No photographers in Madison, so here's a memory of when Michigan had shooters vs. Wisconsin [MG Campredon]

Wisconsin 77, Michigan 63 Comment Count

Alex.Drain February 20th, 2022 at 3:44 PM

NOTE: The part of the column that appears before the jump will not discuss the Juwan situation. It was written before the incident happen and was a holistic narrative that I didn't want to mess with. The brawl will be buried after the jump. 

In modern basketball, it's pretty hard to win when you do absolutely nothing from three for the entire game. It's even harder when you can't do anything from the field for a ten minute stretch of a forty minute game. It's nearly impossible if you have no defensive answer for the other team's best player. All of those things happened today to Michigan basketball, and unsurprisingly, the Wolverines came up short in Madison today by a final score of 77-63. The Maize & Blue shot 16.0% from three on 25 attempts, endured a stretch of 9.5 minutes in the second half where just one field goal went down, and allowed Johnny Davis to post 25 points, scoring at ease. Not a winning recipe. 

The first half was a visually distressing segment that saw both teams be ice cold from beyond the arc. In lieu of efficient three point shooting, both teams decided to focus their offense in the paint early on, with the first twenty four points being scored in the paint. It was not until nearly ten minutes into the contest that the first points came outside of it, a two-point jumper that put Wisconsin up 14-12. Michigan started hot offensively, feeding Dickinson in the post, but then the offense dried up over a 2/12 stretch that spanned much of the middle of the first half. With 7:06 to go, it was 21-16 Wisconsin and Michigan had five turnovers to just one forced. 

Play continued along at this pace, with both teams concentrating inside, though the Badgers began to mix in the dreaded mid-range jumper against Michigan's shorter guards. The threes continued to be literally non-existent, with the first one from either team coming when there were just two minutes remaining in the first half. That was a Caleb Houstan three that trimmed the Badger lead to 27-26 Wisconsin, close to the eventual halftime margin of 31-31. At the break Michigan was 1/10 from three and Wisconsin was 0/6. Both teams were around 50% from two, with Dickinson leading Michigan at 15 points on 6/10 from the floor. The Badgers were led by Johnny Davis, Chucky Hepburn, and Tyler Wahl, each scoring in high single figures. 

Hunter was the lone bright spot on offense in the first half [David Wilcomes]

Michigan came out hot out of the break, allowing a Wisconsin score on the opening possession but then going on a quick 7-0 run that forced a timeout from Greg Gard, featuring a Dickinson thunderdunk, an Eli Brooks transition three, and then a steal setting up a Brooks layup bucket. 38-33 Michigan. Unfortunately, it proved to be the last happy sequence for the Wolverines in the game, as the Badgers would then embark on a 23-3 run (!!!!) spanning ten minutes of action. Over that stretch, Michigan's lone bucket was an Eli Brooks jumper, and they got one other point from Moussa Diabate on a free throw. 

The story of the long Wisconsin run was a thoroughly maddening one. At one end of the floor, the Wolverines missed three pointer after three pointer, and almost all of which were wide open, completely uncontested looks. It didn't matter who took them, be it DeVante' Jones or Houstan or Brooks, they all clanged off the iron. Juwan Howard schemed open looks with ease and the shots just didn't fall, much like last weekend's game against Ohio State. On the other end of the floor, Wisconsin let Johnny Davis turn it on, at one point scoring 11 of the team's last 13 points during a sequence that stretched the Badger lead from 43-39 to 56-41. Eli Brooks was toasted repeatedly, and no other players provided much of an answer either. Davis showcased NBA talent and with Diabate in foul trouble, Michigan was hung out to dry without an NBA-caliber wing defender. 

By the time the run was over, so was the game, for all intents and purposes. Once the lead was stretched up to 15, it stayed in that range for the remainder of the contest, occasionally stretching up towards 17, and sometimes narrowing to 10, but never again competitive. A few more Michigan threes fell, but the damage was done. Wisconsin made a few threes in this period too, to finally break their schneid. The final seconds ran off the clock, and Wisconsin had won it 77-63. 

Michigan didn't have Franz to guard Johnny Davis this year [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

I don't think we learned anything about the Wolverines today that we didn't already know. We knew they struggled shooting the three, and were prone to games where nothing drops. That happened today. We knew they struggle against athletic wings who can drive past Houstan and shoot over Brooks. That happened today. It's a loss that would have been a lot closer if Michigan shot its season average (would've been a two point loss instead of fifteen), but the Davis matchup was probably going to do the Wolverines in regardless. 

The good news is that this was not a win Michigan needed. They wanted to win one this week, and they got that one in Iowa City on Thursday night. They now sit 8-7 and would like to go 3-2 over the final five, four of which are at home. Two big ones are coming up this week against Rutgers and Illinois at Crisler. Absolutely have to win one to keep pace in the bubble chase, and winning both would do wonders to solidify the tourney case. The Rutgers game is on Wednesday night at 7:00 PM EST. It is scheduled to be on BTN. 

[AFTER THE JUMP: The Brawl]

So, after the game concluded, this happened: 

Yeah. 

The incident that spawned this mess was a timeout taken by Wisconsin coach Greg Gard with fifteen seconds left. Wisconsin's bench scrubs had botched the preceding possession, resulting in a steal and a quick layup by DeVante' Jones. That trimmed the score to 76-61. The charitable take (and perhaps most rational one) is that Gard wanted to use that timeout to instill fundamentals into his seldom-used players after a clunky sequence. The take that probably permeated the Michigan sideline is that Gard took the timeout to prolong a game that he was already winning solidly.

It is true that taking a timeout in a blowout game that only has fifteen seconds left generally is considered to be what baseball players would call "bush league". That said, even if it was done to be an asshole move prolonging Michigan's painful loss (which I don't believe it was), that reaction from the Michigan sideline is not appropriate, unless something was said by Gard during the start of the altercation that we are not aware of. 

If you sincerely believe Gard took the timeout to disrespect Michigan's players and rub it in (which again, I don't think was the case), I have no problem saying "hey that wasn't cool, dude" when you shake hands. Defending the players is the job of the coach. But it can't last more than 15-30 seconds and it can't get physical. Throwing hands with the other team's coaching staff is not defending the players, and it does nothing to help your team. The job of the coach is to manage personalities, draw up strategy, make decisions, defend your players, and especially at the college level, be a leader and mature figure in the room. Starting a brawl is not leadership, any more than it was not leadership when Woody Hayes decked Charlie Bauman in 1978. You do not want your coach to be Sonny Corleone when the situation gets heated. 

Welp [MG Campredon]

Now we stew on what happens next. A suspension of some length is coming, and Warde Manuel will have a decision. I don't have a take on what that decision should be because I think we ought to take a day or two to let things simmer down, hear the explanations, and let things go from there. Between the Mark Turgeon incident in the BTT last year and now this, it's not a sustainable situation. Things have to change, either who the coach of Michigan is or the coach's behavior. Coaches can change (think of Harbaugh before and after he decided that taking 15 yard penalties for going crazy was bad for the team), but a public commitment to change feels like a prerequisite to Howard staying on. 

Regardless of what happens, it makes the remainder of this Michigan Basketball season interesting, but also disappointing. The team has played better as of late, and now we have to spend time talking about this and not the players. That's the greatest disservice of all committed by Howard today, not that the fight looks bad on TV. 

Comments

1VaBlue1

February 20th, 2022 at 4:17 PM ^

I don't get the comparison to Hayes.  Yeah, they're both coaches that threw a punch.  The differences, though, are stark.  Howard's punch was after a prolonged verbal argument with Gard, where both coaches were touching, pointing, and pushing each others.  Hayes ran up to a player that intercepted a pass and ran out of bounds, teed up the guy and threw an unaccounted punch to a surprised player trying not to run over bench players and a geriatric coach running up to him.  The two are not similar and are not a valid comparison.

bronxblue

February 20th, 2022 at 4:19 PM ^

Howard is going to be suspended for the rest of the year and he deserves it.  But I do think Gard shouldn't have grabbed Howard and their assistant coach shouldn't have gotten physical as well.  Howard slapped him and that's awful and should be punished appropriately, but it's weird seeing people act like he Kermit Washington'd someone.  

fatpete

February 20th, 2022 at 4:20 PM ^

I believe Gard started it.... he should have let it go and moved past Howard. However,  Howard looks really bad here.  He had all rights to be pissed and I have no problem with him being emotional..... but at this level,  you just can't throw a punch. 

RickSnow

February 20th, 2022 at 4:20 PM ^

Anyone who’s ever coached or played basketball knows that getting upset over Gard’s timeout is weak. Juwan was full court pressing their subs down 17 with less than 30 seconds left and at least 2 starters still in. If you’re going to do that, you can’t get pissy when they call a timeout.

The Wisc assistant coach probably did say some slap-worthy bs, but Juwan has to be the bigger man there. And Juwan’s inability to walk away led to TWill and Moussa swinging roundhouses which are going to put them on the shelf for perhaps the rest of the season too. 

Kentucky.maize

February 20th, 2022 at 4:30 PM ^

No #0 for Wisconsin punching Williams in the face led to the Michigan players fighting. Juwan was in the wrong and should never have gotten physical, but the players legitimately were defending themselves. The whole situation was escalated by all of the Wisconsin personnel swarming Juwan and Gard. 

lhglrkwg

February 20th, 2022 at 4:21 PM ^

Juwan unfortunately has earned the rep as a guy with a quick temper. You cannot do that as the head man. I am not sure Juwan survives this. I wish that wasnt the case but with the Turgeon stuff already on his resume, Juwan has put Warde in a very tough spot

MeanJoe07

February 20th, 2022 at 4:24 PM ^

Would be funny if Manuel says "While I don't condone violence, I think Gard should think twice before he puts his hand on one of my employees. Juwan will be suspended for 3 games and this won't happen again. No further comments"

Stringer Bell

February 20th, 2022 at 4:25 PM ^

Interesting sport when you can get a 1 game suspension for a DUI (an actually serious crime with potentially fatal consequences) a la Mark Few.  But palm an assistant coach during a scrum and the whole world is calling for your head.

btn

February 20th, 2022 at 4:36 PM ^

I think most outside observers are going to be surprised when multiple Wisconsin coaches/staffers get suspended over this 

Hope Michigan gets another shot at these clowns in the BTT

runandshoot

February 20th, 2022 at 4:57 PM ^

I would be surprised if Diabate or T-WIll got a suspension, and I don't think they should. T-Will looks like he is holding back a Maryland coach trying to go after Howard, and he takes a sucker punch to the face from #0 (Neath). Diabate looks like he is trying to strike back at whomever hit T-Will, but hits only air.

I hope Warde goes frame-by-frame with the Commissioner's office if they try any BS about the players.

potomacduc

February 20th, 2022 at 4:37 PM ^

The obvious example of a coach hitting someone and getting fired is Woody Hayes. Bobby Knight provides an example of a coach getting away with it multiple times. What other examples are there? How many other coaches and players have survived something like this? How many have been fired or lost their eligibility? 

ftroop

February 20th, 2022 at 4:47 PM ^

Really bad clip here.  Move back about 2 seconds and you'll see Juwan was brushing past Gard, who felt it necessary to confront Juwan.  Coach should've just kept moving obviously, but Gard initiated the confrontation. 

MGoBlue96

February 20th, 2022 at 4:50 PM ^

So not condoning Howard going further but how on Earth are people acting like Gard putting his hands on him like that wasn't an  escalation of things. Howard was in fact trying to just walk by him initially. Both teams have quite a bit of fault here.

BuddhaBlue

February 20th, 2022 at 4:55 PM ^

I believe Gard has told the press that the reason for the timeout (I had turned it off before then) was because they were trying to avoid a 10-second call due to Michigan's trapping after the inbounds, there was only 4 seconds left.

Juwan has said that it was the TO that pissed him off.

I would infer that's what they were "discussing" - perhaps Gard was trying to explain but Juwan already had it in his mind it was purely bad sportsmanship, but really only the people there know

crg

February 20th, 2022 at 5:01 PM ^

I want to know what Gard & that Wisc assistant said - it was clearly something that set Juwan off and might give him some leniency if it was truly abhorrent (the players would have heard it too).

Also, it wasn't really a hit from seeing the replay (I was only listening to the game and tuned out with 1+ minute to go) - looks like he was trying to grab the assistant coach (still uncalled for, but clearly not a punch/hit).

tomer

February 20th, 2022 at 8:06 PM ^

I've watched the clip a number of times. If you look right before and after Juwan swipes you can see that the Wisco Coach is holding TWill's wrists.

I don't know man. It is a crappy situation all around, but I don't think Howard is the only one that was wrong here and think that it is kind of BS that that is how it is being talked about.

waittilnextyear

February 20th, 2022 at 5:05 PM ^

Warde's job now is doing some interviews and poring over the video closely. Then, we'll see. I think, in retrospect, you can point to some aggressive instigating behaviors by Wisconsin that were subtle when viewed live, even if Juwan "throwing hand" will be the headliner. You figure there will be ample suspensions to go around.

Ultimately, your head coach can't "throw hand" in that situation no matter the instigation, mainly because it puts his travelling party in danger in a road stadium. Secondary to that is the moralizing about losing one's temper, being the bigger man, setting a good example, turning the other cheek, being a good emissary for the program etc.

Blucifer

February 20th, 2022 at 5:08 PM ^

Can’t really form a good conclusion until I hear more about the goings on in that handshake line. Violence is never the answer, but mitigating factors are a thing and in this case they may help to explain why Juwan lost control.
 

The university should immediately suspend him pending further investigation, with no further comment on the situation until the investigation is complete. 

Fan from TTDS

February 20th, 2022 at 5:11 PM ^

Are the coaches normally the first people to shake hands and then the players are next down the line?  On tv, the announcers pointed out that JH was not at the beginning of the line and was probably mad at the timeout by Wisc with 15 secs left in the game.  My guess is Gard stopped Howard and asked him why he wasn't at the start of the line to shake his hand and Howard probably told him he didn't like the timeout that he called with 15 seconds left.

waittilnextyear

February 20th, 2022 at 5:16 PM ^

It's pretty clear that Gard didn't like UM pressing his scrubs in a game that was over...and then retaliated with a timeout that Juwan did not like. What's also clear is that it would've been better for both Gard and Howard to air their frustrations later on and without as much shenanigans. They both get to take an "L" for that one.

SDCran

February 20th, 2022 at 5:15 PM ^

My order of severity of what they did:

1) Krabbenhoft obviously

2) the other Wisconsin staff member that Williams’s had to tackle twice to keep him from attacking someone.   It’s the same guy who caused the final dust up and who Houstan called a bitch

3) Neath who threw the first punch coming out of nowhere

4) Gard and Howard - pretty equal for different reasons

5) Diabate

 

Williams gets a 0%.  He acted as peacemaker 5 times before getting punched in the face.   Honestly Williams actions probably save Juwan.   If #2 above had gotten to Juwan either one, I think it might have been full on

Eyzwidopn

February 20th, 2022 at 5:15 PM ^

It doesn't matter what was said & short of another person throwing a punch at you, it doesn't matter that Gard put his hands on Coach Howard.  A person in a leadership role cannot act this way.  Period.  We expect a Head Coach to lead by example & guide young men & women to being a better person & player, show them how to handle adversity, not let their emotions override their objectives, their skill, & their responsibility/committment to the Team. We can't expect a perfect Head Coach, but we can expect a Head Coach not to be the problem.