6 Years Ago Today...

Submitted by UNCWolverine on March 17th, 2024 at 1:20 PM

I'm sure many of us remember March Madness buzzer beaters over the years. The ones that stand out the most to me in my childhood are:

1989 - Sean Higgins putback against Illinois in the Final Four

1990 - UConn's Scottie Burrell to Tate George to beat Clemson

1992 - Dook's Christian Laettner over Kentucky

Pretty incredible that Michigan has 2 of the most famous/important buzzer beaters inside of a decade, although I guess Trey's isn't an official buzzer beater as there was still some time left. Enjoy.

LakeWylieBlue

March 17th, 2024 at 1:28 PM ^

That is what Howard teams lacked. Grit, attitude and passion. That starts at the top, we just didn't have a leader at the top. Miss coach B! Thank you for sharing.

Indy Pete - Go Blue

March 17th, 2024 at 1:29 PM ^

This was the most exhilarating moment in my sports fan life!  I had just gotten back from Vegas. My oldest son was watching the (very late) game at his grandma’s house. We called each other and screamed together for a good 10 minutes. Trey Burke made him a lifelong Michigan fan.  Jordan Poole made it a lifelong passion that we can hopefully share for decades to come. 

Hensons Mobile…

March 17th, 2024 at 1:58 PM ^

Trey in no way counts as a buzzer beater. However, I still consider it The Shot.

Poole's true buzzer beater was, in its way, nearly as important as Burke's. Both baskets put us on a path to the finals.

The missed buzzer beaters I deeply regret, in order:

1)  Franz vs. UCLA 2020. Mike Smith actually missed one that looked like time expired but half a second was put back on the clock.

2) Nik vs. Kentucky 2014. The shot would have tied it, not won it.

3) Morris floater vs. Duke 2011, second round. There would have been a couple seconds left and it was a shot to tie it.

4) Walton vs. Oregon 2017. It was the Sweet 16, not Elite Eight. Also if it had been made there would have been a second left.

XM - Mt 1822

March 17th, 2024 at 2:24 PM ^

not a buzzer beater, but 35 years ago almost to the day, rumeal robinson hit the two biggest free throws of all time.  down 1 in the national championship game, shooting 1-and-1 with a couple of seconds left in the game:  

Rumeal Robinson Hits Two Free Throws to Win 1989 Title | Michigan ...

sinks them both.  michigan is the national champion.  glorious. 

Blue@LSU

March 17th, 2024 at 3:22 PM ^

I had this SI cover taped to my wall when I was a kid. 

University Of Michigan Glen Rice, 1989 Ncaa National Sports Illustrated  Cover by Sports Illustrated

I also remember cutting out and keeping a poem that a Michigan fan sent to SI after the championship. It was set to the theme of Twas the Night Before Christmas, and the stanzas moved through the tourney, beginning with Frieder being fired and replaced by Fisher, through the Illinois semifinal game, and ending with Robinson's free throws. I can actually remember the closing lines, something like:

Bill Frieder was a dreamer, a hoper, a wisher.

But we don’t care now, because we have Steve Fisher.

I've searched through the SI archives and I can't seem to find it. 

End of story. 🤷‍♂️

Hank Hill

March 17th, 2024 at 2:24 PM ^

I was one of the lucky ones on this day. I had suffered a devastating ankle injury about a month prior to this, that ultimately required a couple of surgeries. I was about three weeks into recovery after the first, and I woke up that morning not feeling right. A trip to my doctor had quickly turned into a trip to the hospital, where what they suspected was confirmed, my entire left leg was clotted, and I had major bi-lateral pulmonary embolisms. They got me settled into my hospital room about 5 minutes after tip-off. I watched the game with much consternation, but not much outward expression, not wanting to dislodge the rather large and precariously placed blood clot that was tucked up right behind my collar bone. The “death zone” as the doctor referred to it. Once Poole hit that shot, all bets were off, and I went into full “if he dies, he dies” mode. I was yelling as much as I could with the sharp pains in my lungs, monitors beeping and buzzing, and nurses rushing to see what went wrong. My main nurse that night, from Centreville, MI, and a Sparty grad (even though we were about 1100 miles from home) was not impressed, just like I was unimpressed with their ability to crack the Syracuse zone defense in the tournament. Thankfully I pulled through, and got discharged the morning of the National Championship game against Villanova.  

mi93

March 17th, 2024 at 2:35 PM ^

Laettner shouldn't have even been in the game.  Any other player in the world gets ejected for the foot stomp on Timberlake.

He goes out, M plays Kentucky for the 1992 national title.  Woulda/coulda.

lhglrkwg

March 17th, 2024 at 2:39 PM ^

I still remember feeling like it was over when MAAR missed that layup with about 5 ticks left. Wasn't it the same guy from Houston who went 1/4 on FTs in the last :30? Dude probably still has nightmares about that

True Blue Grit

March 17th, 2024 at 3:26 PM ^

Amazing moment.  I had written this game off as a loss in that final 30 seconds.  But the Houston guy missing those two FT's opened the door.  And Poole was definitely fouled on the shot to boot.  

WolverineHistorian

March 17th, 2024 at 3:57 PM ^

Poole's shot made up for my extreme annoyance with Mr. Man-bun on Houston who was desperately flopping all game and complaining to the officials that he's been fouled every 5 seconds.  

Also for the fact that this was the very last game of the night.  It was a work night and somehow they put Michigan in the last game while all the west coast teams, who are three hours behind us, finished their games earlier in the day.  

Thank you, Poole.  And now I'm even more depressed over how awful it's gotten.