Hoops Preview: Villanova, National Championship Comment Count

Brian

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1985_villanova_logo.0THE ESSENTIALS

WHAT #7 Michigan (33-7) vs
#1 Villanova (35-4)
WHERE Alamodome
San Antonio, TX
WHEN 9:20 PM
LINE Villanova –6 (KenPom)
TV TBS

chance they use the same dang wildcat growl everyone else does: 82%.

THE US

It's all about the window. Over the course of the season, Villanova has proven themselves to be the best team in the country by a considerable distance. Over the course of the tournament, same thing. Michigan's been in some dogfights and hasn't beaten a seed higher than #6 Houston; the closest anyone's come to Villanova is 12 points and they ended their semifinal against Kansas in the first four minutes.

But if you push the window back, things get interesting. And I'm not talking about cherry-picking Michigan's win streak. Here's a Torvik slice since January 1st, when Zavier Simpson came off the bench to play 32 minutes against Iowa and established himself the starting point guard, against Quad 1 and Quad 2 teams*:

image

That's half the season—far more than half of the quality opponents—during which Villanova is a point or two better over the course of a 60-possession game. Not Vegas's 7 point gap, not Kenpom's 31% chance at winning, but damn near dead even. Big Ten Tournament Michigan—the Michigan that scored 1.1 and 1.2 PPP against the #10 and #31 defenses in the country, respectively—is a titan ready to go toe to toe with even Villanova and their holy grail offense.

Oops Sorry About Your Windshield I Don't Even Know How That Ball Got Out Of An Arena Michigan… not so much. The shooting that's barely gotten Michigan through four of five tourney games isn't going to cut it. For the love of everything good and holy, make some damn shots. Have a Stauskas seance. Whatever it takes.

*[FWIW: this skips the Northwestern L for Michigan by limiting it to Quad 2; it also skips Villanova's loss to Butler, which happened on 12/30. Since Villanova isn't going to run a zone, call it even?]

THE LINEUP CARD

Projected starters are in bold. Hover over headers for stat explanations. The "Should I Be Mad If He Hits A Three" methodology: we're mad if a guy who's not good at shooting somehow hits one. Yes, you're still allowed to be unhappy if a proven shooter is left open. It's a free country.

Pos. # Name Yr. Ht./Wt. %Min %Poss ORtg SIBMIHHAT
G 1 Jalen Brunson Jr. 6'2, 190 78* 26 129 No
KPOY #2 shoots 61/41 on big usage, has better than 2:1 A:TO.
G 10 Donte DiVincenzo Sr. 6'5, 205 63 22 119 No
Dual-threat SG is 57/39 w 20 A rate, technically bench player.
F 25 Mikal Bridges Jr. 6'7, 210 70 22 130 God no
KPOY #6 is future lottery pick. 59/44, not much in the way of assists.
F 4 Eric Paschall Jr. 6'7 250 75 18 123 No
Started 1/27 from 3, 48% since. Also shooting 64% and adding OREBs.
F 25 Omari Spellman Fr. 6'8, 255 67 18 121 God no
Stretch 5 hitting 51/44; solid 6% block rate, top 100 DREB guy.
G 21 Phil Booth Jr. 6'3, 195 61 18 119 No
Oh look it's another inside-outside threat hitting nearly 40% from 3.
G 2 Collin Gillespie Fr. 6'2", 185 28 13 125 No
Just A Shooter hitting 39%.
C 2 Dhamir Cosby-Roundtree Fr. 6'8, 195 31 12 132 Yes!
Rudy! Theo! Roy!

*[last five games minutes from Kenpom.]

[Hit THE JUMP for the rest of the preview.]

THE THEM

Welp, it's the Golden State Warriors. If we overlook Eric Paschall's 1/25 start from three on the year there is exactly one Villanova rotation player who isn't shooting at least 39% from deep, and that's freshman backup post Dhamir Cosby-Roundtree. Everyone else will murder you dead if you give them an open look, which Kansas learned, and learned, and learned, and WHAT IS TAKING SO LONG TO GET THIS THROUGH YOUR HEAD, KANSAS, in the second semi-final.

Kansas's nonsense game plan led to nonsense numbers on Saturday. Villanova took four twos in the first half, didn't shoot a free throw until 30 minutes had elapsed, and broke the Final Four record for number of threes by a whopping five. Michigan would be advised to do the exact opposite tonight. That's not going to shut off an offense that hits 59% from two, but it will prevent Michigan from scoring on five straight possessions and finding themselves even further behind, which is a real thing that happened to the Jayhawks.

Everything starts with point guard, Naismith winner, and erstwhile Michigan recruiting target Jalen Brunson. Brunson is the only Nova player to carry the kind of usage burden that might depress your efficiency, but 26% isn't extreme and is emphatically not denting Brunson's ORTG. That hovers just under 130(!) thanks to Brunson's ability to do everything well.

And I mean everything. Brunson hits 41% from deep and an incredible 61% inside the line despite creating the vast majority of his own shots. He hits 52% on non-rim twos, all of which he generates himself. He hits a post-like 71% at the rim. He catches and shoots, he pulls up off the dribble from both two and three, and he backs down opposition point guards like Chauncey Billups. He shoots 80% from the line and has a more than 2:1 A:TO ratio despite heavy usage.

All of this is elite. He gets a considerable amount of help from the shooters that surround him, but the ruthlessness with which he takes advantage of the situations he finds himself in is unparalleled.

Brunson's primary backcourt sidekick is in a Duncan Robinson situation where he's a starter in all but name. Donte DiVincenzo continues Villanova's streak of having the most ostentatiously Italian name in college basketball. Also he is a 57%/39% shooter with an assist rate not far off Brunson's. He can shoot, drive, and pass. On the bright side, his turnover rate is a little high.

On most other teams he'd be the alpha dog scraping 30% usage; here he's a third banana barely above 20. ESPN projects him as a late first rounder in 2019.

And then there's the projected 2018 lottery pick with a 130 ORTG. Mikal Bridges is a rim-and-three guy hitting 59/44 with a 7' wingspan; he's incredibly lethal as a spot-up shooter, averaging 1.35 PPP. He's equally capable running the pick and roll and, like everyone, can post up effectively. Bridges isn't much of an assist guy and could be a help defense target if Michigan would be so bold as to momentarily double a gent.

Bridges is also a crucial component of the switch-heavy Villanova defense:

The way Villanova defends really showcases Bridges at his best. I found myself waiting for games to return to that end of the floor, if only to watch him cycle from opponent to opponent without leaving the slightest gap in the coverage. Defensive switching has many forms and competencies. This is the most promising kind—the switch not as a last resort, but as a form of control. Bridges does so much to dictate where his opponents can go and, crucially, where they cannot.

His ability to guard 1-5 is going to be a problem.

Stretch four Eric Paschall set Kansas on fire in the semifinal, continuing a season-long trend where his 3P% just goes up and up. When not lighting up the nets from deep he's hitting 64% inside the arc because he gets half his shots at the rim. He's mostly a spot-up shooter and a cutter, and if Michigan can force him out of those categories his efficiency drops considerably. A Paschall post-up or drive to the rim is a (relatively) good scenario for Michigan. He's Wildcat least capable of creating his own shot. For what little that will matter.

Omari Spellman is the first real stretch five Michigan has seen this season. Almost half of his shots are from beyond the arc, where he hits an astounding 44%; forays inside the line aren't bad largely because his TO rate is top 150; he's hitting 51% from two. Those twos are biased towards jumpers that aren't terrifically efficient—like Wagner, Spellman is capable of taking his man off the bounce but he gets stopped short of the rim fairly often and isn't a killer once he gets there.

Despite the perimeter orientation on offense, Spellman checks many of the Big Man Boxes with a 10% OREB rate and a 6% block rate. He isn't a stretch four shoehorned into a job at center; he is a legitimate C who happens to knock down threes at a top 100 rate.

Villanova's bench is thin. Nominal starter Phil Booth is an efficient player but he's a little more perimeter-oriented than much of the rest of the roster, with about 60% of his shots from behind the line and 18% usage. He is ineffective in the midrange and his shot distribution reflects that, with just 15% of his shots checking in as 2PJs. Booth will pull up from three more than anyone else save Brunson.

Past Booth there isn't much. A couple of relatively limited freshmen fill out 10 MPG each. Collin Gillespie is Just A Shooter with 22 2PA on the year; he is 39% from three. The aforementioned Dhamir Cosby-Roundtree is a wispy 195 at 6'8"; his usage is almost entirely dunking off of dishes and putbacks. His block and DREB rates are poor, as well. Michigan will no doubt seek to match Teske against him, and should have an advantage when that happens.

THE TEMPO-FREE

image

lotta green, via Bart Torvik

There's bad news and slightly less bad news. The bad news: Villanova enters the final with the top offense in the country and a near five point gap back to #2 (which is Purdue, FWIW). The gap from Villanova to #31 Michigan is the same as the gap between Michigan and #212 Detroit.

Nova does this with elite shooting from everywhere and an offense that spends just 20% of their shots on non-rim 2s; they pair that shooting with a Beilein-worthy TO rate. Despite being fairly small they rack up a reasonable number of OREBs; the only thing they don't do is get to the line much… because 48% of their shots are threes.

You can take a small amount of solace in Nova's relatively high rate of transition opportunities (19%, not FSU level but pretty high), because even though the Wildcats' halfcourt offense is the best in the country it is a bit less efficient than those guys in the open court.

The slightly less bad news: Villanova's defense is not quite as good as their offense. It's 14th on Kenpom and 10th on Torvik, which is pretty impressive for a bunch of guys who top out at 6'8". Individual components aren't quite as impressive. They don't give up many free throws and their FG% D is dependent on a bunch of misses from three.

Usually you'd chalk that up to randomness and seek to exploit it, but these are Villanova's 3P% D rankings over the past four years: 21st, 135th, 18th, 30th. There's something there, and it's probably the constant switching Villanova can manage because they play a big, burly PG and nobody over 6'8".

There's also a bizarre aspect to that D: Villanova is 40th in defensive tempo—ie, teams shoot fast against them. A full 25% of opponent shots come in the first ten seconds of the shot clock, but opponent eFG on those attempts is a mere 50%. That may be desperation as Villanova pushes out to big leads that force opponents to speed it up in the vague hope of a comeback.

THE KEYS

Prevent launches. IE, do whatever the opposite of Kansas did. If Michigan loses because Villanova hits 70% from two, so be it. This is a clash against a super-elite three point shooting team that averages 40% despite having nearly half their shots come from behind the line. They're 12th in 3PA/FGA. They slaughtered the Jayhawks because Bill Self coached that game like it was 1989.

Michigan won't do that. They are top ten in preventing 3PAs. After holding Loyola to just ten attempts in the semi they are in fact fifth, with just 30% of opponent shots coming from behind the line. Run them off the line and live with the consequences.

Hit a shot! HIT A SHOT. Tournament so far: crappy shooting, crappy shooting, inferno, crappy shooting, crappy shooting. Just in time for another inferno. That's the ticket.

Michigan cannot win this game by scoring a point per possession and has to fling in at least their season average from three. This is not really analysis. Michigan is going to have to make a fair number of terrible shots after Villanova switching bogs their offense down. That's more like analysis.

Send Zavier Simpson every mean tweet from the semi. Brunson is the best point guard in the country. Simpson has annihilated virtually every opponent he's faced for two months. Michigan's best shot here is for an insane defensive game by Simpson that frustrates Brunson into Rob Gray numbers. It could happen.

Uh… Livers? I don't think Teske can play in this game unless Cosby-Roundtree is in. When Mo is out and Cosby-Roundtree isn't, Michigan's going to have to steal some minutes from Livers at the 5, switching everything and hoping that Livers looks less lost on offense than he did when he briefly played the 5 earlier in the tournament.

THE SECTION WHERE I PREDICT THE SAME THING KENPOM DOES

Villanova by 6.

Comments

A Lot of Milk

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:36 PM ^

Actual answer:

- Got bombed for 101 points against Butler (Butler was 15-22 from three!!!)

- Shot 24% from three against St. John's 

- Shot 15% from three against Providence (had 19 TO's also)

- Not really sure how they lost to Creighton. Looks like Creighton just played a little better than them in almost every category

Yost Ghost

April 2nd, 2018 at 2:51 PM ^

Like I said above, TTU was able to stay in their game because of their great D they were only down 6 with 2:12 to go shooting 33% from the field and 24% from the arc.

If UM can get a similar defensive performance and couple that with season average numbers of 46.8% from the field and 36.2% from the arc they can win tonight.

G. Gulo of the Dale

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:36 PM ^

... I'm not sure this will make you feel better, but they had injuries to their starting lineup during a stretch in which they lost to St. John's and Providence--and, as Brian correctly notes, they aren't a very deep team (six players get most of their minutes).  Their other two losses were road games against decent (though not elite) teams.  Butler bet them by hitting 68.2% (!!!) of their three pointers... so there's that?

One Armed Bandit

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:26 PM ^

Great moments are born from great opportunity. And that’s what you have here tonight, boys. That’s what you’ve earned here tonight. One game. If we played ‘em ten times, they might win nine. But not this game. Not tonight. Tonight, we shoot with them. Tonight, we stay with them. And we shut them down because we can! Tonight, WE are the greatest college basketball team in the world. You were born to be basketball players. Every one of you. And you were meant to be here tonight. This is your time. Their time is done. It’s over. I’m sick and tired of hearing about what great basketball team Villanova has. Screw ‘em. This is your time. Now go out there and TAKE IT!

Blue in PA

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:27 PM ^

Because its our time....

Because MAAR and Robinson are the two seniors who are due to step up and they will.

Because its Austin Hatch's curtain call with Michigan Men's Basketball.

Because Coach B does it right, does it clean and develops players through the season as well as anyone.

Because these young men aren't a bunch of players, they're a team and they believe.

 

GO BLUE!

 

And because i've got a slow cooker making pulled pork as you read this. We've had pulled pork nachos for two of the last three games and needless to say, we're undefeated in that time.

ak47

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:27 PM ^

If Wagner wants to prove he can do it in the NBA tonights the night to prove it. He's going to have to guard a guy thats just as comfortable as him on the perimeter and just as if not more comfortable in the post. He won't be able to drive Spellman like Ward, he won't be able to post up Brunson. He's going to have to earn it by just flat out being better, not because of a mismatch but because he outplays someone. 

A Lot of Milk

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:28 PM ^

Seems like we have two scenarios of winning: pray Villanova bricks everything they shoot (not likely), or sprint them the fuck off the three-point line and make them play within the arc. They're super efficient in there too, but if our offense can get hot this might be another classic Beilein win just because 3>2. Depends on Michigan's approach to Villanova's shooting and how we decide to play Simpson. I'm in favor of having Brunson back Z down the entire game personally. Nobody can help off their man, but I wouldn't be surprised to see Z hold his own. There's gonna need to be some magic tonight, too. Shit where MAAR and Poole look their defender dead in the eyes before launching a deep three over them and hitting it. It's gonna be a fun night regardless, and we might just shock the world.

bronxblue

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:29 PM ^

I will simply point out that if you had told me in February that Michigan would be playing for a national title on April 2nd, I'd have called you insane. This team has exceeded all my expectations, and it's going to be a blast to watch them play tonight regardless of the outcome.

MC5-95

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:33 PM ^

Wagner (probably leaping over the announcers table) and Poole are going to feature in One Shining Moment. But I'd really like us to win this thing. Go Blue!

Der Alte

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:35 PM ^

Against K-State, Loyola-Chicago shot 50% from behind the arc. Against M, Loyola-Chicago shot 10% --- they only attempted 10 3-point shots, and only made one of them.

So there's that. Can M defend against the 3? Yes, M will limit Villanova's 3-point production. Not down to Loyola-Chicago's level, but will limit them nonetheless. And by now M has dealt with enough switching ball-screen defenses to work their way through them for decent 3-pt looks at the basket or dribble-drives thereto --- that's what they did in the last 10 minutes of the last game.

M will play D --- if their shots fall, M's got a chance. Go Blue.

El Jeffe

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:37 PM ^

Anyone have any of the following:

  • Voodoo doll of Jalen Brunson;
  • Sr. Jean's discarded rosary beads;
  • A disparaging Maverick Morgan quote;
  • A photo of Mikal Bridges with a dead girl or a live boy;
  • The juice to pull Tim Donaghy out of disgraced forced retirement and the number to his Zurich bank account?

Sigh.

Well, we'll just have to win this one on our own with good 3-pt defense, a little luck, and some scorching shooting of our own.

gtwill

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:37 PM ^

Get 'Nova into a rock fight to throw them off the three-point line and keep them (and us) off the free-throw line.  We can win this.  Defense wins championships.

maize-blue

April 2nd, 2018 at 1:45 PM ^

Yup. Michigan would be the 2nd most unbalanced team to win the Natty during that timeframe. A majority of the champs were pretty balanced with their offensive and defensive rankings being within single digits of each other. Michigan has a spread of 28 between their two rankings. Uconn in 2014 had a 29 position spread. It's doable but UM is definitely playing against historical stats.

Jonesy

April 2nd, 2018 at 7:09 PM ^

The thing about our team is we don't have the #32 or whatever offense, we have more like the #3 and the #150 offense and a different one shows up each game. The #32 offense might not be enough to win this game but we won't have that, we'll either have the 3 or the 150, one of those can win it, one won't.

jmblue

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:46 PM ^

We're the #3 Kenpom defense in the country.  Texas Tech is #4.  Against TT, Villanova shot 4-24 from downtown and 33% overall.  They did shoot a crazy number of free throws (29-35) and won, but nevertheless were held to 71 points.  (Box score here.)

TT gives us a gameplan to follow.  How much of that result was good D and how much a fluke, I can't say, but it gives us some cause for optimism.

 

 

Durham Blue

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:49 PM ^

I'm not as worried about Villanova hitting threes as I am Brunson faking the three and driving to the hoop, or driving and dishing for an easy bucket.  We got burned quite a few times against Loyola with the drive to the hoop and layup.

It boils down to solid D.  And if we are inferno tonight we could easily win this game.

MC5-95

April 2nd, 2018 at 1:05 PM ^

Let him drive and stay home on the shooters. 

(Adding: not sure if Brunson can beat us on his own; in 3 of their 4 losses, he had a huge game. Seems the better bet will be to limit their three point shooting. Only loss of Villanova's when they shot the lights out was against Butler, who shot even more lights out.)

Perkis-Size Me

April 2nd, 2018 at 1:40 PM ^

I think Beilein and Yaklich are going to approach their defensive gameplan fairly similarly to how they did against Purdue in the BTT. Sell out to defend the three point line, and make them beat you on the inside. Haas was going to get his anyway, so make him win the game by himself. Purdue was, I think, the best 3 point shooting team in the country outside of Villanova. 

It worked against Purdue. Might as well give it a shot against Villanova. If we sit back off the 3 point line we're going to get buried by halftime. 

MNWolverine2

April 2nd, 2018 at 12:58 PM ^

Wagner is not the guy to lean on tonight.  He's barely been with the team over the past 24 hours struggling with dehydration.  They've been pumping him full of fluids.

 

If you follow Michigan basketball twitter, you'll notice he's been in none of the film sessions, pre-game meals, etc.

MC5-95

April 2nd, 2018 at 1:15 PM ^

You mean the one post that had three whole pictures from film session and lunch in which you can't even see the whole room? Because in the practice photos you can't even see who's in the huddles. If you have some inside dope, then that's fine, but don't use Twitter as your source.

(Adding: I believe this video was shot at the last practice, and he's there. So get out of here with your crap rumor.) 

Perkis-Size Me

April 2nd, 2018 at 1:00 PM ^

Great moments are born from great opportunity. And that's what you have here tonight, boys. That's what you've earned here, tonight. 

One game. 

If we played 'em ten times, they might beat us nine. 

But not this game. Not tonight. 

Tonight, we run with 'em. Tonight, we stay with 'em, and we shut them down, BECAUSE WE CAN!

Tonight, we are the greatest college basketball team in the world. You were born to be basketball players. Every one of you. And you were MEANT to be here tonight. This is YOUR TIME. 

Their time --- is done. It's over. I'm sick and tired of hearin' about what a great basketball team Villanova has. Screw em! 

This is YOUR TIME! Now go out there and take it!!

1VaBlue1

April 2nd, 2018 at 1:07 PM ^

Why did I read that?  I didn't want to, but I did.  Ugh...

Nonetheless, I feel okay about this game.  There is no pressure on Michigan, none.  This is house money time.  Play loose and hit shots.  They'll hold 'Nova to ~30% from three while limiting those to about 20 shots.  And they will get enough open looks to hit in the 40's, themselves.  They've gotten good looks in every game, once they settled down and ran the offense.  They just need to hit them.  The cold shooting nights have been because of Michigan, not because of the opponent's defense.  Play loose and hit the shots.

The defense will be good enough.  If MAAR, Robinson, Wagner, and Matthews are hitting ~40-45%, the game will not be fun for Nova.  Add in Poole for some offensive electricity...

It doesn't make sense, but we're betting with house money.  

maizedNblued

April 2nd, 2018 at 1:17 PM ^

..do I ever log in to chat but I do enjoy reading items on here. Three things that nobody is talking about, that I believe will play a role in the probable UM win - yeah I said it.

1.) The tip-time (9:20pm) - kind of a late tip for a team that relies heavily on the arc.

 

2.) More Michigan fans than Nova fans. If the breakdown favors us by a large margain, it could be MSG part deux fueling energy and fight for UM.

 

3.) Hardly anyone ever takes notice of this but UM MAKES TEAMS WORK on both ends of the floor and almost strips the "will to win" out of teams in the last five minutes - opponents look exhausted down the stretch - we saw it with Loyola, Florida State, Montana, Purdue, MSU etc. Texas A&M looked gassed after about 10 minutes. If UM makes them work for shots and makes them defend for 25-30, the game slows down and that short Nova bench gets shorter, especially if there's foul trouble.