Basketbullets: B1G/ACC Matchups, Johnson to UNC Comment Count

Ace

B1G/ACC Challenge Matchups: M Heading To Dean Dome


I guess this qualifies as a marquee opponent.

This year's Big Ten-ACC Challenge matchups were released today by ESPN's Jeff Goodman. Michigan drew one of the marquee games: they'll travel to Chapel Hill to face defending national champion North Carolina. Here's the full slate of games; dates and times are still TBD:

Northwestern at Georgia Tech
Duke at Indiana
Notre Dame at Michigan State
Miami at Minnesota
Penn State at NC State
Boston College at Nebraska
Michigan at North Carolina
Clemson at Ohio State
Louisville at Purdue
Florida State at Rutgers
Maryland at Syracuse
Wisconsin at Virginia
Iowa at Virginia Tech
Illinois at Wake Forest

This will be the first time Michigan has faced Carolina in the challenge, as well as their first trip to the Dean Dome. It's the first matchup between the two programs since a certain game in 1993 that never happened and definitely didn't end horribly for the Wolverines. The nonconference schedule is beginning to come together; M will play in the Maui Invitational, host UCLA, travel to Texas, and face Detroit at Little Caesars Arena.

The UNC squad we'll see in November will look quite different from the one that beat Gonzaga for the title in March. The entire starting frontcourt of Kennedy Meeks, Isaiah Hicks, and early NBA Draft entry Justin Jackson is gone, as are key reserves Nate Britt and Tony Bradley.

They still won't lack for talent, of course. ESPN has UNC seventh in their too-early preseason rankings. The starting guard tandem of Joel Berry and Theo Pinson returns and there's plenty of talent coming up from the 2016 and 2017 recruiting classes. In addition, they landed a major piece as a grad transfer, and it's a player Michigan fans had held out hope for...

Cam Johnson to UNC

Pitt grad transfer Cam Johnson, a 6'8" sharpshooter who would've been a great fit at the four in Beilein's system, announced on Tuesday that he'll head to UNC for his final two seasons of eligibility. Pitt coach and noted jerk Kevin Stallings restricted Johnson from transferring to other ACC programs without sitting out a year, but now that Johnson's transfer has been approved he's making a strong push for immediate eligibility:

Johnson also cited an NCAA rule that stipulates graduate transfers be allowed to compete immediately at a given school, or be completely denied the opportunity to transfer to that school. Pitt is allowing Johnson to transfer to UNC, and receive immediate athletic financial aid. And so, Johnson argued, given that he wasn’t prohibited from transferring to UNC, he should be immediately eligible there.

During a recent interview, Johnson said he graduated from Pitt with a 3.9 GPA. In his statement, he wrote that Pitt officials cited his strong academic record in their decision to allow him to transfer to an ACC school and receive immediate athletic financial aid.

Johnson has a strong case and public opinion on his side; I'd expect him to be on the court this season.

This may spell the end of Michigan's pursuit of grad transfers barring another name popping up late. Johnson was the last available player who had confirmed contact with the coaching staff. The Wolverines haven't been mentioned in connection with Illinois State grad transfer MiKyle McIntosh, who's visited Oklahoma, Oregon, and Oregon State. McIntosh appears to be a top priority for the Ducks, who were also hoping to land Johnson.

Ignas Brazdeikis Not Reclassifying

Another possibility for filling the open scholarship was having four-star Canadian wing Ignas Brazdeikis—who's at #39 overall in today's updated Scout rankings—reclassify from 2018 to the 2017 class. While Brazdeikis took that under consideration, he ultimately decided to stay in 2018, per UMHoops' Orion Sang:

Traded texts with Ignas Brazdeikis, a four-star forward in the class of 2018. Brazdeikis told me that he WILL NOT be reclassifying to the class of 2017. He also said he has no visits planned for this summer and that Michigan is "most definitely" still one of his top teams.

While Brazdeikis remains a top target for 2018, he won't help fill the hole left in this season's rotation by DJ Wilson's departure, and it's looking increasingly possible that Michigan will bank that open scholarship. This post on Michigan's post-DJ outlook from a couple weeks ago may be relevant to your interests.

Comments

nerv

June 8th, 2017 at 12:15 PM ^

That game at Chapel Hilll is going to be ugly. This roster is likely to be still looking for its identity at that point of the season.

Blue_In_Texas

June 8th, 2017 at 12:20 PM ^

That UNC game is a win-win for me. Get them great experience in a hostile environment against a top 10 team early on, and if they win, a great win for the resume. 

UNCWolverine

June 8th, 2017 at 12:27 PM ^

And there it is, the first time my two schools will have played each other in a major sport since I graduated from Chapel Hill in 2003. That said..... Go Blue!

spiff

June 8th, 2017 at 12:59 PM ^

So again this year we will have an open scholarship and have basically told a experienced upper classman that he is no longer wanted.

JB couldn't have anticipated DJ's departure beforehand I don't think, but that is why you maybe don't tell Donnal before the season that he can take a hike after his 4 years are up.

I understand Donnal's limitations, but I would much rather have him as another bullet in the chamber off the bench instead of just Teske/Davis/Livers.

ypsituckyboy

June 8th, 2017 at 1:29 PM ^

Main problem with the current roster is the Davis/Teske/Wagner situation. Neither Davis nor Teske are quick enough to guard a 4. They also wouldn't be good on the wing. Wagner faces similar issues at the 4, albeit to a lesser extent. He's also much better suited to the 5 on offense, where he can exploit speed mismatches and pull the opposing big out of the paint due to his shooting.

Many complained when Beilein took Teske and Davis and that's looking to be a legit complaint. They're just not flexible enough for modern basketball.

So if you can't play any of those three at the 4, you're left playing Duncan Robinson there. Unless Robinson's defensive prowess grows by leaps and bounds, that's not good...at all. Consequently, I think we're going to be seeing at least 20 mpg from Livers next year. His development could drastically raise or lower the ceiling of the 17-18 team.

 

 

TrueBlue2003

June 9th, 2017 at 2:58 PM ^

we can and almost certainly will play Moe at the Fo for 10-15 minutes a game.  He's still a liability on defense at the four but not as much as he is at the five and not as much as Duncan is.

So I think we run a PnR with Davis/Teske rolling hard to the basket (can't pick and pop) and if they collapse to help on the big, kick for corner three or Wagner on the wing, and if we need an iso, we can still run through Wagner at the 4 as our best creator.

That should (if Teske/Davis can be solid defender/rim protector and at least a decent enough finisher to be a threat in the PnR) be a good lineup against big-ish teams/teams we need to do a better job of rim protection since Wagner can't do it.

Livers is a bit of a wildcard. Not expecting much of him as a young big, but if he can provide 10-20 useful minutes as a 3 and D guy, that would be huge as it would allow Duncan to remain a matchup-only offensive spark and would put less pressure on Teske/Davis to have to be ready for 15-20 min.

kevin holt

June 8th, 2017 at 4:43 PM ^

So Johnson didn't want to come to Michigan where he had guaranteed eligibility to play immediately and preferred somewhere he might not play for a year? Cool, whatever.