the thing that worked [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Michigan 81, Oakland 71 (OT) Comment Count

Ace November 29th, 2020 at 9:33 PM

Michigan probably could've avoided overtime in this one.

Facing an Oakland squad playing their fourth game in five days, the Wolverines were flummoxed in the first half by the Golden Grizzlies' zone defense, turning the ball over 15 times before the break. A baseline hook by Trey Townsend on one of a handful of designed plays OU had time to install in a COVID-ravaged preseason gave the visitors a shocking 33-31 halftime lead.

Everything that could go wrong in the first half did go wrong. In addition to the comical number of turnovers, there was Mike Smith picking up two fouls, Franz Wagner scoring a mere two points, Chaundee Brown crashing back to earth as a shooter, and Isaiah Livers getting into a yelling match with Juwan Howard in the huddle, then throwing a Gatorade cooler when he was pulled shortly thereafter.

dime [Campredon]

Presumably, Michigan would settle their differences, adjust to the zone, clean up the turnovers, and pull away. They did this. Eventually.

The key was freshman center Hunter Dickinson. Oakland had no answer for his post scoring and exquisite passing. He flashed the latter in the first half with a nifty assist to Brandon Johns but went scoreless in only nine minutes. Once he got into the game again, Michigan was fine.

The trouble was Howard didn't insert Dickinson back into the game until nearly nine minutes had elapsed in the second half. Michigan had continued to struggle with the zone, shooting 3-for-11 in the half before Dickinson replaced Austin Davis, who hadn't built on a couple early buckets and wasn't containing OU on defense. Smith had created a couple quick baskets in transition before picking up his third foul and coming out. The Grizzlies pushed their lead to six points multiple times, including the possession after Dickinson checked in.

That'd be the last time Michigan faced that large a deficit. On the ensuing trip down the floor, Terrance Williams slipped a pass to Dickinson for a dunk. For the rest of the game, the Wolverines ran through Dickinson. He scored 13 points on seven shooting possessions, dished out three assists, pulled down a couple boards, and grabbed a critical steal in the second half. He dunked in traffic. He created dunks for others. He called out cutters on defense. He looked nothing like a freshman.

you'll never guess who assisted this dunk [Campredon]

Michigan still needed more. Despite some good looks, they missed six of their last eight shots in the half. That included a desperate chuck from Dickinson at the buzzer after OU blew up the initial plan to get it to him in the high post and the play completely broke down. Just prior, a bump by Livers on the baseline sent Rashad Williams to the line for two bonus free throws that tied the game. The heavy home favorites were going to overtime.

And then it was over. Dickinson won the overtime tipoff, ducked into the post, caught an entry pass from Livers, and laid the ball in. After that, OU had to foul him pretty much every time he touched the ball, giving him four more points at the line. With M's defense flying to the ball, a couple Livers triples put the game way out of reach. The final ten-point margin almost looked respectable as long as you ignored the "(OT)" next to the final score.

The Wolverines played about as a poor a game imaginable, didn't maximize their available talent, and managed to come away with a win. Dickinson finished plus-18 in 25 minutes. The other other players to come close to that +/- were the two whose minutes most closely aligned with the freshman center's time on the floor.

A close call against a bad team isn't the ideal way to figure out the best lineup. There are worries out of this one—Brown's bad game, Brooks' turnovers, and Wagner's continued lack of production chief among them. But every team has their duds. Michigan won theirs, and in the process, Dickinson may have forced Howard to adjust the lineup in a way that'll provide short- and long-term benefits.

[Hit THE JUMP for the full photo album and box score.]

Click here to see the full photo album from MG on Flickr.

Comments

mackbru

November 30th, 2020 at 1:06 AM ^

Franz did a great job on the boards. But it’s been about 30 games now and his “big breakout game” has yet to materialize. Beginning to wonder if he’s really more of a nice rotation player and less of a star. Which wouldn’t be so bad. 

outsidethebox

November 30th, 2020 at 8:42 AM ^

I have not see any video of the game so I'm not sure exactly what precipitated the offensive struggles against the zone. Were shots simply not falling or was the defense causing an out of synch element? I do hope that the Michigan staff recognizes and takes to heart the value a zone defense holds in this game. I have seen the Oakland zone described as a 1-1-3...which tells me it was more of a flex, match-up zone. 

Straight zones have holes but a match-up mitigates many of these issues. One of the huge advantages of playing zone is that it makes the offense work harder than the defense-it is an energy saver. Michigan has a roster that would lend itself very well to including zone play.

Despite the troubles here, I believe this team is going to come together and be very good.

njvictor

November 30th, 2020 at 10:37 AM ^

I have not see any video of the game so I'm not sure exactly what precipitated the offensive struggles against the zone. Were shots simply not falling or was the defense causing an out of synch element?

It was some of both. We were definitely having issues initiating our offense against the zone which was resulting in some TOs and I think that caused a bit of a mental downward spiral resulting in more TOs and missed shots. Juwan eventually made some adjustments entering the offense from the high post which started working for us, but guys like Chaundee and Franz were really off tonight

schreibee

November 30th, 2020 at 12:06 PM ^

In a nutshell - trying to shoot over the zone was a brick fest (not Livers, mostly Franz & Chaundee) leading to attempting to penetrate with entry passes, many of which were sloppy & resulted in TOs (Franz again, with help from Smith & Eli).

It was a shitty performance, absolutely no preparation for the opponent, just expected to roll over an overmatched, tired team. But they WON anyway! That's the best sign that they'll be good you can have! 

enlightenedbum

November 30th, 2020 at 8:57 AM ^

Dickinson's hands, passing, and his free throw stroke were obvious strengths.  Last two misses were because I think he was getting tired after playing 14 consecutive minutes.

Free throw stroke makes me think he'll develop into a respectable 3 point shooter that you have to at least honor.

FreddieMercuryHayes

November 30th, 2020 at 8:59 AM ^

Are we worried about the overall structure of defense and offense through the first two games?  Specifically the D does not seem to put an emphasis on not letting the other team shoot threes...UM has let the other team out shoot them on threes in both of these games.  The numbers say this is not a great way to try and win a lot of basketball games.

trueblueintexas

November 30th, 2020 at 10:54 AM ^

While I am generally not a fan of "but if x,y,z hadn't happened" justifications, I will say in both games so far there have been at least two if not three 3 pointers which were desperation end of shot clock shots that have gone in. That's 6 - 9 points difference in the final score of the game. That margin would make these games feel very different. 

I think there are enough parts on offense that there will always be someone having a good night. Some people like having one lead dog. You can win either way. 

On defense, the team showed significant improvement over the last 10 minutes + overtime against Oakland. I expect that is an area they will continue to improve as they get used to communicating and understanding their capabilities together better. 

AlbanyBlue

November 30th, 2020 at 11:38 AM ^

On one Oakland possession, either near the end of the first or the first part of the second half, an Oakland player (Micah Parrish, I think) heaved one up with what looked like one hand at the end of the shot clock, and swish.

The announcers said something like "well, he's not a 3-point shooter".

So yeah, rotten luck on a few of these.

AlbanyBlue

November 30th, 2020 at 11:26 AM ^

The youth and transfers will be key to this team going forward. Someone does need to remind Brown that functioning within the offense is a good thing, though. Talk about crashing back to Earth.

Brooks' turnovers are clearly a problem -- we need Mike Smith out there as much as possible. As teams watch more film on how to attack Brooks, it's going to continue to be an issue.

Davis is great - as a backup. Dickinson is leaps and bounds ahead. Start him. Already giving him the majority of the minutes, which is great.

I've been pretty happy with Johns and moreso with Livers, of course.

And Wagner, yeesh. Good D, but so unathletic on the offensive end. The fast break where his layup attempt didn't even catch iron and he fell over? Wow. It didn't look like he stepped on that dude's foot, but maybe? And his sweet stroke from 3? We haven't seen it enough, for sure. He hasn't showed he's that good consistently on the offensive end.

Last year this effort loses this game, I think. It was a perfect example of why playmakers are important. Sometimes you need a guy to just take over.

 

PublicSector

November 30th, 2020 at 3:08 PM ^

The announcers ignored it and I don't see a lot of mentions anywhere, but Dickenson's between the legs pass under the basket in a crowd was just brilliant. I know it basically was after the whistle - hence it was ignored, but it would have lead to an easy layup by the UM player (forget who it was) who was cleanly catching the pass in space under the basket.