Michigan 79, Marquette 61 Comment Count

Ace


Marquette had no answer for Michigan's size. Seriously. [Joseph Dressler]

"They're just too big," said Karl Ravech, the ESPN play-by-play man. He was talking about a Michigan basketball team. It was a true statement.

"The defense by Michigan has really been outstanding," Fran Fraschilla added a short time later.

By the second half, the two were discussing how future opponents would handle Michigan's size as Moe Wagner demonstrated precisely why they were on that topic:

The key to it all was the insertion of DJ Wilson into the starting lineup in Duncan Robinson's stead. Both players flourished in their new roles. Wilson looked every bit as good as he did in the season's first two games, if not better, tallying his first career double-double with ten points and 13 boards and filling out the box score with a pair of assists and blocks. Robinson came off the bench to match his season point total, hitting 3-of-4 three-point attempts to finish with ten himself. The switch allowed John Beilein to unleash Wilson and pick ideal matchups for Robinson; it paid off immediately.

Michigan jumped out to an early lead due to hot outside shooting and a torrent of Marquette turnovers. Even the big men got into the act, with Wagner, Wilson, and Mark Donnal all connecting on first-half triples. Robinson's pair of first-half bombs got the lead up to double digits, and a strong stretch by Donnal—his tip-in of a Xavier Simpson miss elicited Ravech's comment—helped push the margin up to 24 points at the break.


DJ Wilson dominated the boards. [Dressler]

The Wolverines were able to set it on cruise control for the second half. They eased up a little too much at times, committing some sloppy turnovers to allow Marquette to get as close as 12 points down, but every run was swiftly rebuffed.

The frontcourt was the story of the night, as it should've been: Mark Donnal went 6-for-9 for 15 points, Wilson was everywhere, and Wagner tallied nine points and the SportsCenter posterization. That overshadowed a quietly solid performance from the others. Zak Irvin had his midrange game going early and started knocking down threes, too, on his way to a 16-6-6 stat line marred only by four turnovers.

Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman finished with 15 via frequent trips to the line and some tough twos. Derrick Walton and Xavier Simpson didn't need to score to make an impact. Both played excellent perimeter defense and the offense didn't skip a beat when Walton sat with two fouls early on. Notably, Beilein let Walton re-enter the game with two fouls midway through the half, and he rewarded his coach's confidence by not picking up another the rest of the way.

The resounding victory puts Michigan in tomorrow night's 2K Classic title game against SMU, another team that looks like it will surpass preseason expectations after a comfortable 76-67 win over Pitt in the other semifinal. That game tips at 7 pm on ESPN2. A bigger, burlier Mustangs squad should provide a tougher matchup; if Michigan is able to get through that close to as well as they did tonight's game, it'll be time to get really excited about where this season can go.

Comments

Gr1mlock

November 18th, 2016 at 12:18 AM ^

I'm so confused by Michigan running two legit bigs at one and dominating with size. Good confused, but confused none the less. If tonight is a real look at this team and the jumps by Moe and DJ are real, this could be a very fun season.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

TrueBlue2003

November 18th, 2016 at 12:36 AM ^

of having those two guys playing well is that they make us tall and long inside (did someone say rebounding and shot blocking, whaaaaaaa?) but they can both handle the ball and shoot well enough to not bog down the offense - they keep it spread out as it should be.  Could be very fun indeed.

TrueBlue2003

November 18th, 2016 at 12:32 AM ^

and this isn't an "I told you so" (maybe it is) but for Michigan to make a leap, it had to come from Wilson (and to a lesser extent, Wagner).  Having Robinson on the floor for 30 minutes was such a huge negative for the defense that he had to shoot lights out just to make having him on the floor neutral.

Very early but this rotation at the four, with Robinson coming in for instant offense and playing the right matchups is perfect.  So far so good. Greenberg said it at halftime: they appear to be a very complete, experienced team.  They should compete for the conference title and have a good shot to get to the second weekend of the tourney.

ijohnb

November 18th, 2016 at 7:00 AM ^

think he just lost sight of the effect that defense has on offense. Our players look more energized and focused on the offensive end because they are getting stops. Basketball is a tricky mental game. There is a shift in the mental dynamic every time down the floor. Every time you give up a bucket it chips at your confidence. For the last two years, Michigan has been a collective "sad face" on offense because they were not playing with any confidence due to defensive deficiencies. It can be hard, particularly for a coach so focused on an Xs and Os offensive scheme, to remember how much defensive confidence can effect a players ability, or willingness, to execute on offense.

In reply to by ijohnb

Needs

November 18th, 2016 at 8:38 AM ^

This can be true, though I think everyone's who has played has played with guys who can't be bothered on the defensive and still light it up on offense (James Harden is the prime example).

M's best player, who likely would have been a late lottery pick, also missed almost the entirety of the past two seasons



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

In reply to by ijohnb

TrueBlue2003

November 18th, 2016 at 3:04 PM ^

What makes you think he ever lost sight of that? That he was playing a guy last year for 30 minutes who is really good at offense and equally bad at defense? I buy that.  Regardless he did some major re-evaluation, and decided he needed help on the defensive side, which takes incredible awareness and humility and hired a former head coach and he gave up a tremendous amount of control over that side of ball, which isn't uncommon.

So to the poster making fun of people saying Beilein couldn't coach good D, them playing better this year (witht the same players!) doesn't prove that's not the case.  Quite the contrary.  It proves that probably was the case, and he made a smart move to bring in a guy that could coach a good defense.  Brilliant move by Beilien.  It's only three games so we'll see if this keeps up. 

Venom7541

November 18th, 2016 at 8:22 AM ^

This team looks athletic like it hasn't in a couple years. I still can't believe the title game didn't pan out on the recruiting trail more, but the title run team wasn't full of 5 stars either. 

93Grad

November 18th, 2016 at 8:42 AM ^

Is his ability and willingness to adapt his coaching philosophy and staff. He's done it multiple times now at Michigan to great effect. Now if only he would do the same on the recruiting trail.

Harbaugh is my…

November 18th, 2016 at 9:00 AM ^

Beilien has turned over a new leaf. In years past, it always appeared that a player who was more offensively gifted would get more playing time than a player who provided more of a defensive presence. Inserting wilson into the lineup is a big step. Good to see that an old dog can learn new tricks.

Bertello NC

November 18th, 2016 at 9:48 AM ^

I think Donlon has brought some intensity and a level of swagger to this program not to mention better defensive play. Last few years we were a soft team now we have some attitude. Not saying we're a team full of junk yard dogs but you can see an improvement in that department.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

L'Carpetron Do…

November 18th, 2016 at 10:14 AM ^

Gotta say - this is the best a Beilien team has looked this early in the season in a long time - maybe ever.  If they get through OOC play relatively unscathed there can be some serious upside to this team.

Also - at the end of the game when Wilson got a sweet alley-oop and-one I was shocked that he only had 10 or so points.  I had been watching the game on and off but I thought he was the best player on the court.  It's nice to see he can have a major impact without packing a statline (still - 13 rebounds - pretty good and he had some nice blocks too).  But his development and early play is huge.

What's up with those shorts though?  Dude is a Michigan Wolverine, wears #5 and his middle name is an homage to Jalen Rose and he wears his shorts high!  What the hell, man?

username03

November 18th, 2016 at 11:03 AM ^

Props to Beilien for making some adjustments. DJ at the 4 mitigates a lot of problems they've had the last few years. He provides some cover to the weaknesses they have at center and allows Irvin to play his actual position and focus more on his strengths.