Maryland 86, Michigan 82

Submitted by Alex Cook on

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Paul Sherman – MGoBlog

After Michigan and Maryland traded baskets in the first five minutes of the game, the Terrapins locked up the Wolverines defensively and put together one of those frustratingly common runs that seem to take U-M out of the game. Over a span of about seven minutes, Maryland went on a 17-1 run and the game was following the script of Michigan’s many blowout losses this season. For the first time all season, the Wolverines stood in after taking a big early punch and managed to erase the deficit by the first TV timeout in the second half.

That resilience wasn’t quite enough, as Maryland eventually managed enough stops late in the game to pull ahead in what was an entertaining back-and-forth second half without much defense – Maryland (1.17 points per possession) put up its best performance against a Big Ten foe in nine games on the offensive end, while Michigan (1.09) mostly kept pace until the very end. Though no losses can be considered moral victories by this time of year, Michigan still acquitted themselves far better than they had in any loss so far this season – today, they were just unable to make enough shots in the final possessions to get away with what is still a much-needed marquee win for their NCAA tournament hopes.

Surprisingly, it was Michigan’s role players leading the charge – Derrick Walton and Zak Irvin combined for just 25 points on as many shot equivalents (though Walton added five assists, six boards, and three steals). Mark Donnal was excellent against a very good center duo: he flashed his full arsenal of skills in a 20-point second half as he finished with an extremely efficient 25, two offensive rebounds, and five blocks(!) Yet again, there was a significant drop-off from Donnal to Ricky Doyle and Moritz Wagner – per SCACCHoops, Donnal was +8 in 29 minutes. Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman also turned in one of the better performances of his season with 16 points and a career-high nine assists – as a team, Michigan had 22, indicative of the Wolverines’ excellent ball movement today. Duncan Robinson was largely off all day; Kam Chatman put in some of his best minutes off the bench and hit two threes (and no other bench player scored).

In Michigan’s win over Maryland, Zak Irvin won the battle of mismatched power forwards against Robert Carter – today, it was Carter who turned in a very good performance with an efficient 17 points, six rebounds, two blocks, and a critical tip-dunk to stretch the Terrapin lead to four with under two minutes left. Three others scored in double figures for Maryland: Jake Layman (16), Melo Trimble (14) – though he didn’t play well – and Diamond Stone (13). Collectively, UMD hit on 59% of its twos, 44% of its threes, and 90% on a high volume of free throw attempts; while both teams put up high eFG% marks and very similar rebounding rates and turnover rate, Maryland scored 12 more points from the free throw line than Michigan did. Michigan hit 13 threes on the game, which kept them in it; an atypically high turnover rate prevented them from getting as many looks as they should have.

Michigan now sits tied for seventh in the Big Ten at 9-6 and finishes the season with contests against Northwestern, Wisconsin, and Iowa. Michigan needs two more wins to feel safer about a tournament bid – though if those wins are against NW and a weak first-round opponent in the Big Ten tournament, it might be dicey. Moving forward, we shouldn’t assume that the Wolverines will make it in, though as things stands right now, I think it’s more likely than not that they’ll be dancing in a few weeks.

Comments

funkywolve

February 21st, 2016 at 7:16 PM ^

Based upon what Max is doing at IU, I'm scratching my head as to why he was shown the door.  He's not all world but his numbers on the year are similar to Donnal.  That'd be a nice two headed center cause like you said, the drop off from Donnal to whoever comes off the bench is huge.

funkywolve

February 21st, 2016 at 10:55 PM ^

what the staff's reasoning was with letting Max go.  I'm guessing based upon last year they thought Doyle would be better this year but Donnal didn't really show any glimpses last year.  So you'd think they thought Doyle and someone else would be a solid rotation - I'm curious who the other player(s) is.

YakAttack

February 22nd, 2016 at 12:43 AM ^

Adidas refused to make calf sleeves big enough, with the move to Jumpman, so he didn't want to risk future circulatory issues and decided to transfer. IU is an Adidas lifer, and they already had his measurements, making for a quick transition, production wise.

TrueBlue2003

February 22nd, 2016 at 1:16 AM ^

from three.  Tough to ask for better.  The real problem is that he's not getting nearly as many open looks in B1G play because teams are prepped and have scouted.  So it's gotten to the point where he's probably a net negative to have on the court (hurts defense more than he helps offense) but we literally can't play anyone else because Caris is hurt and none of the 4's are even close to as good (Wilson, Chatman).

991GT3

February 21st, 2016 at 7:41 PM ^

an aircraft carrier at center. Without one, they cannot compete.

Also, when Michigan fans start claiming moral victories then you know the basketball program is in trouble.

Boner Stabone

February 21st, 2016 at 8:21 PM ^

Doyle has been a big disappointment this year.  I was expecting a lot more from him.  I was also expecting a little more out of Wilson and Chatman this year.  I think if Kam ever finds his shot he will be a nice fit, but Doyle needs to go to catching camp in the off season and Wilson needs more work as well.

doggdetroit

February 21st, 2016 at 9:46 PM ^

It would be nice. Michigan is probably in the NCAA comfortably with him. But I can't completely fault Beilein from moving on.

At the time, Doyle was coming off a very productive freshman season. Bielfeldt was coming off a decent senior season. It was far more likely that Doyle would make a jump in his sophomore season vs. Bielfeldt making a jump in his 5th year senior season.

It was a gamble, but I can see why Beilein made the move. Unfortunately, his gamble did not pay off. Doyle regressed and Beilfedt has gone on to be even more productive at Indiana. Beilein's only saving grace is that Donnal has finally started to live up to some of the hype.

uminks

February 21st, 2016 at 8:33 PM ^

at OSU, then we would have won. We need to beat NU and one game in the B1G tournament to make it to the dance. Who knows this team could get hot in the tournament?

mgoblue98

February 21st, 2016 at 11:08 PM ^

than failing to make enough shots at the end, I tend to think that Michigan failed to make enough defensive stops at the end...and throughout the game for that matter.

db012031

February 22nd, 2016 at 10:03 AM ^

So took away some positives and negatives about this game, as I assume many of you did.

The Positives:

 - Donnal was in beast mode today.  His outside shot was on point, he battle for position under the rim, and most importantly, he cut hard to the rim off of screens.

 - Kam Chatman look pretty solid in his 1st half minutes.  He played pretty under control, went to the glass hard and hit his open shots.  at 6'8,he gives us options at the 3 and 4, as long as he played like he did today.

 - 3 point shooting was on point today, the first time in a while

 - Passing (assists) were very good today.  I don't recall the last time we had this many assists in a game

 

The Negatives (and unfortunately these are repeated very often during the year)

- Michigan went cold the second Dakich was brought in.  Look, he is a great kid and from all accounts a great person, but he has absolutely no business being on the court in a Power 5 game, Period.  Now you may say "What other options do we have"  see my second point.

 - Kam Chatman - how in the heck after a very good 1st half performance can he NOT see the court the entire second half.  That was ridiculous.  Yes, I know the offense was huming along quite well but when Walton went out, you could have moved Irvin to the 2 and Kam could have played the 3/4 with Duncan.  It would have allowed for another passer, a guy who's shot was falling that day and would have provided some mis-matches on offense for M.  No exuse to not get some time in the second half.

Doyle - Again, great kid, great person, but he should NOT see the court the rest of the year.  How he is still ahead of DJ is really beyond me.  Yes, I know again people will be like "DJ is garbage".  But...watch the games when DJ plays the 5 as opposed to the 4.  When he plays the 5, he is much more effective on the court.  His length causes issues in the paint, he does get to the rim defensively and his actualy pretty good and tipping the ball back to his teammates, and on offense, when at the 5, he shows a pretty good flash to the paint/rim on screens.  Really, you cannot get much worse than what Doyle provides, so dear god, let DJ play some minutes at the 5.