Farewell, 2021-22 [Patrick Barron]

Villanova 63, Michigan 55 Comment Count

Alex.Drain March 24th, 2022 at 10:54 PM

When you enter a game in which your team has a size advantage, especially at the center position, you expect to dominate at the rim. That was the thought entering Thursday night's game in San Antonio for Michigan against Villanova, where the Wolverines hoped to own the paint agains the hot shooting, five-out Wildcats. Michigan had no such advantage, as a team-wide malaise on finishing at the rim doomed the Wolverines despite a strong defensive performance against Villanova. The Wolverines hung tight for much of the contest, but couldn't buy a made layup or free throw when it mattered and in the process, fell 63-55 in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament. With that, it's curtains on the 2021-22 Michigan Men's Basketball season. 

The game got off to a quick start before slowing down dramatically. There were 19 points scored between the two teams just over 5.5 minutes in, with each team trading early scores. Caleb Houstan made an early three that seemed to bode well for Michgian's shooting, but it did not hold up moving forward. Villanova pulled ahead to an 18-11 lead with 10:32 to go in the first and Juwan Howard called a timeout, seemingly furious at Brandon Johns Jr. for a defensive mistake. After that point, Michigan would lock Villanova down defensively, allowing only 13 points the remainder of the first half. Johns himself would turn it around defensively, playing some of the best defense of his career in the latter section of the first half. 

Michigan reclaimed the lead 22-20 with just under 4 minutes left in the half after a quick DeVante' Jones-led spurt, including a coast-to-coast layup and then a three pointer. Jay Wright called timeout and got his own 5-0 spurt from star Jermaine Samuels to restore the 'Nova lead, who converted an and-one that tacked Hunter Dickinson with a crucial second foul at the 3:42 remaining mark. The teams each made a couple buckets in the final two minutes and the half ended 31-28 Villanova. Michigan's scoring was evenly distributed between players in the first half, and the Wolverines shot 44% from the floor and 43% from three. The issue were the appalling 1/6 from the free throw line, as well as several missed layups. It felt like Michigan should have led at halftime, given the excellent defense they had played. 

[Patrick Barron]

The second half didn't represent a marked change from the slog of the first half. The Wolverines scored just three points in the first seven-and-a-half minutes of the second half (!), continuing to struggle at the rim and with free throws, in addition to a few sloppy turnovers. The balls clanged off the iron time and time again, as precious time dwindled off the clock. The defense held strong to keep the game competitive, but after Eric Dixon knocked down a three to make it 40-31 Villanova, Michigan was in a pinch.

Eli Brooks stepped up in that pinch, breaking Michigan's offense out of the funk temporarily, nailing a couple threes that cut the game to a six point edge (a Justin Moore three sandwiched in between). The score was 47-41 in favor of the Wildcats with little more than eight minutes remaining when a Collin Gillespie three came up a little short. The rebound kicked out and DeVante' Jones leapt for it, colliding with a Wildcat in what seemed like an obvious foul call. No whistle came, Villanova retained possession, and seconds later, it led to a Caleb Daniels and-one off a touch foul from Moussa Diabate. Daniels swished the free throw and it was 50-41 with 7:52 left. 

[Patrick Barron]

Villanova's passing over this period of the game was extremely impressive, it should be noted. They moved the ball very well, exploiting Michigan defenders who had gotten out of position, finding the open guy and leading to buckets. That allowed Villanova to convert some key makes to retain a mid-size lead, even as Michigan's offense began to come back on line. When Eli Brooks nailed a three to cut the lead back to six (54-48), there were under four minutes to go in the game.

Michigan needed to make a run, and they began to put a push together. Brooks was hammered on a moving screen, and Terrance Williams II was hacked on the ensuing Michigan possession. T-Will made both free throws and after a 'Nova miss from three, Williams pulled up on a heat-check look from distance that would've cut it to one. The three was well off the mark, and that's the closest Michigan would come to making a comeback. 

Jermaine Samuels toasted Hunter Dickinson for a layup and Dickinson would miss one on the other end. At that point, it was getting dark for Michigan and the dagger came only moments later. Collin Gillespie got an open look from beyond the arc and canned a three. 59-50 Villanova, 1:49 left to play. The final 109 seconds of Michigan's season slipped away like sand in an hourglass and the final score read 63-55 in favor of the Wildcats. Game over, season over. 

[Click the JUMP for takes]

[Patrick Barron]

Michigan lost this game because they shot 34.9% from two. They were consistently under 40% on dunks/layups throughout the contest, despite holding the size advantage on the interior. Villanova, to their credit, did an excellent job denying easy entrance passes to Dickinson in the post, and also contested a number of those looks in the paint. Still, Michigan's path to winning (barring an outlier hot shooting night) was never going to be through bombing it in from three. They needed to assert themselves at the rim and couldn't do so. Shooting 7/14 on free throws didn't help either. 

Defensively I think Michigan did what they wanted to do. They held a top 10 KenPom offensive team to 63 points on <40% from both the field and from three. Michigan, you could argue, got better looks than Villanova all game long, but an inability to consistently finish those chances haunted the Wolverines. In some ways it was a microcosm of this season from a coaching perspective: crafting a smart game plan and executing it to 80% success, but individual failures left Michigan unable to go beyond that and claim victory. 

The Wolverines will finish their season 19-15 and now await the offseason. Questions remain about what the roster will look like next season, and in time we will learn those answers. Caleb Houstan, Hunter Dickinson, and Moussa Diabate have NBA decisions to make, while veterans Eli Brooks and Brandon Johns Jr. are likely out the door due to age and eligibility factors. As Brooks leaves, he exits the winningest player in Michigan Basketball history and deserves a 'thank you' from the Michigan fanbase. DeVante' Jones still has a COVID season to use if he wanted to return. Of the eight Michigan players who saw the floor tonight, only Frankie Collins and Terrance Williams II are assumed to be back in Ann Arbor 100%. A new recruiting class will come through the doors of Crisler and transfer portal shopping will begin, as Juwan Howard tinkers with the roster. 

Thank you, Eli [Patrick Barron]

This was a flawed Michigan team, streaky shooters where either everything went right or everything went wrong through much of the season. They were on one night, off the next, consistently inconsistent and unable to stitch together more than one win in a row for a two month stretch. Even during their biggest wins, Michigan games were littered with frustrating mental errors, a year that seemed to deliver so little pleasure as they flopped short of lofty expectations, before being partially redeemed thanks to one weekend in Indianapolis. Tonight was the culmination of all of that. 

I was rather unenthused going into this NCAA Tournament because it never really felt like this Michigan team could make a run. Unlike in 2017, where Michigan had a low seed but were scorching hot and had an identity behind Derrick Walton Jr.'s leadership and Moe Wagner's burgeoning stardom, this 2022 team had a low seed but it felt like that rank was apt. There really wasn't anything on the resume to suggest they could make a Cinderella run. Too many flaws, too many mistakes, and lacking the kind of pivotal players that 2017 team had. But of course, due to the nature of the tournament, those two teams ended up in the same place, the Sweet 16.

The 2022 team won a coin flip against Colorado State and pulled off one upset thanks to the genius of Eli Brooks. That was a nice treat for a long season of frustration, but in the end, they are who we thought they were. Not able to live up to the hype, but the hype was unreasonable in hindsight and preseason rankings only mean so much in a sport where rosters are so constantly in flux between one-and-dones and the transfer portal. It's a winning season, it keeps the Sweet 16 streak alive, but it does, for a minute, blunt the progress of the Juwan Howard era from last season.

Questions will need to be answered next year, but that day will come in time. It wasn't the Final Four/national title contender we wanted, but in three seasons of Juwan, Michigan made (or was on pace to make) the tournament all three years, made the Sweet 16 in both years the tournament was held, and has a B1G regular season crown. Not too shabby first three seasons. Onward and upward. 

Comments

M-Dog

March 25th, 2022 at 12:41 AM ^

The pieces on this team just never fit together well . . . two experienced players, two raw freshmen, and a transfer from a mid-major league. 

There was some talent, but they didn't (and probably couldn't) play complimentary, consistent basketball all year.  It didn't really get much better as the season progressed into March.

They finished the season with only 19 wins, despite making the sweet sixteen.  That sweet sixteen seems like all you could ask for from this team. 

So the deck will get shuffled next year, one way or the other.  I'm happy to trade some talent and potential for a more synchronized whole.  One that can shoot the damn ball.

 

umchicago

March 25th, 2022 at 2:39 AM ^

The D is everything we could have hoped for. The offense was not good. HD and Brooks had poor games. Oh well. I was calling for the collins, brooks, Twill, diabate, HD lineup big time. it happened for like 2 min in the second half. juwan playing johns for 15 min may have cost him this game. too bad. This game was there for the taking.

B-Nut-GoBlue

March 25th, 2022 at 2:54 AM ^

I did not enjoy this game.  I hated it.  The little that was enjoyable (Eli Brooks 2nd half) was washed out by horrible execution on elementary basketball shots (albeit, yes, defended by D1, Villanova players).

I despise this game more than an April 2nd, 2018 game.

outsidethebox

March 25th, 2022 at 6:29 AM ^

Once again, the lead picture paints a thousand words. It's a complicated game-a lot goes into winning-and losing. 

Generally the effort was good. On to next year.

gweb

March 25th, 2022 at 7:29 AM ^

It was a weird feeling for me after the game almost like I was glad it was over. I rooted them on and watched all the games yet the agony from their poor play seemed to outweigh the joy from the times they played well and looked good. 

Watching this team shoot the ball usually made my eyes hurt. I was reminded that freshmen are frustrating and inconsistent despite their rankings. They had talent but it rarely all seemed to click and work together. The guard play was poor and the 3 point shooting was a roller coaster. 

I’m ready to see a new team next year and wish the guys well. T Will deserves more time and he will get it.  Hopefully Frankie can get a jump shot and work on his free throws.

I will definitely miss Brooks… likely in my top 10 favorites… Hunter too. 

goblu330

March 25th, 2022 at 8:21 AM ^

This is a good take.  This particular Michigan team was starting to feel like a bad addiction, with fans enduring agony for most of the time for fleeting “highs” that were always short lived.

This game is far easier to accept for me than some losses in the past, because although the game was there for the taking, Michigan didn’t take it because they were simply not a good enough team to do it.  Unlike the loss to UCLA where M lost the game because they didn’t do things they had done all season, this team lost this game because of the things they couldn’t do all season.

Thanks for the first weekend, boys.  That was a bit of unexpected joy that killed some time during the winter/spring transition blah.  Interested to see what happens in the off season.  Excited about sophomore Bufkin.  I think that kid is going to be very good.

readyourguard

March 25th, 2022 at 7:48 AM ^

No bench 

Turnovers 

Zero points in 3 tournament games from Johns 

Far too little production from Houstan

An inability to take pressure off Dickinson with some consistent outside shooting.

Too many participants who consistently get out-worked.

Maybe next year we have fewer Tik Tokkers and more gritty ballers.

 

lunchboxthegoat

March 25th, 2022 at 7:51 AM ^

While I think its unlikely - a 3-5 of Jett/Diabate/Hunter would be a foundation for a team that could make another 2nd weekend or beyond run.

I'm not sure how you can look at Diabate and not see how that dude is going to be a monster in a year or two. 

Blue Vet

March 25th, 2022 at 7:53 AM ^

3 impressions:

• a fascinating team that remained inconsistent

• on offense, it felt as if guys, subconsciously, were trying to match the narrative of underdog hero doing extraordinary things, rather than simply repeating what their talent, training, and season-long habits had prepared them for.

• the defense, as much effort as talent, got better in the end

Thanks for the fun.

WFNY_DP

March 25th, 2022 at 9:30 AM ^

Re: your second point, the hero-ball 3 attempt by TWill late in the second half is emblematic of this issue. Just not the shot he needs to take there. Work the offense, get a better look, and if you have the three attempt in the flow of the offense, by all means.

1974

March 25th, 2022 at 8:18 AM ^

Michigan missed a lot of shots, yes, but quite a few of those were launched hurriedly or from slightly odd positions. (Not saying that they didn't have more than usual just miss overall ...) Villanova got a few more easy shots at the rim (ones where they'd clearly beaten their defender).

aiglick

March 25th, 2022 at 9:43 AM ^

When your team has so many young pieces leading the team it’s not surprising in retrospect that it’s going to be inconsistent. Some nights this team looked like it could bang with the best and other nights they got wiped. Last night was competitive and they came close which while there are no moral victories was still good that they competed hard. The ball just didn’t bounce our way. Hopefully we can be a lot more consistent next year and do some damage back in the Tourney.

Blue_2008

March 25th, 2022 at 9:50 AM ^

It was a frustrating end to an up and down but overall frustrating year. This team had some talent but could never really put it together. I think Houstan and Diabate should stay but I know that's not always how it works with raw, high potential players. We'll miss Eli and Dickinson, but I think we have some solid pieces for next year in Houstan and Diabate if they stay, but also Collins, Bufkin, and TWill with some talent waiting on the bench and coming in. Desperately need some knock down shooters and guys that can create offense though.

Richard75

March 25th, 2022 at 10:25 AM ^

The shooting was why U-M lost, but Samuels’ dominance on the other end was another reminder of how badly this team needs someone who can check guys like that.

gmoney41

March 25th, 2022 at 10:33 AM ^

Dickinson should come back, work on his  game.  Diabate needs major work.  Who better to work with than Juwan.  Caleb Houston going pro???  Lol.  The guy is tall, has little athleticism and has a wonky shot.  At times it looked like he was in molasses out there.   Brooks is going to be missed.  He was awesome and improved so much here.  This team was so inconsistent and could use shooters, big time.  I thought the freshmen class that was so hyped, was nowhere near what we needed this year, but hopefully we can add some missing pieces and hold on to some players that could use another year to improve. 

lou apo

March 25th, 2022 at 10:38 AM ^

The unusual reasons we lost: 1) Not finishing at the rim, 2) sucking at free throws.  

The not so unusual reason: Diabate can't hold onto the ball.  I just don't know if he isn't strong enough, doesn't use the muscles he has, or has some sort of technique problem, but people are constantly knocking the ball out of his hands, and each of those is minus ~1point for us and plus ~1 point for them, maybe more since fast breaks result which are usually worth more than 1 point.

KennyHiggins

March 25th, 2022 at 12:11 PM ^

It pains me to see the overly critical comments about young men like Diabate, Houstan, and Dickinson....and all the other guys who fought their guts out for the team.  Great effort last night - sometimes the shots that should fall don't.  If you've played, you know.

Hold your heads up, and keep getting better.  Go Blue.

energyblue1

March 25th, 2022 at 1:53 PM ^

Nova was a much stronger team, player for player, thicker upper body, stronger base and played more fundamentally sound.  Offensively the shoulder bump every drive they knocked their defender off his block and got the separation.  They hand fought pushing off all game, not sure if that's a foul but used to be.  But no mistake this team just needs to put on at least 10-20 lb's of muscle each guy..  

Nova finished at the rim, got the rebounds over a larger team and fought their way in.  Nova always has good shooters that can pull up and hit, 3, at the arc, 15' jumper.  But they can shoot and finish at the rim.  And it's not like Nova didn't struggle themselves but the fact they could shoot and finish at the rim as well as make free throws was the difference.  

Michigan, didn't finish and in fact rushed a ton of shots that they had.  Had position, had the shot and rushed them.  Not confident and physicality had a lot to do with that.  Just insane imo.  This team has a long way to go and wouldn't have made it that far without HD, his size is just too much for many teams.  But the lack of physicality, this team was too much finess without being really good shooting or fundamentally sound defending, boxing out, sliding, drop or pivot as they should be.  

Merlin.64

March 25th, 2022 at 5:03 PM ^

As frustrating as the team's inconsistency has been (to themselves as well as others, no doubt), let's give them credit for their hard work and improvement in some areas, notably defense. They beat two higher seeded teams to reach the sweet sixteen, where they fell to a second seed, on a night when two top-seeded teams lost. Meanwhile, the rest of the Big Ten have been . . . unimpressive?

Perhaps our expectations for this year were unrealistically high, but last weekend the team showed what it is capable of. A final loss is always a disappointing end to the season, but unavoidable for all but one in a playoff. As in football, we outperformed our rivals, despite some hiccups, and that  is . . . gratifying?

Speaking of which, we are doing pretty well in other sports. (Go, ladies!)

As alums and fans, we're spoiled, really, which is kind of nice to remember.

Go Blue!