Hoops Preview: Villanova, National Championship
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THE 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*:
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.
Jalen Brunson shoots 68% at the rim and ranks in the 98th percentile in post-up offense. He's a 6-foot-2 point guard. https://t.co/UgTvjlfnIB pic.twitter.com/8A07jE7YO1
— Dylan Burkhardt (@umhoops) April 1, 2018
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
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.
I'm at peace.
We will have to play our best game of the season, probably our best game of the last 5 seasons, on defense and offense to win.
We will have to do a 1985-Villanova on 2018-Villanova.
That's as it should be.
It's the National Freaking Championship. You should have to play out of your mind to win it.
Every player on our team is capable of having the kind of game needed to win. We've seen them all do it. Now they have to do it when it counts.
Doing it when it counts is what separates being champion from merely being talented.
I don't even think they need to have the most amazing game to win. If they bring the inferno I'll take it. But I think if they can play the smothering D they have been for the last 2 months and couple that with their season averages on offense it'll be enough to win.
OK - everyone has a list, so here's mine:
1. Meainingful time outs to rest Mo, Z, whoever else we need out there for 35 minutes
2. Make more three's than them -- wouldn't that be HUGE
3. Related to #1 where we may need Mo, MAAR, possibly Z out there long minutes, don't get into foul trouble -- plus they shoot a high FT %.
4. Yeah -- make some shots, a lot of shots.
5. No praying -- just hard work and smart play (Z - please get back to that high A to TO ratio)
I'm coming into this game with a weird sense of calm. Like, obviously yes I want us to win but I'm kinda resigned to the fact that Villanova is a fully operational death star. So I'm just enjoying the ride. This has been a spectacular season, especially the back half of it, and I'm just going to enjoy these guys going out there and playing the best damn ball they can, win or lose. That said, goddamn I would like to win this one. If we play to our potential, there's not a team we can't beat. Go Blue, make the shots, and above all Win The Game!!!
I was pretty zen about this matchup on Saturday night - as in, we don't stand a chance, so just enjoy the ride. Now I want to win. I want to see Charles Mathews smiling. I want to see Wagner sticking his tongue out after threes from the top of the arc. I want to see Zavier erase Jalen Brunson like he has every other PG that is better hyped than him. I want to see Teske running and finishing with violence at the rim. I want to see MAAR closing the game at the line like he's collecting rent. We've seen all of these things against good teams. Why not see them again ?
no numbers, videos or theories from history carry forward tonight...
Go Blue!
Some points of encouragement (which I'm sure have all kinds of stats to negate any good feelings, but I'll try anyway...)
- From what I can tell, they haven't beat a top-8 Kenpom team. Kansas was their best win on the entire season; Kansas is currently #9 on Kenpom (and Kansas has the #47 adjusted defense).
- UM has had 3 top-8 Kenpom wins (MSUx2, Purdue). All better than any Nova wins.
- Their best regualr season wins were over Xavier (twice), who is #58 in adjusted defense. UM defense is #3.
- They only beat 3 top25 teams all regular season. Xavier twice, Gonzaga once. Florida State beat both of those teams, before losing to Michigan.
- They lost to Providence, St Johns, Butler, and Creighton. The best defense on that list is St Johns at #29, and the best offense is Providence at #22.
- Virginia was #1 in Kenpom before the tournament started. It didn't make them unbeatable or anything close to it.
Summary -- they've put up a bunch of crazy-good stats against a bunch of "meh" teams. Their best win is Kansas (who is by far the worst defensive team in the Kenpom top10, not a good matchup for the #1 offense).
When Michigan wins, I now have the stats to pepper into my work and family conversations tomorrow morning.
We'll get to see how good our defense really is.
If it does cause them problems, they'll have a huge "Uh oh" moment where the pressure of the moment will start to impact them.
We've seen this ourselves in basketball and hockey, rhythm offenses do not like defensive pressure that takes them out of rhythm.
To have that happen to you with 20,000 Wolverine fans screaming in your ear is not a recipe to get back on track easily.
Currently undefeated in 2018 Championship Games. That gives me confidence.
#1 = Villanova 0.9869
#2 = UMBC (!) 0.9805 (Probably b/c UVa was #1 but panicked then quit the entire 2nd half)
#3 = Clemson 0.9785
#4 = Michigan 0.9746
This should be a close game, I think.
We win easy. E-Z.
I agree, if you look at more recent results (Jan 1+) Michigan has more than a chance. My biggest question is why does Kenpom and ESPN's BPI not take into account how recent a game was in weighing a team's performance. All teams do not improve the same amount during the season and Michigan seems to improve more than most almost every year.
and ended 18-40, so in the second half they were 5-17, when Kansas decided to guard it a bit, that's something, isn't it?
I don't think Kansas started guarding it, I think Nova players' arms got tired.
I just want Michigan to win a national title. I have never witnessed it and I relly hope I get the chance to (specifically in basketball/football).
two things:
1 - truly one of the worst in-game coaching jobs i've ever seen. kansas literally never adjusted to the fact that villanova was shooting the lights out from outside. bill. bubby. you've GOT to make some adjustments to the game in front of you. good heavens.
2 - villanova played about as close to perfect as you can play. can they do that again? sure, i guess...that's pretty hard to do, no matter how great you are.
look, i know they're terrific. - talented, well-coached, and experienced. but they also went into last year's tournament as a 31-3 1-seed with kenpom's #2 offense...and got knocked out in the 2nd round by a wisconsin team that played so-so offense but really good defense. sound familiar?
they love to shoot threes, but they won't shoot 40 of them again tonight. if we hit any shots (we DON'T need to shoot like we did vs a&m), it will be a dogfight.
michigan 71, villanova 68
Demolish all the Bridges!
LETS GOOOOOO!
Defense wins championships.
But I'd sure feel better if we hit all the threes. Including Moe's first, and at least two from Dunc.
LET'S GO BLUE! WIN THE GAME!
Brian wants and I want. INFERNO!!!
Your due boy's. Just hit those shots.
Continue to move those puppies like you been on defense.
Go Blue!!!
Michigan is relaxed and can shoot like they did in the TAM game. If they can hit their shots this will be a close game where Michigan can win. If they can not make their shots it could be a long night.
This preview makse it look hopeless, but then again so did the MSU and Purdue ones and we won 60% of those.
Go Blue!!
But we get to watch 〽️ichigan play tonight. Everyone else can watch.
And stfu.
Game on.
Go Blue!!
Guy that killed us not even mentioned.in top 8
Tip of the cap to nova, great season M.
Donte, nice game.
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