No photog in West Lafayette, so here are old pics [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Purdue 99, Michigan 67 Comment Count

Alex.Drain January 24th, 2024 at 12:20 AM

On the road against the #2 team in the country without their point guard, Michigan probably didn't have much of a chance. The game that unfolded was predictably lopsided, a Purdue romp by a final score of 99-67. The margin already exceeded the KenPom and Vegas spread by halftime and only got worse in the second half. By the time the final five minutes arrived, the crowd in Mackey Arena was more interested in whether a free throw contest could net them free chicken and  whether the home team could hit 100 points than they were which team was going to win. That much was clear in the opening minutes. The last notable moment of the game was a Purdue player with nine points on the season pulling off a highlight reel dunk. It was really that bad for Michigan Men's Basketball tonight.  

The first half showcased just how much better Purdue was than the Michigan team they faced today. Superstar big Zach Edey scored just six points and Purdue missed multiple point-blank layups, yet the Boilers still hung 49 on Michigan and led by 24 at halftime because they rebounded their misses and were white hot from three. With Dug McDaniel left back in Ann Arbor due to his ongoing academic suspension, the Michigan team started a lineup with Jaelin Llewellyn starting at PG in his place, alongside Nimari Burnett, Terrance Williams II, Olivier Nkamhoua, and Tarris Reed Jr. It was not a roster ready to compete. 

Purdue came out shooting it well from distance, a trend that would continue for the entire game. They built an 11-4 lead by the first media timeout and an early bucket showed off the kind of night it was going to be from Michigan defensively. Michigan's rotations lost track of Braden Smith in the corner, who caught the pass from Ethan Morton and could either pull-up for a clean look at three or drive the hoop. Smith put the ball on the floor, drove to the rack, and laid it in virtually uncontested. That score put Purdue ahead 15-4 and foreshadowed a night with little defensive resistance from the Maize & Blue. 

 

[Campredon]

If there was one bright spot for Michigan defensively in the first half, it was Tarris Reed Jr.'s showing against Zach Edey, managing to keep Edey quiet and force his post touches to begin farther out from the basket. Reed contested Edey well when the two were on the court together and held the star's scoring to a minimal. Unfortunately, as Reed was doing that Herculean work in the paint, Michigan was struggling to defend the long line. Purdue started 4/5 from three and then feasted when Michigan's offense turned the ball over with increasing frequency. The Michigan offense, lacking its primary scorer in McDaniel, was often stagnant and had no hope of keeping pace with the torrid Purdue attack. 

The offensive bright spot for Michigan in the first half was McDaniel's replacement, Jaelin Llewellyn. Purdue had things looking like a romp when they were up 30-13, but Llewellyn engineered his own 9-2 run with back-to-back triples followed by a layup. That kept Michigan hanging around in the distance, but Purdue buried the Wolverines with a spurt before halftime that more or less ended the game right there. After Jace Howard hit a pair of free throws to make it 34-23 Boilers, Purdue went on a 15-2 run over the half's final 3:21 to lead by 24 at the break. Purdue had their way offensively, throwing in threes from all over, including Fletcher Loyer's make at the horn, and tacked on two more points when Mason Gillis rebounded his own missed free throw. Michigan's offense sputtered in between, bricking shots from distance and having little in the way of creation. At halftime, Michigan trailed 49-25. 

The second half was no different in terms of trajectory. Michigan's only defensive positive in the first half, Reed's defense on Edey, was made minimal by a pair of quick fouls on the Michigan big. Reed picked up his fourth with 17:12 to go and would eventually foul out, limiting him to only ten minutes in the second half. With Tarris limited, Edey scored 10 points in the second half and reached a double-double. Michigan leaned heavily on the three in the second half, with 3PAs making up 48.6% of their total FG attempts in the second half, but made just 27.8% of them, an ice cold shooting night for the whole team.

 

[Paul Sherman]

If there was an offensive positive in the second half, it was Terrance Williams II's hustle, snagging five offensive boards and scoring eight points, a bit of hustle and energy you didn't expect from a player on a team that was already getting blown out. Of course, TWill hustling and competing wasn't anywhere near enough to salvage Michigan from a humiliating defeat. Purdue continued to have their way on offense, lighting Michigan up at a rate of 58.3% in the second half from three and grabbing eight more offensive rebounds. Michigan kept the deficit in the mid-20s for the first eight or so minutes of the second half, but by the halfway point, Purdue was leading by 29 and attempting difficult fast-break alley-oops. 

It was not a serious basketball game. Matt Painter and Juwan Howard both went to their benches in the final minutes of the second half and it was up to the walk-ons and deep cut scholarship players to try and finish Purdue's quest for 100. They came up a little short, but Carson Barrett was able to score his first points of the season on a three to push Purdue's total to 97 and Brian Waddell's dunk may well make it onto SportsCenter. The only notable for Michigan in the final stages of this embarrassing rout was George Washington III hitting a couple threes, his first points in over a month (GW3 finished with 10). 

The box score from tonight's game is bloody. Purdue shot 52% from the floor to Michigan's 34%. The Boilers were a sizzling 14/21 from three while Michigan finished 9/29. Purdue also scored 40 points in the paint to Michigan's 22. The home team had a rather ho-hum night from the reigning National Player of the Year (16 points on 6/13 from the floor) and shot only 65% from the free throw line, yet still put up 99. Thirteen different players scored for Purdue. They turned the ball over just seven times, zero in the first half(!!). Only three Wolverines scored in double figures, Llewellyn, Williams, and Washington, the latter of whom's points all were in garbage time. 

 

[Paul Sherman]

The 32 point margin of defeat is the largest in Juwan Howard's tenure. That Michigan didn't even come close to covering the astonishingly wide 17.5 point Vegas line is the biggest indictment of the program's current state yet. They gave up 1.42 PPP to Purdue, their worst clip in over six seasons. Michigan's defense now ranks 152nd in efficiency per KenPom. Neither of Tommy Amaker's sub-.500 teams, nor John Beilein's first team, had a defense ranked that low. After starting the season 3-0, Michigan has lost 12 of their past 16 games and still has four more to go on the road without Dug McDaniel.

There's little of interest to say about this game other than that Michigan was thoroughly outclassed by a team they didn't belong on the same court against, a sign of how far this program has fallen in the past three seasons under Juwan Howard. Where three years ago the Wolverines were handling the Boilers in West Lafayette, and even two years ago were fighting a tight battle in this very venue against an elite Purdue team, tonight Michigan was dispatched like a mid-major.

After the game, former Michigan great Nik Stauskas unleashed a public tirade in the comments of the team's Instagram account about the team's lack of passion and pride. In fairness to Nik, this game was not competitive, even for one second and while getting blown out by a team as great as Purdue isn't unexpected, something about tonight felt different. Unlike most Howard era defeats, frustrating late game collapses and the like, tonight saw Michigan's head get bashed in with a garden hoe, laying it bare just how far away this program is from anything resembling respectability. 

 

[Campredon]

At this current moment, Michigan is the laughingstock of the Big Ten. A once-mighty power of the league getting literally dunked on by the 12th or 13th best player on the opposing roster. Michigan is only 10th out of 14 teams in the conference in KenPom, sure, but they've lost to two of those four teams below them and now sit dead-last in the conference standings. A program that had an active streak of five consecutive Sweet 16 appearances only a couple seasons ago and made the NCAA Tournament 10 of 11 seasons is going to miss the tournament for the second straight year and this time around, they were eliminated from contention in December. 

Michigan feels like a team dead in the water. Maybe they can find a way to turn it around, but it is not trending in the right direction to say the least. If they don't, the fanbase's ire will only grow and calls for Juwan Howard's removal as head coach will escalate. Their next opportunity to turn the narrative around and prove this was rock bottom is Saturday when Iowa comes to town, one of only three games that Torvik favors them to win the rest of the season. That game is scheduled for 5:00 PM EST and will be broadcast on FS1. 

[AFTER THE JUMP: Box score]

Comments

JR3410

January 24th, 2024 at 12:50 AM ^

Warde lucking into Harbaugh pulling off one of the greatest turnarounds in college football history will convince him to give Juwan more time.  It would be absolutely foolish to expect a similar turnaround for the basketball program, but that is what he is going to do no matter how this season finishes.  

snarling wolverine

January 24th, 2024 at 11:27 AM ^

When Warde was hired, Harbaugh was the football coach, Beilein the men's basketball coach, Bakich the baseball coach and Hutchins the softball coach.  He couldn't have inherited a stronger situation.

Now, three of these four are gone and it's looking like we've hired downgrades to replace them.  The fourth (Harbaugh) may be gone within days.

And that's not even getting into the hockey mess, when he sat on the Pearson report for months until the Regents forced him to act.

It's incredible to me that Warde still has fanboys posting here.

dragonchild

January 24th, 2024 at 12:27 PM ^

Well TBF Hutch retired and Beilein was burned out by college BB in general. I can’t blame him for those.

There is a cult here that says everything good is thanks to Warde and everything bad is not his fault (which is classic cult worship), but even a broken clock is right at times. No one thought Howard was a bad hire.

I think Warde needs to go but it’s for stuff like sitting on the Pearson report. And yes I expect him to sit on this too long, because all he ever does is sit on stuff.

Carpetbagger

January 24th, 2024 at 2:41 PM ^

I thought we could do better than Howard. However, I was more than willing to give it a chance. Guy was the most cerebral of the Fab 5 and parlayed his talent, physical gifts and smart play into a 20 year career. Then went into coaching.

After 30 years of seeing how it's done, he either didn't learn the right lessons or he's just a bad fit for this job. Either way he shouldn't have made it to this year.

RibbleMcDibble

January 24th, 2024 at 3:56 PM ^

Juwan Howard was brought in to be the coach of Michigan in the pre-NIL era. His reputation, NBA connections, etc. were supposed to level the recruiting playing field when it came to competing against the bag schools. 

Now that NIL is the norm and Michigan doesn't do PtP, he can't get the talent and might not have the coaching acumen to make up for it. 

Its unfortunate. 

Medic

January 24th, 2024 at 1:47 AM ^

Narrator: They will not, in fact, turn it around.

 

Time to put Dutcher's agent on speed dial when this season ends.

Yes, I realize the optics of him replacing Howard look bad. No, I don't care. 

OC Wolverine

January 24th, 2024 at 2:16 AM ^

In previous seasons, a few times each season I will see the headline for post-game article before I got a chance to watch recorded game later that day during West Coast evening hours.  Even when Michigan lost, I would be disappointed that the I could not watch recording without knowing score.

This season, every time I unintentionally find out score from main page, I am thankful to have saved myself from watching another poor showing from this team.  And the last time I did watch a game was when I found out they beat Ohio State.

Not that many years ago, I used to look forward to basketball season possibly even more than football season.

Tex_Ind_Blue

January 24th, 2024 at 3:38 AM ^

This sounds embarrassing. I have not watched any of the games, but if they are playing the way it is described, that's not a good look for a program like Michigan. The players and coaches need to right this ship, and it should start in earnest.

BlueTimesTwo

January 24th, 2024 at 9:49 AM ^

I have watched a few games, but it is not entertaining basketball.  It is a painful watch, and I don't see signs of it getting better.  If Juwan was not a legend at Michigan, I don't think he would still be around.  It would be very on-brand for Michigan if we can't keep Harbaugh but bring Juwan back for another season.

bronxblue

January 24th, 2024 at 7:04 AM ^

Yeah, I saw about 5 minutes of this game at the start and just skipped the rest.

I assume Warde will give Howard a chance this off-season to stick around if he massively overhauls the team and his coaching staff, but I'm not sure it makes any sense.  The difference between this team and even last year's squad is vast and seems to go beyond any one factor that can be fixed.  I wouldn't be shocked if Howard decides to "move on" with a healthy goading from others to save face, but I expect a new HC next season.

njvictor

January 24th, 2024 at 8:18 AM ^

This team has enough talent on it to be better than it is. That is on coaching, development, and motivation that there has been an extreme lack of under Juwan

Hensons Mobile…

January 24th, 2024 at 11:08 AM ^

Yeah, Dug has talent (when he's allowed to play). Otherwise this is a collection of role players who aren't even being coached to their low-ceiling potential. Nkamhoua might be the exception. He's probably maxing out his ability here.

Roster construction is also to blame. The guards are Dug, Burnett, and Llewellyn. Of those, Dug is the only ball handler.

dragonchild

January 24th, 2024 at 8:25 AM ^

astonishingly wide 17.5 point Vegas line

The only thing astonishing about the line was how narrow it was.  No one here looked at that line and thought Michigan would lose by less than 20.

I'm not a gambler, but if anyone here was, last night was the night to make some money.

Durham Blue

January 24th, 2024 at 9:40 AM ^

The team looked pretty good over the first handful of games.  They gave a top 10 Memphis squad a scare, and could've easily won that game.  The internal strife with Sanderson really killed any momentum the team had.  And that is completely on Juwan.

Michigan losing by 30 points is never acceptable.  I don't care that Purdue is ranked #2.  The team has enough talent to keep the game semi-competitive at least into the second half.

This ship is taking on water faster than it can be emptied out.

AlbanyBlue

January 24th, 2024 at 10:34 AM ^

Michigan basketball in the years before Beilein: hardly even watchable.

Michigan basketball once Beilein got settled: must see TV and shoulda-been National Champions

Michigan basketball now: hardly even watchable, plus crappy off-court incidents.

✳️☆JACK☆✳️ on X: "@Bornakang My mans seems to do a whole lot of nothing. 😂  https://t.co/WyxUHJ1aXH" / X

Don

January 24th, 2024 at 10:59 AM ^

I feel bad for Juwan. There's no doubt that he loves Michigan as much as any Michigan coach has, but right now the situation is bad, to put it mildly.

The risk of hiring alumni heroes as head coaches is that it's considerably more difficult to make a change if a change is necessary.

dragonchild

January 24th, 2024 at 12:41 PM ^

Thing is we’ve seen him develop players and pick apart opposing schemes and this team isn’t lacking in ability. Everything needed for a deep tourney run is there on paper, including an HC who can coach.

For some reason he’s lost the team and it’s times like these it’s a serious problem that Michigan’s MO is to lock down the flow of information like they’re a gorram fascist police state.

maizedNblued

January 24th, 2024 at 2:27 PM ^

Ehhhh - other teams have caught on to our gimmicky NBA quick hitters - you need to have a fundamental offensive flow and a firm understanding of everyone's role and what they can positionally do. When I see Cheddar and Jace do 2-man action on the open side of the floor, that is a serious problem because neither of them can create, shoot or rim run. The fact that they were put into that position is a strategic issue - this happens too often which tells me there is very little structure and players are given too much freedom to operate.

uminks

January 24th, 2024 at 11:14 AM ^

We are now bottom feeders in the conference. It will take years to dig out of this hole. I probably will not watch a another game this season. I always looked forward to following the BBALL team but it's just so bad.

SDskyjammer

January 24th, 2024 at 11:42 AM ^

It is painful to compare & contrast the turnaround of UM football to UM men’s basketball.

UM football’s legendary development of & change in culture has been awe inspiring. Athlete focused teaching/coaching. Coaches-staff-players laser focused on “..the team, the team, the team…”  A defensive strategy that was/is cutting edge & relentlessly disruptive. Offensive strategy that was balanced & did whatever was needed to put points on the board. 
It was inspiring to see how the coaching staff constructed a championship roster by recruiting, retaining, developing, & transferring in players who fit the schemes & culture created by the coaching staff. 

VS.

UM men's basketball team devolution has been demoralizing (understatement). A mystifying roster of players who appear to have no chemistry or structure for working together as a team. Whatever we enjoyed as a consistent Sweet Sixteen or better championship pursuing teams in the latter Beilein years has disintegrated into a bottom feeding/dwelling team. Effort is variable. Leadership within the team is hard to see. Player development into a team structure & strategy appears lacking. Where's the cohesion-synergy that you see in winning teams?

HAIL 2 VICTORS

January 24th, 2024 at 12:05 PM ^

This is all Seth's fault getting me excited after talking about that Marquette scrimmage when Michigan went toe to toe and scored at will in what was a 122-120 finish however the minutes in the halves were played.

Fools Gold once again when I watched the St. Johns game and thought this was a 4 seed in the tournament.  

I am still huffing off the fumes from the 2023 Michigan Football National Championship bag.

I MISS THIS:

Coach-beilein GIFs - Get the best GIF on GIPHY

UofM Die Hard …

January 24th, 2024 at 1:33 PM ^

Its just purely awful basketball all around

I hate not wanting to watch, I hate not wanting to pull for Juwan, I hate not giving a shit...but this is where the program is right now.  Allowing this to happen one more year is a crime against basketball. 

 

Dwarrior

January 24th, 2024 at 6:04 PM ^

I’m happy that our post game synopsis author doesn’t have to concern himself with those on this site that would NEG you for such astute commentary such as the one I pulled from this column  “At this current moment, Michigan is the laughingstock of the Big Ten. A once-mighty power of the league getting literally dunked on by the 12th or 13th best player on the opposing roster.” I’ve posted much the same commentary over the course of this season to only get downvoted by some of the last Juwan, or program hacks around. Michigan, with its rich tradition, and unmatched reputation, and resources, should never be cellar dwellers in a conference as long as teams like Rutgers, Nebraska, Penn St, Iowa, Maryland, and Northwestern are in it. To currently be sitting in last place speaks to this embarrassment (laughingstock).