[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

njvictor

March 29th, 2021 at 1:00 PM ^

I take back anything I ever said about Johns not being on the roster next year. I would still love to see him clean up a few things (i.e. weird drops and turnovers), but he's looked way more natural and fluid out there. Would love to get him some 3 point looks, but I'm overall pretty happy with his performance playing inside

Yinka Double Dare

March 29th, 2021 at 1:06 PM ^

And the two game sample for Michigan was (1) a game against a 16 seed, and (2) a game in which everyone watching was absolutely baffled by the officiating (not just us, the neutrals in my feed all hated it). Michigan was top 30 in fewest fouls per game, FSU was around 250, and Michigan's biggest foul guy only played 8 minutes. Lot of holdover from the Beilein teams that fouled even less. Verticality was back for one night!

stephenrjking

March 29th, 2021 at 1:25 PM ^

I haven't seen anyone remark on this, but after he picked up his first foul, except for one dumb swipe after a missed OREB, it looked to me like Hunter was playing really careful D in the first half. Even to the point where there were some drives I think he would usually contest that he was keeping clear for. Obviously didn't hurt our D too much, so I would guess it was smart play. 

HollywoodHokeHogan

March 29th, 2021 at 10:06 PM ^

 I would agree.  Michigan got a few calls but you don’t get to blame officiating when you get dominated basically wire to wire.  
 

I will say that I think FSU’s switching hurt not only in terms of rebounds but also fouls.  They end up with small dudes trying to box out bigs and they ended up getting called for obvious pushes because they were too small to just bump or subtly move their man.

 

mwolverine1

March 29th, 2021 at 1:16 PM ^

My favorite part of this game was that Juwan clearly had a 4th quarter changeup in his back pocket and we probably didn't even need it. Giving Scottie Barnes the playoff Giannis treatment and putting Hunter Dickinson on him was genius and really allowed us to ensure FSU couldn't come back. 

Naked Bootlegger

March 29th, 2021 at 2:06 PM ^

When I first saw this match up, I assumed it was the result of a defensive switch.   But when Dickinson didn't swap again later in the possession, I thought "Coach Howard, you sneaky bastard."    Barnes was guarding our 5'10" PG, while Barnes was being checked by our 7'1" center.  Interesting in-game stuff.

AC1997

March 29th, 2021 at 1:19 PM ^

Good write-up.  My only minor disagreement is when you said Mike Smith had a "tough game".  His shooting was off and FSU probably gets some credit for that - but he spent the entire game dealing with full court pressure with ease, had those two critical buckets highlighted here, played EXCELLENT defense despite the size advantage, and successfully managed against a defense designed to funnel shots to Smith.  

I thought that he joined Wagner and Johns as the key to this game.  Unlike against LSU when Brooks was able to run the offense well without Smith, things started falling apart in the few minutes Smith was off the floor.  

Clinic indeed.

ColoradoBlue

March 29th, 2021 at 1:39 PM ^

That high-low work with Dickinson and Johns was killer.  Just adds another change-up to Juwan's arsenal of weapons.

Juwan has neutralized the loss of Livers by maximizing John's strengths and mitigating his weaknesses.  Many coaches would probably try to plug-n-play the next man up and hope for the best.

Naked Bootlegger

March 29th, 2021 at 2:09 PM ^

Livers is the better pure shooter, and probably a better team defensive player.   Johns is better driving to the hoop, post-ups, and offensive rebounding.    You're absolutely right in that Howard isn't merely inserting Johns into the lineup and telling him to replicate Livers.   He's definitely playing to his strengths.   

Indonacious

March 29th, 2021 at 1:39 PM ^

Could care less about seeds or kenpom at this point. Everyone can be beat in a single elim tourney at this stage. They have nobody who can check hunter reliably and their center is not a shooting threat/stretch 5. Their defense is nothing elite and have benefited from some great 3 pt defense luck in the tourney (and ft luck too)! I take UCLA for a birth in the final four 100/100 and with NO reservations. Win the game. 

chronic

March 29th, 2021 at 1:43 PM ^

For me, play of the game was when Franz bounced the ball off that dude's head and out of bounds, although I guess it didn't count, but still...incredible...

DK81

March 29th, 2021 at 2:15 PM ^

While I agree with your overall point about Beilein teams taking too long to advance the ball against the press. We would be remiss to not mention the clinic Trey Burke put on dismantling VCU's vaunted press in the 2013 NCAA tourney.

schizontastic

March 29th, 2021 at 3:06 PM ^

Only nitpick--I'm pretty sure that Coach H's "end of the half/regulation" set play is not "Smith dribble around until taking a long, contested 3" that we saw at BIG tourney and yesterday. 

But I could be wrong. 

Teeba

March 29th, 2021 at 3:24 PM ^

     I think in retrospect, too much was made of FSU's height. They go 6'8", 6'8", and 7'1" across the front. We go 6'10", 6'8", 7'1, and our seven-footer plays like a seven footer. Their big burly PF got in foul trouble, reducing their advantage. Their backup 7 footer is still learning the game. Our backup center has an old man game with 40 year old post-up moves. Davis' game is reminiscent of Kevin McHale.

    Where they have an advantage is at guard, but I didn't see FSU doing anything on offense to exploit that size mismatch. It helps that FSU was 0-18 in that building at one point over two games. That allows Johns and Hunter to help near the rim. I saw someone in the game thread complaining that we were leaving their 3 pointer shooters wide open. Um, yeah, make a shot first and then I'll guard the line.

ak47

March 29th, 2021 at 3:31 PM ^

Michigan putting Hunter Dickinson on Scottie Barnes was a fascinating choice. They knew Barnes didn't shoot threes and it let Dickinson hang in the lane, feels like that deserves some unpacking on how it went overall.

avid

March 29th, 2021 at 4:08 PM ^

Not a crazy wrestling guy but that move reminds me of 'the razors edge' from back when Scott Hall was called Razor Ramon, which was before I even started watching wrestling as a kid so why do I remember this????

Also IMO the play of the game was Franz stuffing the guy and then bonking the ball off his head.

 

MGlobules

March 29th, 2021 at 5:58 PM ^

Beilein's teams very handily broke a lot of presses, and made a lot more transition buckets than was the common estimation. He was all about being deliberate but scampering for available transition buckets. I mean--yeah--he didn't always have super-speedy talent like we do now. . . Smith has been masterful controlling the pace. 

Jonesy

March 29th, 2021 at 6:11 PM ^

It might bite us at some point this year but Livers getting hurt is the best thing that could have happened for 21/22 Brandon Johns.

jsquigg

March 29th, 2021 at 8:42 PM ^

I'll take those numbers everyday from Johns, but I'm also not going to pretend that he still isn't Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. He had several timid possessions and dropped passes. He's so talented but it always feels like he's holding himself back much of the time. He could be dominant. Hope he finds it consistently because Michigan needs it. 

SHub'68

March 30th, 2021 at 5:50 PM ^

"It has long been this site's contention that screaming "and one" should be a class B tech..."

It's kind of like 'flopping light' in that it's an attempt to get a call that isn't there. And it's annoying.

I think I hate that 'throw your head back as you attempt to drive by someone' thing worse, though. It is flopping with the ball in your hands, looks stupid, and isn't called that much any more anyhow. So point guards: stop doing this.

Also: Trae Young should get offensive fouls for what he does, too.