The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I March 15, 2010 Ohio State guard Evan Turner (left) is mobbed by teammates after hitting the game-winning half-court shot in Michigan's 69-68 loss to Ohio State. Junior Manny Harris (right) looks on after Turner's game-winning shot. Postseason hopes end with buzzer-beater loss 31' didn't deserve that heartbreak By JOE STAPLETON Daily Sports Editor INDIANAPOLIS - The Michigan men's bas- ketball team has had more than its share of dis- appointing losses this year, but none of them can approach what happened in Michigan's 69-68 loss to Ohio State in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Tournament on Friday. The Wolverines clawed their way back from a 13-point deficit to pull it to within five with less than three minutes remaining. After stopping the Buckeyes on defense with the game tied at 64, Michigan guard Manny Harris made an extremely tough fallaway jumper to put Michigan up by two. Ohio State answered with a floater at the other end, and Michigan called a timeout with nine seconds left and the score tied. Harris got the ball, curled around a screen at the top of the key, and elevated for a midrange jumper with about three Buckeye defenders hanging off of him. It went in. And Michigan, as well as most of the fans in the stadium, thought that was the game, that the Wolverines had won, 68-66. But there were still 2.2 seconds left, and Ohio State had Evan Turner. Turner took the inbounds pass, dribbled about three feet past half-court and made a des- peration 3-pointer to win the game with Michi- gan guard Stu Douglass's hand in his face. "I just wanted to stay in front of him, get a hand up and try to distract him a little bit," Dou- glass said. "But he got it off pretty clean, I didn't want to foul him and it just dropped right in." officials convened to make sure Turner released the shot before time ran out, and the confirmed that it had. Replays showed the clock didn't start until about half a second after Turn- er touched the ball. "I tried to be a part of that, and they wouldn't let me be a part of that," Michigan coach John Beilein said. "I was in my coaching box. It's a whole other issue for another day." Even so, questions arose after the game about why Beilein didn't have someone pressuring the inbounder or someone on Turner before he crossed half-court. "I don't think Evan Turner is going to hit a half-court shot better than anybody else is going to hit a half-court shot," Beilein said. "If you try and put two guys on Evan or you try to deny him by throwing over the top, then he even can get closer. A half-court shot is a half-court shot." The shot effectively ended Michigan's season, with an NIT bid looking highly unlikely. It was obvious from thebeginningthe Wolver- ines (7-11 Big Ten, 15-17 overall) knew this might be their last game of the season - they played with intensity on both offense and defense. 'We just really wanted to win this game," sophomore Zack Novak said. "We honestly felt we had a pretty good shot to do that. They got ahead and we kept fighting back and fighting See BUCKEYES, Page 2B INDIANAPOLIS - Two point two. Two and two-tenths.2.2. It's a number that's going to haunt the Michigan men's basketball team and the entire Wolverine fanbase during a painfully long offseason. It's a reminder of just how close Michigan came to upsettingthe No. 5 team in the nation, Ohio State, and continuing its run in the Big Ten Tournament, and per- ' haps winning it. It's a reminder of coach- ing imperfection.0 And it's also a reminder that, for every ridiculous NICOLE SportsCenter buzzer-beater AUERBACH highlight, there's the other- team, the one on the losing end. The one poised for abig win. You know, the team sitting shell-shocked on the bench while players like Evan Turner are mobbed, cheered and deified. Maybe Michigan didn't deserve to win Fri- day's quarterfinal game, but you can't tell me they deserved to lose that way. After every pain- ful loss these players and coaches have been through this season, they didn't deserve this. After clawing back from a 13-point deficit, after building a two-point lead, they didn't deserve the heartbreak they endured. "I was hoping that a miracle would happen, where it'd say 'basket no good,"' Manny Har- ris said after the game. He wasn't the only one praying duringthe brief official review at the end of the game, which ultimately confirmed that Turner released his 37-footngame-winner with two-tenths of a second to spare. Basket good. Michigan crushed. But even though there seemed to be no good reason for the Wolverines' season to end, there was a reason for what happened in the game's final moments. Was Michigan coach John Beilein's peculiar defensive strategy in the final 2.2 seconds the most disappointingpart? No full-court press? No defensive pressure at all? Why not double- team Turner, a national Player of the Year can- didate? "They gave me one good look," Turner said afterward. "I guess being open, it felt a littlebit free. I had a lot of time to shoot the ball. I felt like I was in the gym by myself." Turner is right - Michigan gave him a better-than-he-should-have-had chance to win the game. ButI have a hard time siding with those who want to bury Beilein for that defensive lapse. A 37-footer, no matter who shoots it, is not a guaranteed shot. He said after the game that he See AUERBACH, Page 2B 'M' bounces back against No. 3 Illinois By MICHAEL LAURILA as Kelley and Ian Makowske. DailySports Writer Finally healthy again, Cameron won the still rings, placed second After two tough losses over the in the pommel horse and parallel past two weeks, the No. 4 Michi- bars and tied for fourth in the floor gan men's gymnastics team got a exercise. much-needed win against No. 3 "I scored pretty well on rings, Illinois in Champaign on Saturday, but probably the best moment for 359.65 to 358.65. me was P Bars," Cameron said. "I "I think we did great," junior knew I had to hit and I went out Chris Cameron said. "We went out there and it felt incredible." there, we knew what we had to do, Kelley finished second on the and we proved to everybody that high bar, receiving a season-high we are true champions." score of 15.45 and Makowske The Wolverines avenged a ten- placed third in the floor exercise point loss from last year at home and the high bar. against Illinois. Going into the final rotation, The victory, especially after two Michigan was up by a mere tenth tough losses to No. 1 Stanford and of a point. Taking second, third No. 2 Oklahoma. It was a much- and fourth on the high bar, the needed confidence boost for Mich- Wolverines built a nice cushion igan at this point in the season. and ensured the one-point victory. "Last year, Illinois came up to In recent meets, Michigan has Michigan and beat us," Michigan struggled in one or two events, coach Kurt Golder said. "And I but on Saturday the Wolverines just think there was a little extra appeared much more well-round- incentive there." ed. Leading the way for the Wolver- ANNA SCHULTE/Daily "We still made some mis- ines were juniors Cameron, Thom- Junior Ian Makowske, pictured here, celebrates after a dismount. See ILLINOIS, Page 3B WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS Blue defeats defending champs in dramatic meet By STEPHEN J. NESBITT Daily Sports Writer Freshman Natalie Beilsteain and junior Kylee Butterman led the comeback for the Wolverines on the floor routine just as they did against then-No. 5 Utah on Feb. 19. Even with the same scores: 9.875 and 9.950, respectively. The stage was set, but the scene was nothing new. The No. 12 Mich- igan women's gymnastics team took another elite squad down to the wire at Crisler Arena, and it once again failed to disappoint. Last Friday on Senior Night, the Wolverines (4-1 Big Ten, 13-2 overall) finished with a flash and ended the evening with stellar floor routines to overthrow defending national champion No. 5 Georgia, 196.375-195.800. Just as the team ousted then-No. 5 Utah on Feb. 27, with freshman Natalie Beilstein and junior Kylee Botterman leading the comeback, so they did again against the Bull- dogs - with the duo again posting scores of 9.875 and 9.950. "We must have good luck against fifth-ranked teams, to beat Utah and Georgiaboth in the same year," Michigan coach Bev Plocki said. The Wolverines beat the then top-ranked Bulldogs in their last meeting of the 2008 season, but the all-time record of 36-4 heavily favors Georgia. Senior Sarah Curtis also played a part in leading the team to victory, posting consistent scores through- out the evening and taking home the all-around crown. For what could be her final per- formance in Ann Arbor, Curtis took advantage of her opportunity. See GEORGIA, Page 3B