[Brett Wilhelm/NCAA Photos via Getty Images]

Clinic Comment Count

Brian March 29th, 2021 at 11:54 AM

3/28/2021 – Michigan 76, Florida State 58 – 23-4, 14-3 Big Ten, Elite Eight

Michigan was up 11 at halftime and Twitter was unanimous: they weren't even playing that well. Twitter cannot agree on anything.

Twitter cannot agree what color a dress is or whether a Vehicle Miles Traveled tax is a regressive monstrosity or a good, urbanist idea. The only things Twitter has ever agreed on are 1) a boat stuck in the Suez Canal is extremely, extremely funny, and 2) the Michigan-Florida State score did not accurately reflect how deeply Juwan Howard and friends had dunked the Seminoles into a trash can.

When Twitter's right, it's right. The boat is amazing, and FSU was deep in a trash can. After surveying all available stats this one seem like the best indicator: Michigan had 34(!) shots at the rim. They had 14 other twos. That is a crazy ratio, and honestly it felt like making 23 of those 34 at the rim was cursed. We've got Austin Davis assisting Chaundee Brown out here.

"How good are they," Bill Raftery exclaimed after that. And yeah, the impression Michigan gave off in this game was a magnificent, implacable They. Scoring was distributed. Aside from the deep bench Michigan scoring went like this: 14-14-13-12-8-6-6. Five different guys had at least two assists. Davis didn't make that roster but he only played eight minutes, so he gets a pass.

Michigan followed up a first half where they shot 33%—they weren't even playing that well—by hitting about 70% of their looks in the second half, and that conversion rate was deserved. Michigan's second half shot chart is incredible:

image

One bucket outside the paint, and ~2 that aren't at the rim. That is against the tallest team in America, and a team that entered the game 10th in two-point defense. Michigan assisted on 15 of 18 second half baskets. Clinic. That was a clinic.

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There is something tremendously satisfying about winning a game where it's not about hitting shots. Michigan was 6/25 away from the rim, and it did not matter because half of Michigan's possessions ended either at the rim or in free throws.

Maybe LSU was onto something with their "give Michigan all the open threes" approach. Anyone can miss an open three. Michigan just had to hit a couple fewer and it was game on. Here there was no respite. FSU's ball denial and constant switching is on the completely opposite end of the defensive spectrum and all it got the Seminoles was the above parade to the rim.

On the other end, well… FSU got a bucket at the end of the first half. It was a pick and roll that evolved into an elbow jumper off the dribble. If you remember the preview, FSU is abominable—second percentile—at jumpers off the dribble. A bad idea shot that Michigan would give FSU all day which they will hit a quarter of the time. That's a win.

The larger win was encapsulated in the TV crew's reaction. Raftery exclaimed "they ran something! They ran something!" This is not a good spot to be in. When the color commentator is shocked that you did a basketball set more than nineteen minutes into a game, and that basketball set got you a not particularly efficient shot that you're particularly horrible at, you're going to be so far down the trash can that light reaching you from the rest of the universe is noticeably redshifted.

[After THE JUMP: Big Minutes Johns]

BULLETS

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - MARCH 28: The Florida State Seminoles take on the Michigan Wolverinesin the Sweet Sixteen round of the 2021 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament held at Bankers Life Fieldhouse on March 28, 2021 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Brett Wilhelm/NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

[Brett Wilhelm/NCAA Photos via Getty Images]

Big minutes Johns. Brandon Johns was one of the guys who got to 14 points, leading the team. Even more surprising: he was Michigan's highest usage player at 30%. That's in part because Michigan had some of those rebound-your-own-miss-and-put-it-back possessions, but Johns had 13 shooting possessions and a couple assists. Michigan opened the second half with a high-low set on which Johns put Koprivica in a blender:

Michigan's done a good job of getting Johns post touches where he can use his outstanding athleticism and Juwan Howard-taught moves to overwhelm guys who are frequently smaller or less athletic. Koprivica is, uh, not smaller.

That high-low action got Johns a floater bucket and an assist to Davis later. I imagine a world where Johns is the starting 4 in 2021-22 (and Moussa Diabate is getting the rest of the minutes there) is going to see a lot of that.

The eraser. Franz Wagner went head to head with Scottie Barnes for a big chunk of this game and came out the clear victor. Not only did Wagner end up the Kenpom MVP of the game, Barnes was held to eight points and a 72 ORTG. Franz wasn't all of that but neither was that Franz's only defensive impact:

The sequence where Wagner broke the FSU press to set up some Johns FTs, plunged into the lane for a layup, and then contested a Barnes shot into a miss, then put a rebound off an FSU player to regain possession was peak That Doesn't Show Up In The Boxscore. (Okay: one bit did end up in the boxscore.)

Rebound of the year. There are surely more consequential ones but none are more mansome:

Brown can do some things.

Brooks had some tough possessions. Michigan's offense was mostly a well-oiled machine but there was a period in the first half where Brooks was taking some extremely inadvisable shots, including a contested scoop against Koprivica, an early-clock elbow jumper off the dribble, and a semi-transition floater that missed the rim entirely. The two latter possessions were back to back and then Brooks got a gift of a 1-and-1 after a silly press foul from FSU; he missed the front end.

This doesn't have a larger meaning. Brooks carried Michigan early against LSU and even during this tough stretch he caused a couple FSU turnovers; he's a keystone for an Elite Eight team. I only mention it because maaaan that was frustrating.

Punishing full-court press. One of my few, but perpetual, complaints about John Beilein's teams is that they were susceptible to those half-ass three-quarter-court presses that are designed to drain the shot clock and do little else. Beilein's offense often took a lot of time to get a shot and there were certain games in which it felt like getting into offense with 18 seconds on the clock was a problem. Those teams never did this:

Michigan never fully dissuaded the FSU press but they got in enough transition situations off of it that it felt like a net loss for the Seminoles.

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - MARCH 28: Florida State vs Michigan in the Sweet Sixteen round of the 2021 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament held at Bankers Life Fieldhouse on March 28, 2021 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Jack Dempsey/NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

[Jack Dempsey/NCAA Photos via Getty Images]

Smith off the top top top of the backboard. Mike Smith had another tough game against a ton of length (8 points on 10 shooting possessions, 4 A, 2 TO) but had two of the biggest buckets of the game. One was the and-one where he explored the furthest reaches of the backboard right after FSU had cut it to five:

The second was a late-clock possession in the first half when FSU had subbed in Wyatt Wilkes, who is named "Wyatt." Smith nailed a step-back three over him.

Do not place a person named Wyatt on Mike Smith. Or Darryl, if he's the Big Ten DPOY.

Downtown Chaundee Brown. Brown had two of Michigan's three makes from three and on both his height, ability to elevate, and lack of hesitation created the look. Brown followed up the Smith step-back mentioned above by nailing a contested corner three with the clock under ten.

Brown's ability to get up good threes in situations other guys would have to drive at is a quiet strength of his game.

Fun with Synergy buckets. This game via the lens of what buckets the Synergy charters put various possessions in:

  • Michigan had a 15-9 advantage in spot-ups. Just 12% of FSU's possessions ended up in spot-ups, and remember that they were a 99th percentile spot-up team.
  • Synergy does not have a specific dribble jumper category in their play type charting. "PNR ball handler" is a decent proxy, although you're going to get a lot of floaters and some layups in there. FSU had 39(!) PNR ball handler possessions to Michigan's 23.
  • Michigan had a 16-8 advantage in shots off cuts. Cuts are probably the most efficient half-court offense Synergy charts and that's 21% of Michigan possessions.
  • FSU did have a 7-3 advantage in passes to the roll man and forced Michigan into 9 iso possessions versus their three; this was a result of their near-ubiquitous switching. Michigan only got 8 post-up possessions despite the switching.
  • Michigan had eight putback attempts to FSU's two.

A shot quality demolition.

"And one!" It has long been this site's contention that screaming "and one" should be a class B tech if you 1) miss and 2) aren't fouled. This would have been a 40 point game if that rule was in place because seemingly every FSU shot inside the arc was accompanied by an impressively loud (and impressively incorrect) "and one!"

I think Scottie Barnes was the main culprit but he was far from alone.

A win, but not as much of one as you'd think. UCLA was not #TeamFoul and reaped the whirlwind (from a 29% three point shooter taking one from 30 feet) but poured in on in overtime to knock out two-seed Alabama. Michigan now gets a team whose season was unimpressive enough to end up in a play-in game. Hooray?

Well, yeah, but Pac-12 teams are surging up Kenpom because they just won a ton of games against excellent competition and UCLA will enter the Michigan game ranked 16th. That's 4-5 seed territory. Better than a two? Yes. As mentioned, Michigan just stuffed a 4 in a trash can. Not quite 11 territory. UCLA's play-in game opponent, Michigan State, is ranked 63rd.

On the other hand, I do agree with this take on the potential matchup:

UCLA plays a traditional big almost all the time and Cody Riley is a 6'9" guy with a 3.5 block rate. That should be advantage Michigan.

I think that's a precursor to the… uh… I don't know what this wrestling move is but I know it is one.

I'm not sure I've seen a basketball game stopped for entanglement before.

Turtleneck man loses it. Danny Kanell did not take the game well:

This was part of a conversation about a tweet in which Kanell cited a two-game sample to argue that the officiating was terrible.

Comments

Hail-Storm

March 29th, 2021 at 4:22 PM ^

My mind is always blown away with Chaundee.  I think of him as a shooter and solid defender, but then he goes and out jumps a bunch of trees, head above the rim, to grab an offesnive rebound out of no where and put it in.

He's such a high effort guy. This team has such great chemistry and amazing coaching.  Love that they keep getting picked against and just keep winning.

KennyHiggins

March 29th, 2021 at 12:14 PM ^

Good writeup - hopefully the coaches do an equally thorough job of figuring out UCLA's weaknesses, and optimal strategies for exploiting them.  THAT is what made this clinic possible.  Wolverines by 10-12 tomorrow night.

jmstranger

March 29th, 2021 at 1:55 PM ^

It's a good run for sure but some folks are pretty breathless over the 23 points and I think some perspective is needed. Good free throw shooting got them those points but Alabama was also fouling long after they had any hope of actually coming back which led to an inflated number. For more perspective, Alabama scored 13 points in that 5 minute period (zero free throws made). 

Teeba

March 29th, 2021 at 2:50 PM ^

UCLA scored only 25 points in the whole 20 minute second half. They would have lost if Bama hadn’t choked numerous times at the free throw line. UCLA also had a clunker of a half against MSU. They will need to play two solid halves to beat us. Can they? Sure. Will they? We’ll find out tomorrow.

IDKaGoodName

March 29th, 2021 at 6:40 PM ^

This was what I experienced as well. UCLA is a very beatable team, and I think probably more so than both LSU and FSU. I am confident in our coaches and team, but cautionary that no game is a given and any day could be THE day. But UCLA has fewer weapons than those other two teams, and they don't go out and run you off the court. They are a bit reminiscent of MSU in football, how they always get you to "play down to their level" and then they end up beating you cuz fuck you. 

It should maybe be noted that Juzang was out for a large portion of the end of the 2nd half as well as all of overtime due to fouls. This game was much more Alabama losing than it was UCLA winning. I can see our defense clamping down tightly on Juzang and Jaquez (this doesn't mean they won't score some baskets) and us getting out in front early and never looking back. I will remain cautiously optimistic, but I much prefer to play this team than Alabama. 

Also, hit your free throws. 

Baffin

March 29th, 2021 at 12:15 PM ^

Good writeup. I think Eli Brooks needs a star in the pregame graphic. He is rounding into MAAR postseason form and he doesn't play like a little guy. 

This U-M team is one for the ages and I am enjoying the ride.  

 

lhglrkwg

March 29th, 2021 at 12:16 PM ^

It's really been nice following Michigan basketball for the last 10 years. It feels like rarely is this team outcoached and every so often you get an emphatic coaching dunk on national TV when lots of people are picking us to lose. It was pretty awesome watching FSU play offense was a big '?' over their heads the entire game. Hopefully the first of many tournament obliterations for Juwan

stephenrjking

March 29th, 2021 at 1:17 PM ^

Forget talking heads, a lot of Michigan fans, myself included, thought FSU would be a tough matchup. All that length, our small guards, lacking Livers, the team basically still scuffling in bits since the Illinois game? I figured it was going to be a 50-49 game.

Well, I was in the ballpark with FSU's offensive output. But not Michigan's. I hope someone does a thorough breakdown of Michigan's high-low post game somewhere, because I want to read it, even though we're already turning toward UCLA. I had said somewhere that I was really concerned about our ability to get post entries, something the team is fine, but not perfect at doing, against FSU's length... and that my vague hope was that Juwan, with lots of experience coaching against long teams in the NBA, might know something I didn't to make things work.

Well, he knew something I didn't. And something FSU didn't. Schemed his way into a breeze of an offensive win.

Still, now, think about this: We have some good players. Franz looks like an NBA lottery pick. But we don't have offensive killers the way other teams do. Look at how commentators talk about Gonzaga, with all their weapons. Nobody thinks we have those kinds of weapons. But in the end our coach makes it look like we do. 

Edit: Jordan Sperber highlighted some hi-lo action on twitter.

https://twitter.com/hoopvision68/status/1376317309770477578?s=20

IDKaGoodName

March 29th, 2021 at 6:46 PM ^

Yes. I mentioned before about having him take banana cuts to the free throw line and work from there for the dump off or kick out, but I was basically more referring to this Hi-Lo action, I am just not super familiar with the terminology. Point was to get inside the arc with Franz as the ball handler and options. His length and IQ make him so fun to watch create. I would absolutely love to see this kid come back another year, but not holding my breath on that

jmblue

March 29th, 2021 at 12:16 PM ^

With John Beilein on the sidelines, I had great confidence that, in a game that seemed like a tossup on paper, his coaching mastery would carry us to the finish.  I'm now getting that same confidence in this staff.  Juwan has pushed all the right buttons.  It is awesome to watch.

MGolem

March 29th, 2021 at 12:39 PM ^

Totally agree. It doesn't show up in the stats but FSUs press was largely negated because no one on their team was fast enough to keep up with Smith allowing our offense to get set up in a hurry. I wonder if that had a lot to do with our effectiveness at the rim: FSU was simply not able to set up their half court defense because Smith blew right by the deterrent. 

yossarians tree

March 29th, 2021 at 12:53 PM ^

I also did not agree with Brian's mild tut-tutting of Smith's performance. I thought he responded to the LSU game (Smith's worst performance since early in the season) with a brilliant game. He single-handedly managed the FSU press and got penetration on a very stingy defense. He was very strong in this game and I felt extremely comfortable when he had the ball.

Side note: Terrance Williams will be a good player for Michigan, and he puts forth great effort when he's out there, but does anyone else start yelling "Pass it to someone!" every time he gets his hands on the ball? After his turnover he did seem to take better care of the ball.

stephenrjking

March 29th, 2021 at 1:20 PM ^

I honestly think Smith's struggles against LSU were overstated. He wasn't great, but he was plugged in and for the most part did what he could in a bad matchup. His defensive play late in the LSU game to cut off a passing lane from Gaines, a 25% eFG shooter, to Smart, to force Gaines to make a play (a missed basket) was one of the smartest things I can recall seeing a basketball player do (credit @umhoops with identifying that). 

Yeah, he had a couple mistakes and struggled there, but I think he's playing fine. And he held up really well against FSU, the only real issue being slightly inefficient offense. That TO number, just two for the game, is huge to me. 

robpollard

March 29th, 2021 at 3:02 PM ^

I like Mike Smith, and UM wouldn't have won the B1G without him, but he did not play only "not great" against LSU -- he played poorly. Shooting 2 for 8, w 6 ASTs and 4 TOs, putting up a minus 10 in an 8 point win, is not good for your starting point guard. The fact the team went into overdrive against LSU when Smith sat and Brooks took over at point guard told the tale.

As always, he made some nice plays (as you mentioned) and always gives a great effort, but it was a bad matchup and it didn't go well.

He played better against FSU and largely held the key PG duties down (e.g., low turnovers), but this game was a blowout b/c Wagner, Johns, Dickinson, and Brown played fantastic on both ends of the floor. That's what is so good about this team, as there is a pretty good chance it will be Smith who plays really well against UCLA and if not, very likely someone else will step up.

MarcusBrooks

March 29th, 2021 at 3:59 PM ^

Terrance Williams will be a good player for Michigan, and he puts forth great effort when he's out there, but does anyone else start yelling "Pass it to someone!" every time he gets his hands on the ball? After his turnover he did seem to take better care of the ball.

 

YES! 

PASS THE BALL 

TIMMMAAY

March 29th, 2021 at 4:33 PM ^

Smith was pretty great, I thought. His passing was pretty sloppy vs LSU, but against FSU I thought he was very solid. We don't win, at least by that margin without him. 

On Williams; I find myself yelling, or mumbling "FRESHMEN!" to myself most times he handles the ball. He just needs time on task, against this level of competition. He'll get there, I think. 

bronxblue

March 29th, 2021 at 12:54 PM ^

One of Smith's TOs was with under 2 minutes to play and was sort of a "let's see if I can spring this to the guy under the basket" type passes that I doubt he'd have done if the game wasn't decided.  Otherwise he largely ran a really solid offensive game and was one of only 2 people to hit a 3 all game for UM.  And he held up perfectly fine defensively, at least in my viewing.  It feels like he's being graded a bit unfairly in this game.

FieldingBLUE

March 29th, 2021 at 1:04 PM ^

Agreed. Mike was so cool and calm most of the time. Handled the pressure, his dribbling and control were exquisite. He didn't do Excellent Things(TM) but he took the wind out of FSU defense by simply NOT BEING BOTHERED by it. 

It's very much a "not in the scoresheet" kind of performance but crucial nonetheless.

SoccerDancer

March 30th, 2021 at 11:44 AM ^

That pressing high pressure defense also takes a lot of energy. You continually spend that energy and don't get a return on it, does more than take the figurative wind out mentally, it takes the real energy and you wear down. You can't press an entire game without getting results or without a 'lot' of subs, it's just too draining. Typically it's also draining for the team trying to break it, but breaking it as easy as Mich did, didn't really cost the same energy. Also once it's broken, the D has to bust a$$ to get back into a half court and that cost FSU additional energy. Whole thing compounded to wear FSU down.

 

DetroitDan

March 29th, 2021 at 1:31 PM ^

I was watching Smith on defense the whole game and didn't see a single basket scored against him.  I think they tried to back him down once in the first half.  That failed and FSU stayed away from him from there on out.  He was denying passes to the man he was covering.

This happened many times in B1G play also.

BK-bloo

March 29th, 2021 at 12:31 PM ^

I like Big Minutes Johns.

That said, I love that there wasn't one player that won us the game. The balanced scoring, assists, doing it at the rim when the outside shot isn't falling, or vise versa... it's a thing of beauty!

Kudos.

UMQuadz05

March 29th, 2021 at 12:31 PM ^

Let's pause to appreciate Raftery for a moment.  He could have gone the way of Vitale, etc, but still does some scouting and can make cogent points about the games.  Just a treasure.