Nothing But ‘Net – Week #08 – 12/20/2021 – A Welcome Cupcake

The University of Michigan men’s basketball team played one game this past week, and they won it.  On Saturday (12/18/2021), they beat Southern Utah 87-50 in Crisler Arena.  The win raises Michigan’s record to 7-4 (1-1 in Big Ten).

What Happened?

Michigan had a light schedule this week, since the players are taking finals.  They only played one game, at home, against a lesser opponent.  SUU is a pretty good team with lots of experience, but not much height, and UM took advantage of the height differential.  The game was expected to be pretty close and competitive, but Michigan made SUU look helpless out there.  It was a fun, easy, stress-free game.

Michigan never trailed, but after an early tie (2-2), they only led by 1 point (11-10) at the 14:30 mark.  Over the next 4:35, Michigan went on a 14-0 run to push the lead up to 15 points (25-10) with 9:55 left in the half.  The lead was still 15 points (31-16) at the 8:11 mark, when UM went on another 14-0 run, to take the lead up to 29 points (45-16) with 2:12 to go.  It was still 29 points (49-20) at halftime.  At that point, the game was essentially over, and Michigan used the 2nd half as a glorified scrimmage, with lots of playing time for the lesser-used players.  UM kept the lead in the 30-34 point range for most of the half, although SUU did creep within “only” 28 points (69-41) at the 6:08 mark.  Michigan finished strong, and won by 37 points.  It was a solid, impressive performance.

Stats

The game stats are solid, but not too flashy.  Michigan shot well overall (36-for-64 = 56.3%), they shot 3-pointers pretty well (7-for-18 = 38.9%), and they shot free throws well enough (8-for-12 = 66.7%).  They won the rebounding battle handily (44-27), and they won the turnover battle barely (11-12).  They won this game with overall shooting and good defense, holding SUU to 32.8% overall shooting (19-for-58) and 17.4% shooting from 3-point range (4-for-23).

Who Started?

The starters were Eli Brooks, Moussa Diabate, Hunter Dickinson, Caleb Houstan, and DeVante’ Jones.

Who Looked Good?

Dickinson was the star of this game, with 22 points and 10 rebounds, for another double-double.  He also had 2 blocked shots, and held the two SUU centers to a combined 5 points.

Jones had the best game of his Michigan career, with 13 points on 5-for-6 shooting (3-for-3 from 3-point range).  He also dished out 6 assists against 1 turnover, all in only 22 minutes.  The young point guards got to play the other 18 minutes.

Houstan almost hit double figures, with 9 points.  He looked solid and comfortable out there.

Diabate also almost hit double figures, with 8 points, including two highlight-reel dunks.  He also had 8 rebounds, and helped Dickinson shut down the SUU centers.  On the negative side, he committed 4 fouls, and had 3 turnovers.

Kobe Bufkin had the best game of his young Michigan career, with 11 points on 4-for-9 shooting.  If only he could have hit a couple 3-pointers (0-for-3)…

Zeb Jackson had his best game of the season, with 8 points on 3-for-4 shooting (2-for-2 from 3-point range).  He did a nice job at point guard.

Frankie Collins didn’t score a lot of points (5), but he had a good game running the offense, with 3 assists vs. 0 turnovers.  He also had 4 rebounds.

Terrance Williams II also didn’t score many points (3), but he contributed in other ways, with 5 rebounds and 3 assists.

Who Looked Not-So-Good?

For the first time this season, Brooks looked “not-so-good”.  He ended up with only 2 points, on 1-for-4 shooting, and had 2 turnovers against 3 assists.  He had hit double figures in every game up until this one.

Brandon Johns, Jr. had a lousy game, with 2 points on 2-for-3 free throw shooting, and no field goal attempts, in 12 minutes of “action”.

Who Else Played?

Jaron Faulds played for 2 minutes, and scored 2 points.

Jace Howard played for 7 minutes, but didn’t attempt a shot.

Adrien Nuñez played for 4 minutes, and scored 2 points.

Who Didn’t Play?

Isaiah Barnes and Will Tschetter are the scholarship players who didn’t play.

Ian Burns and Brandon Wade are the scout team players who didn’t play.

What Does It Mean?

This was a game that Michigan was expected to win, and they took care of business.  They opened up a big lead at halftime, so they were able to get some valuable game experience for some of the lesser-used players.  That will help when the grind of the Big Ten schedule starts in the new year.

At this point, Michigan is solidly “on the bubble” for the Big Dance.  They have plenty of opportunities to win big games in the Big Ten part of the schedule, but they don’t have a very big margin for error.  They need to get the youngsters ready to go, and hope for the best.

What’s Next?

This week, Michigan only plays one game.  On Tuesday (12/21/2021, 7:00 p.m., BTN) they play Purdue-Fort Wayne in Crisler Arena.

Purdue-Fort Wayne is currently 5-5 (1-1 in the Horizon League).  They have no impressive wins, and embarrassing losses to Western Michigan, Florida Gulf Coast, Wright State, and Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville.  They don’t have any noteworthy players, and they don’t have any height (one 6’9” player).  This is a game that Michigan should win easily.

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

Go Blue!

2021 Michigan Football — Playbook — Hand-Off — JJ McCarthy to Blake Corum

Let’s break down Michigan’s first touchdown in the Big Ten Championship versus Iowa.

Blake Corum had a blistering 67 yard touchdown run (with a little help from QB J.J McCarthy) that maybe would have been stopped if not for some blown assignments on the Iowa defense.

Blake Corum describes what he saw during the play

PRE-SNAP

The Michigan offense lines up in the pistol formation on the right hashmark with QB #9 J.J. McCarthy and RB #2 Blake Corum in the backfield. WR #5 Mike Sainristil goes in motion from the left side of formation.

Michigan is targeting the right side of the Iowa defense, pre-snap there are good gaps for a running play and bringing WR #5 Mike Sainristil brings an extra blocker to the point of attack.

POST SNAP

#2 Blake Corum takes the handoff from #9 J.J. McCarthy in the backfield.

Check out the Michigan offensive line- #77 Trevor Keegan and #68 Andrew Vastardis double team the Iowa down lineman in front of them, taking him out of the play. #65 Zak Zinter and #71 Andrew Steuber do the same to the down lineman in front of them.

At this point Iowa is in trouble- they have two defenders #44 and #28 to account for two Michigan players– TE #86 Luke Schoonmaker and WR #5 Mike Sainristil– and plenty of space for #2 Blake Corum to make some moves.

WR #5 Mike Sainristil comes in motion and ignores Iowa defensive end #92 as he crashes and takes himself out of the play. Sainristil heads downfield to block.

And here is where things go wrong from bad to worse for Iowa. Linebacker #44 steps up into the double team of #65 Zak Zinter and #71 Andrew Steuber taking himself out away from the point of attack. Linebacker #31 slides over and is in good position to stop Corum but inexplicably takes on #86 Luke Schoonmaker.

And Blake Corum is off to the races. Note the distance between Blake Corum and J.J. McCarthy. Now Blake had to slow down a bit to evade defenders but J.J made up an incredible amount of ground.

#Roman Wilson blocks a defender while #5 Mike Sainristil blocks for Blake Corum with J.J. McCarthy joining the attack.

#5 Mike Sainristil blocks #33.

#9 J.J. McCarthy places himself between a final Iowa defender, allowing Corum to score a touchdown.

Check out the clip below to see the entire play.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qN9O8NHrKbI

PLAY DIAGRAM — THE ACTION

Corum took advantage of a few mis-steps by the Iowa defense and completes the scoring the play with the help of QB J.J. McCarthy whose hustle downfield makes the difference.

2021 Football Season Mosaics

UMGoBlue.COM has been creating mosaics since 2007 for charity auctions, commissions, Wolverines coaches, players, of course, Michigan fans. Photos by Dell Callihan, Ryan Callihan, and Phil Callihan.

Click the images to zoom for details.

Aidan Hutchinson
This image contains 2947 original images from the 2021 football season.

Hassan Haskins Leap
This image contains 2979 original images.

Jim Harbaugh Triumphant
This image contains 3038 original images.

Blake Corum, Unbowed
This image contains 3034 original images.

Erick All, Season Hanging in the Balance
This image contains 3014 original images.

Hassan Haskins, Check Me Out
This image contains 3002 original images.

Hassan Haskins, Over the Top
This image contains 3049 original images.

Nothing But ‘Net – Week #07 – 12/13/2021 – The Lowering Of Raised Expectations

The University of Michigan men’s basketball team played two games this past week, and they won one and lost the other.  On Tuesday (12/07/2021), they beat Nebraska 102-57 in Lincoln (NE), then on Saturday (12/11/2021), they lost to Minnesota 75-65 in Crisler Arena.  The win and the loss leave Michigan with a record of 6-4 (1-1 in Big Ten).

What Happened?

The Nebraska win was impressive and encouraging, but the Minnesota loss showed the ugly truth: this Michigan team is a long way from the promise they showed in preseason predictions.  It’s time to (significantly) lower the high expectations from the beginning of the season.  Sorry.

The Nebraska game was very smooth and low-stress.  Michigan never trailed, and once they broke the tie at 13-13 with 13:56 to go in the 1st half, they led the rest of the way.  In the 1st half, they pushed the lead up into the 18-20 point range, and kept it there, leading by 19 points (51-32) at halftime.  The beginning of the 2nd half was more of the same, with the lead still in the 18-20 point range until the 11:22 mark, when Michigan pushed it up into the 20s and 30s for the rest of the game.  Coach Howard emptied the bench for the final 5:00, and the subs did a nice job of keeping the lead in the 30s.

The Minnesota game was miserable.  Minnesota was picked universally as the sure-thing last place team in the Big Ten this season, and they made Michigan look silly out there.  The game was close and tight for the entire first half, with neither team getting ahead by more than 6 points.  It was all tied up (30-30) with 2:03 to go in the half, when Michigan went on a nice 6-2 run to end the half, up by 4 (36-32).  The 2nd half was a disaster.  Minnesota scored 7 straight points to go up by 3 (39-36) at the 17:29 mark, and they never trailed again.  Michigan did get within 1 point (41-40) with 15:23 to go, but then Minnesota pulled off a 6-point possession on a foul off the ball during a made 3-pointer, which gave them the ball for a second 3-pointer.  That was the deciding play of the game.  It gave Minnesota all the momentum they would need to hold off Michigan.  Minnesota had hot shooting in the 2nd half (16-for-25 = 64.0%) and Michigan was cold (11-for-26 = 42.3%).  It was miserable.

Stats

The game stats for the Nebraska game are very nice.  Michigan shot well overall (39-for-76 = 51.3%), they shot 3-pointers very well (15-for-32 = 46.9%), and they shot free throws well enough (9-for-12 = 75.0%).  They won the rebounding battle decisively (54-38), but they lost the turnover battle (12-9).  They won this game with 3-point shooting.  They’ll win just about every game where they make 15 3-pointers on less than 40 attempts.

The game stats for the Minnesota game are terrible.  Michigan shot poorly overall (26-for-55 = 47.3%), they shot 3-pointers very poorly (3-for-18 = 16.7%), and they shot free throws poorly (10-for-16 = 62.5%).  They won the rebounding battle (34-28), but they lost the turnover battle (8-4).  They lost the game with poor 3-point shooting.  They’ll lose just about every game where they make less than five 3-pointers.

Who Started?

The starters for the Nebraska game were Eli Brooks, Hunter Dickinson, Caleb Houstan, Brandon Johns, Jr., and DeVante’ Jones.  Johns started in place of Moussa Diabate, who was out with the flu.  He was back as a starter for the Minnesota game.

Who Looked Good?

Dickinson played well in both games, scoring 15 and 19 points.  He also had 12 and 10 rebounds, for two double-doubles.  He even hit another 3-pointer, against Nebraska.  He did his part.

Brooks continues to be the most consistent player on the team.  He hit double figures in both games, with 10 points vs. Nebraska, and 12 points vs. Minnesota.  He didn’t shoot a very good percentage (3-for-10 vs. Nebraska, and 5-for-14 vs. Minnesota).

Houstan actually had a pretty good week, with 16 points vs. Nebraska and 8 points vs. Minnesota.  He shot well in the Nebraska game (6-for-9), but not so much in the Minnesota game (2-for-7).

Diabate played pretty well in his one game this week, with 7 points and (a career-high) 13 rebounds.

Johns had a real Jekyll-and-Hyde week, with 20 points (tying his career high) vs. Nebraska and 0 points on 0 shots in 13 minutes vs. Minnesota.  He was brilliant in the Nebraska game, and lousy in the Minnesota game.

Terrance Williams II also had a Jekyll-and-Hyde week, with 22 points (a career high) vs. Nebraska and 0 points vs. Minnesota.  Just like Johns.

Jones was yet another player who had a Jekyll-and-Hyde week, but with a twist: he had a lousy game scoring (3 points on 1-for-5 shooting) vs. Nebraska, and a good game scoring (14 points on 6-for-12 shooting) vs. Minnesota.  On the positive side, he had 11 assists for the week (8 vs. Nebraska, 3 vs. Minnesota), against 0 turnovers.

Who Looked Not-So-Good?

Frankie Collins had a mediocre week, with 2 and 5 points.

Who Else Played?

Kobe Bufkin played for 11 minutes in the Nebraska game, and scored 5 points.

Ian Burns played for 1 minute in the Nebraska game, but didn’t attempt a shot.

Jaron Faulds played for 7 minutes in the Nebraska game, and scored 4 points.

Zeb Jackson played for 15 minutes in the Nebraska game, and scored 5 points.

Who Didn’t Play?

Isaiah Barnes, Jace Howard, Adrien Nuñez, and Will Tschetter are the scholarship players who didn’t play in either game.

Brandon Wade also didn’t play in either game.  He’s on the scout team, so he’s a lower priority for minutes.

What Does It Mean?

The Minnesota loss is devastating, but it’s still only one loss.  The important thing is to not let it turn into a losing attitude.  This is a young, fragile team.  When they’re up, they look pretty good, but they have yet to handle any true adversity.  If they play the way they did vs. Nebraska, they’ll do fine vs. any team left on their schedule.  If they play the way they did vs. Minnesota, they could lose to anyone.  If the young players on the team continue to grow and improve, by the end of the season this could be a scary-good tournament team that no one wants to face.  Or, they could pack it in by mid-February and just play out the string.

What’s Next?

This week, Michigan only plays one game.  On Saturday (12/18/2021, 7:00 p.m., BTN) they play Southern Utah in Crisler Arena.

Southern Utah is currently 7-3 (2-0 in the Big Sky).  They have no impressive wins, and embarrassing losses to Dixie State University and St. Mary’s College of California.  They don’t have any noteworthy players, but they do have a 6’11” center.  This is a game that Michigan should be able to win, if they stay focused.

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

Go Blue!