I Left Part Of Me Back There, In The Heat Comment Count

Brian

3/30/2013 – Michigan 72, Kentucky 75 – 28-9, 15-3 Big Ten, season over

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Dustin Johnston/UMHoops

Trey-3-vs-Kansas[1]

same damn shot

About three hours later, I realized I was on the same damn road, passing the same damn Indiana towns with ominous overtones in their names.

I was feeling the same damn way. I wanted the miles to evaporate faster than they were, to put all that behind me, to have a stiff drink at home. Mostly I just wanted to sit on a couch and exhale until everything had left my body and I flopped over on my side, inert, until the smell of bacon revived me in a day or a week or a year.

I kept trying to do this exhalation thing, and it was not working. I spent most of the game fearing the immaculately-coifed Kentucky fan in front of me would turn around and ask me to stop breathing so hard on her neck, whereupon I'd have to explain to her husband that yes I may be making your wife's neck uncomfortably moist but you see I am trying to expel my soul which really no that's not what I'm saying oh I see I've just been punched.

We made quite a crew in section 228: me trying to not die and not exist at the same time; the lady who is mercifully tolerant of moist neck; the XXXL Kentucky fan next to me complaining that the refs were treating Stauskas like a pretty pretty princess after every possession; the two Michigan bros a few rows in front of me taking their fashion cues from Macklemore and standing after every basket to make karma-obliterating woofing noises; and the unaffiliated mother with her family on the way to spring break trying to commiserate with me about how the Kentucky fans who made up about 90% of our section were just unreasonably into sports.

It took her a while but I think she finally put me into the unreasonable bin after the teams traded dagger three pointers with a few minutes left and the sun came through the floor of Colts Location Stadium, blasting us all with a heat only she noticed.

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The boxing metaphor is inescapable. I have seen many basketball games; this one is the one that defies you to compare it to anything else. And it was specific: this was not the kind of boxing match where a Cuban with ten thousand amateur fights comes out and touches you up for twelve rounds until he's ahead on all the scorecards. This was two dudes with noses that might as well already be broken strolling out and windmilling at each other until one looks like Chernobyl… and he's the guy still standing.

Max Kellerman talks a lot about how great fighters are not like people, because when they get hit witheringly hard they don't want to dig a hole and lay down in it for a while. They instead get mad and start hammering back. This is an easy thing to feel you are capable of when not being hit witheringly hard, and pretty much the entire point of boxing is to strip this feeling from victim after victim. I have no illusions about my response to being hit like that. I will put my head in my hands, check twitter, and be nearly incapable of standing. One day I'm just going to fall over. I've made my peace with it.

Michigan—this Michigan team, this dead Michigan team—is not like that. They dug out of enough ten point holes midway through the season to demonstrate that, surely. Here every time Kentucky would threaten to pull away Stauskas would swoop into the lane or Morgan would collect a rebound and finish against Kentucky's never-ending assembly line of skyscrapers, or Robinson would nail the late momentum-shifting corner three that has become a trademark over the past month.

If Calipari had ran out to midcourt with a shovel and started whacking Morgan with it while screaming "WHY <whack> WON'T <whack> YOU <whack> DIE," this would have made total sense to everyone in attendance. Kentucky was hitting three pointers and taking zero jumpers otherwise. They rebounded 63% of their misses(!). Michigan was there, riddled with bullets but still lurching forward.

As the game went on and the temperature rose, the building knew. There is an odd shift in the dynamics of an arena once it becomes clear to everyone present that they are watching an out-and-out classic. The stakes, already astronomical, ratchet ever-higher as the imperative to not lose this game, to win this game, to have this thing in your heart forever for cold nights and funerals, reaches critical mass. I mean, what if Michigan loses in overtime to Kansas last year? It does not bear thinking about.

So Michigan executes its version of that Syracuse possession with about seven missed shots in four seconds except Jordan Morgan wills the ball in the basket with his goddamned mind, and then it's just one guy taking a bad shot that looks improbably true.

Shit.

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It was probably the guys tweeting that they were watching Cosmos and regretting that they were responsible adults with children instead of super high and watching Cosmos that put me in this frame of mind but on the same damn road I started thinking about how space was unfathomably large, cold, and empty.

We'd just exited what was temporarily the saddest Culver's in America, on the vanguard of a highway of silent maize-clad Michigan fans acknowledging each other with a sigh and a shrug at chain restaurants and rest stops. In the fifteen minutes it had taken to eat, the twilight had turned definitively into night. The sun down, I tried exhaling again. Still nothing.

You know, I was basically okay. I thought about Jordan Morgan and the Kentucky fans all screaming out defensive instructions to their players whenever Stauskas touched the ball and figured out the exact tenor of my sadness. I had been eroded in the presence of the sun, and was glad for it, but now that place was getting smaller and farther all the time.

We were an outbound comet, hoping, waiting for the next opportunity to feel the stellar wind blow.

Bullets

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[Bryan Fuller]

Jordan Morgan. Uh…

I'm not actually sure I can or want to do that. Usually those kind of things are reserved for the Cazzie Russell types but these days anyone that good exits before he can… well, I kind of want to say "program icon status" but if I say "Trey Burke" one of two images pops into your head so that's not quite right. But they're awesome and gone so fast it feels a little weird putting them in the rafters. (Being a Kentucky fan these days must be the weirdest experience in sports. Entirely new team every year.)

Watching Morgan's up and down career end with a tournament run in which he was one man trying to hold back the hordes… it does make you wonder. Morgan is the embodiment of the program's straight arrow up in the Beilein era, and he is an epic twitter troll with two engineering degrees. Save a Tyler Hansborough/Russ Smith type who is awesome but has one critical flaw in his game that prevents the NBA from swooping in on him, it's hard to think there are going to be many more deserving four-year guys.

Nik Stauskas. If that was the last game, and I'm guessing it was, he went out with a bang. I think swooping layups and rim attack after rim attack against Kentucky may perk up NBA draft executives' ears.

It is kind of crap luck that the guys Beilein turns into killers are so so good that they're two or three and out these days. As Morgan demonstrated, seniors are nice to have. You're up, Caris.

Welp. Michigan was set to win this game despite getting bombed on the boards, just as it had been ordained, but Kentucky, the #249 team in the country from three, went 7/11 behind the arc on looks that were mostly contested. If you find randomness on the street, slug it in the gut and say that's from MGoBlog.

SOFT THREE-DEPENDENT BEILEIN. That's continually the line from MSU fans. Michigan from two against freakin' Kentucky: 20/39. Michigan State versus UConn: 7/17. MSU took 12 more threes than twos. Shirtless AXE bro, heal thyself.

(Two point baskets by players who will probably return to MSU next year: 1, by Dawson.)

The NCAA tournament remains great. Hunter Lochmann probably had a stroke when he realized that absolutely no piped in music would be provided. Wait until they see a February NBA game, he thought, 'I'm Gonna Make You Sweat' is gonna make YOU sweat.

Do you know what they did during TV timeouts? Nothing. They put some trivia up on the scoreboard. There was the occasional announcement. Otherwise the commercial breaks were bands playing music and nothing else. It was amazing.

No one left at halftime, muttering about how if they can't hear "Ceiling Can't Hold Us" there's no point to sports. "Why will no one direct me to make noise?" this nonexistent person asks. "Where is my kiss cam? Are you guys even having a sporting contest? GIVE ME MY HAT SHUFFLE."

Anyway, for all the commercialism the NCAA packs into their every waking moment they have really minimized it for the event itself. The tournament is a national treasure for that reason. Michigan should emulate that instead of the ECHL.

Except for PA announcer guy. It started off poorly when he called Caris LeVert "Caress" LeVert and continued for the entire two games; even when not doing that the Colts Location Stadium PA announcer sounded like a terrible parody of a smarmy PA guy instead of a PA guy. Imagine Rob Schneider doing PA guy, and then make him worse at it. Oy.

Stagger. My one problem with the tournament setup is one I'm sure everyone shares: what is up with the game stagger in the Sweet 16? There's no reason MSU and Virginia should be going down to the wire at the same time Kentucky and Louisville are melting down Colts Location Stadium. Also you have large video boards; when game action isn't going on those should be playing other games.

Basketball of the future. Michigan wanted to force Kentucky into two-point jumpers. Nope:

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With that distribution it's a victory that Michigan only gave up 48% from two in the second half, and yes, Daryl Morey is subscribing to Calipari's newsletter.

Stats! This game created or cemented a few remarkable ones.

70%! For a below-the-rim center. John Beilein is a genius, man. Also, best offense in 11 years (shhh, don't mention the rule changes).

Dammit. I said I wasn't going to think about McGary what ifs. Impossible not to, though. Imagine Morgan bumping down to the 4 for big chunks of this game with Mitch's crazy defensive rebounding on Dakari Johnson. On the other hand…

Michigan won the Big Ten by three games was a coinflip away from the Final Four without Burke, Hardaway, and McGary. I'd say let that sink in, but it should have been doing so for weeks now and it hasn't and it probably won't. The shots Michigan took should have had them down and out since they don't recruit at a super-elite level, but instead they blew through a conference that had three Elite Eight teams. And even though they're likely to take more NBA hits this offseason, they should enter next year as one of the conference favorites. It boggles the mind.

Comments

MaximusBlue

March 31st, 2014 at 12:13 PM ^

Still a huge shot nonetheless. Can't say anything else. The only way it could have been played better is if Levert actually blocked the shot. Tip your hat and call it a day. Still hurts though...

LordGrantham

March 31st, 2014 at 12:22 PM ^

I could never be a Kentucky fan.  How could you possibly feel any loyalty or personal connection to guys who select your school for the sole reason of being able to move instantly to the NBA?  

Erik_in_Dayton

March 31st, 2014 at 12:28 PM ^

And how could you root for John Calipari, the pre-tax-indictment Al Capone of college basketball?  Yesterday was like watching a hardworking family man/woman lose the chance to buy the home of his/her dreams because a cocaine dealer swooped in at the last minute and offered more money. 

michclub19

March 31st, 2014 at 1:03 PM ^

I'm assuming you hated when Mitch McGary signed with us then?  Obviously he's dealt with inuries and stuck around, but we all expected the #2 player in the country to be gone after one, two years max, when he signed.  While loyalty and personal connection to the players may not be truly experienced, I don't think you can fault someone loyal to the school.  Unless they prove to be poor character, I do my best to support anyone who represents my school, be it one season or four.

LordGrantham

March 31st, 2014 at 3:02 PM ^

Well, your entire argument is undermined by the fact that McGary had a chance to leave after one year and didn't, but I'll also point out that there is difference between having a couple guys talented enough to leave after one year and setting up your entire program as a minor league system to funnel every single starter to the NBA after one year. 

michclub19

March 31st, 2014 at 6:18 PM ^

I may have misinterpreted your initial post.  I guess being at the game yesterday it seemed to me that many of the Kentucky fans were true UK Basketball followers, meaning they were fans of a "traditional" program, rather than jumping on the bandwagon after Calipari came in. If Michigan found themselves in a similar situation, I would hope the fans would still stay loyal to the program rather than abandoning their support.

enlightenedbum

March 31st, 2014 at 4:21 PM ^

For me, it's more that I'm pretty sure the average pickup team runs more set plays than they do.  Drives me insane, having watched the machine that is our offense.  I don't really mind the one and done thing as much as that Calipari is so transparently not teaching them anything and is getting paid millions to not do it.

Yinka Double Dare

March 31st, 2014 at 7:48 PM ^

It actually sounds like Cal realized that calling plays too much was getting in the way of the talent and he's basically just told Andrew Harrison to run the offense.  There frankly aren't that many coaches that would both recognize it and actually actively take less control over the game.  Lots of coaches are crazy control freaks.

He's still probably dirtier than dirt in a dirt sandwich though.

wile_e8

March 31st, 2014 at 12:20 PM ^

An old coworker of mine used to have a similar image taped to his door. It just popped into my mind after seeing those two images up top right next to each other.

Sopwith

March 31st, 2014 at 12:21 PM ^

from the unaffiliated mom in Brian's section should replace the Emeril line on the masthead.

Good post.  One nit Brian:  there were no "dagger threes" in this game.  A dagger three is a three that a team already in the lead makes to put the game away, more or less like a "nail in the coffin" but, you know, cooler.  If you're "exchanging" daggers, they're not daggers.   /semantic argument that no one but me cares about

bluebyyou

March 31st, 2014 at 12:25 PM ^

As sad and disappointed as I feel today, this season had a ton of meaning. It is nice to have something after a dismal football season and Michigan basketball was "it".  Such a great surprise and so much hope for the future.  I hope Hoke was watching.

We can all walk away, feeling like crap, but with our heads held high.

 

gwkrlghl

March 31st, 2014 at 12:52 PM ^

Michigan Hockey makes me want to break things because a lot of our losses just feel like apathy or underachievement. Michigan basketball with Beilein rarely ever gives me that feeling. They're almost always clawing and fighting right till the end. I mean, we were on the ropes down 7 late in the game and still fought back to the point that we were awfully close to winning in regulation (one of those last possession 3s drops instead of rimming out)

MGoManBall

March 31st, 2014 at 12:27 PM ^

I'm a little salty about the offensive they called on Levert for the arm bar. That Harrison kid used the arm bar all night and the Randle kid used it to get a bunch of space at the end of the 1st half. And Levert took a charging shoulder square in the chest and flew backwards in the 1st half. Block called.

Call offensive fouls consistently, or just get the rid of them.

CompleteLunacy

March 31st, 2014 at 3:18 PM ^

I specifically remember the announcer say Levert extended an elbow. And I remember my exact thought at the time was "what, by 2 inches? How is that any different than what Kentucky has been doing all night?"

I wasn't mad at the refs because we've all seen far worse reffing. But between that, Morgans first foul (seriously...wtf call was that) and the inexplicably unreviewable basket interference play...it's hard to not feel at least a touch salty about it. But I mean, that's a natural feeling after these close losses. You start to play the "what if" game. And it usually goes to refs because they're the ones constantly making this close calls.

freejs

March 31st, 2014 at 4:22 PM ^

I think Greg Anthony is usually surprisingly excellent (at one time, my dominant memory of him involved a hawaiian shirt and an embarassing brawl), but that was a classic example of denying reality when the replay says you are wrong. That was a terrible call. 

 

JamieH

March 31st, 2014 at 6:23 PM ^

It WAS an offensive foul on Levert.  However at that point.  Kentucky had committed about 25 uncalled offensive fouls, as they pushed off with their off arm on pretty much EVERY F'ING DRIVE, so what the hell?  Either call it or don't call it.  But don't call lit differently at each end.

Chris S

March 31st, 2014 at 12:27 PM ^

Very well-written Brian. The whack-a-morgan part had me cracking up.

I honestly don't know if I could've handled another 5 minutes. I cannot remember being this tense for a basketball game since, maybe, Pistons vs. Spurs in the Finals?

UNCWolverine

March 31st, 2014 at 12:29 PM ^

My emotional healing as a Michigan sports fan always begins with reading your post mortems Funky. Well done as usual. See/Read you in about 5 months.

go blue.....

MGoJen

March 31st, 2014 at 12:38 PM ^

I feel like I can never truly process monumental loss without an MGoColumn.  They help me to make sense of the overwhelming emotion I can never seem to put into words or organize or compartmentalize.  Even when really sad or inexplicable not-sports things happen to me and I can't process them, I find solace in old emo MGoColumns.  They are tremendously comforting even though they may have nothing to do with my current situation. Sports.

Thanks for always being able to put my crazy emotions into words and for helping me make some sort of sense of it all, Brian. For that I will always be grateful.

dcmaizeandblue

March 31st, 2014 at 12:45 PM ^

I just hope that Beilein gets a National Title before he's done. I can't imagine a more deserving coach and it's a travesty if he doesn't get one while Pitino and Calipari do.

fitty88

March 31st, 2014 at 12:52 PM ^

Slogging through other sites comments and mindless talk radio complaints about officials makes reading your well-written, and funny wrap ups all the more enjoyable. Your analysis of the building knowledge that you were watching a special game was evident even at home. That it involved such a special, TEAM made the ending that much more painful. Thanks, again, for your work

NorCalGoBloo

March 31st, 2014 at 1:05 PM ^

"I had been eroded in the presence of the sun, and was glad for it, but now that place was getting smaller and farther all the time.

We were an outbound comet, hoping, waiting for the next opportunity to feel the stellar wind blow."

Beautiful. Thanks to you and your staff for your stellar work over the season.

'til the nex trip around the sun, smooth sailing to all.

DetroitBlue

March 31st, 2014 at 1:40 PM ^

I enjoyed watching this team more than any other I can remember. I'm sad that it's over, but it was a great season. To JMo and anyone declaring early for the draft, thank you for a hell of a ride. The future is bright for the program.

victors2000

March 31st, 2014 at 1:43 PM ^

Honorable mention kinda banner, one that just displays the name of those guys we love and appreciate a cut above the rest of the guys we love and appreciate. Someone bring this up to Dave...

JimBobTressel

March 31st, 2014 at 1:44 PM ^

Great column.

Them's the breaks. Sometimes Goliath wins. You know, as mad as I want to be, Kentucky has now knocked out 3 of last year's Final Four.

M-Dog

March 31st, 2014 at 6:29 PM ^

I hate the Kentucky program and Calipari for what they are doing to college basketball.  And I hate the media for not calling them out on it.  And I hate Kentucky players for being nothing more than mercenaries.  And I hate the University of Kentucky for selling it's proud, noble soul to become the whore-house of One-And-Dones. 

But you are right, this particular Kentucky team flat out earned their Final Four.  They beat last year's National Champion, last year's Runner Up, and one of last year's Final Four teams.  All those games were dog-fights that should have caused an all-freshman team to collapse.  But they stood up to the test.

I still hope Wiscy beats them and makes them look stupid doing it, but I no longer think that's inevitable.

 

ca_prophet

March 31st, 2014 at 1:44 PM ^

... And not even much of that. The team exceeded my expectations and gave it all they had, but Kentucky hit their shots. We couldn't force them to take the long twos, so they got good shots and crushed the boards. Surprisingly, so did we, but they did it one shot better. Hell of a game. We'll see you next year. Go Blue!

readyourguard

March 31st, 2014 at 1:45 PM ^

I feel like I'm the only Michigan fan who isn't depressed this morning.  I thought this was a remarkable season and am completely at peace with the finish.  Would I rather have beaten KY?  Of course.  But this team exceeded every reasonable person's expectations, and won with class and team work.  I would be supremely satisfied if our football team duplicated Beilein's model.

********

What's the deal with Colts Location Stadium?  What am I missing?

umumum

March 31st, 2014 at 4:13 PM ^

We lost to a very good team in a great, likely memorable, game.  Just like last year with Louisville. 

The older I get, the less premium I put on winning--at least as a fan--at least in these kind of games.  Of course, you have to win alot of games to put yourself in a position to have memorable games. 

But I'd rather play meaningful/exciting games against  top programs and lose some than win every game against under-manned opponents--as the direction of football has been headed here for some time.  And I get that the BCS in partly responsible for the latter.

Mattinboots

March 31st, 2014 at 1:47 PM ^

I'm sad this season is over. But not because of how it ended. I'd be sad this season is over if we won the national championship. Even with last year's team and run, I haven't had this much fun since 2006.

AdamBomb

March 31st, 2014 at 2:02 PM ^

I have to say, as disappointed as I am with the loss yesterday, and damn did it hurt, especially the way it happened (LeVert could not have been in better position), I am very, very proud of this team. They played well beyond their expectations for this year, and we all should be very happy. 

 

It always hurts when Michigan loses, and especially when they're so close (it still kills me just thinking about last years championship game...). 

 

But, job (very!) well done, and I can't wait to step foot back in the Big House, August 30th.

Michigania

March 31st, 2014 at 2:42 PM ^

Brian,

Do you see the subliminal pattern there, in those two similar photos?  It is a COUNTDOWN for next year.... 3 - 2 - 1       Burke's #3,   Harrison's #2  ...... next year, we win the title.

The Geek

March 31st, 2014 at 2:52 PM ^

and I was really high. True story.

Like others, I wasn't upset...Didn't kick the dog or throw my beer mug at the flat screen. Just sad the season was over.

Thank you MBB 2013-2014 - Terrific season!

Go Blue!

Pinckneyite

March 31st, 2014 at 3:24 PM ^

just have to point out that it's rigged: no young fan has missed choosing the "right" hat for several years, 'cause whichever one is chosen, there's an Arby's under it. That way, Arbys gets to distribute free curly fries certificates to everyone in the winning kid's section, resulting, no doubt, in Arbys getting several customers down the line who would never have gone there otherwise. And the kid leaves Crisler happy! Just sayin'. And how we loved this team and all they did! Go Blue! The best to all of them wherever they end up. This old grad is grateful for the fun.