length [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Ooh Shiny Sword Comment Count

Brian February 26th, 2021 at 12:40 PM

2/25/2021 – Michigan 79, Iowa 57 – 17-1, 12-1 Big Ten

Video games that have made questionable design choices will often have certain levels that, once achieved, massively spike the player's power. Sometimes this is because you've been holding some whiz-bang item in your inventory for six hours that is suddenly wieldable because you hit level 36. You can be an invincible god slaughtering millions of undead and also if you try to wield that purple warhammer you're going to get the worst cramp. I find this to be an annoying mechanic, most of the time.

The other time is when Hunter Dickinson pulls out his heretofore unknown Peacock Slayer and it glints in the sun once, twice, three times.

The next possession resulted in a heavily contested reverse layup that came up short, and the world realigned a little more. The story of this game was not the story everyone expected. I didn't know Michigan could do that.

The story of this season is "I didn't know Michigan could do that" over and over again. When the ability unlocked is holding the probable Naismith winner to 5/17 from two, look out. Michigan held Garza to his second-worst ORTG since midway through his sophomore year. The only team to top this performance was Michigan State, which lost by 30 because it was triple-teaming the post.

Michigan didn't double once except for an apparent moment of confusion, and did more than survive. They dominated the post.

Dickinson singling up Garza allowed Michigan to crush Iowa's three-point shooting. First off, just 19 of Iowa's 69 attempts from the field were threes. That's 28%; Iowa usually has 40% of their shots  from deep. Second, Iowa only hit six and four of those were heavily contested, off-the-dribble jacks. There were only four or five looks that were actually good.

Even more remarkably, Iowa had four (four!) assists. Iowa entered this game with the fourth-highest A/FGM nationally. Attempts at the rim were rare: 16 vs 24 midrange attempts, and guys not named Garza go to the rim just eight times. If you can single up Garza Iowa's offense doesn't know what to do because it doesn't have a Plan B guy who can get to the basket or pull Franz stuff on pick and roll.

Synergy play splits tell a tale here:

  • Iowa's worst efficiency comes when the PNR ball handler shoots. Iowa had 24 PNR possessions. 3 of them got to the roll man. 21 stuck with the ball handler.
  • Iowa had just 13 spot up opportunities. (Michigan had 18.)
  • Iowa got forced into 7 isolation situations. (Michigan had 1.)

Synergy doesn't really encapsulate Iowa's proficiency at not-quite-transition post ups based on Garza beating his man down the floor, but IIRC there were zero of those.

This was a master class against the best offense in the country. It started with Dickinson, but everyone played their part from Juwan Howard on down. You do not get that level of lockdown without everyone buying in all the way.

----------------------------------------------------

If you wander over to the seedy side of opponent message boards you'll get a consistent message: Juwan Howard is a figurehead and Phil Martelli is really running things. (Also: Michigan's All-American recruits aren't coming and Howard will take an NBA job in the next few years.)

This has been obviously untrue from the drop. Howard is as involved as John Beilein is on the sideline, shouting out instructions and coaching guys up as they come off, as Martelli sits, watches, and offers the occasional recommendation.

Hoop Vision's latest post notes that Michigan is running a set Jordan Sperber describes as "the most NBA":

So why “the most NBA play” label?

Admittedly, I don’t watch much (or really any) NBA until the playoffs. But last playoffs, the veer and the baseline exit were the two NBA concepts that jumped out to me the most as lacking representation in the typical NCAA offense.

And Michigan just turned a massively prolific post player into a pumpkin despite playing Austin Davis and Brandon Johns about a third of the time. Davis, a nobody recruit people openly questioned John Beilein for taking, outplayed Luka Garza during their time on the court together. A below-the-rim center with Bill Laimbeer's jumping ability is shooting 70% from the floor. Tell me Juwan Howard didn't do that.

I didn't know Austin Davis could do that. I didn't know Brandon Johns could do that. I didn't know that a basketball team could just keep pulling swords out of its backpack until it finds the one with the right combination of filigree and runes to banish whatever ogre is threatening the village this time around.

[After THE JUMP: Franz gets his due]

BULLETS

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[Campredon]

Sorry Franz, you got knocked out of the main column. It's hard to imagine any situation other than "freshman center detonates POY" that would keep 21 points on 13 shooting possessions, four assists, and one turnover out of pre-jump hagiography. Here's a personalized highlight reel from—dangit—The Draftmatic:

Wagner coulda shoulda had a couple more assists but Dickinson was robbed of an and-one by a lack of continuation that seemed absurd even on the college level and Iowa was able to recover on his ridiculous pass to Brooks. Also this reel should have included Wagner batting an entry pass out of bounds when Chaundee Brown got switched on Garza.

One of Michigan's second half adjustments was to put Wagner in a ton of pick and roll, where he was devastating. Remember this bit from after the Rutgers game?

Wagner's had 56 PNR possessions, 36 of which have ended in his own shots. Apparently PNR ballhandler offense is pretty inefficient because he's at 0.78 PPP and that's 59th percentile. (Oddly, the guy who scores out of PNR best in the Big Ten is Eric Ayala.)

The other 20 possessions are passes that are split evenly between roll guys/cutters and guys spotting up. PPP for the former: 1.6. PPP for the latter: 0. Michigan has missed all ten of its spot-up opportunities after Wagner passes out of PNR. That's a fluke that's holding down his numbers there.

Further exploration of this method of offense is warranted.

Wagner's performance against OSU and Iowa—mostly Iowa—added 11 PNR possessions to Wagner's total. These shot his personal offense in PNR up to 77th percentile, and when he passes to the roll man or cutters he's 99th percentile. Michigan now has a make after a Wagner spot-up pass but 2 points on 12 possessions is still 0th percentile and artificially depresses what would otherwise be not quite elite PNR performance. But maybe getting there.

Franz is freshman-aged and is still leveling up rapidly. There's a strong possibility he's dominant in the tournament and heads to the lottery.

Speaking of draft items. Sam Vecenie posted his first big board. Michigan players:

  • #15 Franz Wagner
  • #56 Hunter Dickinson
  • #70 Isaiah Livers

Vecenie might not have incorporated the results of the M-Iowa game into this board since Dickinson is still six spots behind Garza.

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[Campredon]

Backup centers! Dickinson only played 23 minutes, which felt questionable at times in the first half. In the second half Dickinson went to the bench after his third foul and it just didn't matter, as Michigan continued to extend the lead. Both Davis and Johns put in work, and would have put in more work if they had hit a series of bunnies they usually make.

Garza did get a couple buckets against the backup centers but it was not the endless parade of layups that I feared. Davis walled up sufficiently to force Garza to finish through him, which he did a couple times because Davis lacks Dickinson's Garza-overwhelming size. Davis also went 3/5 from the floor and easily could have gone 5/5 since his two misses were right at the rim.

Johns put in an even more improbable shift, fronting everything he could. Iowa's first attempt to pass it over the fronting resulted in a turnover a couple feet over Nunge's head, and further attempts were not made. He was able to survive several possessions against Garza without allowing a post touch. When he did fail to front and suffer a post entry there was one easy bucket for Garza and one smart foul on the floor.

IIRC Garza had two buckets and a trip to the line in the 12-14 minutes he got someone other than Dickinson, which is even more incredible than Dickinson shutting him off.

One half point. Your author wants to take a victory lap after asserting in the preview that Michigan should roll with one-on-one coverage on Luka Garza so they could shut off the firestorm of threes Iowa usually puts up, but alas. If I do that I have to remind people that on the season preview podcast I was the most pessimistic one specifically because I thought defense at the center spot would be a problem all year.

Elbows and other oddities. Man, Garza flings those everywhere. He did not get called for an offensive foul in this game. There was one late in the first half where the entire Michigan bench leapt out of their chairs and started waving their elbows around like it was a strange new dance move. Nothing.

I'm less mad about that and more mad about Hunter Dickinson getting called for a much less egregious elbow against Ohio State.

Also:

image

That was the ten second call and a couple people put that in my twitter mentions. I do think that might have been a correct call because on the next possession it seemed like the clock on TV was behind the actual shot clock:

image

14 on the clock, 15 per the chryon

This was more relevant in the OSU-MSU game. OSU had a three-pointer that seemed clearly out before the shot clock ran out. It got disallowed; with it OSU would have been ahead in the last minute instead of behind. Since it seemed clearly, but barely, out per the chyron it was probably late in the real world.

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[Campredon]

Sneaky explosion. Isaiah Livers was both nearly invisible and also scored 16 points on 9 shooting possessions because he hit 4/5 threes. When you can get that kind of output from a guy who's operating mostly as an outlet option who lets the game come to him, you're gonna have a good time. If Livers can defend at all at the NBA level I have to believe there's room on the bench for a guy like him.

Magic number. It's 2. Illinois defeated Nebraska without Ayo Dosunmu last night so they're still in with a chance, but they have a brutal closing slate: @ Wisconsin, @ Michigan, @ Ohio State. Even if they sweep that slate they need Michigan just needs to go 2-2 in their final four to wrap up the conference title.

Comments

AWAS

February 26th, 2021 at 1:34 PM ^

The second half defense reminded me of piranhas, and makes me appreciate the killer instinct of this team.  The ability to dial up the intensity and put away a teetering foe has become a trademark of this team.

ESNY

February 26th, 2021 at 1:49 PM ^

The Garza elbows drive me nuts. They aren’t the usual chicken wings that players use to get around a guy and is rarely called.
 

He just flat out throws elbows at the ribs routinely. It’s not when he’s trying to turn the corner, he just does it as a matter of practice. Don’t know how it doesn’t get called 

Nickel

February 26th, 2021 at 1:52 PM ^

Loved it! The margin could have been 30 pts if they'd called Garza for even half the hooking he did on the offensive end. Great college player obviously, but wouldn't waste a late round draft pick on him if he needs to do that to score in addition to his defensive limitations.

Inuyesta

February 26th, 2021 at 2:03 PM ^

If you wander over to the seedy side of opponent message boards you'll get a consistent message: Juwan Howard is a figurehead and Phil Martelli is really running things.

 

I don’t love to go there since it’s sports and hopefully shouldn’t be that serious, but every time I encounter this argument, it strikes me as so ridiculous that it almost has to be racist.
 

With no disrespect to Martelli, he may be vastly more experienced as a head coach than Howard, but that experience means he has a track record. And in over 20 years as a head coach, he never produced a team even a fraction as good as Michigan is right now.  There is simply no basis to think Martelli is really running the show other than, for a certain type of fan, he is a better fit for the mold of what a college basketball coach “should” look like.

 

Brian Griese

February 26th, 2021 at 2:51 PM ^

It's opposing fans being opposing fans; it's what everyone does.  If you don't believe me, what is the explanation for all the pointing and laughing this blog does about a certain minority football coach in the BIG? I have heard it all about him on this blog from the writers to the message board particiapnts - an offensive coordinator runs the show, he's an X's and O's idiot, etc.  Is it okay to say that about hm since it's "true" or are 75.7% of the people that comment and write about him racist? 

Maison Bleue

February 26th, 2021 at 4:15 PM ^

I have heard it all about him on this blog from the writers to the message board particiapnts - an offensive coordinator runs the show, he's an X's and O's idiot, etc. 

I am on this blog more than I should be and have never read either of those things about Mel Tucker, especially from the board's writers. I can tell you, that if MSU were very successful on the field and I read posts here saying "his white coordinator was running the show" or "he is an x's and o's idiot", I would absolutely find those posts offensive and racist.

what is the explanation for all the pointing and laughing this blog does about a certain minority football coach in the BIG?

I mean, MSU is a shitty football team. Why wouldn't we point and laugh? Not sure that has anything to with him being a minority. There was a lot of pointing and laughing at our own shitty football team on this board too.

Brian Griese

February 26th, 2021 at 8:16 PM ^

I was talking about Franklin and not Tucker, and yet all the people that neg’d me gave me no explanation as to how it’s different when Brian calls Franklin “Mocha Brady Hoke” or how it’s “luck” when they actually looked competent against OSU 2016-2018, won the BIG and went to the Rose Bowl but it’s racist when other people say bad things about Howard. So which is it? 

Maison Bleue

February 27th, 2021 at 11:20 AM ^

If Brian called Franklin "mocha Brady Hoke" that is absolutely a racist comment, yes.

You lose me at the "luck" thing. We all called their Rose Bowl lucky, yes, because we MURDERED that Rose Bowl PSU team by 39 points! Then proceeded to get screwed by the refs in the OSU game, while PSU had some favorable bounces in their game against OSU. Context is needed here. That doesn't feel like the same as attributing a Top 5 team's success to a white assistant, rather than the Head Coach does it?

Maison Bleue

February 28th, 2021 at 9:52 AM ^

Are you being intentionally obtuse? This is not an apples to apples comparison when context is added.

There was hard evidence that Moorehead came in and made that offense better than it was previously under Franklin and then became worse when he left. I think you can reasonably attribute some of that success to Moorehead instead of Franklin. I also don’t remember people saying ALL of Franklin’s success was luck and Moorehead either. In fact, I always felt the general sentiment here about Franklin was, “Good scheme coach, good recruiter, good at hiring assistants but, has hilarious in-game clock/TO foibles that we make fun of him for(again, there is hard evidence of this and we also make fun of our white coach for the same thing).

Question: Where is the hard evidence that Phil Martelli is the x’s and o’s guy and Juwan is just the figurehead?

Answer: In their racist brains, that’s where.

Maison Bleue

February 27th, 2021 at 11:27 AM ^

Laughing at/insulting a black coach because they make mistakes is not racist(depending on the particular insults). Saying that a black coach of a very successful team isn't smart enough to be the "brains" of the operation, while the old white assistant is, is absofuckinglutely racist. 

You see the difference, I hope?

dragonchild

February 26th, 2021 at 8:04 PM ^

NO ONE said similar crap about Beilein.

There’s a form of bigotry that concedes blacks can be superior athletes, as long as an old white man puts a leash on them. It’s just a modernized variation of the “benevolent” plantation owner “civilizing” slaves. Even if athletes aren’t property, they are undisciplined thugs without Old White Man to control them.  And of course, there’s never anything wrong with a white man coaching whites.  The coach-player relationship asserts the inherent genetic superiority of White Man.

Hence the dearth of black head coaches in every sport. The likes of Juwan Howard blows up this white supremacist delusion, so they find the thought of him leading these black and white kids to success unbearable. That he’s out-scheming white coaches, that makes their feeble brains explode.

So we get fed this stupid crap that Martelli is the brains behind this operation, because they can’t stand to face reality.

abertain

February 26th, 2021 at 2:19 PM ^

I'm glad the team is so good and tough. I was just reading about MSU and Holtmann and Underwood both commented on how much they foul. I abhor them. It's like how I've never minded North Carolina. Even teams that cheat a bit, whatever. I just hate watching teams play football, particularly when the NBA game has gotten further and further away from that style. Already loathing those games. 

My Name is LEGIONS

February 26th, 2021 at 2:25 PM ^

A few points...

The talk of Martelli... and then people forget Eisley... as he is in charge of the offense.

Brown should have been mentioned in this write-up too... for it seems when he is in, is when we always pull away, for whatever reason, but this should be noted. His spaziness on defense deflates the other team over and over.

 

I Bleed Maize N Blue

February 26th, 2021 at 2:40 PM ^

Hail to the Victors! So glad that we got Dickinson, a big strong big, who doesn't get knocked out of the way when Garza rams into him - in fact, Garza was bouncing off, LOL. (I'm also team WTF, how does Garza only get one measly foul called on him?!?!) Props to Davis & Johns for helping keep the clamps on Garza.

And 6-10 Franz Wagner had some game, too!

Baffin

February 26th, 2021 at 3:12 PM ^

... and yet, watch the next game preview state — in classic Mgoblog nervous-nelly fashion — that "it's always really hard to win inside (an empty) Assembly Hall."

Juwan Howard has a juggernaut on his hands. Venue is NBD. Michigan rolls. 

Still waiting for those pregame graphics to remove the cyan around Davis, the banana peel on Smith, and add some more crowns and danger stars. This team is Alabama-football quality. 

jmblue

February 26th, 2021 at 3:28 PM ^

Austin Davis' development has definitely not gotten enough attention.  He's become a really efficient low-post scorer.  Since the restart, he's shooting 11-14 from the floor.  I can't think of another big guy who's improved his footwork so much.  His up-and-under move is fantastic.

Needs

February 26th, 2021 at 3:59 PM ^

Going from the UM-Iowa game to MSU-OSU was quite the shift. Michigan just runs so many more actions in a possession and they get into them so much more quickly than did those teams. None of the holding the ball on the perimeter until the shot clock is at 8. Some of that is the Heat background, as they’ve long been one of the more strategically savvy teams, but in general I think the NBA is just miles ahead of the NCAA in terms of offensive design and UM is reaping the benefit right now. Kind of the opposite of football.

TacoLivesOn

February 26th, 2021 at 5:39 PM ^

Yes, it's really fun to watch.  The fluidity of this offense is remarkable.  It feels like a system has been established that is going to lead to a lot of future success, even with different players.  I love how guys are able to play within their game and consistently get great looks and lanes to the hoop. High efficiency is winning basketball. 

UMinSF

February 27th, 2021 at 3:52 AM ^

Michigan's players have absurdly high basketball IQ, especially in this day of college hoops.

Smith came to us from the ivy league, Wagner played in a (semi?) pro league in Europe, Livers and Brooks are multi-year starters, as was Chaundee at Wake. Even Dickenson played at DeMatha with terrific youth coaching. Davis and Johns have multiple years in the system - and John Beilein was both a terrific teacher and known for recruiting smart players.

They're all bright guys who soak up coaching like a sponge. Special group.

BlueLikeJazz

February 26th, 2021 at 6:27 PM ^

That draft ranking really is a testament to Howard’s coaching ability. He’s got one of the 3 best teams in the country with exactly 1 first rounder on it. (And prob one future first rounder in Hunter)

Compare that to a lot of teams with NBA guys all over who can’t do shit—it’s really impressive.

DayZ1996

February 26th, 2021 at 7:10 PM ^

Of all the comments from the announcers, we laughed when they said "Oh wow that's Franz Wagner doin' Wagner things". Which pretty much sums up the way he plays.

abertain

February 26th, 2021 at 9:02 PM ^

Most of the time I think people give too much credit to coaches for just recruiting talented guys, but I really love some of the footwork on the Michigan bigs. I think both of them came in with advanced levels, but I want to think that having an incredible technician like Juwan coaching them isn't hurting at all. Maybe it's because the post game is barely a part of basketball anymore, but I have loved a couple of Hunter's spins in the last two games. 

Gustavo Fring

February 26th, 2021 at 10:15 PM ^

I have no idea how Livers is 70th on Vecenie's board but I highly doubt that's the feedback he gets from the draft committee.  He has the size to play the 4, is an elite shooter with a high release and he doesn't need room to get it off.  He also has plus athleticism, switchability on D and very good instincts.  Guys like that simply don't grow on trees.  

If you want to see how useful a guy like Livers is, you Pistons fans who watch Saddiq Bey can get an idea of how easily you can plug high-level shooters with the size and athleticism to play the 4 in and have them be successful. 

UMinSF

February 27th, 2021 at 4:11 AM ^

Isaiah Livers is one of my all-time favorite Michigan players, and he'll probably have a future in the NBA. 

That said, he's kind of a 'tweener. He's listed at 6'7, is probably 6'6. His wingspan seems average. He probably doesn't have the handle, lateral quickness or passing chops to be a guard, and is too small to check most NBA forwards. 

What does that leave? Seems to me his future is as a 3 and D guy off the bench - and while he's smart and flies around on D, he's not especially long or quick or strong by NBA standards. He can shoot, but he doesn't seem like a gunner like Duncan Robinson or JJ Reddick.

I hope I'm wrong, and he has a long and successful career. He seems like a fantastic kid.