Michigan 82, Florida State 80 (OT) Comment Count

Ace


Via Diehard Sport

The first half confirmed everyone's worst fears. Michigan couldn't handle Florida State's size on either end of the floor, repeatedly getting caught in mismatches defensively while failing to get to the rim offensively. The Wolverines trailed 37-27 at the break, and a 6-0 FSU run to start the second half had the game on the verge of blowout territory.

Michigan gradually worked their way out of the 16-point deficit, however, thanks to three things: John Beilein's defensive adjustments, Mitch McGary rounding into form, and Nik Stauskas leaving no doubt regarding the identity of this team's go-to scorer.

It started defensively, as Michigan switched from playing exclusively man-to-man in the first half—allowing FSU to exploit their significant size advantage—to a brief dalliance with the 2-3 and a full-blown love affair with the 1-3-1, which led to seven second-half turnovers and got the offense going in transition. It also allowed Caris LeVert, who was attacked repeatedly on the interior in the first half, to become a disruptive force at the top of the zone; he was credited with two steals and generally wreaked havoc defensively.

McGary finished with 14 points and 12 rebounds (7 offensive) with three assists and two blocks, and aside from some trouble finishing at the basket (6/15 from the field) he looked like the McGary of last season's NCAA tournament, crashing the boards with aplomb, affecting shots at the rim, and even leading the fast break. He even tallied an assist with a behind-the-back pass in transition that bounced twice before reaching Stauskas, who calmly sunk a three to cut the Seminoles lead to six; naturally, the fast break opportunity came off a McGary steal.

Then there was Stauskas, who finished with a career-high 26 points despite shooting just 7/16 (3/8 3-pt) from the field. After forcing some questionable perimeter shots in the first half, Stauskas found his rhythm in the latter stanza by repeatedly attacking the basket and taking contact—he finished 9/12 from the line. When Michigan found themselves down by two with 11 seconds to play in regulation, John Beilein entrusted Stauskas to make a play, and his trust was rewarded: Stauskas declined a high ball screen from McGary when he saw an opening, drove hard to the baseline, and finished with a layup to send the game to overtime.

Stauskas and Glenn Robinson III, who had a relatively quiet game otherwise, led the way in the overtime period. Stauskas buried a three and added four points from the charity stripe, while Robinson sunk two pull-up jumpers to account for 11 of Michigan's 13 points in the extra period. The Wolverines had to sweat out a desperation heave after Derrick Walton missed two free throws with a chance to ice the game; while FSU's prayer hit the backboard (ack!) it harmlessly bounced well wide of the rim.

The concerns brought forth in the first half still stand, of course; Michigan has traditionally had trouble with very big teams, and Florida State was no exception. The fact that they adjusted so well in the middle of the game this early in the season, however, cannot be ignored; it's entirely possible that the Wolverines just stumbled upon their ideal defense going forward. McGary is doing better than anyone could've reasonably expected while playing his way into shape, Stauskas has taken the mantle as the team's go-to scorer, and a young team showed plenty of fight when they could've simply folded. We may look back at the second half as a critical turning point en route to another special season.

First, however, Michigan must get past Charlotte on Sunday at 6:30 EST to take home the Puerto Rico Tipoff title.

Comments

San Diego Mick

November 22nd, 2013 at 8:56 PM ^

Charlotte, which used to be UNCC, North Carolina Charlotte, upset us in the 1977 NCAA Elite Eight, had we won that game, I think that would have been our first championship.

We need to exact revenge in a cruel way 36+ years later, I'm still angry about that loss, let's do this!!!

jmblue

November 22nd, 2013 at 9:06 PM ^

Gutty win that could be nice for our tourney résumé.  Very interesting to see the 1-3-1 return - we very rarely used it last year and it seemed to backfire when we did, but this time we really executed it well.  

AlwaysBlue

November 22nd, 2013 at 11:28 PM ^

I remember JB pretty much saying they couldn't run it last year...lack of practice and/or effectiveness. Last season they would have been trying to do it (to start the season) with Morgan, Hardaway, Burke and two freshmen. Tonight he said only Walton lacked experience in that defense (though he complimented him).

MaizeyBlue

November 22nd, 2013 at 9:17 PM ^

With Caris running the top of that 1-3-1 it looked really good.  I'd love to see another 'bigger' guy running the baseline.... Irvin?  With truly how effective that was we might being seeing it a lot more.  

A nice win tonight against a probable tournament team, great to see the team make that comeback without Burke and Hardaway to go to down the stretch!  Hope to close it out sunday, and then finish this non conference schedule strong!

Ace

November 22nd, 2013 at 9:26 PM ^

I thought Walton did a very nice job running the back end of the 1-3-1, actually. That spot requires a player who's quick enough to cover the entire width of the court, and Walton certainly fits the bill; McGary being smack in the middle of that zone makes it tough to exploit any size issue underneath. Also, Walton's displayed a knack for grabbing defensive rebounds, which is an unexpected bonus.

MaizeyBlue

November 22nd, 2013 at 10:05 PM ^

Agreed, and the defensive boards were great and a bonus.  I know we heard a little big about Irvin being a defender early in his career, and just thought it might be interesting to see another 6'6" guy, still pretty quick closing out on those corner 3's,

That said, I'm no basketball mind at all, just seems like all that length could be used in some sort crazy defense.  The non conference should have us tested for big ten play!

 

Shop Smart Sho…

November 22nd, 2013 at 9:27 PM ^

Which is why I would love to see them run the 1-3-1 with the "big" lineup out there.

Caris up top and Irvin on the bottom.  Stauskas, McGary, GRIII across the middle.  That has the potential to absolutely destroy teams.  I'm assuming he hasn't put that group on the floor together yet and wants to save it for the B1G, unless he needs it for Zona or Duke.

CoachParker6

November 22nd, 2013 at 10:03 PM ^

I think it will be a recurring theme for us this year, struggling against teams with great length coupled with athleticism.

The awesome thing Is that we clearly have a roster that will be much, much better in February then it is right now.

Coach B it was crazyyyyy

WolvinLA2

November 22nd, 2013 at 10:21 PM ^

Man, Stauskas is good. He was cold shooting (for his standards), even from the stripe, and he still had 26. If I were an NBA scout I'd STAY THE FUCK AWAY FROM HIM GODDAMMIT!

Ty Butterfield

November 22nd, 2013 at 10:38 PM ^

Lots of weirdness in this thread. Michigan started out bad, adjusted and got a huge early season win. Can't we all just get along?!

robmorren2

November 22nd, 2013 at 11:09 PM ^

I see a lot of parallels between THJr & Stauskas. When Tim would be aggressive and not settle for only 3's, he was a very good player. Too many times he'd settle for jumpers and disappear in the offense. Nik is the same way. If he can stay aggressive game-to-game, he could be better than Tim. I think the light might have gone on for him in the last few games, as he realized that he can get easy points just by getting in the lane and drawing contact. With his shooting ability well known, no defender wants to be the guy that gets reamed for letting him get a good look at a 3. That creates a perfect opportunity to shot fake and drive right into the heart of a defense. From there, the options are dunk, double clutch (which he's done several times lately), draw a foul, or drop it off to Mitch. That's Michigan's #1 weapon right now. Stay aggressive Nik.

Tom Pickle

November 22nd, 2013 at 11:42 PM ^

I think tonight's use of the 1-3-1 was the perfect scenario to break it out. Although I have a bit of a different take on it than some of you guys. I don't know if this was Michigan finding itself a defense that they will use with much more frequency than they did tonight. I don't know if it should all of a sudden be the primary defense to run, but that it's the perfect defense to pull out for short stretches in a game where you try to discombobulate the opponent a bit in hopes for a few turnovers or at least forcing them into some bad possessions. It may very well be Michigan's most effective defense and the one that best fits the personnel, but (to make a totally absurd comparison) I feel it's almost like when Rocky fights right-handed the entire fight and then has the opportunity to switch to southpaw to try to throw Apollo Creed for a loop. There will be games where it doesn't need to be used, but it's a nice ace to have up your sleeve in case you're desperate for a few stops.

I think overall it's a better weapon in these types of games or in the NCAA tournament where there is less time to scheme and practice against one team and less familiarity with an opponent as well. I wouldn't be too upset if we didn't see Michigan run it much in conference play.

robmorren2

November 22nd, 2013 at 11:52 PM ^

The big problem with zone is rebounding. However, we suck at rebounding anyway (save McGary). I love the 1-3-1. In man-to-man defense Nik has a hard time keeping people in front of him, Caris gets pushed around, and we lack a shot blocker at the rim. In zone we utilize the length of Nik, Caris, and GR3. The biggest drawback would be that it exposes McGary to be attacked and he could draw quick fouls. I don't think you can pull that off with JMo/Horford in there. But with GR3, Mitch, Nik, Caris, and Walton Jr it is a very, very nice looking defense. I think we could blitz a team like IU with it.

PAproudtoGoBlue

November 23rd, 2013 at 1:41 AM ^

Impressed with the come back W.  Obviously the 3-ball gives us a chance to come back from 14-16 down but I think the overall poise these guys show is the real advantage.  It clearly stems from Beilein down to his players and you can tell they are coached by one of the best.

Otisthebigdog

November 23rd, 2013 at 7:15 AM ^

The enforcement of the hand check fouls this year will require most teams to run more zone D. Love this team. Watch out in about 6 weeks when GR111 gets comfortable in the half court offense.

True Blue Grit

November 23rd, 2013 at 7:32 AM ^

The grit they showed in coming back from the big deficit in the 2nd half will pay dividends down the road I think.  Also, the defense looked much better down the stretch.  It also seems the team's identity is starting to come forward, with McGary and Stauskas emerging as key guys.  I thought we were dead in this game with FSU's size not being matched by Beilein.  But I've given up trying to out guess the Coach.  In Beilein we trust!

97 was so long ago

November 23rd, 2013 at 8:02 AM ^

Could end up being pretty damn good. Free throws need to be addressed along with help defense when in man to man. The gritty comeback was nice, but these slow starts have to stop.