[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Michigan State 65, Michigan 60 Comment Count

Alex Cook March 17th, 2019 at 7:13 PM

For the third time this season, Michigan fell apart in the second half against Michigan State. For the second time, they handed a banner to their rival. This one was closer down the stretch, but State scored the last ten points of the game after erasing a 13-point second half deficit. With the game tied at 60 with less than a minute left, Zavier Simpson missed a wide open three, Cassius Winston muscled a layup past Jon Teske to take the lead, Ignas Brazdeikis missed a floater badly, and Aaron Henry missed the back end of a one-and-one. With the Wolverines trailing by three, Winston tried to give a foul on Jordan Poole, Poole put up a shot, and the refs swallowed their whistle on a clear three-point foul to effectively end the game.

Michigan State started the game up 17-11, but Xavier Tillman’s second foul with about nine minutes left in the first half swung the game. With Nick Ward and Thomas Kithier at the five, Michigan found easy looks in the ball screen game and locked up the Michigan State offense. Two threes by Matt McQuaid were the only Spartan points for the rest of the half, and Michigan took a solid 31-23 lead into halftime. Despite another McQuaid three to open the scoring after the break, Michigan extended the lead: an off-balance Poole three, an Iggy three over Kenny Goins, and a pair of Iggy free throws put the score at 39-26. By that point, Iggy had scored 17 points — he was Michigan’s only source of offense early on and had made a few threes. Michigan State shut him down from there.

Much like in Michigan’s previous losses to State, the Spartans went on an inexorable run over much of the second half to get the win. In those first two wins, the hero was Winston; in this game, it was McQuaid. The senior wing went off for 27 points, including 7-13 from three point range (State’s other players were just 2-10). Winston read Michigan cheating off McQuaid in the weakside corner on the pick and roll, and the sharpshooter made the Wolverines pay. McQuaid was essential in State’s comeback, and came up big late by twice getting State to within two points after they’d fallen down five, baiting Poole into a three-point foul with two minutes left, and hitting a three over Zavier Simpson. Goins had a rough game and Winston took a while to get going, but McQuaid was there to pick up the slack and take advantage of every poor tag and recover.

[Campredon]

The Wolverine offense again bogged down in the second half. In the first half, Michigan scored a respectable 1.15 points per possession, and in the second, they scored just 0.88. Michigan settled and went one-on-one against State’s switch-heavy defense, Tillman was an important presence inside, and Michigan couldn’t feed the ball to Teske when they managed to switch Winston onto him. The Wolverines’ shot selection was about as bad as it’s been all season. Tillman was impressive once again: State was clearly more vulnerable defensively as he sat on the bench in the first half, and Tillman was active on the offensive glass to generate a few extra possessions in the second. Tom Izzo realized that his backup bigs couldn’t handle this game, and played Tillman 18 minutes after halftime.

Michigan defended Cassius Winston well for most of the game, but it was his work in the ball screen game with Xavier Tillman that propelled Michigan State in the second half. Winston, who had just 3 points and 4 assists in the first half, had 11 and 7 in the second — finding McQuaid on the kick and Tillman on the roll, and eventually getting a couple buckets himself. It was a tough Winston layup past Isaiah Livers to beat the shot clock that completed the Spartan comeback and tie the game at 48, and Winston’s ability to power a shot up through a strong Teske contest gave State what would prove to be the game-winner with a little over 30 seconds left. Simpson had a decent game — 10 assists to just 1 turnover — but missed all of his shots from three, including one late in the game. For the third time this season, Winston won that battle.

After State tied the game at 48, Michigan got out in transition for an Iggy dunk and Simpson found Teske for a quick turn and lay-up alley-oop. Winston hit both free throws after a Teske reach in, Poole made 1-2 free throws after getting fouled on a fastbreak, then Winston got around Poole for another late clock layup. After the last TV timeout — Michigan was up one — a nice set play got Poole two free throws (he made both), and Simpson blew past Winston for a layup. Livers responded to McQuaid’s three free throws with a big three, but Michigan didn’t score on their final four possessions. Starting with that McQuaid three over Simpson, State scored on each of their final four possessions.

[Campredon]

Had the foul on Poole’s final shot been called correctly (Winston was clearly trying to give a foul and grabbed Poole’s arm with both hands), Michigan would have needed an 82% free throw shooter to knock down all three free throws and would have needed to get a stop on a State possession with a couple of seconds to work with to even force overtime. None of the refs blew the whistle, Goins caught the airball, and the game was over. Michigan played poorly on both ends in the second half and State’s comeback — outscoring the Wolverines by 18 over the last 17 minutes of the game — didn’t hinge on one play… but it was a tough no-call for Michigan.

State won the Big Ten Tournament, the regular season title, and all three matchups against Michigan. Both teams enter the NCAA Tournament as two-seeds, and Michigan will have to advance past Montana (again) and either Nevada or Florida to get to the Sweet 16. Potential matchups against Texas Tech, Buffalo, Gonzaga, Florida State, Marquette, and Ja Morant would stand in the way of a second straight Final Four.

[Box score after the JUMP]

Comments

snarling wolverine

March 17th, 2019 at 7:44 PM ^

I suggest that MGoBlog switch around these two articles on the front page - put the article on our NCAA seeding at the top.  This game's in the past.  The tourney is up in front of us.

Mannix

March 17th, 2019 at 7:46 PM ^

Jordan Poole & Charles Matthews

Two great enigmas of the Beilein era and certainly more of the two frustrating players to watch - can’t be any less frustrating coaching them. 

Mannix

March 18th, 2019 at 9:16 AM ^

Agreed. 
When Charles does go to the rim, he seems strangely unaware he can elevate rather high to get off his shot within 8'. Instead, he prefers multi pivoting until he spins himself dizzy.

Poole? He does the Elaine dance with the ball at the top of the key until he loses full control and everyone breathes a sigh of relief when he finally passes it. The other moments, such as dribbling into a 1 on 4, are inexplicable. 

 

PublicSector

March 17th, 2019 at 8:58 PM ^

Matthews twisted ankle against Sparty in the 1st game seemed so benign at the time unlike the terrible gruesome twisted ankle today, which to me looked similar. (I'm not a doctor) Unfortunately I believe it lead to all 3 losses. First game we play 4 on 5 for most of the game because of it. 2nd game obviously missed his leadership, rebounding and toughness and his ability to create during the droughts. Today he was limited again. He covered McQuaid for 30 seconds or so and McQuaid had trouble dribbling. Wish we could have had a healthy Charles checking him for all 40. 

Mongo

March 17th, 2019 at 7:54 PM ^

You have to hang this on JB.  Very bad looking box score.  Livers minutes were way too low.  Guy was hot and sat.  Should have gone long and cut back on Brooks and Matthews who both under performed. 

Gulogulo37

March 18th, 2019 at 12:48 AM ^

Which is to be expected frankly. Obviously Beilein knows how to run an offense. But the current players are limited. Z's inability to shoot 3s is huge. Matthews just isn't a good shooter. Ignas is good but has 1 trick and gets stymied when opponents adjust and he just barrels into defenders. It's amazing this team is even this good given what was lost.

I think they'll be much better next year. The bench is going to be way better. And this season still isn't done. Anyone who thinks they're incapable of making a good run are idiots. I'd be extremely surprised to get as far as last year though.

Mannix

March 18th, 2019 at 9:21 AM ^

Both Poole and Iggy can come off screens and shoot. Sparty has two main offensive action, besides parking Ward in the post: They run their lone shooter of multiple screens, some staggered. Izzo has cleverly (sorry) put in some action where McQ curled around a screen and then did it again...was wide open again for a three but missed that.

For all the offensive acumen JB has, his inability to rely or set up off the ball screen action and even screening the screener is really head scratching. 

The off ball screen action staple for a JB team is the high post back screen away from the ball which usually results in 2-3 buckets a game at the rim. 

DaftPunk

March 18th, 2019 at 7:21 PM ^

Ignas is good but has 1 trick and gets stymied when opponents adjust and he just barrels into defenders.

I'm getting killed elsewhere on the internets for saying it, but am I wrong for suggesting that passing out of failed drives might be a worthwhile skill for Iggy Deke to develop?

A Lot of Milk

March 17th, 2019 at 8:06 PM ^

Letting McQuaid shoot 13 threes is great? What happened to our defense that's supposed to be the best in the country at preventing three point looks? So fucking tired of watching Poole get eaten alive by a white shooter who just has to nod his head in order to get Poole to jump a thousand feet in the air. Why Matthews wasn't switched onto him is a catastrophe. The single reason we lost

ScooterTooter

March 17th, 2019 at 8:03 PM ^

When it was 57-52, Michigan State received three straight questionable calls, only one of which was technically correct.

McQuaid should not have shot three. Should have been a 1 and 1 I believe. 

The ball was technically out on Teske, but damn I hate those rake outs that graze the guy's hand on the way out. Reminds me of the Purdue game from last year when something similar happened. 

Obviously, the Poole non-call. 

Reminds of the 2016 Ohio State football game. Yes, Michigan could have played better and won. But its a lot easier to win when the officials give you some breathing room. 

 

Arb lover

March 17th, 2019 at 9:35 PM ^

Not even close. Michigan had a chance to win this game, but yes, some very questionable calls made state's path easier, especially in the final 12 seconds. 

The OSU game was atrocious, and very possibly nothing will ever come close to it (I hope, at least). Lets save the full on conspiracy for games where it's a little more obvious than this. 

BuckNekked

March 18th, 2019 at 7:28 AM ^

I hate that a foul was called on us at all on the McQuaid three foul shots. He obviously initiated the contact. But giving him three FT was ridiculous. He didnt even attempt to shoot the ball there. That was the game. No call on it and Michigan wins.

BuckNekked

March 18th, 2019 at 7:28 AM ^

I hate that a foul was called on us at all on the McQuaid three foul shots. He obviously initiated the contact. But giving him three FT was ridiculous. He didnt even attempt to shoot the ball there. That was the game. No call on it and Michigan wins.

jbrandimore

March 17th, 2019 at 8:13 PM ^

I can’t agree with your hot take on the Poole non call.

Yes, it was a foul.

It was not at all a shooting foul anywhere outside the NBA and even there only around 50% of the time.

Arb lover

March 17th, 2019 at 9:38 PM ^

He was fouled twice. The first time was a swipe and obviously not a shooting foul. However they didn't call it (had they we would have inbounded it again), and he continued to get mugged as he then went for a shot. I mean, why do you think the ball landed 6 feet short? 

Technically the first should have been called, but since it wasn't, the foul on the shot ended up transferring possession to State via DREB. You can't simply say it wasn't a shooting foul if you look at the whole play. 

ERdocLSA2004

March 17th, 2019 at 11:16 PM ^

Agree, Poole was fouled, he wasn’t shooting.  He was trying to get a continuation call and get gifted some FTs by the refs.  What he should have done was wait for a whistle before throwing it up.  No doubt it was a foul but this is just another bad decision by Poole.  This was completely different than his foul on McQuaid. He bit on a pump fake big time(again), jumped 3 feet in the air and got exploited.  This is called and given 3 shots everytime, even if it shouldn’t be.  Put Poole in the game if you need a Hail Mary or buzzer beater.  He seems to be very disinterested unless he sees the opportunity for a big play. As others have said,  Livers has done more than enough to eat up all of Poole’s minutes.

kevin holt

March 18th, 2019 at 12:56 PM ^

How was it a bad decision? If he waited for a whistle then he DEFINITELY wouldn't get a shooting foul and might not get another chance since they had a foul to give (which is ridiculous by itself but whatever). If he waits and then tries to shoot then people would say "why wait for the whistle, obviously that's too long."

The refs were ok in this one for the first 60% of the game, but then it felt like they started to ref the score like they always EFFING do. There's no way they were going to keep calling it evenly when we were up by so much. And that's a travesty.

Arb lover

March 17th, 2019 at 9:40 PM ^

Let's not call our starting players names, shall we? Though since your account was created as the B1G season got underway and not even at the start of basketball season, more likely than not you are simply a spartan troll.

footballguy

March 17th, 2019 at 8:20 PM ^

Poole's foul was not a shooting foul. It should have been on the floor, which would have given us the ball back and given us the opportunity to get a better shot off for the tie. Ridiculous no call (especially since the fucking refs knew MSU was trying to foul) but there's no way in hell that's a shooting foul

blueday

March 17th, 2019 at 8:24 PM ^

That game was truly embarrassing for that team..Did anyone try an outside shot. Who cares. We are rebuilding with a bunch of premma donnas 

remdog

March 17th, 2019 at 8:25 PM ^

Yes, Michigan blew its chances - crappy one on one offense, crappy rebounding and crappy defense on McQuaid - but still would have won if not for crappy officiating at the end.  McQuaid shooting 3 when it wasn't even a shooting foul, the crap overturn on the OOB play and the non call on the foul on Poole were the difference.

The Denarding

March 17th, 2019 at 8:43 PM ^

I think the failure was two fold actually.   One Matthews has to be on Winston.   This way you don’t have to hedge the screen.   The other is MSU for the first time ever this season switched everything.   You need to punish that switch and if you want to do a 1-4 switch with Matthews or Iggy then that’s the way to go.   I’m FLOORED that we didn’t solve for that.   You can pick and pop off that action.   Just really, really surprised.