Michigan 68, Maryland 67 Comment Count

Seth

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sure.

It was your typical trap game. Playing 51 hours after a season-defining road win in East Lansing, Beilein’s clearly exhausted Michigan squad barely scraped together 20 points in the first half. Then, as trap games go, they erased the 10-point deficit right out of the break, pushed it to a 10-point lead thanks to a little-used freshman sparkplug, lost the 10-point lead, went down by 1 point with 3.5 seconds, and won on two MAAR free throws, just another couple of points in a career that’s seen a thousand of them.

Michigan certainly came out like they’d just played the biggest game of their season two days ago, missing layups, dunks and open threes as the Terps opened a 30-20 deficit at the half. In the frame the Wolverines shot just 31% from the field without getting to the line. MAAR in particular was scuffling,

Maryland, on five days rest, was able to collect a few early buckets in transition and capitalize on more than a few bounces. Michigan played strong defense, forcing the Terps to use the entire shot clock and take five desperation heaves—their eight points off of those low-percentage attempts were most of the 10-point difference in the half.

As Mr. Bridges noted after Saturday’s game, Michigan doesn’t really focus on toughness. Yet for the second time in three days these non-toughness-focusing players erased a halftime deficit out of the break. Zavier Simpson sparked the comeback with a few brilliant series, one a defensive set in which he cut off an Anthony Cowan drive, fought through a screen, knocked the ball out of bounds, assisted on a bad shot, and collected the rebound. Down three Z drove the length of the court, released a floater from the top of the paint, and sank the and-one to tie it 30-30.

Then in came Jordan Poole.

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“Poole’s B1G eFG%: 70.6” —Ace  [Marc-Grégor Campredon]

If the Purdue game was a taste, this was a coming out party for Michigan’s (arguably) most talented freshman. Poole immediately showed his characteristic awareness for the arc. In one sequence he sank a transition three, blocked a Maryland attempt at the same, and got back down to deliver Z’s drive and kick. In minutes Michigan had a 45-41 lead. Later he’d hint at his ceiling as a creator with a beautiful bounce-pass that set up a Teske and-one and pushed Michigan’s lead to 8.

With Z’s backups struggling and Poole hot, Beilein experimented with a MAAR-Poole-Matthews lineup. This didn’t look bad—it got Wagner an open top of the key 3PA (he missed). It also opened up transition lanes for Maryland. A pair of Wagner free throw misses and a small Maryland run on two crazy buckets forced a timeout with the lead cut to four, setting up the ho hum finish.

Under two minutes, MAAR missed a layup and Wagner picked up a foul on a rebound as Maryland cut Michigan’s lead to 2 with 1:19 remaining. On the ensuing possession Matthews fought his way out of a trap, and Michigan passed it around the horn to get MAAR an open three and Michigan a two-point lead. The teams then traded layups, then with 20 seconds left Cowan sank an improbable line drive three, Z missed a pair of free throws, and Kevin Heurter sank one of his signature ladder triples to put Maryland ahead a point with 3.5 seconds left.

In typical trap game fashion, Isaiah Livers hit MAAR on a perfect deep flag route. Abdur-Rahkman, at 998 career points, tripped over a Terp and picked up the foul. The rest was academic.

Michigan escapes their murderous stretch at 2-1 (that shoulda been 3-0) with a tournament resume, and now has a few days to rest before their Thursday tilt in Lincoln, followed by Rutgers at home.

[After the jump: a box score, more photos by MG, some favorite tweets, and at some point you might want to breathe]

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Box Score:

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Photos by MG:

This is one sequence:

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Tweets:

Comments

MH20

January 16th, 2018 at 4:12 PM ^

He had the exact same "not impressed" look on his face after hitting the first one, which really is his general demeanor.  Hit a big three? Meh. Nifty scoop layup? Eh. Cut into a passing lane for a transition dunk? Yawn.

Love me some MAAR.

Here's him waiting for the ball after the first FT:

WindyCityWolverine

January 16th, 2018 at 8:41 AM ^

Jon Rothstein
@JonRothstein
"Chemistry is a special thing in sports and Michigan certainly looks like it has it. Wolverines have now won 9 of 10 after a one-point win over Maryland in Ann Arbor."

Blue in PA

January 16th, 2018 at 8:57 AM ^

 I think Z is coming into form at a better rate than Walton did in his first season as starting PG.

Z, Teske, Poole and Livers will all continue to get better, wow.

 

MAAR's heart pumps ice water, GOOD GOD.  Dude is cooler than the other side of the pillow.

panderberg

January 16th, 2018 at 12:17 PM ^

It was CLEARLY a moving screen that got that MD guy the open top-of-the-key three at the (almost) end of the game.

 

Also - how is it even possible that after a couple thousand replays of the Hill/Laetner (sp??) miracle that a decent Big Ten coach would NOT know to cover the in-bounder?

Jonesy

January 16th, 2018 at 2:32 PM ^

I watched this on replay after avoiding the score and as I was fast forwarding through the time out post 3 pre miracle with my blood pumping in my ears from us stupidly losing this game my damn iphone/appletv/something just would not load the rest of the game. So finally I gave up and checked the final score elsewhere...wait, what, we won? wtf? lets go try to load this again...That ending combined with that first half makes this perhaps the least enjoyable win of the season, ugh.