Snips, Fingernails, And Spartan Dawg Trails Comment Count

Brian

26752637568_147817c8b4_z

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

I still don't believe in Zavier Simpson.

I do not believe that Simpson explored the theoretical upper reaches of the backboard as he flipped up a Layup In Name Only over Dutch windmill Matt Haarms. I don't believe that ball survived re-entry and went through the basket. I don't believe that he just got Carsen Edwards so mad he wanted to fight Muhammad Ali Abdur-Rahkman's chest, one day after he outplayed Cassius Winston for the second time, in his fourth game in four days. I don't believe that a guy who attempted six twos in his first nine games is ripping down the lane so frequently that he turns John Teske into a dunk machine and then legitimately earns… this. This big-ass mood.

Try doing that in any situation you may encounter. Actually, don't. You will die. Zavier Simpson walks the earth still except he doesn't because none of this happened and he does not exist.

I know I have seen all of this with my lying eyes. I have seen four-foot-two Zavier Simpson make 57% of his twos, and not believed a damn one of them. Zavier Simpson does not care about this. He is busy eating keratin.

I'll tell you what I believe. I believe Zavier Simpson's dad literally fed his son big heaping bowls of fingernails he'd cadged from local beauty schools, homeless shelters, morgues, Greek restaurants, and hospitals. I believe he did not distinguish between finger- and toenails, and sometime mixed in cat claws, which are also keratin. I believe this explains Simpson's lack of stature and general approach.

Once I have believed this—once I have envisioned the great heaping piles of milk-soaked nails that do not even soften like Grape Nuts™ eventually do—I can begin to cope. I envision the great piles going into Zavier Simpson's belly, and then I can start to interpret recent events as reality. It even makes a certain amount of sense: the great bezoar lurking in his gut, simultaneously restricting and driving him. The gradual assimilation of the collected protein into his self. The assembled wisdom of various people who'd had their fingernails shorn from them flowing into him, subliminally. The spooky ability to jet into the lane and to the basket and to flip up some crazy bullshit that goes in anyway, derived from the memories of every guy in rec specs at the YMCA.

Does it make sense? No. Does it make more sense if Zavier Simpson is sort of a man and sort of a toenail golem? God no. BUT ALSO YES.

---------------------------------------------

The John Beilein era at Michigan is nothing if not a continual stream of people exclaiming "who is that guy?!" And "why is he so good?!" Simpson is its latest and least likely focus. Beilein turning a 6'6" sniper into a lottery pick is, in retrospect, so obvious as to be boring. Of course Nik Stauskas. Of course Tim Hardaway Jr. Of course Caris Levert. 

But I must confess to you, reader, that several times over the past two years I have expressed frustration in our MGoSlack by wondering why Beilein recruited a radically undersized point guard who can't shoot, like, at all.

This critique still stands! Simpson has not hit an off the dribble jumper all season. He's one of the most implausibly listed-at-six-foot players in the country. He's a 50% FT shooter. His three-pointer looks like it was dragged from a James Naismith instructional manual. And he is the alpha dog on a top ten team.

Beilein achieved this in the usual way: by admitting something isn't working and changing it. When he arrived at Michigan, he barely used ball screens and ran a 1-3-1. He evolved, and got to a Final Four. When his defenses fell apart in the aftermath of changes to the charge rule, he admitted he would never be an elite defensive coach and brought in a specialist; when that specialist left he brought in another one.

Possibly by accident he also brought in an elite defensive player for the first time in his career. I don't know if Beilein was making a stylistic choice or simply acknowledging that MSU had won Cassius Winston's recruitment when he suddenly abandoned his pursuit of Winston and scooped up Simpson in a whirlwind weekend. I don't know why Simpson was singled out as the backup plan when he is in many ways the platonic opposite of a Beilein kind of player. But he was, and collectively they made it work. Michigan can give up some shooting from the one when Simpson inflicts this kind of pain on the point guards of four of the Big Ten's best offenses:

  • Jordan Bohannon, Iowa: 11 points on 16 shot equivalents, 3 TOs, 82 ORTG
  • Glynn Watson, Nebraska: 10 points on 12 shot equivalents, 2 TOs, 85 ORTG
  • Cassius Winston, MSU: 11 points on 12 shot equivalents, 1 TO, 102 ORTG
  • Carsen Edwards, Purdue: 12 points on 18 shot equivalents, 2 TO, 77 ORTG

The rest of the team of course has a major hand in this. MAAR in particular was often tasked with running around after Edwards and tracking Winston. But that latter was because Michigan matched Simpson up on Miles Bridges for about ten minutes. Bridges could do nothing except jack up contested 18-footers against a man nearly a foot shorter than him.

Defense is this team's backbone. Nebraska went 1/20 for a stretch in the first half and it didn't feel like a fluke. Zavier Simpson is the first line of defense, and his mood is contagious.

25730438977_c82ce8a9ac_z

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Nobody's talking about who's tough anymore. Because everyone knows. Soak Michigan in milk all you want, they're still nails.

BULLETS

Brackets. Lunardi has M as a 3 in Wichita against Bucknell and then TCU or a play-in winner. I wouldn't take much more than the seed from that—Lunardi again put together an impossible matchup since one of the play-in teams is UCLA. He also puts protected seed Wichita State in… Boise, while Michigan plays in Literal Wichita. Jerry Palm has been dogging Michigan all year and still has them as a four, in San Diego. He seems to rely heavily on the NCSOS number the committee head publicly crapped on, so hopefully he's out of touch and not accurately reflecting an out of touch committee.

Despite the above, Detroit should be within reach now for Michigan. You can't do a blind resume comparison between M and MSU because it's immediately apparent who is who, but it seems fairly clear that Michigan now has the better collection of wins. Tourney teams and bubble-ish ones:

  • MSU: UNC(N), Notre Dame, Nebraska, Maryland, @ Maryland, Penn State, Purdue
  • Michigan: UCLA, @ Texas, @ MSU, OSU, Maryland, @ Maryland, @ Penn State, Nebraska (N), MSU (N), Purdue(N).

Seven losses vs four is MSU's main argument, and that's fairly hollow since the only road games they played against a tourney-or-bubble Big Ten opponent were an OSU loss and a Maryland W that M matched. MSU did not play at Purdue, Michigan, Nebraska, or Penn State. Michigan has a better Q1 record at 6-5 than MSU's 3-4. Hopefully that's judged more important than Michigan having one loss in Q2 (LSU) and one in Q3 (Northwestern). RPI thinks it is; Michigan passed MSU in it after the Purdue W.

Also hopefully some RPI jitter slides PSU into the top 75 again—they're 76th. Root for South Carolina, Utah Valley, and Stanford to lose ASAP in conference tourneys.

FWIW, both Xavier and Cincinnati are approximately equidistant from Nashville, Pittsburgh, and Detroit, so the committee has three protected seeds in the Midwest that don't really care where they're placed (those teams and Purdue) and two that really do (MSU and M). It seems to make the most sense to put both M and MSU in Detroit and figure it out with the other teams.

 38771577980_a013bb1a25_z

[Campredon]

BY GRUNDLAR'S HAMMER. Who is Jon Teske and why is he so good?

Teske had a breakout game in the final, finishing with authority and playing his usual brand of excellent defense. He also hit a couple of jumpers. We suspect those are good-ish shots already; additional confirmation is nice. 14 points on 10 shot equivalents and a couple assists was good for a 123 ORTG… on 30% usage.

Simpson set up a number of his points but he finished with authority when given the opportunity—see above. He's not Mo, but he provides other things.

I've said it before but I think the C spot will be just fine even if Wagner departs. Austin Davis got a few minutes in the first half and D-ed up on Haas pretty well, forcing him into a tough hook. (That he hit, naturally.) There is a lot of speculation that roster attrition might include Davis, but I think that's really really wrong. Never give up on an underclass big.

Tired legs and open shots. Michigan didn't look particularly fatigued at any point during the tournament—their defense remained top notch for the duration. There was a hint of the four-games-in-four-days during the first half of the Purdue game when good shooters got a series of wide open looks and missed seemingly all of them. Purdue elected not to switch screens and demonstrated why they'd been switching in the first place; Michigan failed to take advantage.

The hard hedge. Fortunately, Purdue was not murderous death Purdue. Michigan had a lot to do with that, preventing even a look from three on most possessions by hedging harder than they have all year. Many, many complaints from the past five years of Michigan basketball have been about the hard hedge getting guys in foul trouble and forcing rotations that Michigan wasn't very good at. This year the hard hedge has been an erratic way to apply pressure at the end of shot clocks; teams that aren't seeing it frequently are much worse at exploiting it. It's a nice changeup. In this game it was the game plan because Michigan was desperate to prevent the rain of threes, and it worked.

What are you doing, Tom. Jaren Jackson Jr played two more minutes than Gavin Schilling and Kenny "Kevin" Goins. He was off the floor for 40% of the game. What are you doing, Tom? Are you panicking and throwing in weird guys in case it works? It kind of seems like it, Tom.

Speaking of Izzo, is there anything more perfectly Izzo than opening up his presser with complaints about Simpson and Matthews hitting threes and the late friendly roll for MAAR? Michigan hit 36% from deep against MSU. Their season average is… 36%. Izzo did not note that Robinson and Wagner combined to go 2/10 on mostly excellent looks. He did not note that Bridges hit a 35-foot prayer at the end of the shot clock.

Close. Michigan's first turnover against Purdue came with about 12 minutes left in the game. They had a total of five.

Retroactive NYC defense. There has been a lot of pushback from access-merchant types in the media about putting the tournament in New York. These are largely based on the fact that Michigan has a ton of alumni in NYC and packed MSG. I'm obviously in favor of that. Accelerating the schedule remains a bad decision, one Delany copped to in public. If the Big Ten can play in NYC at the usual time they should do so semi-regularly. It's not worth the hassle otherwise. A 20 point loss at Nebraska says hi.

Poole: argh. Maaaaaan was that a rough four days for Jordan Poole. His decision making was mostly fine, it was just that whenever he took a shot it hit the underneath of the backboard. I choose to believe that the aura of MSG overwhelmed him, and since Michigan's not going to be in the NIT it doesn't matter. Yeah.

The greatest tweet in history. Not knowing this has been killing me for years.

The second greatest tweet in history.

Twitter: good sometimes.

Comments

Michigan Arrogance

March 5th, 2018 at 3:54 PM ^

I agree with this assessment - they are not dependent on the 3 and we saw that this weekend. We don't have trouble against a classic MSU team and they are the most talented in the country (it's not like the 90s when Duke/UNC/KU/UK would just out talent you b/c you never played a team with that talent level before the tourney). And it's all b/c the defense is flat out ELITE and consistently getting better.

I only have 2 concerns and I'd think that UMHoops and/or MGoBlog will address them next week:

  • What let Purdue bomb us by 92? I know they have a great shooting team but were they hitting tough 3s more than usual? Were weird guys (#Izzo) hitting them too? can a team repeat that?
  • Can a team do to us what we did to Purdue yesterday- that is, run shooters off the line like whoa and let the bigs get their 2s? what are the best 20 teams at limiting 3pt attempts and how can M beat that defense?

This team can survive some bad shooting halfs and still be up by a few down bown buy a few at half and I feel good about it - b/c if they do starting hitting them it like 51pts in 15mins like at Maryland. I feel like M will bloodlet, and I mean absolutely moider some decent team by 40 (like a 6 seed in rnd of 32) in this tourney if they hit 3s 1std dev above the median. In years past, if they hit 1 std dev below, I'd say they lose for sure.

I can't wait for some talking head on CBS/TNT to mention how Beilein teams go as the 3s drop and laugh at how dumbfounded they will be when M hits 34% from 3 and they win by 77-60. Or maybe they will come across an MSU type team that "bangs down low" and laugh as they trade 2's at a 40% clip for M 3's at a 35% clip.

SHub'68

March 5th, 2018 at 11:15 PM ^

were going to start falling for Purdue at half time.  I chuckled at this because this was a completely ignorant assumption that Purdue was just misfiring and not getting stifled.  Figured this was not likely to just magically change - as if M was going to drop the defensive intensity with a second straight B1G title on the line.  Not this group.

TrueBlue2003

March 6th, 2018 at 2:38 AM ^

1) Purdue shot 11-20 from three which is good but not even that good for them.

They shot 20-30 from two and while half of that (10-14) was Haas and he does that to us every time, Vince Edwards was 6-8 and the rest of the team was good too.  They also shot 19-23 from FTs.

9 of their points came in the last minute and a half when we went into foul mode so the 92 number is misleading.  Under any other circumstances (if the game is closer or not as close), they score in the mid-80s.  Which is still a lot, and UNC did that to us as well.  Purdue is the number 3 offense in the country and UNC is the number 4 offense in the country and they both had very hot shooting nights when they lit us up.  So yeah, it can happen again but probably only if an already elite offense also gets hot against us.

2) Yes, they could do that to us, but we aren't as reliant on the 3 as we typically are.  See: Zavier Simpson.  Also: Moe Wagner, MAAR, and Matthews driving the lane.  We can score in a lot of ways.

We have played some of the top 20 teams at limiting threes this year.  Nebraska is even better than M at preventing threes.  It was highly effective against us in the first meeting, obviously.  And woof, I just went back to look at that box score.  Matthews was the only one that scored in double figures.  Moe had 2 (!!) points.  We were only 17-38 from 2 as Roby just swalled everything up inside.  In the second meeting, we scorched the nets by hitting 11-23 from three!  Not sure how we got that many good looks.  Maybe I'll watch that film more closely.

Wisconsin is also 11th in the country in this stat but we shot 9-20 against them.

Hopefully we figured something out and this isn't an issue for us (as I suspect it isn't since we can score so many different ways).

Indy Pete - Go Blue

March 5th, 2018 at 1:32 PM ^

Before this season began, we knew we had one shot against the most talented Michigan State team ever on their home court. I am an optimistic fan, but not even the most blind optimist could have predicted that we would face them 2 times and crush their spirit with double digit wins both times.  Then you add in the fact that their university and their athletic department are imploding and their coach is shrinking in stature by the day - and voila - Michigan is back on top of the heap and it feels like MSU's previous successful run w/ Izzo is in the rearview mirror!

Not only did we destroy them on AND off the court, but we have them beat in the RPI and quadrant 1 win arenas as well. 

Bring on the NCAA in LCA!

stephenrjking

March 5th, 2018 at 1:39 PM ^

Preseason the talk was that MSU was going to be a monster, and the tone of the conversation was that we would have to content ourselves being at least a level below them. 

And it's not like they aren't good or talented this season as it is. They just aren't as good as we are.

I'd love to see some of the preseason stuff now. 

J.

March 5th, 2018 at 1:32 PM ^

Wichita State is the host in literal Wichita.  They can't be sent there.

As for UCLA -- not an issue.  The no-rematches thing for non-conference opponents is first-round only.  I'm not saying he's right, or that Michigan will actually get a second-round game vs. UCLA, or anything else, but it's not a violation of the bracketing principles.

The Man Down T…

March 5th, 2018 at 1:41 PM ^

"Michigan's first turnover against Purdue came with about 12 minutes left in the game. They had a total of five."

 

that's amazing and will win a lot of basketball games.  It may be the weekend booze talking but damn, I think this is a championship caliber team.  Just win 6 more.  :) 

G. Gulo of the Dale

March 6th, 2018 at 10:22 AM ^

To be precise, Michigan turned it over a bit earlier than that.  Matthews dribbled the ball out of bounds with 15:06 to go in the second half.  Nantz claimed that it was already our second turnover but then corrected himself coming out of break.

Still, nearly 25 mins. without a turnover is incredible--though we may have gotten away with one or two up-and-downs.

SlickNick

March 5th, 2018 at 2:00 PM ^

Izzo complaining about perfectly capable guys hitting open shots is classic Izzo. Yeah, maybe not the best shooters on the team...but if you aren't atleast prepared for wings/guards on a Beilein team to shoot an open look...well you lost already. Another tough week for poor Tom! 

YoOoBoMoLloRoHo

March 5th, 2018 at 2:45 PM ^

Beilein at this point. UM plays tougher D, rebounds on par and clearly has a superior offensive team. Izzo tried to position at as “luck” but I really hear him saying “I’ve got no answer when UM makes some open shots at this point ...” He knows Beilein is steadily adapting and now reloading with athletic scoring machines for next year.

ijohnb

March 5th, 2018 at 3:19 PM ^

think Izzo is just lost now, period.  The guy names his child after a former player, Mateen Cleeves, and that player is now standing trial for rape.  Like two weeks after that arrest his best team in a decade loses to Middle Tennessee State.  Devonte Davis bolts after playing 10 minutes of that game.  He lands an eye opening recruiting class (to fans and to the FBI) that proceeds to suck, loses by 29 points to Michigan, and gets ousted in the second round.  

He gets torched in an article about Payne and Appling and Walton, and really has no response to it.  His treasured player is named in the FBI investigation that is likely just the tip of the iceberg, and Michigan beats that ass, again, in route to a second BTT title that sees the f-ing Empire State Building light up maize and blue.   It is like everything Izzo thought he was and was going to be remembered for has kind of gone up in smoke in 24 months.

I am not sure if I was the only one to notice, but Izzo seemed checked out to me this weekend.  Not just against Michigan, but his aftergame interview against Wisconsin was basically like "yeah, I'm not really sure what is going on and it is kind of too late to figure it out now."  That is obvioulsy not verbatim but it is close.

I mean, unless they make a deep run...... I don't know.  I think the clock might just about be up on Izzo, and I'm not sure that is a bad thing for Michigan State basketball.

In reply to by ijohnb

NateVolk

March 5th, 2018 at 4:38 PM ^

 "It is like everything Izzo thought he was and was going to be remembered for has kind of gone up in smoke in 24 months."

 

Good observation. Image is such a big deal to him and their fans. The whole situation presents a cruel choice.  The best way for them to rescue the school's image to outsiders is to cut bait with probably the most significant figure in their school's history. By doing that they reclaim dignity and end up making the choice where sports finally took a backseat. 

The guy who made the school national. It was a yearly Mr. March watch by CBS and the media from 2000 to 2010. They'll argue anything to keep that image alive, but no one outside of the fan base is buying it any more. 

I don't think he's a bad guy. I think he got caught up in program/image over good judgment. In a way similar to Paterno.  He believes his own BS right down to the overdone "yooper" voice cadence he breaks out in interviews every now and again. Like Joe with the coke bottle glasses and his pot shots at "renegade" programs like Miami and Oklahoma.

The fact that, outside of MSU fans, very few people still buy that BS or the myth probably torments the guy beyond words. 

 

TrueBlue2003

March 5th, 2018 at 6:09 PM ^

because there is no doubt the guy has put his own interests, i.e. winning basketball games, ahead of proper player discipline and accountability.  Sure, he hasn't committed any crimes himself (I assume) and he probably did "cooperate with all investigations" but the guy has benefitted from an entire legal system rigged in his favor and likely put people at risk because of his acceptance of that above-the-law culture.

TrueBlue2003

March 6th, 2018 at 2:40 AM ^

is insane.  He's a 31 percent 3pt shooter...and shot 33 percent. Tom, we're going to need to give you a probability lesson if you think him making one was a surprise.

And yeah, Matthews hitting 2-4 is pretty good but doesn't even come close to offsetting Wagner+Duncan+Poole going 2-11.

If he's really blaming luck, it explains a lot about why his teams underacheive lately.  Maybe you should tell your players to take the good shots instead of the bad shots and you're team would be better.

mgobaran

March 5th, 2018 at 2:18 PM ^

Last year I cried when we won. I blamed it on the plane crash, how fragile life is, and how amazing life is that you can go from that brink to another in a weekend. 

And then I cried last night because I love John Beilein and everyone of his teams deserve to raise a banner. Back to back baby. This, but in that these are both emoting happiness beyond words. 

 

M_Born M_Believer

March 5th, 2018 at 2:26 PM ^

I will always maintain the mantra..... Anyone.... Anytime..... Anywhere..... BUT! A 3 seed would mean the following....... -> a 14 seed in the opening round to get our legs and game rythem back -> a 2nd round game against a 6/11 seed winner -> a Sweet 16 game against a 2 / 7 / 10 team -> That would leave a 1 game winner to the Final Four against the 1 seed, even if they make it Again, with the way the team is playing....Anyone, anytime. any place But I sure would love be the 3 seed path....

remdog

March 5th, 2018 at 2:27 PM ^

being excited about Zavier when I saw his highlights after he committed.  He's ultraquick and an elite ballhandler and passer.  So it was immediately apparent why he was Mr. Basketball in Ohio and a Beilein recruit.  And he had scored 52 in a game so I knew he could score extremely well.  But I didn't realize he had such a bad shooting technique/form.  I guess Beilein saw the positives and a highly competitive spirit - the dog in Zavier.  So he knew he might be able to work on the negatives and get a fantastic player.  I've been frustrated by all the negativity on Zavier earlier by posters here and happy Zavier has proven them wrong.

As for Poole, I'm still a huge believer.  He is in a funk but even the best go through similar spells.  And he's still learning.  It's good to see him still positive and cheering on his teammates instead of sulking due to fewer minutes.

poppinfresh

March 5th, 2018 at 2:38 PM ^

if the resumes both have pros and cons... don't you go to the old fashioned tie breaker head to head?

to win AT their place and neutral site has to be worth something.  Maybe its different if our win was at home, or if either game was close and not over with 2-3 minutes to go both times. 

both should be a 3 with us having first dibs on detroit if its there

Steves_Wolverines

March 5th, 2018 at 3:01 PM ^

I still don't get the love affair for MSU. I know the committee can and should look at the entire season, but so much has changed between November and March.

MSU was on a "huge" 13 game winning streak. Most impressive wins during that stretch:

vs Purdue by 3
@ Maryland by 6
@ Wisconsin by 5
vs PSU by 8
vs Wisconsin by 3

Their other significant wins were:
vs. ND by 18 in November
Neutral court vs UNC by 18 in November

During their 13 game win streak, they also managed these "impressive" wins:
3 point win @ Iowa
3 point win @ IU

I agree with what I read somewhere (I think ESPN), that their resume is very similar to a non-major team; a huge win total, won a few big game, but lost a lot more. Then just beat or barely beat weak teams on their way to a big win number. 

MSU may have more NBA potential on their roster than any other team. That shouldn't automatically give them a free ride to a 2 or high 3 seed. Show me why they deserve it with who they have beaten recently. Oh yeah, you can't. They lost to Michigan x2 and OSU. They beat Purdue at home. So what. We just beat Purdue on a neutral floor. 

Steves_Wolverines

March 5th, 2018 at 6:20 PM ^

I think Langford is way under-utilized, and he could be Gary Harris-esque if given the chance.

I think it looks like this:

NBA Bound 100%:
Jackson Jr
Bridges

2nd Round NBA Pick/Jumping b/w D-league until finding a home a la Stauskas and Burke, or Euroball if they don't find an NBA home:
Langford - More likely to NBA bench/D-league
Winston - more likely to Euroball

Destined for Euroball:
Ward
McQuaid

 

TrueBlue2003

March 6th, 2018 at 2:45 AM ^

Langford isn't nearly the defender Harris was. I do agree he could be a better scorer on other teams.  But not sure he has enough to be an NBA player.

I don't think there's any way WInston will sniff the NBA.  He's a terrible defender and it's hard to overcome that in today's NBA.

We'll see what his 3 pt shooting levels out to.  If he really is elite then maybe a team would take a shot on him, but he has some huge flaws.

Year of Revenge II

March 6th, 2018 at 6:09 AM ^

I disagree tepidly on Winston.  Defense can be taught, and it's more about effort and common sense than innate talent.

He has a good head on his shoulders and understands the game, so there is plenty of room for him to keep improving.  He may not sniff it, but he may make a team.  I think he has it in him.

I am troubled (for him) by his lack of winning instinct though, if that is fair.  There are too many stars on the team (MSU) and not enough smart role players, a coach who needs to retire before he becomes a laughing stock instead of a legend, but Winston has to find a way to lead them to W's in the tourney.

lippesq

March 5th, 2018 at 3:04 PM ^

Agree with all the (much-deserved) love for Z. Still makes me nervous that our alpha point guard is around a 50% FT shooter. Hope it doesn't catch up to us.

socrking

March 5th, 2018 at 4:03 PM ^

I truly truly truly do not mean this as a back handed compliment. Seems like about once a quarter Brian rolls out an absolute gem of an article. This was it IMO.

Sam1863

March 5th, 2018 at 6:20 PM ^

One thing I noticed about Simpson during this weekend's games: he has a Look. And I don't mean the puffed-chest, exaggerated swagger that he showed after the Teske atomic slam, just before CBS went to commercial.

No, I mean the cold, unblinking, emotionless stare that he has during the course of the action. It's that look of a panther that is just about to gut the wildebeast, or the assassin in a spy film who is reloading his Glock. The looks that states very clearly, "It's not personal. It's just business."

I'm looking forward to watching him take care of business.