past. When have we ever had a rock solid back-up Center? Two guys who come off the bench that can light up the scoreboard? One of the best on-ball defending point guards in the Country? This is all on top of typical Beilein teams which of course never foul, rarely turn the ball over and can shoot the lights out from all starting positions. I’m blown away by this team. They have shown grit and the ability to win in a variety of ways. I’m excited for today’s game, tomorrow’s BTT Championship game and our run in the NCAA Tourney (4 seed/Sweet 16 with a great chance at a Final 4!).

M Ascending

March 2nd, 2018 at 6:25 PM ^

Matthews has been slowly coming around, but now Poole seems to have caught his bad case of the funk. If Jordan can recapture his mojo, this team can go far.

TrueBlue2003

March 3rd, 2018 at 1:05 AM ^

at the same time.  The great thing about this team is that we have 8 guys that can score in double figures on any given night, so we'll get 4-5 of them there every game and a couple guys will have bad games but it'll even out.

We aren't reliant any any one or two guys.   And with the defense playing the way it is, that's a recipe for a lot of success.

umchicago

March 2nd, 2018 at 6:31 PM ^

0 FG today but was solid again on D.   if he holds down bridges tomorrow and Drob hits more 3s than mcquaid (both doable), UM will win.  i expect simpson to limit winston and maar to limit langford/mcquaid.  ward may get his, but hopefully, mo can render him to the bench again since he can't check mo.

J.

March 3rd, 2018 at 1:46 AM ^

Actually, fans of math did not expect him to shoot his season average for the year after he started out so slowly.  This has been highly unexpected.  The most likely outcome was for him to shoot 40% or so for the remainder of the year -- in other words, his career average -- and to finish the year down near 33% or so because of all of the misses that were already baked in.

"Regression to the mean" should not be used to suggest that a player will eventually wind up at his average.  What it actually suggests is that the player's performance from the current time forward is most likely to be around the mean.

In other words, suppose Robinson shoots 40 more 3s this year (5 per game * 8 games :) ).  His most likely outcome is to make 16 of the 40, even though he's recently been shooting at a 50% clip.  This is somewhat more controversial when the player in question hasn't just restored his seasonlong numbers to match his career averages, though. :)

snarling wolverine

March 3rd, 2018 at 10:46 AM ^

I'm not that surprised that he's gotten back to 40%.  Shooters tend to be streaky.  I expected him at some point to get hot again.  We knew from previous years that he had it in him.  It was a question of when.

 

Indy Pete - Go Blue

March 2nd, 2018 at 6:50 PM ^

Beautiful pics by Campredon.  The Teske block picture is one of the best sports shots I have seen on any media site in a while.  Look at his length!  He is hardly jumping yet he envelopes the ball with his hand near its high point strictly due to excellent positioning and exceptional God-given length.  I love this team!  Also, looking ahead, I think I will love the team for years to come! 

Goblueman

March 2nd, 2018 at 8:01 PM ^

Neb goes zone late in 1st half with great results,Mich begins to pull away in 2nd half ,timeout  Neb ,Neb goes back to zone ,Mich gets 8 points in 3 possessions,another timeout Neb....JB & staff can make halftime adjustments.

1971woverine

March 2nd, 2018 at 8:03 PM ^

THe Wild Card is Fouls/Free Throws.  We schooled Sharty in East Lansing and really have done nothing but got better since.  Sharty has only beaten one team with a winning record since then... And had they played Purdue and Nebraska and Michigan on the Road they likely would not have won the Big Ten.  This Izzo March Mystique has run its course...THe REAL MR. MARCH is John Belein.  I think a T-shirt which says THE REAL MR. MARCH with JB's image on the front would be an excellent way to twist the knife on these Sharties!

HermosaBlue

March 2nd, 2018 at 8:21 PM ^

MAAR's outside shooting was a liability. His growth since his freshman year is amazing, especially considering he was the rare "old for his grade" Beilein recruit.

jjelliso

March 2nd, 2018 at 9:42 PM ^

Nice gamer, Harry. Fuck Sparty. Beating them in the tournament followed by them flaming out early in the NCAAs would be a nice little assist to the tailspain that athletic department is in right now.

panderberg

March 3rd, 2018 at 3:47 AM ^

by our coach when asked about Mo in the postgame interview:

"He makes some of the stupidest fouls ever...puts them in the bonus early. I need to figure out some way in German to communicate with him. But don't get me wrong - I love the guy." 

All said while grinning.

 

***Probably not a correct direct quote***