[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

maize-blue

March 17th, 2019 at 8:55 PM ^

Poole and Iggy have a lot of maturing to do.

Matthews was ghost. Maybe still rounding back into shape from being out. Who knows.

northernmich

March 17th, 2019 at 9:14 PM ^

I feel like one of my family members summed it up perfect, Michigan has failed to seize opportunities all year. Had a chance to be the #1 ranked team in the nation, lost to Wisconsin. Had a chance to win the big ten, blew an 11 point lead to MSU. Had a chance to win the BTT, blew a 13 point lead to MSU. I couldn’t agree more with them.

Blue In NC

March 17th, 2019 at 10:02 PM ^

As disappointing as this whole end was, we finished the year as a #2 seed.  Yes, losing to MSU three times does sting but we are still the #2 team in the Big 10 and this was a team that was rated maybe 15-25 in the preseason.  We would have liked to see more from Charles and Poole but Iggy was fantastic, Simpson took things even higher, Teske made huge improvements and Livers looks to be a player.  Let's be relatively happy about the year even though today was disappointing.  On to the NCAAs.  We will be a tough out for anyone.

njvictor

March 17th, 2019 at 10:45 PM ^

I mean yes, we had a good season, but we also have to look at the multiple opportunities we blew to make the season that much better. We blew double digit leads to lose twice against MSU to lose a share of the B1G title and the B1G tournament championship. That shouldn't have happened and we blew it multiple times

Blue In NC

March 18th, 2019 at 11:43 AM ^

I don't think the opportunities lost are escaping anyone right now - those are obvious.  My point is that, on the whole, this team probably overachieved right now and let's not lose sight of that.

With that said, this team has the capability of a great run.  The real weaknesses (offensive droughts and weak bench) can be overcome if the team gets on a role.

SteveJ1

March 17th, 2019 at 10:17 PM ^

Well come on.  Just call a foul before the shot in the last minute of play, and have Michigan inbounds the ball down 3 with less time left.

State had fouls to give (a questionable situation in and of itself), so that's what Izzo wanted.  And that's what he should have got.

You don't reward the offending team with a turnover.

Do the officials have situational awareness?  Not this year.

L'Carpetron Do…

March 17th, 2019 at 11:21 PM ^

Yeah - I'm a liitle annoyed with the way Poole played but really it just seemed like he was a magnet for bad luck.  McQuaid fucking went out of his way to bump into him to create contact (Poole would not have made contact if McPoyle didn't move) but got whistled. I wish the NCAA would do away with that shit because it's terrible. It should be a no-call or at worst a foul on the floor. No way it should be three shots. That gave State a chance to get into it and kicked off their game-ending run. 

The other was the last gasp three. It wasn't a terrible play by Poole - again, I was annoyed he took the shot  but - he legitimately got fouled. Because Winston was trying to foul. It's unfuckingbelievable. I mean State is trying to foul and the refs still won't call a fucking foul on them. God forbid he hit the shot or passed it to someone else who hit a shot - could you imagine the irony -  Izzo berating a ref for NOT calling a foul on State in a crucial situation? God, that would just be too much. I think at that point the universe would fucking fold in on itself.

 

micheal honcho

March 17th, 2019 at 10:32 PM ^

I think Pooles shitty huck from 5ft behind the arc was the dagger. State ran after that miss and got an easy layup that our resident brain surgeon Jordan Poole tossed in a weak foul to give them the +1. That’s a 5 or 6 pt swing right there. All 100% thanks to the 15yr old(mentally) college sophomore who does not learn. It’s one thing to make a mistake or a bad decision. It’s another to repeat it and then repeat it again. I could see that Beilein was beyond furious with him on the bench and would not even look at him. I’m afraid it doesn’t matter. He’s incapable of adjustment. He will come down the floor in the waning minutes of another big game, ignore all coaching and instruction he’s had, and chuck up another heat check 3 from 4 ft behind the arc. I just wish he would look at his teammates afterwords and say “fuck all you guys!!” Cuz that’s what that play is saying. 

michymich

March 17th, 2019 at 10:37 PM ^

Let me simplify this stuff. I don't mean to be disrespectful but I am going to make it easy for people to understand.

 

Ever hear of MJ? How about Kobe? Ever hear of Tom Brady? Joe Montana? What do these guys have in common besides being legends? They handle the ball at the end of games and they are legendary clutch players.

 

It's why their teams essentially won against their competition the majority of times. Every great team has a guy like this to close it out. Very good teams usually don't have this guy but it doesn't make them a bad team, it's just makes them a very good team.

 

End of story.

footballguy

March 18th, 2019 at 12:01 AM ^

Poole could be that but he is too worried about trying to draw a foul on a shot, rather than actually focus on making the shot. His incredible shot in last year's tourney he did the same thing, but it actually went in. 

I trust Poole the most to hit some late minute shots, but I have almost no faith that he won't try to go out of his way to get a worse shot in an attempt to get 3 FTs.

rice4114

March 18th, 2019 at 12:17 AM ^

MSU still had 16 free throws in the second half. We will lose every game we give up 16 free throws in the final 20. Or any game we give up 30 in 40 minutes. Is MSU better, yes I think so. But ill tell you this when you get 16 freebees in the final half of a game like this it doesnt matter. All these high variance foul tallys seem to be stacking up. Is it UM that does this randomly

40 minutes 30 FT against

40 minutes 30 FT against

20 minutes 0 FT against

20 minutes 16 FT against

look at that closely. Make sense of it. Tell me how you win giving up 15 free shots per half in 30 point halfs. We MAY be lesser team but im telling you there is a game where it doesnt end with 15 free trips in the final 20 minutes and its my belief the outcome ends very differently.

SDCran

March 18th, 2019 at 12:31 AM ^

In the last 10 minutes of the game, bad, missed, or questionable calls led to a 13 points for MSU or not scored by UM.   

The reverse led to 1 point for UM (I’m giving MSU a questionable call when McQuaid fouled Poole on the fast break.  I liked the call but some would call it questionable)

So trying to be fair, it was a 13-1 advantage for MSU in the last 10 minutes.  In a game tied in the last minute that could be a factor

Luke15

March 18th, 2019 at 1:32 AM ^

Thank you for sharing this. 

And for comparison, MSU shot 16 FT's in the second half and UM shot 6 FT's.

On average, MSU commits 17.1 fouls per game. Today, they fouled only 10 times (once intentionally), coming in significantly below their season average, as they did in their previous game against UM (10 fouls today, 12 fouls last game).

The two teams are evenly matched. When that's the case, a single whistle can alter the outcome of the game. String together multiple whistles on questionable calls in favor of one team in a short span, especially at the end of the game when there's no time to recover, and it's lights out for the team that was on the other side of those whistles.

In our games against Iowa and Minnesota, the refs were a non-factor. Other than a short span at the beginning of the second half of the game against Iowa, the refs called it evenly. And we won both games handedly.

Today, the refs called a good game until 12:08 in the second half, when they called the phantom call on Poole while Winston was driving to the bucket, resulting in a 3-point play. That allowed MSU to cut the lead to 3 and was a critical call because of momentum. Still, UM held it together and held a 4 point lead until the 5:00 minute mark when Teske was called for the reach-in on Winston. The replay they showed one time, looked to me like he got all-ball (but I would like to see again). And then again at 2:45 when they called Poole for a shooting foul on McQuaid -- when he clearly was not in the act of shooting -- giving him 3 FT's, again when MSU was down by 5. That was a another big momentum changer. If any of these calls are not made in favor of MSU, this game could have ended differently.

What questionable call or calls can someone argue that Michigan received down the stretch? In a one possession game, every whistle is critical and MSU had the benefit of three big ones. The no-call on Poole on the final possession was another, but the hole had already been dug by the other calls.

I wonder, how does Paul Szelc get assigned to this game? A UW-Madison grad that is the only man to eject John Beilein from a game in the last 40 years he's been coaching. And T'd up Beilein again in 2017 -- a game where he was part of a crew that assessed Michigan 27 personal fouls, leading to 41 Minnesota free throws, both program records under Beilein. Szelc was also part of the crew, along with McJunkins, where Fran McCaffrey lost his shit and called them a bunch of "cheating mother f*ckers" leading to a 2-game suspension.

www.mlive.com/wolverines/2019/02/john-beilein-will-have-a-pretty-interesting-discussion-with-big-ten-office-over-ejection.html

https://twitter.com/bfquinn/status/840623495579066368

Btw, in that game against UMinn in 2017, Szelc paired with the now-retired Gene Steratore, the same jerk the broadcasters summoned today to tell us that the ball was clearly off Teske at the end of the game when replays showed conflicting results and not "irrefutable video evidence." You may recall Steratore made the same critical 'end of game' call out-of-bounds call against Michigan when they lost to Purdue at home last year. That was Michigan's final loss before their epic run that ended in the National Championship game.

Speaking of which, Michigan played only two games where they out fouled their opponents in last year's tourney: Houston and Villanova where they committed 22 and 20 fouls respectively (well above their season average). One of the refs calling both of those two games was Terry Wymer, a Big 10 official and Ohio native. How many people from Ohio do you know that are impartial when it comes to anything Michigan? Do you think Rick Boyages, the Associate Commissioner and Coordinator of Men's Basketball Officials is impartial? Wiki tells us he was an associate head coach for Ohio State from 1997-2000. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Boyages.

How about Tony Buyniski, the Assistant Commissioner of Officiating Services? Google tells us he is a Cincinnati, OH native, Moeller High School grad (feeder school for OSU football), and worked for University of Illinois football. https://twitter.com/tonybuyniski?lang=en. Do you think he has any desire to see Michigan get a fair shake?

https://bigten.org/staff.aspx

I realize this level of detail makes me look like a nutter to a lot of people. But I don't give a fuck and IMO the devil is in the details. The Big 10 has fucked us for a very long time. Delaney has surrounded himself with "his guys" and they're probably not going anywhere, even when he retires.

Pelops

March 18th, 2019 at 5:50 AM ^

I’m a long time college hoops fan. Heading into the NCAA’s, I reminded of the fantastic emotion of the game and of the rich rivalries that sustain generations of fans. I like this site because of the pace and quality of content. I think I’ve posted once before today.

Luke15 - I get that it is tough to have perspective in the immediate aftermath of a game like this game, so I’ll share a little of mine informed by decades of fandom and by a ton of time spent in boardrooms assessing the performance of executive teams. 

Charles Martel

March 18th, 2019 at 10:37 AM ^

Northern Michigan, that's the best overall take of the season.    UM needs to get out on the break more in the second half.  Push tempo and look to finish at the rim off tempo.  They don't have the horses or the half court consistency to grind for 40 minutes with the likes of MSU, but I think they could pick a few more spots to run to keep their offense fueled.  Even off made baskets, MSU was pushing it back quickly to put pressure on UM's defense.  Maybe it was just to keep Iggy too busy to do money signs and blow kisses.  

Beat Rutgerland

March 18th, 2019 at 11:17 AM ^

I don't think the intentional foul was a shooting foul, it was a bad miss by the refs to not call it at all, but whatever, you can't just jack up a shot in that scenario and hope you get the whistle.

On McQuaid's 3 shots, Also a bad call imo, but you see guys get that call often enough that it doesn't feel like some great injustice.

It felt like MSU was just better in all 3 of those games, M refused to attack the zone and struggled to find quality shots late every time.

HollywoodHokeHogan

March 18th, 2019 at 1:43 PM ^

Up 2 with a 1:30 to go, Poole gets the ball standing at least two feet behind the three point line at a 45 degree angle to the hoop.  There are 12 seconds on the shot clock.   What does he do?  Immediately jacks up a three that isn't close.    Next possession, it's a tie game.  We come out of a time out and have Simpson of all people shooting a three, again with over 10 seconds left on the shot clock.   Those aren't forced shots at the end of the clock.  Those are terrible shots they willingly took.  

You can complain all you want about the non-call at the end, but those two possessions ended the game.  Atrocious.  

SHub'68

March 18th, 2019 at 10:41 PM ^

Had to wait a day, sorry for being late to the party.

One thing baffles me: this is a John Beilein team and the only offense we could come up with during the final 1:20 was for everyone to stand around on the perimeter watching someone dribble 'til the shot clock forced a bad three. I just don't understand what the thinking was there. It just put the game into the hands of an official when a single score could have forced MSU to start using up their fouls. 

One thing I'd like to see go away: the 'money' crap after every made three. Keep your head in the game. If you'd just hit a big shot to seal the deal, sure, but in another losing effort it just looks dumb. Seems like every time Iggy does that it gets him and Poole too high. Then it's followed up with a series of out of control possessions featuring janky, terribly selected threes early in the clock and ill-advised one on three - or four - drives. Meanwhile, the bad offense turns into run outs that change double-digit leads into single digits in short order.

Ah well, I guess they're just young'uns and they'll learn...sigh.