Michigan 61, Southern Miss 47 Comment Count

Ace


Big Nasty. [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

In an effort to speak a new identity into existence this offseason, Michigan's coaches and players started calling sophomore Jon Teske "Big Nasty." They hoped that would replace "Big Sleep," the moniker Teske picked up during a quiet freshman year as a little-used third-stringer.

Now Moe Wagner's primary backup, Teske was every bit Big Nasty tonight against Southern Miss, tallying his first career double-double with ten points and 11 rebounds. The seven-footer made all five shots from the field and grabbed five offensive boards. He did all this in only 15 minutes, earning a standing ovation when he exited in the game's waning moments.

Without Teske's breakout performance, this could've been another uncomfortably close game against an overmatched opponent. After Michigan jumped out to an early 9-2 lead at the first TV timeout, USM fought their way back as—stop me if you've heard this before—Michigan couldn't can open looks while their opponents made an unsustainable percentage of their three-point shots. Fittingly, an off-balance pull-up triple by Tyree Griffin fell at the buzzer to give the Golden Eagles a one-point halftime lead.

Michigan still looked disjointed to open the second half, trading the lead with USM until Teske checked in with 13 minutes to play. He was a much-needed spark. His defensive rebound led to a quick Duncan Robinson three in transition to give M the lead for good; he'd cap a 13-0 run with a putback and a smooth baseline jumper. USM didn't threaten again.


MAAR finished with a team-high 14 points. [Campredon]

It was the third straight game that Michigan couldn't dominate a body-bag opponent. Their expected stars again underwhelmed. Wagner posted a quiet 12 points and six rebounds. Charles Matthews went scoreless in the first half, finished with six points and two turnovers, and looked unsure of when to assert himself. Point guards Zavier Simpson and Jaaron Simmons didn't make a shot from the field, though Simmons at least dealt out five assists, including a slick cross-court feed for a Matthews corner three that blew the game wide open.

Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman was a notable exception, grinding out ten first-half points when the offense was struggling. He'd finish with a team-high 14 points and gave out five assists; his ability to make something out of nothing in late-clock situations proved critical.

Michigan will face a significant step up in competition with three games in three days at next week's Maui Invitational, starting with LSU on Monday. While the early portion of the season hasn't been pretty, there's reason to believe a simple correction in shooting luck, much like what occurred midway through last season, will have this team looking dangerous. Through three games, the Wolverines are making 32.9% of their three-pointers, even though their looks have been of decent quality; opponents are hitting a scorching 48.1%, even though the perimeter defense hasn't looked nearly that awful.

There are still problem areas. Michigan needs more production from their point guards, and Matthews looks alarmingly gun-shy for a player who's supposed to be one of the team's top two scorers. Teske's emergence, however, answers at least one big question, and could even give John Beilein some added lineup flexibility down the road.

Stick around, Big Nasty.

[Hit THE JUMP for the box score.]

Comments

mGrowOld

November 16th, 2017 at 9:58 PM ^

A basketball game without an open thread?   I've NEVER seen that before in any of the three "major" sports.   Twitter had comments from our hosts here but nothing from the sideboard.

We're slipping.

HarbaughsLeftElbow

November 16th, 2017 at 10:03 PM ^

Agreed that Matthews looks really timid. He passed open good 3 point looks on several occasions to take a dribble or two and then pass it back out. 

So far this looks like potentially one of Coach B's worst 3 point shooting teams. Really only Robinson and Wagner are above-average shooters for their positions. 

ST3

November 16th, 2017 at 10:05 PM ^

Davis enters Club Trillion in the box score. What is a little concerning is Livers posting an Eight Trillion and 1. Come on big fella, get involved.

Monocle Smile

November 16th, 2017 at 10:08 PM ^

USM fought their way back as—stop me if you've heard this before—Michigan couldn't can open looks while their opponents made an unsustainable percentage of their three-point shots.
The first happens often early in the season and less later in the season, but is there any actual reason why the second is so frequent? Does the universe just enjoy crapping on us? Because it seems to happen even when we hedge and contest the 3.

WolverineHistorian

November 17th, 2017 at 9:53 AM ^

I'm at the point now where I shrug over the fact that EVERY opponent will drain a three at the buzzer to end the first half against us.  It doesn't matter which time of year, home or away, from close by or from mid-court, that shot is ALWAYS going to go in.  When Southern Miss did that last night, I just laughed. 

bronxblue

November 16th, 2017 at 11:04 PM ^

This feels exactly how last season started. I'm not that worried about bad teams hitting a bunch of threes. And this is still a team replacing Walton, Irvin, and Wilson, so I'm not totally surprised there are issues with play calling. Still, feel good about this team. Should be in the tourney, and then anything can happen.

The Man Down T…

November 16th, 2017 at 11:45 PM ^

"Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman was a notable exception, grinding out ten first-half points when the offense was struggling. "

 

I know I sound like a broken record or his biggest cheerleader but this statement has been MAAR for the last 3 seasons.  He has consistently been our biggest hustler on the court, keeping us in games where we struggle and pushing us ahead when we don't.  He always comes to play and works hard every minute he's in there.  Going to miss him after this season.  

lilpenny1316

November 17th, 2017 at 12:04 AM ^

 

It was the third straight game that Michigan couldn't dominate a body-bag opponent.

Beilein is wise to play some soft competition before Turkey Day tournaments.  I don't know if it's the style of offense he runs, but it seems to take the guys some games to get comfortable running and gunning.  That South Carolina game last year was unbearable. 

I hope people don't worry if we stumble in Maui.  Beilein has shown that if his team is healthy, they are no fun to play come February and March.

shoes

November 17th, 2017 at 10:24 AM ^

good minutes,in games against better competiton, that will be a huge asset. I was not optimistic after last season that he would be anything more than a large slow-moving body. Competition caveats aside, he is looking like he is moving much better, has a nice soft touch (including at the line) and can be a much needed rim protector.

DowntownLJB

November 17th, 2017 at 2:09 PM ^

there was a point last night where Teske caught a questionable-looking pass downlow, gathered it, and put it up to score.  All I could think was how a guy like Ricky Doyle would've never caught that ball, let alone gotten it up for a shot.  Teske really does look like a different guy than last year.

Fifth-Generation

November 17th, 2017 at 2:29 PM ^

Start Teske against LSU and put mo at the 4. Bring either Robinson or Matthews of the bench. This is the lineup I have been dreaming about in my sleep. Yes it is a small sample size but hell I have not seen a Michigan player rebound like teske that since the 1990's.

shoes

November 17th, 2017 at 4:44 PM ^

doesn't really fit Beilien's offense, as it really slows things up in transition and also slows down ball movement in the half court. Also I love Moe but I'm not sure he has the lateral quickness to guard many 4's.