[Jamie Schwaberow/NCAA Photos via Getty Images]

The Real MVP Comment Count

Brian March 23rd, 2021 at 12:07 PM

3/22/2021 – Michigan 86, LSU 78 – 22-4, 14-3 Big Ten, Sweet 16

With apologies to Chaundee Brown and Eli Brooks, all hail the real MVP: regression to the mean.

Cam Thomas came out in full-on NBA Jam mode, and folks I gotta tell you it felt bad. After Thomas hit a one-footed fadeaway 18-footer around the midway point of the first half it felt like he would never miss anything. It felt like by the second half he would scorpion kick a ball into the basket for his billionth point and then fade into the background like the avatar of a fallen god. "Peace," Thomas would utter mysteriously, "basketball has been solved."

Meanwhile Michigan came out and hit one of six clean looks from three. Visions of Will Wade hunched over a cauldron full of booster cash and other nefarious reagents flooded my vision. This is how LSU gives up three after three and survives. This is occult, man. Why would LSU stop at strong offers or rampant, repeated institutional Title IX dysfunction? Satan! Satan is involved. I feel his presence.

These are the things you think in the first eight minutes of a basketball game when you're happy with almost all the shots both teams take and furious at the results.

None of these feelings show up in the box score. LSU shot 44% from two; Michigan shot 67%. LSU shot 24% from three; Michigan shot 40%. This game was only a single digit affair because LSU turned the ball over all of three times. This sounds weirdly disciplined for a team that frequently didn't bother to even raise a hand in the direction of three-point shooters, but then again only one guy on the team bothers to pass inside the arc. Water finds its level.

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With apologies to regression to the mean, all hail the real MVPs: Eli Brooks and Chaundee Brown.

Both are four-year college players, but other than that they could not be more different. Brooks has been at Michigan almost as long as D'Mitrik Trice has been an undead warlock. Brown is new. Brooks spent much of his career in a state of emotional precarity, one turnover or missed shot from a funk that would last games and games. Brown showed up determined to shoot every last plausible three he could get his hands on, no matter recent results. Brooks is listed at a willowy 6'1" and when he dunks a basketball everyone says "I didn't know he could do that!" even though he just did it a couple games ago. Brown is 6'5" and built like a linebacker. When he dunks I wince in case he does a chin up that destroys the basket.

But here they did the same things, more or less. They checked Cam Thomas, in their varied ways. They buried open threes. They ventured inside the line successfully. They did not stand around with question marks over their head when offensive actions were attempted. They led Michigan to a Sweet 16.

Remarkably, that's their sixth in the last eight tournaments. The two exceptions were years when Caris Levert got injured*. The only team that can match that claim is Gonzaga, which has morphed from a curious team into a dominant program over the last few years. Michigan will seek to match Gonzaga in that, too.

Brooks and Brown feel like the past and future of Michigan basketball. Brooks is a heady overachiever maximizing his talent. Brown is a physical marvel unleashed by newfound structure. This is not to say they are separate. The Venn diagram has some overlap here. As mentioned, Brooks has thrown down some rad dunks, and Brown is the kind of culture guy who might blow up on the sideline at Breslin. Together they spearheaded a second-round tourney win, and point the direction forward. Less a transition than an adaptation.

Right now Michigan needs both of them as they stare down the only chalk left in this bizarre tournament.

*[As is required by law, let us reiterate that LeVert was shooting 53/45 with a big free throw rate, a 33 assist rate, a 13 TO rate, on 26% usage when he was lost for the season. He had one bad game against a high major in there (SMU) but was more or less at that level of production in the other four A-tier games before he was lost.]

[After THE JUMP: heeeeeeeere's Willy!]

BULLETS

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Closeouts affect things on the margins. Thomas's early hot streak was primarily against Brooks—Smith got matched on him for another hand-in-the-face long jumper—and consisted almost exclusively of shots like the above. I don't think there's much more to do on those. If those are the shots you're getting up against anyone you're not going to have a good time.

Thomas in particular is almost contest-immune. He has an eFG of 55% on unguarded catch and shoot opportunities. On guarded ones that drops to… 52%. He fell off later in this game because that was always going to happen, and also he played 40 minutes. Chaundee Brown did get some minutes on him late in the first half, but down the stretch Michigan matched Brown on Javonte Smart because Smart was getting into the lane and hitting those floaters. Eli stuck on Thomas and Thomas didn't do much. Heck, Thomas took Smith to the rim a couple times and got a charge and a massively contested miss for his troubles.

Anyway: yes, closeouts matter. Length matters. What matters more is the kind of shot you've induced from the offense.

The King of Floaters. Speaking of: Javonte Smart's floater gave me horrible flashbacks to Cassius Winston. Usually you induce a floater and chalk up an EV win. Smart makes that dodgier since he's at nearly a PPP on runners over the course of the season. Here is the spot where it really felt like Michigan's height was an issue for them. A closeout on a jumper is a relatively minor effect relative to Smart being able to get two feet in the paint and go up, even through some contact.

A contrast in styles. Michigan had 22 assists, 79% of their buckets. LSU had 8, 30%. All of those came from Smart or Aundre Hyatt. It seemed like a turning point in Michigan's ability to defend LSU was when they realized that no one other than Smart was going to pass the ball and they started collapsing on drives like Michigan State against Kofi Cockburn.

Meanwhile LSU had a massive shot volume advantage because they turned the ball over just three times to Michigan's 12 and had four more OREBs. Michigan combatted that by almost exclusively finding good looks.

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No secret sauce. The mystery of LSU's three-point defense is solved: it's blind luck. Michigan got up 25 threes and it could have been 35 if guys didn't turn down a bunch of okay-to-great looks. Maybe a handful of them were meaningfully contested. A corner three where Javonte Smart closed out, sort of, and didn't even bother to lift his hand rather stuck out as a meaningful non-contest, if you get my drift.

Michigan hit 10 of those 25 looks, a 40% clip. That 40% versus the 30% LSU has given up on the season is the whole margin. On the one hand, rough justice. On the other hand basketball games get dizzying if you contemplate a couple misses here and there. Brooks banked one in. Delete that and the finish to this game is a blazer.

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - MARCH 22: Michigan takes on LSU in the second round of the 2021 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament held at Lucas Oil Stadium on March 22, 2021 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Jamie Schwaberow/NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

eeeeeeeeeeeee [Jamie Schwaberow/NCAA Photos via Getty Images]

Chaundee's first shot == Moe Wagner's first shot. Brown got a kickout for a mid-range catch and shoot two. That went down, and things took off from there. This is entirely irrational feelingsball but man Brown's first shot seems like a hinge point in a lot of games, just like Moe Wagner's first one.

From there he was off. Brown was Michigan's best player when it came to exploiting LSU's matador defense, repeatedly driving baseline past guys with no inclination to stay in front of him.

I'd say he roasted Cam Thomas here but that implies the opponent isn't stuffing himself in an oven with a smile on his face, seasoning himself the whole time.

This was brought into light by the opposition: Brown himself is fairly contest-immune. The confidence with which he goes up even in the face of closeouts is notable. Other guys on the team will turn down open threes to drive far more often—there was a particularly frustrating Wagner drive when nobody was even going to close him out that turned into a turnover and a fast break bucket the other way. Brown has those freshman Zak Irvin vibes where if his feet are set and he's got a little bit of space you know it's going up. And he's hitting 40% so nobody's going to complain. (Except when he misses shots and they do.)

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This is a foul

They were never going to keep calling it. LSU started the game by having Days put his face in Dickinson's chest. (The above is it happening to Davis several minutes later.) This resulted in a turnover when Dickinson tried to hit Johns on a back cut after Days snapped his head back when Dickinson tried to rotate and do basketball things. That's supposed to be one of those "cylinder" fouls, but expecting an NCAA tourney crew to remember the cylinder after a year where nobody's bothered with it seems… uh… optimistic.

I could insert various other officiating notes here, but I think people will boo at me and throw trash when I say that I was less perturbed about the various calls in the second half than Twitter seemed to be during the game. Sometimes you get something that looks like a ref show and then on the replay it's just that a lot of fouls are being committed. There were some weird ones or missed calls (the loose ball foul on Davis, Brown stepping OOB immediately before an LSU foul, Brown getting a very ticky-tack call while closing out a Thomas three) but this felt more like the players uglying up a game instead of the refs.

There. Throw your rotten vegetables.

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[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Terrance Williams: functional? Williams got nine terrifying minutes but mostly held his own. Smart hit a pull-up three over him and he had a couple other moments on defense where he was unable to stay in front of LSU's athletes; he also had a bad turnover when he was trapped against the LSU press. I hardly blame him for that; that is not a situation a freshman power forward should be put in.

On the other hand he cut to the basket so Dickinson could finally get something other than a hockey assist and had a putback off a missed Brown three. His defense occasionally cropped up as an issue but he wasn't a glaring deficiency.

Williams was a reasonably good shooter in high school and needs to recapture that before my "senior Kenny Goins" comparisons can bear fruit.

Also to be hailed: front ends. Michigan had five different one-and-one opportunities and went 5/5 on front ends. Dickinson missed the back half of one opportunity late in the first half.

Not the Ivy League. Mike Smith struggled with LSU's athleticism. Things got off to a rocky start when he attempted a pull-up jumper that Thomas could have blocked if Smith was another foot off the floor. Later he had a couple of sloppy turnovers on which he underestimated LSU's ability to accelerate. The travel in the last couple minutes was probably just one of those things.

This is a concern going into Florida State, which is very large everywhere but particularly in the backcourt.

JUST ONE SMALL PROBLEM, WILL. Okay so you've got four badass offensive players who barely pass and barely need to pass and just aggressively wander towards the basket and put in impossible shots. You don't turn the ball over because you don't pass. Your offense is so rudimentary Sean Astin keeps popping up asking if he can star in it. And it's top 5 nationally.

Just one question: [axes through wall] WHAT ARE YOU DOING WITH YOUR PRACTICE TIME, WILL? DRAWING AQUAMAN? You have the number one hundred twenty three defense in America despite being the beneficiaries of what feels like a historic amount of three-point luck. Maybe try drills like "get your hands up occasionally" and "don't bend over for no reason on a baseline out of bounds" and "for God's sake I am begging you to just close out ONE GODDAMN TIME."

The funniest thing in the world will be if LSU gets its program nuked to the Stone Age because they were hell-bent on keeping Will Wade.

The shirt. I'm surprised they keep putting this on television:

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I was really not feeling SEC twitter mocking Michigan for having one fan on a message board who thinks it's RICO when 1) the above and 2) the only thing that guy wrong was the statute they should bury LSU athletic department under.

The best of post-game twitter. Buzzfeed article lightning round time:

Also.

Also.

Also.

Etc.: Michigan-FSU is at 5 Sunday. Nantz/Hill/Raftery on the call. Only two teams left in the tourney have won titles in the last 25 years: Villanova and Syracuse. Rodger Sherman on the second round winners and losers. The biggest loser: floor slaps. Welcome to the resistance, Rodger. This is the wackiest Sweet 16 ever. M-FSU is the only chalk matchup.

Comments

TrueBlue2003

March 23rd, 2021 at 7:09 PM ^

When you play a lot of minutes, your +/- is going to be close the final score so it's not crazy that his was just three points from the final margin.

And that's what's even more crazy about Smith being -11.  That is almost literally unbelievable. I wonder if there was some funky things going on like him being put in at the end of the first half when Brown fouled the three point shooter.  Those points go on his +/- even if the foul didn't even occur with him on the floor.  Even still 19 point differential from when you're in to when you're not is massive.

Dodort

March 23rd, 2021 at 12:47 PM ^

That Smart close-out on Brown was one of the stranger things I've seen.  He gets there in time to contest...but then just stands there.  It's not even like he was covering a possible drive because he's flatfooted and leaves the baseline wide-open.

tubauberalles

March 23rd, 2021 at 2:03 PM ^

This is where I may disagree with Brian - I think he was coached to do exactly this.  Run at a shooter to get them to anticipate a closeout, but in no way get near enough to actually execute one, so as to avoid fouling at all costs.  With their rotation, they can't afford foul trouble for any of their starters.  

Their defense is "Not Defense".

TrueBlue2003

March 23rd, 2021 at 11:36 PM ^

If so, it's terrible coaching (and so yes, their coaches may have told him that because I wouldn't put it past them). 

He wasn't even close to Brown.  You can make a much stronger closeout and still not be close to fouling.  Besides, he ended up with one foul.  One! Smart had just two.  It's really hard to foul out of a college basketball game as a guard even if you play 40 minutes. Eli plays really hard, contests really well and plays 35 minutes a game and is never in foul trouble.  They can play that way.

No reason for them to play so softly, especially in the second half of a close game when you're not even close to foul trouble.

WolverineHistorian

March 23rd, 2021 at 1:17 PM ^

Not a wacky Sweet 16.  More like an epic one.  Besides the thrill of us playing this weekend, how about the sweetness of not having to watch the announcers drool over North Carolina, Duke, Kentucky, Kansas, Louisville and Tom Izzo?  They'll all be watching from home.  Epic, not wacky. 

The closest the TV announces can come is bringing up instances from the past.  Like when Grant Hill was asked for a couple Coach K stories during our game with Texas Southern.  (Nobody cares!!!)

Teeba

March 23rd, 2021 at 1:35 PM ^

Okay so you've got four badass offensive players

Looking at the boxscore, I can't tell you who the 4th badass offensive player is. From the preview post (and Seth's lineup card,) it appears to be Days (128 ORTg, 18% Poss.) He was held to 6 points on 2-6 shooting. My guess is that some combination of Johns and Wagner shut him down. Watford was limited by Hunter, who continues to be an underrated defender. When you take 2 legs away from a chair, the chair falls over.

Days and Watford were held to a combined 10 points below their season average. We won by 8.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

March 23rd, 2021 at 1:49 PM ^

Consider rotten vegetables thrown.  I thought the reffing was hideous.  In one instance they did the old "wait to see if the shot misses before blowing the whistle" on a super-chintzy foul they hit Johns(?) with.  There were a couple all-ball fouls, they missed Dickinson getting hip-checked into the bleachers, and that's just the stuff that LSU benefitted from.  Michigan was on the lucky end of a few howlers too.  Like missing Brown stepping out of bounds which I saw live and so did millions of others.

MGoBlue96

March 23rd, 2021 at 2:25 PM ^

The biggest problem with the officiating was the wild swing in how the game was called. First half had a few missed calls but it was consistent, cheap stuff was not being called generally and a little contact at the rim was being let go. Second half opens with 5 min of UM being called for a flurry of shooting fouls that did not all look legimate. Johns then goes down and gets hammered with no call, UM bench and Howard flip out. 

It seemed after that it was just a complete clownshow of missed calls/cheap calls on both sides. Just be consistent with how you call the game half to half, it should not be this difficult to achieve. It is really not an isolated incident in this tournament either, that has happened a ton so far in various games.

UMinSF

March 23rd, 2021 at 4:31 PM ^

I'm with you, Wahoo. I think the officiating this entire tournament is frustrating as hell. 

One of the worst trends in officiating, both NBA and college, is blowing the whistle anytime someone gets close to a shooter. Meanwhile, muggings occur all over the court with no calls.

Shooters/coaches know this too - there's so much flopping and complaining after every contested shot. If you fall down and cry to the heavens, you'll either get this call or the next one. Every. Single. Time. anyone drove to the basket they blew the whistle.

This clearly seems to be intentional - a way to emphasize offense. I hate it. Does not allow defenders to close out. IMO it's a big part of the reason the B1G/Big 12 fared so poorly.

Basketball is no fun when there's constant interruption for free throws and good players are in foul trouble. I hate it. I'm not advocating for '80's basketbrawl, but show some discretion and penalize floppers.

This crew also made a practice of the VERY late whistle, long after a shot went up. 

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

March 23rd, 2021 at 5:18 PM ^

I actually think the refs have been pretty OK about letting defenders defend and keep their vertical space - there've been a lot of times I thought a foul would be coming (but shouldn't) and lo and behold, it didn't.

What's actually been driving me crazy is overcalling blocking fouls.  There was one instance in the FSU/UNCG game where the FSU defender was backpedaling like crazy on a UNCG break, straight backwards to stay between the ball and the rim.  The UNCG dribbler lowered his shoulder, knocked the defender over, and got a blocking call.  I thought....really??  What the hell do you want the defender to do - stop short, set his feet, and cause a massive collision?  The defender was between the ball and basket and yet there was nothing he could've done to either avoid a blocking foul or allow the bucket.

In general, if I have one complaint about the way the tourney's been officiated, it's that defenders don't get enough benefit of the doubt when a dribbler lowers the shoulder and tries to bull his way past or around.  

TrueBlue2003

March 23rd, 2021 at 11:58 PM ^

Yeah, that foul was so late and sooo bad on Johns.  I agree that the reffing was awful.  It at least mostly evened out, IMO.  But at one point in the second half Michigan had 6 fouls, about four of which were awful and LSU only had 1.  At that point I was irate.  But then as though they knew how bad they were, they called the next 5 fouls on LSU, about 3 of which were bad calls (or one coming after a guy obviously stepped OOB). It was bad.  But at least mostly even.

OldSchoolWolverine

March 23rd, 2021 at 2:15 PM ^

On this team nurtured by JH to be team and family, was suprpised to hear Martelli single out an MVP of the team, not game, in Brooks... the announcers kept harping it.  Oftentimes individual accolades are avoided in a program.   Maybe it was deliberate to induce confidence.  If so, maybe Martelli should say something special about Johns...for he is on the cusp of being a monster.

kehnonymous

March 23rd, 2021 at 2:19 PM ^

As a Laker fan, I now understand the agony of someone in a purple and gold #24 uniform nailing off balance contested twos that have no right to go in vs your team.

mschol17

March 23rd, 2021 at 2:25 PM ^

I don't understand why they didn't get Thomas or Smart just a couple minutes of rest. Their entire offense is iso, so it's not like they would interrupt the flow if they weren't out there.

El Jeffe

March 23rd, 2021 at 4:46 PM ^

I thought so too but there are so many stoppages that, assuming you give zero effort on defense, you probably have enough in the tank. Most normal players expend at least a little energy on the defensive end so need a breather.

Thomas is the worst on- and off-ball defender I have seen in quite a while. He makes Trae Young look like Kawhi.

stephenrjking

March 23rd, 2021 at 2:34 PM ^

Regression to the mean is nice, but it's frustrating when it doesn't show up until after 40 minutes. Glad it came to play while Michigan was still in the game. 

bronxblue

March 23rd, 2021 at 2:40 PM ^

It does feel like this team has re-set it's feet after the scuttling to end the season, and I feel like they may actually be poised for another long run.  Just feels like they've got a functional rotation and aren't leaning on anybody too heavily.

DougoBlue

March 23rd, 2021 at 2:48 PM ^

I'm wondering about the B1G officiating now... they didn't do us any favors by calling the conference games completely different from how these tournament games seem to be being called.

It got to a point in the second half where seemingly every whistle was a ridiculous call.

I guess as the featured CBS primetime game keeping it back and forth makes it more "exciting". Juwan did an excellent job of adjusting his strategy towards the way the game was being officiated.

jmblue

March 23rd, 2021 at 2:53 PM ^

I don't know.  I don't think officiating was too big of a factor in most of the Big Ten's tournament losses.  Maybe the Rutgers-Houston game.

I think the Big Ten's poor performance was a perfect storm of bad matchups (Loyola was tough), bad luck (0-3 in overtime) and yes, being overrated (who really thought Iowa was one of the eight best teams in the country?).

TrueBlue2003

March 24th, 2021 at 1:10 AM ^

Yes agree. Iowa, Purdue and OSU were very overrated.  Illinois did get a tough draw but still no excuse; they needed to beat Loyola.

But aside from those four teams, you had an 11 seed to go OT in a play-in, which is totally reasonable.  And you had Maryland, Rutgers and Wisconsin who all overachieved.

Sultans17

March 23rd, 2021 at 4:35 PM ^

You could tell from the first minute the kind of game we were in store for: a "knot in your stomach/sense of dread" game where the only relief is it's inevitable often sad conclusion.  And, while intellectually we all knew Brian's reversion to mean theory was correct, we all knew it would never kick in in time. 

That's why it was so cathartic when they tired and we started punching back. 

I felt the exact same way for the entire Houston "Man-bun" game. And similar to that year, we face a long FSU team that goes deep and D's it up. 

But given Livers injury and the preseason polls, I feel like we're playing with house money now.
 Whereas a loss last night would have put us in that same "you suk just like the rest of the B1G" basket. 

Btw anyone else get the vibe that the rest of the conference desperately wanted us to lose? Just a bunch of crabs in a bucket I guess. 

dragonchild

March 23rd, 2021 at 5:12 PM ^

Btw anyone else get the vibe that the rest of the conference desperately wanted us to lose?

If you’re off it’d be in thinking the hate is circumstantial. Michigan is probably the most collectively loathed program in the country, for all the wrong reasons. The NCAA is fully invested in a crooked sports world so they’d much prefer LSU over us. We have more rivals than most schools and the fanbases of MSU and OSU are toxic. Now add the bigots because we have a black coach (tho there’s considerable overlap between bigots and toxic fans and NCAA fatcats).

Yeah, they wanted us to lose. But if you hadn’t noticed until now that everyone wants our heads. . . get used to it.