Michigan 77, Iowa 71 (OT) Comment Count

Ace


Moe Wagner "played" M's most critical minutes from the bench. [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

"I have no idea how we won the game," John Beilein said to BTN's Mike Hall.

Michigan didn't make a shot outside the paint until under ten minutes remained in the game. Their two best players, Moe Wagner and Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman, fouled out after playing 16 and 22 minutes, respectively. The Wolverines went 18-for-32 from the free-throw line. Players not named Duncan Robinson made zero of their ten three-point attempts while Iowa made four more shots from beyond the arc. Zavier Simpson took a late five-second call with the team clinging to a three-point lead. Jordan Bohannon sunk a dagger to send it to overtime not long thereafter.

With all that going against them, Michigan somehow found a way to pull out a 77-71 win over the pesky Hawkeyes to advance to the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinals. It was about as un-Beilein a game that the Wolverines have won in recent memory. The vast majority of their offense came from attacking the basket, going 25-for-43 (58.1%) on two-pointers. Michigan's resulting shot chart is unlike any I remember from the Beilein era (via ESPN):


Layups and, uh, more layups.

Meanwhile, the defense bounced back from an uncharacteristically bad first half to shut down Iowa's offense for the duration, highlighted by an overtime session in which the Hawkeyes didn't hit a field goal after their opening possession. That allowed Michigan to ultimately pull away despite an unnerving number of missed free throws in the deciding period.

Part of what made this game so frustrating is that Wagner and MAAR were both excellent when they were on the floor. MAAR stuffed the stat sheet with nine points on nine shot equivalents, five rebounds, three assists, and two steals; Wagner had 11 points, made four of his six two-pointers, and had a gorgeous no-look assist to Charles Matthews. An enragingly tight whistle—the two teams combined for 46 fouls—prevented either player, and Michigan, from getting into a consistent rhythm, however. 


Matthews and Teske both came up big down the stretch. [Campredon]

Coming at just the right time, it was a get-right game for Charles Matthews. He led the team with 16 points, going 5-for-10 from the field and 6-for-10 from the line, and pulled down eight rebounds.

The supporting cast also picked up the slack. Robinson made three critical three-pointers, pulled down five boards, and came up with two steals while playing sturdy post defense. His counterpart at the four, Isaiah Livers, converted a few tough shots around the hoop to tally his most points (nine) since early January. Simpson converted five-of-nine two-pointers, frequently beating Bohannon off the dribble, grabbed a Waltonesque five defensive rebounds, and played his usual suffocating defense—Bohannon finished only 3-for-14 from the field. Jordan Poole had an up-and-down afternoon but did get a crucial steal and dunk in the second half. Like almost all of his teammates, he could finish at the hoop but didn't have his outside shot going.

Jon Teske's contributions were quite difficult to overlook. Iowa had a hard time converting at the rim with him patrolling the paint for 28 minutes; his two blocks and steal undersell his impact on defense. He did a lot more than come up with stops at the basket, including snatching a couple huge rebounds late and tapping another to Robinson while simultaneously sealing off Tyler Cook to effectively seal the game in overtime. While Teske struggled to actually put them back, he also grabbed a team-high four offensive rebounds. With Wagner unable to avoid whistles, Teske came up huge.

Michigan will hopefully get a few more threes to fall tomorrow afternoon in a tougher test against four-seed Nebraska. Even if they don't, though, they've found ways to win games anyway—plus, their two stars are impressively well-rested going into their second game in two days.

[Hit THE JUMP for the box score.]


THIS FRIGGIN' GUY [Campredon]

Comments

JBE

March 1st, 2018 at 7:00 PM ^

Yep, flaws are what usually bite a team in the ass.

Free throw shooting is a frustrating flaw for a team, but it's better than getting killed on the offensive glass or having a seive of a defense. 

J.

March 1st, 2018 at 7:02 PM ^

Especially when there are often ways to paper over this particular flaw.  If Michigan hadn't been 3 of 19 from 3, the frree throw shooting would have been an afterthought.  Hit their normal percentage from behind the arc and they win by double digits in regulation.

Year of Revenge II

March 1st, 2018 at 8:50 PM ^

It would not be an afterthought for me.

The free throw, but for the uncontested layup, is the easiest shot in basketball, and we are not good at it.  In fact, we stink.  Hard to believe that it is not mental at this point.

It will clearly be our Waterloo.  It's just a question of when.  Until then, I am enjoying the ride.

RobM_24

March 1st, 2018 at 7:03 PM ^

Was the bad shooting caused by tight rims or tight buttholes? Or both? I'd say some of Poole's misses were nerves -- airballs on decent looks.

J.

March 1st, 2018 at 7:08 PM ^

I don't think it was the rims.  Iowa couldn't miss vs. Illinois, and I don't think they changed the rims overnight.  But you're right; Poole, in particular, was way off.  It might have been nerves, or maybe the sightlines, or playing in midafternoon, or.. not really sure.  But I can't blame the rims here.

WolverineHistorian

March 1st, 2018 at 7:10 PM ^

About three Hawkeyes mugged Robinson to the ground so he couldn't get off the long pass to Matthews for the easy layup. No foul. No whistle. Yes, our free throw shooting is eye cancer but if THIS is how the officiating is going to be, it doesn't give me much excitement for tomorrow.

Mongo

March 1st, 2018 at 7:11 PM ^

Looked too amped, tight not loose. Stage got the better of a them. Need more shoot around on my he court and relax. MSG is an intimidating place first time. Hopefully today’s christening settles them down.

jsquigg

March 1st, 2018 at 7:31 PM ^

I was actually pretty calm the first half, but I lost it the second half.  I know basketball is hard to officiate, but this reeked.  I don't know if any of the refs had money on the under, but Michigan didn't get one damn 50/50 call and many of their fouls were utter bullshit.  This was made even more infuriating with the amount of physicality Iowa got away with at times, whether moving screens/picks or bodying up Michigan when they drove.  It's not that that stuff doesn't get let go a lot, it's the lack of consistency from one end to the other.  The thing is that when it comes to basketball I'm not sure how you fix it.  I'd like to see an advantage call similar to soccer to prevent bullshit fouls that prevent easy hoops.  I'd also like to see better training on what a foul is.  Michigan got run over with position at least 3-4 times and didn't get one call.  With balanced officiating this game wouldn't have been close.

Bill22

March 1st, 2018 at 11:39 PM ^

With as easily they called fouls on Michigan, the Duncan Robinson ‘taking a charge’ no call pissed me off. The one 50/50 call that goes Michigan’s way was overturned on a replay that wasn’t clear at all. Reminded me of the home Purdue game replay. The explanation by the announcer about how the ball moved was bullshit. I also didn’t appreciate the multiple “Big Blue” references. Get your shit straight BTN/Big Ten officiating.

bronxblue

March 1st, 2018 at 7:52 PM ^

The only saving grace is that it's unlikely these same refs will call tomorrow's game, greatly reducing the likelihood two Michigan starters foul out of a game.

UM Griff

March 1st, 2018 at 7:57 PM ^

To ensure this game ended up in the “W” column. Nebraska will be a tougher opponent tomorrow, so hopefully MAAR and Moe will be back making 3’s.

Thirdgenerationblue

March 1st, 2018 at 8:25 PM ^

We shouldn't be there playing the B1G tournament, but since we are, it is probably appropriate that we had such a bizarre game. Kudos to this team for continually finding new ways to win. 

No Mo, MAAR, or Duncan for a late first half stretch.....down 5 at the half? 

No worries, just come out with your hair on fire in a 11-0 run that makes everyone remember how good we can be. 

Mo and MAAR held down all day with foul trouble.....at least they both made the most of their time on the court. Duncan wore the 6th man award proudly......

If I told you that the leading scorer would be Mathews, with Duncan and Z to follow and that we were going to miss 14 free throws, you wouldn't believe we could win. I wouldn't either. 

Lots of times when a team excapes with a win in the post season, it can lead to a strong run. I'm voting for that. Mo and MAAR should be well rested. 

Nebraska wanted Michigan. Well they got us (be careful what you ask for) .......

Lets win and advance again........

snarling wolverine

March 1st, 2018 at 8:55 PM ^

If I told you that the leading scorer would be Mathews, with Duncan and Z to follow and that we were going to miss 14 free throws, you wouldn't believe we could win.
Matthews is the team's second-leading scorer on the season (ahead of MAAR and behind only Wagner) and Robinson is fourth, while Simpson (5th) has had a number of double-digit scoring nights. It's not that shocking that these guys filled it up. As for the FTs, well, 18-32's not too different from how we've been shooting a lot of nights.

snarling wolverine

March 1st, 2018 at 11:41 PM ^

Matthews didn't score in B1G play like he did in the non-con, but he still had a number of conference games in which he reached double figures. 

Simpson was 0-4 from 3 today; it's not that he rediscovered his stroke from the perimeter.   He simply continued his reliable shooting inside the arc - on the year he's shooting 56.8% (67-118) from 2.

 

MC5-95

March 1st, 2018 at 8:44 PM ^

I felt like if the promos weren’t touting New Yawk-isms by Mr NYC himself Michael Rapaport, we were seeing how “Big 10 Country” was a rugged land of pick up trucks, timber, and mustaches. Yee-haw.

Big 10: please pick one region to know nothing about. Thanks.

1blueeye

March 1st, 2018 at 9:52 PM ^

I think it was about 26 of 40 minutes. In the bonus at the 16 minute mark of second half, and about 10 minutes of first half. Yet still shot more ft’s than Iowa and played aggressive defense.

Bill22

March 1st, 2018 at 11:26 PM ^

What was the last meaningful game, FB or BB, where you thought, “Wow, the calls are really going our way?” Jan 1, 1998 Rose Bowl? Seriously, I would love to know of an example in this century.

SysMark

March 2nd, 2018 at 10:08 AM ^

There's always an adjustment to shooting in a new, large arena.  That may have given Iowa an advantage, especially early.  We could see some improved shooting today.  That and some different refs could make today a good one.