No photos from Nashville in case you're wondering [David Wilcomes]

Vanderbilt 66, Michigan 65 Comment Count

Alex.Drain March 18th, 2023 at 3:10 PM

The 2022-23 Michigan Men's Basketball season is mercifully over after today's crushing loss to Vanderbilt in the second round of the NIT. if there's one thing you can say about this team, it's that they died as they lived, collapsing late in games and rescuing defeat from the jaws of victory. Despite playing without both Kobe Bufkin and Jett Howard, the Wolverines put together a solid game, leaning on the heroics of Hunter Dickinson and Dug McDaniel to get them to an ESPN calculated win probability of 96.7% with 1:30 to go. And then? Collapse. Again. Michigan turned it over on three straight possessions, allowed Vanderbilt to score each time off turnovers, and the last chance basket to win at the buzzer didn't go down. 66-65, a 9-0 run by the Commodores in the final 58 seconds to close. 

The first half had a few distinct chapters, the extended Vanderbilt run to take a lopsided lead, the extended Michigan run to close the gap, and then the back-and-forth last few minutes leading to halftime. Michigan began with a small 5-0 lead, which was immediately followed by a 17-0(!) run for the Commodores, who threatened to blow the Wolverines right out of the building. Michigan was held scoreless for nearly six minutes, their tires spinning in the mud but not gaining any traction, while the hot shooting of Vandy forward Colin Smith built the home team's lead up. Smith made three three-pointers and a layup for 11 of Vanderbilt's 17 points during this period of time. 

Michigan snapped the drought with a tip-in shot by Terrance Williams II and from there, it was the Dug McDaniel show, as the diminutive PG willed Michigan back into the game. He converted a three point play at the FT line and then started pulling up like Steph Curry, nailing successive triples and long twos. His three with 9:21 to go in the first half tied it at 20 and when Williams made a pair of free throws a few minutes later, the Maize & Blue had the lead back. For the final five minutes of the opening half, it was a competitive game, each team answering the other and the lead for both sides never more than one score. Ezra Manjon's jumper put Vanderbilt ahead 29-28, but Dickinson's hookshot propelled Michigan to a 30-29 lead going into halftime. 

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

At the break, McDaniel was the hero for the Wolverines, 13 points to lead Michigan (no one else had more than six). In the second half, the hero would be Hunter Dickinson, who began to exploit his size advantage inside to dominate in the paint. The teams stayed close through the first six or so minutes of the second half, but Dickinson began to control the game and gave Michigan padding. He scored eight straight points for Michigan to put them up 49-42 and he began the half a scorching 6/6 on FGs. Neither team was shooting well from the perimeter and so Michigan's presence of a dominant post player was what was giving them a chance to build up a sizable lead. At the halfway mark, Michigan led 54-47. 

The Michigan edge stayed pretty consistent as the final quarter of the game rolled along, Michigan playing a two big lineup and Tarris Reed Jr. starting to join in the scoring from the free throw line. Joey Baker also began to heat up, the first non-McDaniel perimeter presence for Michigan to come on-line. Baker's long two (originally called a three) left the score at 61-54 with four minutes to go. Vanderbilt answered with a three by Trey Thomas via great ball movement and the Commodores came back down the floor a little later with a chance to cut it to within one, but Thomas' 3PTA was off the mark. Michigan rebounded it down and McDaniel would slice into the lane, connecting on a pretty tear-drop shot off the backboard and in. 63-57 with 2:31 to go. 

The next minute was the period where it seemed as if Juwan Howard's crew was putting the game away. McDaniel drew a charge on Jordan Wright during Vanderbilt's ensuing offensive possession and that was followed by Joey Baker coming off a screen to catch-and-shoot a long two from the free throw line... swish. 65-57 with 1:45 to go. To improve the conditions even more, Wright missed another three after Vanderbilt went back up the court, which was rebounded down by Baker with 1:32 left. This was the point when the game was seemingly over, the 96.7% win probability moment I referenced in the opener. 

[Campredon]

Vanderbilt opted to play defense and let Michigan run roughly 1/3 of the remaining time in regulation off the clock on the ensuing Wolverine offensive possession. Michigan entered the post but Dickinson missed a layup in tight, a miss that would turn out to be fateful. Quentin Millora-Brown snatched the rebound, passed to Tyrin Lawrence, who drove the lane on the Wolverines, was fouled, but made the basket and was granted what appeared to be NBA continuation (Juwan Howard was not happy). Lawrence made the free throw to complete the three point play, leaving the score at 65-60. 

Jerry Stackhouse called timeout to dial up a full-court press defense, looking to force turnovers, and it would work wonders in a way few could imagine. The first time against it, Terrance Williams II made it across the center line before coughing the rock up. After turning it over, he fouled Manjon and with Vanderbilt in the bonus, the Commodores got two quick free throws (Manjon went 2/2). 65-62 with 49 seconds left. Michigan was in a position then where in theory they could wind 30 seconds off, but again they turned it over before it could happen. McDaniel got across mid-court and was trapped by two Commodores. Dug had a timeout and the possession arrow, but decided to hurl the ball towards Williams, which went out of bounds. Vanderbilt took it down the floor and scored on a Manjon layup, 65-64 with 20 seconds left. 

At this point, the collapse was palpable. Michigan called timeout to get set up, but yet again they gacked under pressure. Hunter Dickinson tried to pass it to Williams, the ball deflected off his arms and Lawrence would quickly get a layup. 66-65 Vanderbilt, with 12 seconds left. Michigan called their final timeout, were rather discombobulated getting up floor, but McDaniel got a look in the lane on a driving attempt, which ricocheted off the mark. Dickinson tried to tip it in, also off the mark. The horn sounded, Vanderbilt had won, and Michigan had blown an eight point lead in the matter of 58 seconds to lose in regulation. You'd say it was unbelievable if you hadn't seen this sort of thing happen a half-dozen times over this season. 

Joey's face here sums up the experience of watching this team [Wilcomes]

I'm not going to do a season wrap-up, because I did that in the Rutgers BTT recap. That was the end of the season for any goals that mattered; this is the official end. The narrative has not changed. Per Zach Shaw, Michigan lost seven games this season in which ESPN deemed them as having a >80% probability of winning at some point in the second half. They lost five such games where the win probability was >87%, with today being #5. We can say that not having Bufkin or Jett Howard, two capable ballhandlers, may have prevented this specific collapse, since it would have put the ball in the hands of players besides a true freshman (McDaniel) and a player who is not much of a ballhandler (Williams) and I don't disagree. The problem is, it's hard to make excuses for the fifth collapse of this magnitude. Each individual game can be explained away by one theory or another. In the broader picture, when it keeps happening, at some point it's just who you are. I don't think any Michigan fans were terribly surprised and that tells you all you need to know about the 2022-23 edition of this squad.

In terms of statistics, Dickinson led the way for Michigan with 21 points, while McDaniel was right there with 19. Had Michigan won this game, my intro was going to be about those two starters rising to the occasion to help pull the team minus two starters to victory. Instead, their efforts were for naught. The rest of the box score looks about what you'd expect for this team minus Bufkin and Howard. Joey Baker added 11 but was 3/10 from the field (0/3 from three), while the next highest scorer was Williams with 6 (2/6 from the field). Youssef Khayat, inserted into the starting lineup for Bufkin, made a three for his only points, while Reed added 5. Jace Howard and Will Tschetter scored a combined 0 points in 27 minutes of action. 

Both teams shot 43% from the floor and and around a quarter from three (M = 25%, Vandy = 26%). Michigan's 15 TOs to Vanderbilt's 7 loomed large, especially late, as Vanderbilt owned the "points off TOs" bucket 18-11. Tyrin Lawrence led Vanderbilt in scoring with 24 (10/17 from the field). Manjon had 17 and Smith added 11, the latter's points exclusively contained to the 17-0 Vandy run in the fist half. No one else for the 'Dores had more than 6 points. 

[Click the JUMP for the box score]

With that, this men's basketball season is complete. The offseason now begins, with decisions of immense consequence to the program looming for Bufkin, Dickinson, and Jett Howard. We also don't know which other players will stick with the program and who may be seeking to transfer out. Michigan will certainly be searching in the portal for replacements and/or players to strengthen the roster. It should be an interesting spring/summer ahead.

Lastly, I want to thank everyone reading my (and Seth's) recaps this season. I did not have the most fun writing these (recapping pain is not ideal) but it's always good to know they're at least being read. Thanks for following along and commenting with your takes and I'll be back recapping basketball in November. Until then, so long for bball recaps!

Comments

lhglrkwg

March 18th, 2023 at 3:31 PM ^

I think Juwan should have one more season to prove himself but the program is obviously on a downward trend at this point. If there isnt a pretty clear sign of improvement after next season then its probably time to move on

njvictor

March 18th, 2023 at 4:51 PM ^

everyone saying anything like this is basing it on nothing but vibes

Huh? How is this team being on a downward trend only based on vibes? We just missed the tournament with 2 1st round picks and an All-B1G Center. We lost 7 games where we had an 80% chance of winning and have had numerous monumental end of game collapses. We are likely to lose Kobe Bufkin and Jett Howard and who knows if Hunter wants to stick around. The 4 position has been an absolute shit show the past few seasons and we barely have anyone playable there. Roster management has been pretty abysmal. We have 3 or 4 scholarship guys who are basically unplayable. Our only rays of hope are Tarris and Dug who have developed and should stick around. Unless Juwan does absolute work in the portal this off season, I'm not sure how you can come away thinking we are on anything else but a downward trend

bdneely4

March 18th, 2023 at 3:32 PM ^

IMO Howard should not be fired which is crazy talk, but he has to figure out how to get his players to be more clutch and confident down the stretch. Over and over this season, when things get tight the best players on our team fade. I will give Hunter some credit because he seems to be one of the only ones who demands the ball at key moments in the game but why in the world is he trying to pass the ball back to T Williams at the end of the game today?  If Juwan doesn’t figure out how to make our elite players become stars, then his tenure at Michigan will be limited. His one and dones since he has been here have left before they ever get to a potential where they make a big impact. Go Blue!

Autostocks

March 18th, 2023 at 3:48 PM ^

Why is it crazy talk, especially when you are admitting that Juwan has some coaching basics to "figure out"?  Beilein took under the radar players and turned them into lottery picks.  Juwan's players are supposed stars that underperform in college and then leave early.  The difference is a chasm.

bdneely4

March 18th, 2023 at 6:13 PM ^

I think it’s crazy talk because 1. Michigan does not handle coaching situations this way where they get rid of a coach after an underperforming season. They actually give said coach time unless it comes down to an ethical issue. 2. If we have learned anything from the Harbaugh situation, most coaches are typically competitors and will work hard to figure out how to write the ship. He is in his 4th year and although there are some glaring issues, Juwan came in with high praises and a love for Michigan that not many other candidates can share. I would like to see this played out a bit longer. 3. If an employee can work towards improvement and management can be involved in a plan for said improvement, firing someone should be a last resort. This goes for any occupation. Keep Juwan and come up with some modifications to improve team play which includes coaching staff. Go Blue!

DennisFranklinDaMan

March 18th, 2023 at 4:59 PM ^

Agree. What's more, he will not be fired, so everyone demanding it should settle down. You've expressed your wishes, we all heard you -- and you should know that, at this point, you're on the fringe, and most of us don't share your hysteria. Now let's deal with what's actually going to happen.

Juwan definitely needs to: a) demonstrate that he recognizes the seriousness of the problem (not just make excuses or wave it away); and b) take some serious steps to address it.

I expect him to have serious talks with whoever's returning about the improvement he needs to see, and what the consequences will be, going forward, for this kind of nonsense. I would also very much like to see some changes to his coaching staff, if only to demonstrate to us that he's taking this seriously.

I hope we see some fire, from him and from the team. If not -- if next year is more of the same -- then yeah, next year at this time the calls for his firing will be overwhelming.

L'Carpetron Do…

March 18th, 2023 at 3:38 PM ^

I don't believe clutch is a statistical illusion. I would love to see Michigan's offensive efficiency isolated for late game must-have possessions this season. It's probably hilariously, shockingly bad. 

DennisFranklinDaMan

March 18th, 2023 at 5:01 PM ^

Funny, I agree completely. It's simple: I know they track "quality shots." I would like to see the difference in our "quality shots" during the last minute of games that are tied or within one score, compared to the rest of the game ... and whether or not that difference is better or worse than the rest of the Big Ten. 

So not luck. Luck would be making or missing those "quality shots." But it sure didn't seem like we got the ball in a shooting position much. (Like today, for instance). In fact, not in the Wisconsin game either, as I would define Hunter's shot as not a "quality shot" and therefore primarily luck.

SHub'68

March 18th, 2023 at 7:45 PM ^

Reed tries to bring the ball down and in too much, then gets it slapped away by smaller players. It's an instinct that has to be practiced away. He will. It's coachable.

Other guys dribble high and slow in traffic and get it taken away: Baker, Williams, Jett, Reed, even Hunter a little. This is coachable, too.

Several guys hang the ball out there on drives like a scoop of ice cream on a cone, and it looks almost like they're in slow motion; of course it gets slapped away. This is also coachable.

It's looked a little better as of late but, in general, passing isn't as crisp as it ought to be, either. This is a team thing, except for Hunter. Spacing around the perimeter works much better when the ball zips around; it gets the defense moving and can get defenders out of position, opening lanes. Yep, coachable.

Positioning on rebounds is terrible a lot, too. Guys like Tschetter commit foul after foul trying to lean in and swipe away at balls they or someone else should have been in position to grab cleanly.

These are the kinds of things I've been watching for all season because they're evidence of solid coaching. I expect to see them improved next season. Some of them have, to a degree, this season. But not enough.

gbdub

March 18th, 2023 at 3:42 PM ^

I turned it off with 2 minutes left because Brian Cook assured me those would be exactly the same as the first 38 minutes. You’re telling me we lost!?!?

DennisFranklinDaMan

March 18th, 2023 at 5:04 PM ^

Yeah. Two things are true: 1) Williams was involved in every single one of those turnovers -- compounding one of them with a painful/terrible foul. 2) We were missing Llewellyn and Bufkin -- and had no other guards to put in.

I really really don't want to put this one on Williams, especially since he hasn't gotten much high-pressure time this year to prepare for this. But ... damn, man, just hold on to the damned ball.

swc_92

March 18th, 2023 at 4:29 PM ^

Agreed! Funny thing is that UM was actually 20th in least turnovers per game nationally this year. However, I'd wager that their turnover rate is pretty horrible in situations where the opponent is trying to force a turnover. I got negged by some fellow MGobloggers about a month ago when I pointed out the differences between this staff and coach Bs when it comes to emphasizing fundamentals. The last few years our guys don't dribble well, don't pass crisply, don't communicate on defense, and don't know how to run the break (when they rarely decide to that is). The fact that it doesn't really seem to get better over the course of the year either tells me that its not something that is prioritized by the coaching staff (admittedly, I'm having a hard time figuring out what is). JB cared about playing fundamental basketball for a reason and ultimately it was a big catalyst to his 26-13 record in NCAA tourney games. 

Soulfire21

March 18th, 2023 at 3:46 PM ^

I am so happy to not care about basketball anymore for the season. What a horrific collapse. Thank sweet baby Jesus it’s over and we won’t be subjected to this anymore.

Goblueman

March 18th, 2023 at 3:58 PM ^

After watching what seems like 100 games in the last 3 days it seems to me Michigan lacks players who can generate their own shots,create shots for others,lack athleticism , ball handling and guys who can drive and finish and very poor in individual defensive skills....The question I have is what is Juwan's vision? Exactly what kind of players do you want? 

907_UM Nanook

March 18th, 2023 at 4:01 PM ^

Thanks for all the great recaps Alex, in spite of the obvious pain involved. You always describe the 2-5 mins of endgame horror so well, while still running thru the full game recap when this team plays so hard and responds to adversity. 

My final hot take: Juwan should ask Beilein to sit down in the next month to get a free assessment on the 22-23 season, with regard to coaching options and roster improvements. We all want Michigan to win these close games, we all love Juwan as a player. He's faced adversity all season for the first time as a head coach. Ask someone who has done & seen it all in that seat, someone who shares the love of this great University. Go Blue (please stay Kobe)