Michigan 69, Loyola Chicago 57, One More Game Comment Count

Ace


Moe Wagner made history with his performance tonight. [Bryan Fuller]

We just had to believe.

Believe in the Moe Wagner First Three-Pointer Corollary. Believe in Luke Yaklich's defense. Believe that Zavier Simpson wouldn't have the worst game of his life for every last minute. Believe that these damn shots would eventually fall. Believe in the Ironclad Law of Duncan Robinson's Six. Believe in John Beilein.

Our beliefs were tested. Michigan shot out of the gate, gaining an early 12-4 edge, before a well-coached Loyola squad started outplaying them. The switching Ramblers defense kept the Wolverines from getting into their usual sets. On the other end, Loyola combined dizzying off-ball motion with strong post-ups from center Cameron Krutwig. While Wagner was a force, tallying 11 points and 11 boards at halftime, he received almost no help. Charles Matthews churned out eight points on 3-for-8 shooting. Backup center Jon Teske made his lone attempt. Nobody else on the team had a bucket.

While Michigan's poor outside shooting wasn't anything new this tournament, the same couldn't be said for the seven-point halftime deficit, nor the simultaneous disappearing acts of Robinson, Simpson, and Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman. The Wolverines had been able to grind out wins without one or two of those players in top form; getting nothing out of all three would be tough to overcome.


The exclamation point. [Fuller]

Ever so slowly, Wagner and friends worked their way back in the second half. Ever so slowly. The margin remained at seven at the first media timeout and climbed to eight on a pair of Clayton Custer free throws out of the second. With the outside shots still clanging iron and Simpson looking entirely out of sorts, Beilein turned to his bench, subbing in Teske and Jordan Poole. With ten seconds of entering the game, Poole drove baseline for a layup. Shortly thereafter, Poole grabbed a defensive rebound in traffic, pushed the pace, and the ball worked around to Robinson for a three-pointer—quite notably, his second, reaching the magic six-point mark while cutting the deficit to three.

Poole, fully at home taking center stage in the Final Four, kept seeking out buckets. After another board, he went coast-to-coast for a tough layup. Wagner knotted the game a minute later by backing out of a double-team and launching a three-pointer right over it. Poole took his the next turn, giving Michigan its first lead of the second half at the line with 6:20 to play.

"The Drip Boys are full of swag, that's what they call themselves," said Matthews. "They bring instant energy, especially this kid here [Poole]. This is my roommate, so I've got my hands tied with him the whole trip long."

In closing time, Beilein went with his go-to guys. Simpson came back in for Simmons, rediscovered his defense, and kept the ball moving without those unsightly turnovers. Matthews hit a gorgeous reverse layup off a sharp pass from Wagner after taking a quick breather. Abdur-Rahkman got Michigan's lead up to double digits with a tough runner, only his second basket of the game, that all but ended the game with 2:13 to play. Sister Jean got a head start up the tunnel right around the time Matthews hammered home the final nail.


How many more, Jordan? [Fuller]

This was, above all, a career-defining performance by Wagner, who finished with 24 points on 17 shot equivalents, 15 rebounds (six offensive), an assist, and three steals. That stat line put him among Hall of Fame company: Larry Bird and Hakeem Olajuwon are the only other players to record 20 points and 15 rebounds in a national semifinal.

"Wow," said Wagner upon hearing that fact. "If you put it like that, it's probably cool. But to be honest, I kept looking possession by possession, we had trouble scoring the first half. We scored 22 points and that was kind of the only way we found our way to the basket, grab offensive rebounds and get second-shot opportunities. And I honestly just tried to do my job. The shots were falling the second half. It's a lot more fun when the ball goes through the net."

Wagner also played one of his best defensive games; while Krutwig went 7-for-11 from the field, he also coughed up six turnovers, and Wagner committed only one foul—of paramount importance in a game the Wolverines needed all 36 of his brilliant minutes.

Michigan's now-usual stifling defense handled the rest until the offense finally clicked late. Just don't tell the Wolverines they just knocked off Cinderella.

"We never looked at the team as a Cinderella team," said Matthews. "It's like 300-something Division I teams, and they're one of the last four standing. That's no Cinderella story. We respected them and we knew we had to come out and execute against them."

It took a lot of patience and faith in the system, but it ultimately paid off in Michigan's second trip to the NCAA championship game in six years. The winner of Villanova-Kansas awaits on Monday night.

"Everybody is really happy," said Beilein. "And we're ready to move on to the next game, whoever it is."

[Hit THE JUMP for more photos and the box score.]

All photos by Bryan Fuller.

Comments

jmblue

March 31st, 2018 at 10:27 PM ^

When they said at halftime that Wagner hadn't committed a foul, I had a good feeling.  He was dialed in - already had a double-double - and he wasn't going to be sitting much in the second half.  Then he threw down that dunk over Krutwig and you could feel the team coming back to life...

 

poppinfresh

March 31st, 2018 at 10:38 PM ^

gave us solid enough minutes and hit a huge 3.

like everyone else we gonna need to play perfect to have a chance monday.  xavier is gonna have to do a complete 180 and maar cant shoot worse than he did tonight. 

poppinfresh

March 31st, 2018 at 10:29 PM ^

we're gonna need to slow the pace down monday, tonight definitely felt like we were rushing.  assume it will be a death by 2's strategy and don't let nova rain it down from above like they are tonight

mo foul issues will be paramount again

matty blue

April 1st, 2018 at 8:11 AM ^

...i didn’t think we got the offense going on any level *until* we pushed the pace. that won’t work against villanova, i don’t think - we’re going to *have* to limit transition threes, or we’re dead meat - but i think it helped us this time.

ILL_Legel

March 31st, 2018 at 10:31 PM ^

I know I am probably crazy but we do best on D what it takes to beat Villanova. Great transition D and great 3 point D. I am probably not as worried as I should be. How do we score? I think drive and kick and pick and roll can work.

MGolem

March 31st, 2018 at 10:33 PM ^

Simpson and Abdur-Rahkman could have played any worse as a collective starting backcourt and we won. We may not be as good as Villanova but this team doesn’t subscribe to panic. If our guys play well we definitely have a chance to bring it home. We have only played one well rounded game this entire tournament so far. Hopefully we are due for another.

Sopwith

March 31st, 2018 at 10:34 PM ^

right through about midway in the second half-- even a deficit of 5 or 6 seemed like a mountain with the way the O was playing. What a last 10 minutes. It's like the light bulb just when on and they figured out the LC defense all at once, and suddenly... it looked like a 3 vs. an 11 the rest of the way.

Amazing. Mo, Mo, Mo yer boat.

ILL_Legel

March 31st, 2018 at 10:40 PM ^

How many times since Zavier became the starter again has Beilein had both Z and Rahk on the bench? That was a huge tactical move when they were both struggling and Coach put Charles and Poole on the floor at the same time for a few minutes before the under 4 timeout. Charles and Poole were aggressive while Z and Rahk regrouped. Awesome coaching!

Boner Stabone

March 31st, 2018 at 10:45 PM ^

This team can do it.  They are the only team that went into Breslin and won there this year.  They are battle tested and anything can happen in a winner take all game.  I like Beilein as the better coach and I think he will have something up his sleeve to throw at Nova.

Bill22

April 1st, 2018 at 4:34 PM ^

When the team went to the title game in ‘13 I felt like Beilien was in over his head. They did a pre-game interview with him and he looked nervous. I didn’t have a good feeling after that interview. I don’t anticipate that tomorrow night. Beilien knows he deserves to be there and has confidence in this team. This isn’t a starting 5 loaded with NBA ready talent and the National POY. It’s a 10 deep perfect mixture of shooters, defense, ball handling, passing, team symmetry, confidence and belief in each other, unselfishness, commitment, and love for each other and the game. You can’t quite put your finger on it, but it only exists on teams like these who win championships. This is the quintessential Beilien team and this is the team that will win it all.

UMinSF

March 31st, 2018 at 10:46 PM ^

never stops impressing and surprising. Different stars every night, incredible growth, and stellar play in crunch time.

What a fun year, and what a great team to watch and cheer for!

Go Freakin' Blue! 

KennyHiggins

March 31st, 2018 at 10:54 PM ^

Kansas just looks pitiful - like horrible matador D pitiful.  Let's see if Nova scores 7- against a Yaklich/Beilein defense Monday night.

 

Michigan 70  Nova 63

Arb lover

March 31st, 2018 at 11:27 PM ^

The guys this year seem to play better as an underdog. Honestly that's hindered them some in the tournament so far, though coming back from behind several times you can tell when they start feeling like the underdog and let loose. 

Think back to B1G play, I feel like MSU and Purdue were some of the best teams out there this year, and nobody thought Michigan was going to win any of those games, let alone come close.

I'm thinking our greatest intangible asset here is that Villa(nova) is coming off of an almost 20pt blowout of a 1 seed, and they see us as  a 3 seed that struggled to get here, and that they just played the championship game on saturday night, whereas Michigan comes out to play vs top ranked teams. We went 4-2 vs top 10 teams this year. 

Boom Goes the …

March 31st, 2018 at 11:42 PM ^

Loyola coach Mosers interview with Andy Katz. Very complimentary of Michigans defense and how they close windows so quickly. Classy guy and very insightful interview.

IMB87

April 1st, 2018 at 12:15 AM ^

"We tried to space it and cut hard, their length, they're really good defensively, they close the gaps,...they close the gap of opportunity really fast. We've done a really good job all year of spacing it, moving it...when a gap opens up or a breakdown opens up...they were shrinking the gap of opportunity so fast...I remember one back cut, it was wide open and all of a sudden they close to the body with their length and got a deflection" 

This defense is just ridiculously good.  I think it can carry us over Villanova.  That would be something to beat Villanova without shooting like against Texas A&M.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

March 31st, 2018 at 11:43 PM ^

For about two thirds of the game I was yelling at the TV for these guys to please just drive and attack the rim and I don't care if the big ugly guy is in the way or anyone else because you're bigger faster and stronger and you can just go to the rim and they can't stop you.  Then they figured that out and everything was fine again.

J.

April 1st, 2018 at 1:26 PM ^

There are some seats at the Alamodome that are approximately equivalent to being at a sports bar located somwhere in the vicinity of the stadium, provided the sports bar lacks a liquor license. :)

Looking around, it did appear that they sold the obstructed view seats at the back of the lower bowl, where they have TVs hanging from the bottom of the upper bowl (which is what's providing the obstruction) so you can actually see.

Jonesy

April 1st, 2018 at 12:42 AM ^

Hopefully we don't have a 5th atrocious offensive game out of 6. Can we please play to our ability on both sides of the court? Glad we didn't play Nova today, they sure didn't have an issue with sightlines.