Oregon 69, Michigan 68 Comment Count

Ace


The final shots. [Joseph Dressler]

In the movie script, that shot goes in.

Michigan hadn't played their best game—far from it—but Derrick Walton nevertheless had a clean look to send the Wolverines to the Elite Eight and keep this magical run going. With time about to expire, Walton cleared out space, rose, and fired. His shot caught iron. Walton clutched his head, likely feeling the same combination of surprise and dismay as the rest of us.

"I had a good look at the basket and it just didn't drop for me," Walton said.

This is not a movie script.

In a disjointed game, Michigan's seniors fought valiantly to the finish. Walton shook off a hard fall on his elbow in the first half to finish with a game-high 20 points on 6-for-10 shooting, five rebounds, and eight assists. Zak Irvin poured in 19, going 8-of-14 from the field, pulled down eight rebounds, and played lockdown defense on Oregon star Dillon Brooks, who needed 13 shots to score 12 points. In the last five minutes, the two combined for three go-ahead shots, and Walton added a nasty fadeaway jumper to give the Wolverines a three-point lead with 2:02 left.

They could not get a fourth. Instead, Oregon's two best players on the night made the plays in winning time. Jordan Bell, a force in the paint all evening, put back a missed free throw to get the Ducks within one after Walton's jumper. After Walton couldn't get a tough layup to fall, Tyler Dorsey got a step on Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman and finished at the rim for what were ultimately the final points of the game.

Michigan would get two more shots to win. DJ Wilson's three-pointer with 46 seconds remaining was well off the mark. After Dylan Ennis missed another free throw with 15 seconds to play, Oregon surprisingly chose to give only one of their three remaining fouls to give, allowing Walton to get that final look. It fell short.

"I've seen him make that shot thousands of times, so I had confidence in him knocking it down," said Irvin. "It looked good from my angle. No one else on this team that we wanted taking that shot. He's been on a run and he's such a great player. I'm proud of him."


Jordan Bell made play after play in the paint. [Dressler]

From the start, this didn't feel like Michigan's night. The Wolverines went just 11-for-28 in the first half, and while they only trailed by two at the break, it could've easily been worse. Wilson sat for much of the half with foul trouble. Oregon's guards repeatedly blew by Michigan defenders. Dorsey sunk three of his four first-half three-point attempts. Walton grinded out 11 points and seven assists by halftime, keeping his team within striking distance. With Wilson set to get back on the court, the hope was Michigan could find their groove.

It never quite clicked. Moe Wagner barely played in the second half and finished the night with only seven points on 3-for-10 shooting. Abdur-Rahkman all but disappeared, tallying more turnovers (3) than points (2). Duncan Robinson's eight points weren't enough to offset his defensive shortcomings. While Wilson hit four three-pointers, he didn't get a bucket inside the arc as Bell dominated the paint; his missed second-half layup will stay with him for a while.

While tonight wasn't their night, this team can hold their heads high. Walton and Irvin battled to the bitter end, and this season will ultimately be remembered far more for the remarkable highs of the last month than tonight's low. When it mattered the most, this team galvanized around its leaders, and the most difficult part of tonight is knowing we won't get to see them all play together again.

"It's the tightest bunch I've been around in all my years of playing basketball," said Walton. "Just a very selfless group. I had the joy of being a part of it and being one of the leaders. Like I said, I wish we could have more games to play together because I think a couple minutes throughout the game we didn't show the type of team we were becoming and overall just thank them for allowing me to be part of such a great team."

"We're very close-knit, playing our best basketball and didn't want the season to end," said Irvin. "This team had a lot of great memories. We battled through adversity and just a team that I will always remember."

He's not alone.

Comments

Bombadil

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:19 PM ^

Well written Ace. Never would have thought we'd be at this point back in January. Very proud of this team and the coaching that got them here.

stephenrjking

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:21 PM ^

Welp. What a ride. You tell yourself that you're happy regardless with a B1G tournament banner. And then that you're happy with the Sweet Sixteen. And then you're there and you want it. Walton with a shot to win at the end to go to the Elite Eight? There's not a point in this entire season I don't say yes to that. It didn't go in. But what a trip to get there.

sarto1g

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:22 PM ^

Very happy for our guys to have such a great run in the tournament and in the second half of the season. Really hard to have any complaints at this point. Felt like the magic was back from our runs a few years ago. Very fun basketball

MichiganMAN47

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:26 PM ^

I really loved watching this team. I'm sad that I won't get to see Walton and Irvin play again. They have given us a lot of great memories!

funkifyfl

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:26 PM ^

I just don't understand how you can sit Wagner for the entire last 7-8 minutes of this game. I get Duncan helped the offense for a bit, but there was a time for Mo to get back in. After one of the fouls in the second half, I also thought there was a moment for Donnal, which was followed by an Oregon offensive rebound, but that's not as big of a nit to pick.

 

Nevetheless, the big takeaway is that this team and specifically Irvin and Walton brought me a ton of joy these last two months. So happy for them for leaving on a high note, even though it feels like they had more magic left in them.

 

HAIL

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TrueBlue2003

March 24th, 2017 at 1:55 AM ^

Wagner was getting abused by Bell and his shot was abysmal.  He either has it or he doesn't and he did not have it tonight.  If he's not playing well on offense his defense is way too much of a liability.

We were down 46-50 when he went out.  We went on a 22-15 run to take a 3 point lead with 1:54 to go.  Had to keep going with what was working.  Same way we won against Purdue, the BTT championship game and the OSU game against small ball lineups.  Just couldn't close it out.   

I Like Burgers

March 24th, 2017 at 8:37 AM ^

He also lost confidence in his shot. Right before he sat for good, he passed up a couple of looks that were open for a second. As bad as his shot was that night, if he himself no longer confidence in it then sitting him was the right call. A tough and gutsy call, but the right one.

ricosuave

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:27 PM ^

...Oregon team. I did not watch any but the last few seconds and heard Oregon had a few go fouls to give. Noticed that they finished with 9 total. Wow! They must play great disciplined D accompanied by superb athleticism. Sounds like we ran into to much.

UMfan21

March 23rd, 2017 at 11:25 PM ^

they collapsed really well. any time Walton or someone would get past their man, 2 ducks were collapsing in. it resulted in many kick outs (which missed) or offensive resets. sometimes it resulted in turnovers. but very rarely was anyone able to drive on them. our interior scoring was mostly back cuts and passes to open guys under the basket, not dribble drive.

ThatGuyCeci

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:29 PM ^

Ace, perfect summary of the game.. you hit the nail on the head.. so sad to see this season end. This team erased all negative feelings with a late season surge that every Michigan fan will always remember.. sad night

bronxblue

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:29 PM ^

Thanks for the write-up Ace, this and throughout the year.

It was a really good season, and I'm glad both Walton and Irvin acquitted themselves so well in their final games.  It sucks to lose, but this team exceeded my expectations and can hang a banner next year.  

anywaytodelete…

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:30 PM ^

Supposedly not a very good defensive team, they made Michigan uncomfortable and Michigan couldn't come up with a counter.  And yet it came down to a coinflip.

Disappointing that Michigan couldn't execute it's offense better in the last two minutes once they got the lead, but it wasn't any different from how they executed during the first 38 minutes.

Yard Dog

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:31 PM ^

that I was surprised the last shot didn't go in. He's been so incredible that I came to expect everything he put up to go in. What a great run. Coach Beilein showed us why he is now the leader in basketball victories at our august institution. He just never gave up on this team, even when things looked bleak. Thanks guys. Loved it all. Sad it is over for now.

blue90

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:32 PM ^

can be said about this game.  Fouls, Wagner, etc, but when it comes down to it, it is just another game.  You don't remember the losses, you remember the entire season and this season turned out incredible.  Walton and Irvin showed the muscle we've been wanting them to show, we asked, they delivered and then some.  Every candle burns out sometime.  Cannot wait for next year.  HAIL.

UMinSF

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:52 PM ^

I wish I would forget the heartbreakers, but unfortunately I probably remember them more than the wins.

Webber's TO, Burke's clean block against L'ville, and sadly, tonight's shot by Walton that just wouldn't go in...don't even want to think about the phantom first down.

That said, while I won't forget tonight's gut-wrenching loss, I will also remember the great run and all the fun this team gave us.

The drama, win or lose, is what makes college sports so much fun!

George Pickett

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:59 PM ^

I wouldn't call this one a heartbreaker.  It's easy to point to the 1-2 plays Michigan could have made to win the game, but at the same time, Oregon shot 9-16 from the line.

Overall, it was a mediocre night for both teams, and Oregon won the coin flip.

George Pickett

March 23rd, 2017 at 11:38 PM ^

It underscores the point that Oregon also missed opportunities, which cuts against the argument that Michigan fumbled away the game by missing one or two plays in the closing minutes. 

I'm not celebrating a one-point loss. Obviously it's tough.  But we didn't lose because of some unforeseen circumstance or wildly improbable finish.  It was a disappointing game from a team that's been vastly overachieving. It wasn't 2015 MSU. 

spiff

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:35 PM ^

Ended up being a great season: BTT title, Sweet 16 with two great wins, and Walton's season will be good memories.

And I think this game showed what we all knew. Wagner and DJ may well have bright NBA prospects, but need at least another year of seasoning.

Novak-blood

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:36 PM ^

Thanks, Ace. Great summary. What an epic ride these Michigan Men took all of us on these past few weeks. So proud of the team and coaching staff. Solid returning talent and a nice infusion of new blood. Already looking forward to next season.

Erik_in_Dayton

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:36 PM ^

...that the most difficult part of this is that we won't get to see them play together again. This was a very fun group to watch. They gave us a joyful ride. And they put Michigan basketball firmly back on the map - if it ever was off it. Michigan didn't just get lucky with a single group. None of these guys played on the Final Four team. This is undeniably a very good program now. There will likely be more good days.

Navray

March 23rd, 2017 at 11:16 PM ^

they got pretty lucky to get past ok st i feel. beilein's teams do a fantastic job of playing at an athleticism deficit, but at the end of the day the 3 pointer lotto will turn up tails enough times in a game to end a run. they usually win this game, the universe decided that wagner would have an ice cold night.

very fun ride for the past month for sure and i'm grateful that i got to experience it. go blue.

M-Dog

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:39 PM ^

My kingdom for a free throw rebound.

Oregon is still wondering how they pulled that game out when we went up three in the last minute and a half.  

They're muttering the "survive and advance" mantra over and over to themselves.

freejs

March 23rd, 2017 at 11:17 PM ^

Walton raked down on the arm before the block/charge collision. If they called the rake down, they got it right. If they were deciding block/charge, the call was terrible. I've watched it in slow mo, easy offensive foul to call (but Derrick's rake down was first). 

Good spot that it was DJ who got beat on the rebound and put back on the FT up 3, not Duncan, like the announcers said (you and I spotted that, but most people got fooled by the announcers). 

George Pickett

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:55 PM ^

Oregon averages 12 turnovers a game and only had 5 tonight.  Tough pill to swallow in a one-point loss.

 

UMinSF

March 23rd, 2017 at 10:45 PM ^

Altman outcoached Beilein, keep Ace's words in mind:

"After Dylan Ennis missed another free throw with 15 seconds to play, Oregon surprisingly chose to give only one of their three remaining fouls to give, allowing Walton to get that final look."

Walton should never have had time to get such a good look.

If I remember correctly, there were under 10 seconds left when they committed their foul. If Oregon continues to foul, they probably run out the clock, or at very least force a rushed prayer.

That was a terrible mistake, at the most important moment of the game.

Every time I see the replay of Walton's shot, I think he's gonna hit it. Damn.

 

M-Dog

March 24th, 2017 at 12:15 AM ^

Yeah, if Walton makes that shot, Altman would have been crucified by the media and Oregon fans, and rightly so.  That's some serious coaching malpractice there to just let us get off a shot to win the game.