dug mcdaniel

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Hey: watchalong. We're going to do a watchalong for the hockey semifinal Saturday at 9 PM. Be there.

The culture is 8-24 and Jon Sanderson works for Illinois. An Athletic article from Brendan Quinn and Katie Strang reveals that an outside consulting firm has been brought into assess the culture of the basketball program:

…a makeshift meeting room was assembled inside Michigan Stadium last week. There, officials from Rankin Climate, an external firm specializing in organizational “climate assessments,” convened to conduct a probe into the culture of the men’s basketball program. Rankin officials asked some athletic department employees about their experiences in the program, Howard’s leadership and support offered by the athletic department. Those interviewed were told that participation was voluntary, according to multiple university employees granted anonymity because they are not permitted to speak about the investigation.

There's not a whole lot else that was new except some more details of what Sanderson sent the university via his lawyer; there are some disturbing claims:

Sanderson claims Howard approached his son, Jett, visibly angry during a 2022-23 practice and threatened, “I’ll slap the sh– out of you,” adding the incident “sparked a lot of internal conversation.” Sanderson said one coach on staff said he saw Juwan Howard “manhandle” Jett on the side of the court; that coach expressed that he was upset with how Jett was being treated.

As many have said in the aftermath of this article's release: it's the athletic director's job to know what the culture of his second-most important sport is. Hiring an outside firm to do your job for you is a waste of money and time. If the consulting firm comes back and says "eh this is fine," should Juwan Howard be retained? No. So what are we doing here? It feels like Warde Manuel wants someone else to make the decision for him.

Meanwhile the season is over for most teams that will be axing coaches. There are already 34 open head coaching spots in D-1, and the most attractive candidates will start going off the board soon as Michigan tries to figure out if the culture is bad on the worst Michigan basketball team in living memory.

Decisions made. Vandy—a program with much less recent historical success—just fired Jerry Stackhouse after Stackhouse went 9-23 in year five. The buyout is supposed to be north of 15 million dollars, which is wild. Vandy hired a guy with no head coaching experience who never got to the tournament and is stuck with that buyout after five years… and even that athletic director was able to see the writing on the wall.

[After the JUMP: football stuff! You should click. I promise.]

Using the photos from Thursday because the mood is the same [David Wilcomes]

The Michigan Wolverines went into Columbus today in hopes that they could sweep their arch-rival. Maybe getting two wins over Ohio State out of the 8-10 wins the Wolverines will accumulate in this nightmarish season could put sufficient lipstick on a pig so that we can extract momentarily satisfaction. It was not to be. Michigan was in it at halftime, a sloppy first half of basketball putting the home Buckeyes up only five over the Wolverines. It wasn't going to be easy, but they had a palpable shot.

Instead, Ohio State started the second half on an 10-0 run to get a sizable lead. Michigan slowly chipped its way back and got it to within seven with 10.5 minutes left and then it all crumbled. The offense went cold amid an avalanche of turnovers (a theme all game), while Ohio State's offense churned to a hyper-efficient second half, embarking on a 22-4 run that buried the Wolverines in embarrassment. A 23 point defeat and the seventh loss in a row. Michigan will finish last in the Big Ten in men's basketball for the first time since 1966-67. 

As mentioned, the first half wasn't bad for Michigan in the sense that they were in the game. It was bad for us, the fans, because it was some brutal basketball. The two teams combined to turn it over 16 times in the first half and while they did shoot it well, the flow of the game was exceedingly sloppy. The two teams scored just six points combined in the first four minutes and it took over seven minutes for Michigan to make a second basket, a Dug McDaniel three that trimmed the Ohio State lead to 10-5. Michigan opened the game 1/7 from the floor with four turnovers and found themselves in an early hole. 

 

[David Wilcomes]

However, the Maize & Blue battled back and at least made the first half competitive. They trailed wire-to-wire, but a push in the later stages of the first half eventually trimmed it to one. That came when McDaniel drove the lane and kicked to Terrance Williams II in the corner, who knocked down a triple. The score sat at 25-24 this point and Michigan had the chance to take the lead after Bruce Thornton missed a jumper and Michigan rebounded it down. However, McDaniel's ensuing drive was swatted by Felix Okpara, leading to a Thornton lay-in at the other end. Ohio State surged temporarily to close the half, but McDaniel snatched an offensive rebound off a George Washington III missed three and converted a layup as the horn sounded. Michigan hadn't played well, but they were alive on the road at the half, down 32-27. 

If you've watched this season, you were probably quite pessimistic at this juncture because Michigan has been disastrous in second halves all season. This game was no different. Ohio State knocked the doors off early in the second half, embarking on the noted quick 10-0 run, taking just three minutes to build a 15 point lead. Of the ten points, two were free throws and the remaining eight were dunks and layups (two of each). Points were coming easy for the Bucks early on, while Michigan's offense spun its tires in the mud. Ohio State had a comfortable lead and were now firmly in control in a way they never had in the first half. 

To Michigan's credit, they didn't totally lay down and die. At least not yet. Michigan answered with a 7-0 spurt of their own, another Williams three and then a few solid plays from Youssef Khayat, who had been inserted into the game after Nimari Burnett picked up his third foul. A moving screen was called on Ohio State that Khayat drew, giving Michigan the ball only down eight some 4+ minutes into the half. They'd taken a bit of a beating but the game wasn't over. From there the two teams were stuck on a bit of a seesaw, back-and-forth as Ohio State threatened to make it a blowout and then Michigan would hit back, oscillating around the ten point margin range. 

[AFTER THE JUMP: More recap]

MG was sick today so here's some photos from last year/other games [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Matched up with the #2 team in college basketball this afternoon, Michigan Men's Basketball strung together a decently valiant effort but came up short with another short-handed roster, a loss chalked up to defensive rebounding and foul trouble, some legitimate and some suspicious. Like most games, Michigan led for a large swath of the first half before trailing for much of the game thereafter, but never let Purdue bury them, even with excessive fouling hamstringing a roster already missing the injured big man Olivier Nkamhoua. Michigan hung around and hung around but ultimately couldn't make enough of a charge late and lost by high single digits. The Wolverines are now 8-20 (3-14), with three games left in the regular season. 

Before the game, Michigan got word that they would be without guard Jaelin Llewellyn, who was originally listed as questionable (in addition to the injured Nkamhoua). Will Tschetter was back after missing the Northwestern game, but a Michigan roster that wasn't deep to begin with sans two rotational pieces is in for a challenge, even when not facing an elite team like Purdue. The Wolverines, as they do most games, started pretty well, scoring the game's first five points and then led 10-4 on two Dug McDaniel three pointers. But even in this quick spurt, the problem of foul trouble was popping up. Center Tarris Reed Jr. picked up two fouls in the game's first 4.5 minutes while battling with Purdue superstar Zach Edey and went straight to the bench, putting the more undersized Will Tschetter (as well as Tray Jackson) in position to guard Edey. It wouldn't be long before Tschetter and Jackson would be racking up fouls of their own while giving up easy buckets inside. 

Stil, Michigan was hot out of the gate and generally shot the ball well all day. They led 19-13 via good ball movement and lights out shooting, allowing them to stay in front of the Boilers despite the fouls. Within 7.5 minutes of the game starting, there were seven team fouls against the Wolverines, placing Purdue into the bonus, including two on Reed, two on Jackson, and two on guard/wing Nimari Burnett. Foul trouble against Reed put Michigan in a disadvantageous matchup vs. Edey from a size perspective, and led to the ongoing theme of Purdue destroying Michigan on the glass. Just over nine minutes into the game Purdue was rebounding 56% of their misses(!!!) and that number wouldn't fluctuate much during the rest of the game. 

 

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

The extra possessions Purdue was getting via the OREBs allowed the Boilers to stay in the ballpark of the Wolverines while Michigan was shooting it well early. Purdue went on a small run to shave the lead down to 22-21 and the game eventually became tied at 25 at the under eight minute timeout. Forced to play unconventional lineups with George Washington III seeing extended time due to Burnett's foul issues, in addition to Jace Howard logging minutes in the front court because of the big fouls, Michigan eventually began to splinter and a hard Purdue charge surged them ahead before halftime. After Michigan led 30-29 on a Washington triple, Purdue closed the half on an 18-6 run, getting the final points on an Edey layup at the horn to lead 47-36. 

Given Michigan's tendency for catastrophic meltdowns in the second halves of games, it seemed like the rally by the road team (although the crowd was littered with fans in old gold and black who were quite noisy) may lead to a blowout in the second half. Instead, to Michigan's credit, they dug in and kept battling. Purdue bumped the lead up to 14 but Michigan punched back and got it down to single digits on a Burnett three and that's where the margin sat for most of the second half. Dug McDaniel played a pretty solid game and scored 10 in the second half, while Burnett rebounded from an ugly first half to score 12 in the latter stanza. Unfortunately, Michigan had no answer in the second half for Edey (or in either half really) dominating inside offensively and then a mix of size and hustle continued to annihilate Michigan on the glass. Purdue grabbed seven more second half offensive rebounds (five were Edey's) after ten in the first half. 

Michigan occasionally showed interest in mounting a charge but could never string together a run because they couldn't get stops consistently. They didn't slow Purdue's offense down much and when they forced misses, Purdue rebounded half of them. Foul trouble continued to mount, giving Edey increasingly easier matchups. Some of those fouls were dubious, including the fifth on Will Tschetter coming with 7:38 left in the game, and even more so the fifth on Reed. Michigan was down 78-70 with 3.5 minutes left in the offensive end, a missed three by McDaniel was loose rolling towards the sideline. Reed went for it and got tangled up with Lance Jones of Purdue, whistled for a foul that sent the home crowd into uproar. Juwan Howard charged out onto the court to vigorously argue with the referees, but was restrained by McDaniel, as well as members of the Michigan bench. The closest Michigan got the score down to was seven, but they ultimately ran out of time and lost by eight. 

 

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

In totality, the two teams shot similar clips from the field (47% Purdue, 48% Michigan), but Purdue made more free throws thanks to the Michigan fouls and attempted eight more field goals thanks to the offensive rebounding. That, plus Edey's dominance (35 points on 14/18!!), was the difference in the game. Michigan had a solid, efficient offensive day shooting 42.9% from three, but didn't have the right roster to win this game, not deep enough and not big enough, not to mention not good enough defensively. Maybe with Nkamhoua healthy they may have been able to pull off the upset, but this group was not set up to defeat a team with a dominant big man. Reed and Tschetter both fouled out and Jackson finished with four fouls. 

Michigan has now fallen to 8-20 on the season, 3-14 in the B1G, and has three regular season games remaining. As of this writing, Michigan State leads at home over Ohio State, which would put the Bucks two games ahead of Michigan in the race at the bottom of the standings. Michigan plays Ohio State next Sunday and in theory, finishing 2-1 with a win over OSU while OSU loses out would get Michigan out of the cellar because Michigan would own the head-to-head tiebreak. But it remains more likely that Michigan will finish dead-last in the conference, with Torvik projecting them to win only one of their final three games. It is not the hardest closing schedule, playing teams 13th and 12th in the standings on the road in Rutgers/OSU, as well as a mediocre Nebraska team at home. But this Michigan team hasn't been able to win many games, period, so strength of schedule only matters so much. The next game is this Thursday at 8:30 PM EST in Piscataway against Rutgers, scheduled to be broadcast on FS1. 

[Click the JUMP for the box score]

a trip through time of how we arrived at misery

not much juice in the second half 

bad!

a very familiar script 

Hoops Pulse Check After Ten Games

Bench Comes Up Big in Road Victory

back to .500 with a nice win

Deep Dive on Michigan's Defensive Struggles

Turnovers Are The Root of Transition Defense Woes

Temperature Check on Wolverine Hoops