terrance williams

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

The ball! Also, the wait. 247's Travis Branham has lodged a crystal ball for Vlad Goldin to Michigan. Meanwhile the final FAU piece dropped, as Alijah Martin entered the portal with a no-contact tag. No balls for him or Johnell Davis yet.

What's the holdup on the other two guys? Well, On3 reports that Davis "plans to go all in with his preparation for the NBA Draft with the majority of his focus, at this point, on that process." If he's able to catch the eyes of NBA guys this time around he might not return to college. Expect an Olivier Nkamhoua timeline here, with a bunch of will-he-or-won't-he. Given the fact that Davis went through the draft process a year ago it seems likely that he's going to hear the same things that led him back to college last year, because he'll make more money in college than the G-League. (RIGHT, EXTREMELY RICH BASKETBALL DONORS?)

Goldin's timeline may be accelerated relative to his teammates because he's a drop-coverage-only center and the NBA generally doesn't like those anymore.

The final pieces, coaching edition. First: the NCAA loosened its rules a couple years back in re: coaches. Now you can have five assistants that coach the team; only three are allowed to recruit off-campus. Generally the #4 and #5 spots have been grad assistant types.

This item may explain some conflicting reports about who May's third assistant is going to be. (Mike Boynton and Akeem Miskdeen are 1 and 2.) Folks started dropping Tennessee assistant Rod Clark's name yesterday, to the point where even the Tennessee side of things was saying there was a lot of buzz. Clark is another guy with a sterling reputation as a recruiter. He's the guy credited with bringing SEC player of the year Dalton Knecht over from Northern Colorado:

“It started with (Rod Clark). He was the first one to hit me up out of the portal. Me and Rod, he knew my JUCO. He had family members and friends that played there so he knew quite a bit about Northeastern, so it was kind of that and just creating a bond right away."

He did cop a two-game suspension for an unknown "compliance issue," but the last guy who did that at Michigan won a national title shortly afterwards sooooooooo…

[After THE JUMP: percentages updated]

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

A year ago Michigan Men's Basketball brought a mid-major Central Michigan team to Ann Arbor a few days after Christmas and played a low-effort, embarrassing game. The Wolverines looked uninterested and were dominated by a smaller CMU team on the offensive glass en route to a 63-61 defeat at the hands of the Chips, who'd finish the year 10-21. Tonight Michigan lost a similar buy-game to a mid-major a few days after Christmas, dominated in the paint again but this year it felt less surprising or outrageous. McNeese State led almost the entire contest and looked like frankly the better basketball team, winning by double digits at Crisler Center. Michigan is now 6-7 on the year and the lack of surprise may be because at this point, this feels like who Michigan is. 

McNeese State opened the game strong, grabbing a quick lead by feasting on Michigan turnovers. The Wolverines turned it over nine times in the game's first 11.5 minutes and McNeese was able to outpace Michigan over that period despite the Wolverines' hot shooting from beyond the arc. Michigan came out gunning from three and would end up shooting 10/19 for the half, even better in the game's opening minutes. Terrance Williams II and Dug McDaniel combined to shoot 7/10 from distance, working around two quick fouls for Olivier Nkamhoua (the Finn played only 8 minutes in the first half). 

The duality of Michigan's turnovers and three point shooting meant that the game was pretty tight through the first 10 minutes or so, but McNeese established a lead by tightening up their defense (6 minute field goal drought for Michigan) and getting consistent penetration offensively. The middle stretch of the first half was something like a layup line for the Cowboys, getting repeated blow-bys at the point of attack, breaking down the interior defense and generating easy buckets. McNeese led 35-23 with 5:47 to go, but Michigan closed the half with a strong rally.

 

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Said rally was driven by three-point shooting perking back up for the Wolverines, with Will Tschetter and McDaniel threes book-ending a missed one-and-one by McNeese St. to cut the lead down to 35-31. McNeese's Antavion Collum would add a free throw to stretch the lead back to five but Michigan hit two more threes, one from McDaniel and one from Williams, to take a 37-36 lead. The Cowboys added two buckets in the final minute to lead 40-37 at the half, but Michigan felt fortunate just to be down three given how they had played. 

The first half trends reversed in the second half, but not necessarily for the better. On one hand, Michigan kept somewhat better control of the ball and cut down on the turnovers that had haunted them in the first half. On the other hand, the three-point shooting that had kept Michigan's offense afloat in the first half vanished as Michigan clunked their way to a 3/16 performance beyond the long line after the break. When you consider that three pointers made up 50% of their attempts in that half, you can see how the offense might have struggled. 

McNeese State continued to live mostly inside the arc, but upped its three point percentage to 50% (on low volume), which included several timely makes. One such shot was a three by Shahada Wells with 13:19 to go in the game to stretch the lead back up to double digits, 56-46. Nkamhoua answered with a three of his own but McNeese State came right back with a transition dunk, pushing the lead to nine at the under 12 media timeout. From this point forward the lead oscillated between 6 and 15 in favor of the Cowboys, never getting out of reach for Michigan but they never had the consistency or energy to string a run together that could change the feel of the game. 

 

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

One example was a three pointer from Williams with 8:06 to go, cutting the lead to 64-58. Michigan forced a miss on the ensuing McNeese St. possession but gave up an offensive rebound and second-chance layup by CJ Felder. A stop there could've allowed Michigan to pull within striking distance on the next possession, but instead they were back down eight. Williams missed a three on the next trip down the floor, Wells grabbed the rebound and was fouled by Tray Jackson while shooting on the fast-break the other way. He made both free throws out of the under eight timeout and the lead was back up to double figures. 

There were several moments like that in the second half, but that was just a taste. Every tiny bit of Michigan momentum was quickly quashed by their inability to consistently make shots with the threes not falling, plus getting manhandled inside. Their defense wasn't tight enough to make up for the ups-and-downs offensively and it was McNeese St. who came up with the high leverage buckets.

Nkamhoua dunked the ball to push the lead back down to 70-63, but DJ Richards answered with a corner three. Youssef Khayat trimmed the lead back to eight (73-65), but the Cowboys earned an easy dunk against passive Michigan defense. Williams' three attempt on the other end came up short and once Javohn Garcia drilled a triple with 2:37 to go, making it 78-65 for the visitors, the outcome was no longer in doubt. The final few minutes bled away but the margin didn't change and Michigan never got close again. Final score: 87-76 McNeese State. 

 

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

There isn't much to say about Michigan in this game other than that McNeese State was the better basketball team. They shot it better from the field and from three, dominated in the paint (42-14!!!!), won the turnover battle 15-4, and nearly led wire to wire. After falling down early, Michigan only again led for one brief moment at the end of the first half. Shahada Wells was the leading scorer with 30 points, eclipsing Williams' 20, and Michigan struggled to get contributions outside their big three of Williams, McDaniel, and Nkamhoua. Tarris Reed Jr. scored zero points in 22 minutes, attempting just one FG. 

Very little good happened for the Maize & Blue today and at 6-7, it feels like time is already running out on the season. This game was officially the final non-conference contest, a stretch that saw Michigan add almost nothing to the resume and lose two buy-games at home, one to Long Beach State and one to McNeese State tonight. The Big Ten isn't at its strongest this season, so it will be a significant uphill battle to cobble together the sort of credentials needed to make the NCAA Tournament. They are not playing like a good basketball team, or one that deserves to make the NCAA Tournament and unlike this time last year, it's not outrageous or surprising. Rather, it's numbingly normal. Something is going to have to change for Michigan Men's Basketball in 2024 or else some hard questions will have to seriously be considered by those in the athletic department about the future of the program. 

[Click the JUMP for the box score]

Using old photos tonight [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Michigan Men's Basketball played a close game against an okay opponent. The game was back-and-forth and came down to a crucial closing minutes sequence. Michigan at one point had an opportunity to put an opponent away and did not do so. Michigan then lost the game. Nothing seems to ever change with the team and the program's year-and-a-half-long nightmares with close games continues after a 106-101 defeat to Florida at the Jumpman Invitational in Charlotte, NC. 

The first half established many of the trends that would last for the duration of the game, Michigan's stellar three point shooting bolstering their offense, while Florida's offense was sustained through a high offensive rebounding clip. Michigan got out to an early 15-7 lead that was quickly winnowed by the Gators and from then on, it was pretty tight. Sloppiness was evident across the floor, with the two teams combining for 17 first half turnovers as the game devolved into rag-tag basketball for several stretches (something that would reappear in the second half).

The game was tied at 35 with under two minutes to go in the first half as the clock ticked down before the break. Dug McDaniel, who led Michigan with 15, delivered an underhand scoop off the backboard to put Michigan ahead. Both teams made stops on their next defensive possessions, which gave Michigan a chance to hold for the final shot and guarantee that they'd go into halftime with the lead. McDaniel looked for Olivier Nkamhoua on a potential alley-oop, which was intercepted by Florida's leading scorer in the half, Alex Condon. Condon passed it ahead to Zyon Pullin, who got just across half-court before pulling up for a long three. Pullin banked it in and Florida went to halftime up 38-37. 

[Click the JUMP for another three periods of almosts.]

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

Temperature Check on Wolverine Hoops

a nice win over the sex vampire in the Garden

Deep Dive Into Double Drag

a nice season-opening win 

I don't like to be glad that the season is over

I'm not sure where we go from here, but it can't be back this direction