Nothing But ‘Net – Week #15 – 02/05/2024 – Rock Bottom

The University of Michigan men’s basketball team played two games this past week, and they lost both of them.  On Tuesday (01/30/2024), they lost at Michigan State 81-62, then on Saturday (02/03/2024), they lost to Rutgers 69-59 in Crisler Arena.  The two losses lower Michigan’s record to 7-15 (2-9 in Big Ten).  They have now lost 5 games in a row, and 10 of the last 11.

What Happened?

Michigan has hit rock bottom for this season.  Losing to MSU on the road isn’t that embarrassing, but losing by almost 20 points makes it a lot worse.  None of that compares to losing by 10 points at home to the second-worst team in the Big Ten.  That’s rock bottom.  This season is over, even though there are still 10 games left to play.

Game Flow

Michigan has been very consistent lately: they build up a decent lead in the 1st half, then throw it away.  Once they get behind, they’re sunk, and they never regain the lead on the way to another tragic loss.  They’ve done it in many games this season, especially lately, and they did it twice this week.  In the MSU game, they pulled out to an early 9 point lead (18-9) with 11:52 to go in the 1st half, then let it slip away.  They were still up by 7 points (35-28) with 1:42 left in the half, but they let MSU go on a quick 5-0 run to end the half, with UM clinging to a 2-point lead, 35-33.  As they have so many times this season, UM came out of halftime and threw the game away.  After leading for most of the 1st half, building up a 9-point lead and watching it fritter away, they let MSU tie the game (39-39) at the 17:42 mark, then let MSU go ahead for good (41-39) just 22 seconds later, and that was the game.  MSU never trailed again, and built up the lead as high as 20 points, winning by 19.

It was more of the same in the Rutgers game, except that this time Michigan waited until later in the game to collapse.  Other than a brief 2-0 lead by Rutgers to start the game, Michigan led for the entire 1st half, by as many as 12 points.  Rutgers had crept back to within 5 points (35-30) with 47 seconds left in the 1st half, when Michigan played things perfectly, and scored 4 points in the last 10 seconds to go into halftime with great positive momentum, up 39-30.  Could this be the end of the “2nd half curse”?  It looked good.  Michigan started the 2nd half strong, pushing their lead up to 15 points (47-32) at the 17:03 mark.  They still led by 12 points (51-39) with 12:43 left, when the wheels started coming off.  Rutgers went on a quick 8-0 run to cut the lead to just 4 points (51-47) at the 10:27 mark.  Michigan kept the lead between 4 and 6 points for a while, and it was still a 6-point lead (57-51) with 7:19 left.  Look at that score: the final score was 69-59, Rutgers.  That means that Rutgers outscored Michigan 18-2 in the last 7:19.  18-2!  In that period, Michigan missed 3 3-pointers, missed 6 2-point shots, and committed 4 turnovers.  That works out to 1-for-10 shooting in 7:19.  Disgusting.

Stats

The game stats for the MSU game were reasonable.  Michigan shot decently overall (20-for-47 = 42.6%), they shot 3-pointers pretty well (8-for-20 = 40.0%), but they shot free throws poorly (14-for-26 = 53.8%).  They won the rebounding battle handily (34-26), but they lost the turnover battle badly (13-6).  They lost this game with poor defense, allowing MSU to shoot 55.7% (34-for-61).

The game stats for the Rutgers game were weak.  Michigan shot decently overall (23-for-53 = 43.4%), they shot 3-pointers poorly (7-for-24 = 29.2%), and they shot free throws well, just not enough (6-for-7 = 85.7%).  They lost the rebounding battle badly (40-32), and they were terrible with turnovers, losing that battle 19-9.  They lost this game with terrible rebounding and turnovers, and, most importantly, absolutely horrible 3-point shooting in the 2nd half: 1-for-11!

Who Started?

The starters for the MSU game were Nimari Burnett, Jaelin Llewellyn, Olivier Nkamhoua, Tarris Reed, Jr., and Terrance Williams IIDug McDaniel didn’t travel with the team for the MSU game (indefinite “road suspension”), but he started in place of Llewellyn in the Rutgers game.

Who Looked Good?

No Michigan player hit double figures in both games this week.  No one really looked good in both games.

McDaniel hit double figures in the one game he played in (Rutgers), with 10 points.

Nkamhoua had one decent game (14 points vs. Rutgers) and one mediocre game (9 points vs. MSU).

Williams had one decent game (14 points vs. MSU) and one mediocre game (7 points vs. Rutgers).

Llewellyn had a great game as a starter vs. MSU (18 points), and a lousy game (3 points) off the bench vs. Rutgers.  He’s done this several times this season: he’s great as a starter when McDaniel isn’t available, then he’s lousy off the bench for the home games.

Reed actually had a pretty good week, with 5 and 12 points.  More importantly, he had 9 and 15 rebounds, giving him a double-double vs. Rutgers.

Tray Jackson had 8 and 3 points off the bench.

Who Looked Not-So-Good?

Burnett had a mediocre week, scoring 8 and 5 points.

Will Tschetter had 0 and 5 points off the bench.

Who Else Played?

Jace Howard only played in the MSU game, where he missed his only shot attempt.

Who Didn’t Play?

Youssef Khayat and George Washington III were the scholarship players who didn’t play this week.

None of the Scout Team played this week: Ian Burns, Harrison Hochberg, Jackson Selvala and Cooper Smith.  Smith is currently injured.

What Does It Mean?

Even though there are still 10 games left in this season, it’s over.  Michigan has played all of the winnable games on their schedule, and lost most of them.  The remaining games are all very low win-probability games.  It’s hard to see another win in there.  Maybe at Rutgers or at Ohio State, but probably not.  They’re looking at a final record of 7-25 (2-18 in Big Ten).

What’s Next?

This week, Michigan plays two games.  On Wednesday (02/07/2024, 7:00 p.m., BTN), they play (#6) Wisconsin in Crisler Arena, then on Saturday (02/10/2024, 6:30 p.m. EST, BTN) they play at Nebraska.

Wisconsin is currently 16-6 (8-3 in Big Ten).  They have impressive wins over (#24) Virginia, (#3) Marquette, and Michigan State (twice), and unimpressive losses to Providence, Penn State, and Nebraska.  They don’t have any noteworthy players, but they do have some height: a 6’11” player and a 7-footer.  Michigan stands no chance in this game.  They’ll be lucky to stay within 20 points.

Nebraska is currently 16-6 (6-5 in Big Ten).  They have impressive wins over Michigan State, (#1) Purdue, and (#6) Wisconsin, and unimpressive losses to Minnesota, Iowa, Rutgers, and Maryland.  They have one noteworthy player: Keisei Tominaga.  His production is unexplainable.  He looks like a bad YMCA player, but he still manages to baffle his opponents.  Nebraska also has some height: two 6’10” players and a 6’11” player.  This is not the Nebraska team we’ve gotten used to.  They are in the upper half of the Big Ten, and they are knocking off the big boys.  They should have no trouble dominating Michigan.

Check back next week to find out what happened and why.

Go Blue!

Nothing But ‘Net – Week #14 – 01/29/2024 – A Truly Lousy Week

The University of Michigan men’s basketball team played two games this past week, and they lost both of them.  On Tuesday (01/23/2024), they lost at (#2) Purdue 99-67, then on Saturday (01/27/2024), they lost to Iowa 88-78 in Crisler Arena.  The two losses lower Michigan’s record to 7-13 (2-7 in Big Ten).

What Happened?

This was truly a lousy week for Michigan basketball.  Losing on the road to the #2 team in the nation is no disgrace, but losing by 32 points hurts.  Losing at home to a lower-division team that you beat 6 weeks ago is bad, but losing by double digits is worse.  Michigan’s season is spiraling down the drain more each week.

Game Flow

The Purdue game was never close.  UM was within one point (3-2) very early, then the roof fell in.  Purdue was up by 11 points (15-4) with 14:59 to go, and they kept the lead around 11 points for the next 10 minutes.  It was still 11 points (34-23) at the 3:21 mark, when Purdue ripped off a 15-2 run to end the half, up 24 points (49-25).  All Purdue had to do in the 2nd half was keep the lead at or above 20 points, and that’s what they did.  The lead got as high as 35 points, before ending at 32 points.  It was total domination by Purdue.  Michigan never stood a chance.

The Iowa game was close early, with the score tied at 2-2, 8-8, 18-18, and 22-22.  Iowa led 27-26 with 7:34 to go in the 1st half, when Michigan went on a 10-0 run to lead by 9 points (36-27) with 5:32 left.  That was the high-water mark for Michigan.  As they have done so many times this season, they got a decent lead, then threw it away.  It was still 6 points (44-38) with 1:10 to go in the half, but it was down to 2 points (44-42) at halftime.  The first 3:14 of the 2nd half was the worst sequence for Michigan this season, at that’s saying something.  Iowa ran off a quick 10-0 run, to go up by 8 points (52-44) with 16:46 to go.  During that stretch, Michigan committed two fouls and one turnover, missed four 2-point shots, and missed two 3-point attempts.  And that was it: they went from 9 points up to 8 points down, and never led again.  They did make a couple runs at the lead, getting within 1 point once (67-66 with 10:06 left), but Iowa led comfortably the rest of the way.

Stats

The game stats for the Purdue game were miserable.  Michigan shot poorly overall (23-for-68 = 33.8%), they shot 3-pointers poorly (9-for-29 = 31.0%), but they did shoot free throws well (12-for-15 = 80.0%).  They lost the rebounding battle badly (46-37), but they tied the turnover battle (7-7).  They lost this game with poor shooting and rebounding.

The game stats for the Iowa game were weak.  Michigan shot pretty poorly overall (27-for-63 = 42.9%), they shot 3-pointers pretty poorly (9-for-26 = 34.6%), and they shot free throws pretty well (15-for-20 = 75.0%).  They won the rebounding battle (32-29) and the turnover battle (9-11).  They lost this game with poor 3-point defense: Iowa shot 8-for-16 from deep.

Who Started?

The starters for the Purdue game were Nimari Burnett, Jaelin Llewellyn, Olivier Nkamhoua, Tarris Reed, Jr., and Terrance Williams IIDug McDaniel didn’t travel with the team for the Purdue game (indefinite “road suspension”), but he started in place of Llewellyn in the Iowa game.

Who Looked Good?

Williams was the only Michigan player to hit double figures in both games, with 10 and 16 points.  He had a lousy week shooting: 4-for-11 vs. Purdue, and 6-for-16 overall (2-for-8 from deep) vs. Iowa.

Nkamhoua had one decent game (13 points vs. Iowa) and one mediocre game (7 points vs. Purdue).  He also had a lousy week shooting: 3-for-9 overall (1-for-5 from deep) vs. Purdue, and 5-for-12 overall (0-for-3 from deep) vs. Iowa.

Burnett also had one decent game (13 points vs. Iowa) and one mediocre game (7 points vs. Purdue).  He had a lousy game shooting vs. Purdue: 2-for-9 overall (1-for-5 from deep), and a decent game shooting vs. Iowa: 4-for-10 overall (3-for-6 from deep).

Llewellyn had a great game as a starter vs. Purdue (16 points), but didn’t attempt a shot off the bench vs. Iowa.

McDaniel scored 13 points in the Iowa game, and didn’t play in the Purdue game.  He shot poorly: 4-for-13 overall (1-for-5 from deep).  He had 6 rebounds and 5 assists, vs. only 1 turnover.

George Washington III had the first good game of his career vs. Purdue, with 10 points on 2-for-4 shooting, all from deep, along with 4-for-4 from the free throw line.  He didn’t play in the Iowa game.

Jace Howard had 7 and 4 points off the bench.

Will Tschetter had 4 and 7 points off the bench.

Who Looked Not-So-Good?

Youssef Khayat only played in the Purdue game, where he didn’t score.

Reed had a mediocre week, with 6 and 7 points.  He did have 10 and 7 rebounds.

Who Else Played?

Ian Burns played for 2 minutes vs. Purdue.  He didn’t attempt a shot.

Harrison Hochberg played for 3 minutes vs. Purdue.  He didn’t attempt a shot.

Tray Jackson finally returned to action, after missing 4 games with a concussion and broken bone in his nose.  He scored 5 points.  He played wearing a mask.  It was good to have him back.

Jackson Selvala played for 3 minutes vs. Purdue.  He didn’t attempt a shot.

Who Didn’t Play?

Cooper Smith (Scout Team) didn’t play in either game.  He is currently injured.

What Does It Mean?

That was a lousy week, in the middle of a lousy season.  At this point, Michigan is just playing out the rest of the season, seeing if they can win a couple more games.  I still don’t see them winning more than 10 games.

What’s Next?

This week, Michigan plays two games.  On Tuesday (01/30/2024, 9:00 p.m., Peacock), they play at Michigan State, then on Saturday (02/03/2024, 4:00 p.m., BTN) they play Rutgers in Crisler Arena.

Michigan State is currently 12-8 overall (4-5 in Big Ten).  They have an impressive win over (#6) Baylor, and unimpressive losses to James Madison, Nebraska, and Northwestern.  They have a few noteworthy players (Tyson Walker, Jaden Akins, and Malik Hall), and they have some height: two 6’11” guys.  For a team that started the season ranked in the Top-5, they have massively underachieved.  However, they are still dangerous.  The way Michigan has been playing recently, I don’t expect this to be a close game, say a 15-20 point loss.

Rutgers is currently 10-9 overall (2-6 in Big Ten).  They have impressive wins over Seton Hall, Indiana, and Nebraska, and unimpressive losses to Princeton, Wake Forest, Ohio State, and Iowa.  They don’t have any noteworthy players, but they do have some height: a 6’10” player and a 6’11” player.  This could be Michigan’s last good opportunity for a win, but they’ll have to play better than they’ve been playing recently.

Check back next week to find out what happened and why.

Go Blue!

Nothing But ‘Net – Week #13 – 01/22/2024 – Check It Out: Another Win!

The University of Michigan men’s basketball team played two games this past week, and they won one and lost the other.  On Monday (01/15/2024), they beat Ohio State 73-65, then on Thursday (01/18/2024), they lost to (#14) Illinois 88-73.  Both games were in Crisler Arena.  The win and loss leaves Michigan with a record of 7-11 (2-5 in Big Ten).

What Happened?

I honestly thought that Michigan was going to lose their last 21 games, and finish 6-26.  That’s what makes Monday’s win over OSU so exciting: they aren’t going to lose their last 21 games.  Of course, they started a new losing streak in their next game, but still…

Game Flow

The OSU game was close in the early going, with the score tied (15-15) at the 11:09 mark.  UM started pulling away, and led by 10 points (29-19) with 5:28 to go in the 1st half.  OSU crept back, but Michigan hit a 3-pointer at the halftime buzzer to lead by 9 points (37-28).  OSU hung around in the 2nd half, getting to within 4 points several times.  Michigan got hot, and pushed the lead up to 12 points (55-43) with 11:46 to go.  Sounds pretty encouraging, doesn’t it?  Ha!  No lead is safe with this Michigan team.  They went stone cold, and OSU got red hot, and just like that OSU ripped off a 16-0 run, to go up by 4 points (59-55) at the 7:58 mark.  That’s 16-0 in less than 4 minutes.  Yikes!  At this point, we reached an inflection point in Michigan’s season.  In the last 2 games (Penn State and Maryland), they threw away decent halftime leads, and once they got behind in the 2nd half, they never led again.  Not this time.  UM got the lead back, lost it, then got it back again, for good.  With 3:37 left, UM went up by 2 points (63-61), and they never trailed again, winning by 8 points.  This win was very important for the team’s confidence, since it showed them that they could weather some adversity and still win.

The Illinois game was very frustrating.  Illinois kept building decent leads (8-10 points), and Michigan would slowly catch back up, but always just a point or two from the lead.  Once Michigan got close, Illinois would go on a quick run to push the lead back up to 8-10 points.  This happened several times, and the last time was too much for Michigan to overcome.  Michigan actually led once (2-0), and they tied the score once (38-38) with 18:37 left in the game, but they never could make the big basket to get the lead.

Stats

The game stats for the OSU game were decent.  Michigan shot fairly well overall (27-for-63 = 42.9%), they shot 3-pointers well (12-for-23 = 52.2%), and they shot free throws well (7-for-10 = 70.0%).  They won the rebounding battle (42-38), but they lost the turnover battle (9-4).  They won this game with good shooting and rebounding.

The game stats for the Illinois game were mixed.  Michigan shot pretty well overall (30-for-63 = 47.6%), they shot 3-pointers very poorly (3-for-13 = 23.1%), and they shot free throws very well (10-for-12 = 83.3%).  They lost the rebounding battle badly (39-29) and the turnover battle as well (9-6).  They lost this game with poor 3-point shooting and lousy rebounding: they allowed Illinois to grab 13 offensive rebounds, leading to 16 second-chance points.

Who Started?

The starters for both games were Nimari Burnett, Dug McDaniel, Olivier Nkamhoua, Tarris Reed, Jr., and Terrance Williams II.

Who Looked Good?

Nkamhoua was the leading scorer in the OSU game, with 20 points, and the second-leading scorer in the Illinois game, with 16 points.

Reed was the star of the Illinois game, with 20 points.  He had a mediocre game vs. OSU, with only 6 points, on lousy shooting: 2-for-8.

Williams had a great game vs. OSU (18 points) and a mediocre game vs. Illinois (8 points).  He shot very well vs. OSU (6-for-9 overall, 5-for-5 from deep) and very poorly vs. Illinois (3-for-10 overall, 0-for-4 from deep).

McDaniel hit double figures in both games (15 and 14 points), and he shot fairly well vs. OSU (6-for-16 overall, 3-for-6 from deep), but not so well vs. Illinois (7-for-18 overall, 0-for-4 from deep).

Will Tschetter had 7 and 4 points off the bench.

Jaelin Llewellyn had 0 and 7 points off the bench.

Who Looked Not-So-Good?

Burnett shot OK in the OSU game: 2-for-4 overall, 1-for-2 from deep, for 7 points.  He shot very poorly in the Illinois game: 1-for-5 overall, 0-for-0 from deep, for 4 points.  He was the leading rebounder vs. OSU, with 10 boards.

Jace Howard played in both games, but didn’t score.  He was 0-for-1 vs. OSU, and didn’t attempt a shot vs. Illinois

Youssef Khayat only played in the Illinois game, where he didn’t attempt a shot.

Who Else Played?

No one else played.  No one else was available to play.  Michigan’s bench is very thin.

Who Didn’t Play?

George Washington III was the only scholarship player who didn’t play in either game.

None of the Scout Team players played in either game: Ian Burns, Harrison Hochberg, Jackson Selvala, and Cooper Smith.  Smith is currently injured.

Tray Jackson wasn’t available to play, since he was in the “concussion protocol” after being injured in the Penn State game two weeks ago.  He should be available going forward, but it sure is taking a while.

What Does It Mean?

OK, now that Michigan’s long losing streak is over, they need to sprinkle in a few wins the rest of the way.  I still don’t see them winning more than 10 games.

What’s Next?

This week, Michigan plays two games.  On Tuesday (01/23/2024, 9:00 p.m., Peacock), they play at (#2) Purdue, then on Saturday (01/27/2024, 5:00 p.m., FS1) they play Iowa in Crisler Arena.

Purdue is currently 17-2 (6-2 in Big Ten).  They have impressive wins over (#11) Gonzaga, (#7) Tennessee, (#4) Marquette, (#1) Arizona, and (#9) Illinois.  Their two surprising losses were to Northwestern and Nebraska.  They have two noteworthy players: Fletcher Loyer and Zach Edey.  Fletcher is the younger, much more talented, brother of Foster Loyer, who played (poorly) at Michigan State.  Zach Edey is the reigning National Player of the Year, and at 7’5”, he deserves it.  Tarris Reed, Jr. is going to have his hands full in this one.  I don’t expect Michigan to come within 20 points of Purdue any time in the 2nd half.

Iowa is currently 11-7 (3-4 in Big Ten).  Michigan beat them in Iowa City back in December, and since then they’ve beaten a few middle-of-the-pack Big Ten teams: Rutgers, Nebraska, and Minnesota.  Even though Michigan beat them handily at their place, I expect this to be a close, exciting game.  This is one of the few games left on Michigan’s schedule that they might win, so they need to play their “A” game.

Check back next week to find out what happened and why.

Go Blue!

01/19/2024 – Michigan vs. MSU – The National Championship Comparison

It’s been a while since I updated the UM/MSU National Championship Comparison.  Since Michigan just won another national championship (the 58th team championship in school history), this time in Football last Monday (01/08/2024), it’s time to update the count since 1989:

National Championships Since 1989
SportUMMSUAdvantage
Basketball (Men’s)19892000Even
Cross Country (Women’s)2014MSU
Field Hockey2001UM
Football1997, 2023UM+2
Gymnastics (Men’s)1999, 2010, 2013, 2014UM+4
Gymnastics (Women’s)2021UM
Hockey1996, 19982007UM
Softball2005UM
Swimming & Diving (Men’s)1995, 2013UM+2
Totals143UM+11

Just for comparison, MSU has won a total of 27 national championships in school history, 31 less than UM.

Nothing But ‘Net – Week #12 – 01/15/2024 – At Least We Have Football

The University of Michigan men’s basketball team played one game this past week, and they lost it.  On Thursday (01/11/2024), they lost at Maryland 64-57.  The loss lowers Michigan’s record to 6-10 (1-4 in Big Ten).  Michigan has now lost 5 games in a row.

What Happened?

At least we have football.  The football team had a magical season, going undefeated (15-0) and winning the 2023 College Football Playoff (CFP) National Championship.  I may be the “basketball guy” at UMGoBlue.com, but I’m also a big UM football fan.  I’ve had season tickets for 50 years now, starting when I was a freshman in fall 1974.  It was an amazing season.  Go Blue!

That’s in sharp contrast to the UM men’s basketball team, which is having one of the worst seasons in their history, certainly the worst since I’ve been a fan.  Sure, they still have a lot of games left to play, and they could still salvage a successful season, but watching them play, they stand little chance of getting anywhere near respectability.  They stood a decent chance for a rare win vs. Maryland, but they threw the game away with both hands.  It’s very demoralizing.

Game Flow

The game was close in the early going, with both teams having trouble scoring.  Michigan was up 7-6 at the first media timeout, with 14:40 to go in the 1st half.  The score was still 7-6 at the next media timeout, with 11:54 to go.  Michigan finally broke the long scoring drought by both teams, and managed to slowly extend their lead to 10-6 at the 10:38 mark.  In less than a minute, Maryland tied it up, 10-10, with 9:48 to go.  The game was tied at 12-12, 13-13, and 15-15, at the 7:02 mark.  Suddenly, Michigan woke up and went on a quick 10-0 run, to make it 25-15 with 4:51 left.  They hit a 3-pointer with 9 seconds left in the half, and led by 12 points (33-21) at halftime.

Remember the Penn State game last week?  Remember how Michigan clawed their way to a nice lead at halftime (10 points), then threw it away as fast as they could at the start of the 2nd half?  Déjà vu!  They did it again.  The 2nd half was a disaster.  Their nice 12-point lead was down to 6 points (35-29) at the 17:45 mark, then 3 points (39-36) at the 14:42 mark.  It was down to one point (43-42) with 11:37 to go, and all gone by the 10:00 mark, 44-44.  The lead went back and forth for a couple minutes, with Michigan clinging to their last lead of the game (50-49) with 7:34 left.  Maryland went ahead, and pushed their lead as high as 7 points (58-51) with 4:49 to go.  Michigan got as close as one point (58-57) with 2:38 left, but that was their last points.  Maryland made 6 free throws in the last 2:38, and Michigan couldn’t buy a basket.  They missed four 2-point shots, one 3-point shot, and one free throw.  Horrible.

Stats

The game stats were miserable.  Michigan shot very poorly overall (21-for-53 = 39.6%), they shot 3-pointers reasonably well, but not enough (5-for-15 = 33.3%), and they shot free throws poorly (10-for-15 = 66.7%).  They lost the rebounding battle (35-32), but they did win the turnover battle (11-12).  They lost this game with poor shooting and rebounding.         

Who Started?

The starters were Nimari Burnett, Jaelin Llewellyn, Olivier Nkamhoua, Tarris Reed, Jr., and Terrance Williams II.  Llewellyn started in place of Dug McDaniel.

McDaniel is the regular starting point guard, but he didn’t even make the trip.  He is serving an indefinite (he says “6 game”) “road game suspension”.  He is staying back in Ann Arbor when the team travels, so he can work on his academic issues.  He isn’t academically ineligible, he just isn’t performing up to expectations academically, so he is missing road games to give him more time to work on it.  On the one hand, he’s easily the most important and most valuable player on the team, and his absence is a huge problem.  On the other hand, academics are important, and he can’t let them slide.  This is the right thing to do, but it sure hurts a team that doesn’t need any help to underachieve.

Who Looked Good?

Nkamhoua was the leading scorer, with 18 points.  He was also the leading rebounder, with 7.  He did his best.

Williams was the only other Michigan player in double figures, with 10 points.  He was OK, but not as effective as he’s been lately.

Llewellyn almost hit double figures, with 9 points.  He ran the offense fairly well, with 3 assists, but he also had 3 turnovers.  He shot poorly (3-for-11 overall), and he had a tough time bringing the ball up court against pressure.

Reed also got close to double figures, with 8 points.  He shot fairly well (3-for-5), but right there you can see the problem: only 5 shots in the paint.  In all Michigan’s losses, they’ve had trouble getting the ball into the post to Reed, and when they do, opponents almost always double- or even triple-team him.  When that happens, things usually don’t go well.  Often, he just turns it over.  If he gets a shot off, it’s often blocked, or he misses.  If he tries to find an open man to pass it out to, he often throws the ball away or the pass is intercepted.  It seldom turns into a basket for Michigan.  After 3 seasons of being able to get the ball in to Hunter Dickinson down low and having him either convert or get fouled, it’s a big change not having a dominant post player.  Reed is a good player, and he tries really hard, but the opposing teams have figured out that he doesn’t handle a double- or triple-team well, and that’s why Michigan is having trouble in their half-court offense.

Burnett also got close to double figures, with 7 points.  He also shot poorly: 2-for-9 overall, 1-for-5 from deep.  That shows another problem with Michigan’s offense this season: poor outside shooting.  As we saw in Reed’s discussion, Michigan doesn’t have a dominant post player, so their best hope for scoring some points is outside shooting.  Unfortunately, they don’t have any really deadly outside shooters either.  That’s a bad combination.

Will Tschetter had 5 points off the bench.  That’s all the bench scoring.  There’s Michigan’s third big problem: a very short, very weak bench.  The starters are being asked to play almost all the minutes and score all the points, and it’s obviously wearing them down as the long season grinds on.

Who Looked Not-So-Good?

Youssef Khayat played for 7 minutes, and didn’t attempt a shot.  That’s forgivable when Michigan is at full strength, but they were missing two key players (McDaniel and Jackson [see below]) and they needed some bench scoring.  You can’t score if you don’t even attempt a shot.

George Washington III played for 9 minutes, and didn’t attempt a shot.  See Khayat’s notes above.  Washington’s supposed to be a good shooter, and now is when he needs to start shooting and scoring.

Who Else Played?

No one else played.  No one else was available to play.  Michigan’s bench is very thin.

Who Didn’t Play?

None of the Scout Team players played in either game: Ian Burns, Harrison Hochberg, Jackson Selvala, and Cooper Smith.  Smith is currently injured.

Jace Howard is still recovering from a knee injury, and is not playing yet.  He’s expected back “sometime in the next week”.

Tray Jackson wasn’t available to play, since he was in the “concussion protocol” after being injured in the Penn State game last week.  He should be available going forward.

What Does It Mean?

It’s hard to win a game on the road in the Big Ten.  I understand that.  Maryland isn’t very good this year, but they’re still not easy to beat at home.  I get it.  Still, this was one of the few winnable games left on Michigan’s schedule, and they played well enough in the 1st half to win, then they just collapsed.  They haven’t won a close game all season.  It’s looking like they may not win another game this season.

What’s Next?

This week, Michigan plays two games.  On Monday (01/15/2024, 12:00 p.m., FOX), they play Ohio State, then on Thursday (01/18/2024, 8:30 p.m., FS1), they play (#10) Illinois.  Both games are in Crisler Arena.

That isn’t a typo above: Michigan is really playing a home game against a Big Ten opponent at noon on a weekday.  Yes, it’s MLK Day, and yes, schools and some (very few) businesses have the day off, but what kind of crowd can we expect at noon on a weekday?  We shall see.  The game is officially listed as a sell-out, but I expect to see a lot of empty seats.  Since I post my articles around 10:30 on Monday mornings, by the time you read these words, the game might already have started or even been completed.

Ohio State is currently 12-4 (2-3 in Big Ten), with impressive wins over (#17) Alabama, Minnesota, and UCLA, and unimpressive losses to Penn State and Indiana.  They don’t have any noteworthy players, and they don’t have much height: a 6’10” guy and a 6’11” guy.  Can Michigan beat the Buckeyes?  Sure, but not the way they’ve been playing lately.  If OSU has any lead in the final 3 minutes, they’re going to beat Michigan.

Illinois is currently 12-4 (3-2 in Big Ten), with impressive wins over (#11) Florida Atlantic, Missouri, Northwestern (by 30 points), and Michigan State, and an unimpressive loss to Maryland.  They have one noteworthy player (Terrence Shannon Jr.), but not much height: one 6’10” guy.  This is a game where I expect Michigan to get blasted.  If they can stay close, that will be a moral victory in a season that is desperate for any sort of victory.

Check back next week to find out what happened and why.

Go Blue!