The Michigan Daily -- michigandaily.com January 10, 2011-3B I Beilein brings another top team to Criser Michigan plays hoops powerhouse in front of sellout crowd at Crisler By CHANTEL JENNINGS Daily Sports Editor Yesterday, there was the famil- iar sight of a man bicycling down Hoover Street with a sign around his neck reading, "I need tickets." For the first time all season, Ann Arbor felt alive for Michi- gan men's basketball when the Wolverines faced off against No. 3 Kansas on Sun- day. It was the NOTEBOOK second time this season Michigan has played in front of a soldout crowd. The first time was in the Wol- verines' Big Ten season opener against then-No. 12 Purdue, but that happened during break and the student section seemed to be filled with an older crowd. But against the Jayhawks, the Maize Rage stretched nearly the entire length of the sideline behind both teams benches. "The fans were great, they've come out to pretty much all our games and filled it up ever since Big Ten started," redshirt fresh- man center Jordan Morgan said on Sunday. "It's been great. There's been tons of energy in the building and it motivates us and it kind of takes the other team out so it's been really good." In Beilein's previous three sea- sons, he's brought in a national powerhouse to compete in Ann Arbor. During the 2007-08 sea- son, the Wolverines lost, 69-54, to then-No. 8 UCLA. But in the past two years, Michigan has pulled off an upset - beating then No. 4 Duke in 2008 and then-No. 15 UConn in 2010. "It's why a lot of these young men came here," Beilein said of Crisler's atmosphere on Sun- day. "Tim Hardaway came here because he attended the Duke game two years ago ... You're not always going to have the second- or third-ranked team coming in here. But I do think the people who came to this game tonight see we walked away with a loss but at the same time, I hope they say, 'I like watching that team. That team's gonna get better.'" WOLVERINES' DEFENSE STIFLES JAYHAWKS: Beilein is known for fielding teams that play a strong man-to-man defense, but in last year's contest with the then-top ranked Jayhawks, the Wolverines played a 1-3-1 zone defense. "Last year we had success with it when we played them, so we wanted to throw it at them and kept them off balance," sopho- more guard Darius Morris said yesterday. "And the couple of times we did it in the first half, it seemed to slow them down, so we stuck with it in the second half, and we were getting stops." The zone defense forced Kan- sas to commit 16 turnovers, and Michigan capitalized by scoring 14 points off those turnovers. The defense also held the Kan- sas offense, which averages 86 points per game, to just St points during regulation. The Jayhawk offense is the sixth-highest scor- ing in the country. But more impressively, Michigan held Kan- sas to shooting 33 percent from the field, when the Jayhawks normally shoot a nation-best 54 percent. "We attacked (Michigan's zone) miserably," Kansas coach Bill Self. said on Sunday. "We worked a lot against a 1-3-1. We attacked it CHt Junior guard Stu Douglass grabbed a career-high 10 rebounds against No. 3 Kansas on. Sunday. Michigan forced overtirne against the Jayhawks, but fell 67-60. miserably last year and we meant to do some different things and then reverted back. Of course, it doesn't help when you don't make shots. That's about as bad as you can play against a zone I think." A STU-DENT ON THE BOARDS: It's not uncommon to see junior guard Zack Novak fight on the boards. A year after switching from the four-spot to a guard, he's been a familiar face on the glass - in six games so far this sea- son, he's grabbed at least seven rebounds. But junior guard Stu Douglass joined his co-captain this, game and grabbed 10 rebounds of his own, five more than his previous career best. The two combined for half of the team's boards and both grabbed eight rebounds on the defensive end. "Douglass and Novak had 21 rebounds between them," Beilein said Sunday. "I mean, they just worked their tails off." MSU SPLIT From Page 1B Following Saturday's night win, Berenson said his team had to be more disciplined against the Spar- tans and "play better without the _ puck" too. And after a scoreless first period - in which Michigan was a little "vulnerable," accord- ing to Berenson - Hagelin got the Wolverines on the board first as he threw a bad-angle shot on net from the right half boards. The attempt caught netminder Drew Palmisano offguard, and the goal was the first of two on the night for the Swedish native. Additionally, after a penalty-filled KANSAS From Page 1B Michigan wouldn't enjoy that lead for too long. Kansas forward Marcus Morris hit two free throws to put the Jayhawks within a point and then his twin brother Markieff Morris drained a 3-pointer to put Kansas ahead by two. The Jayhawks didn't look back. "It's hard to defend those guys," redshirt freshman Jordan Morgan said of the Morris twins. "We tried, but if you cover one, the other one comes from nowhere and scores." The Morris twins accounted for 35 points and 22 rebounds collec- tively. Michigan's defense fared well against its first top-five opponent of the season, holding Kansas to its lowest total score all season - even though the game went into overtime. "We'll be happy with that," Mor- ris said about the defensive perfor- mance. "For a team that's averaging over 80 points a game, that's really important that our defense is up there with anybody ... Our defense leads to our offense so if we can get stops it opens up a lot of things for us on the offensive end." Kansas struggled to work against the different looks that the Wolver- ines showed them on defense. The Jayhawks turned the ball over 16 times and netted just two 3-point- ers. But defense wasn't the issue - Michigan struggled to produce on the other end of the court. The Wolverines didn't score a field goal until nearly seven minutes into the first half when freshman Tim Hardaway Jr. made a 3-pointer - the only 3-pointer made of the 10 attempts taken by Michigan in the first stanza. As the game progressed, Michi- gan's shooting woes continued. The Wolverines went into halftime trail- ing 25-18 - the lowest number of points scored in a first half for Michi- gan this season. With 3:27 left in the second half and the Wolverine's down by six points, Novak hit a 3-pointer that got the Maize and Blue faithful on their feet. Hardaway Jr. followed with a layup and Novak hit another field goal to push Michigan within two contest on Friday night, the Wol- verines took just three penalties on Saturday and took advantage of their own power play attempts once again. With Michigan clinging to a 2-0 lead late in the third period, A.J. Treais iced the contest with the team's second power play goal of the night. Then, freshman defenseman Mac Bennett scored his first goal of the season to put the Wolverines up by four. "Tonight was huge. It was an opportunity to climb back in the standings," Hunwick said on Satur- day. "We knew Notre Dame won last night so we knew we were four (points) back so we know we need to put together some wins." tallies. "We didn't give up," Novak said about the final five minutes of play. "(We) stayed persistent with the game plan. I don't think we really changed anything. We forced some turnovers and we knocked down some shots finally, and that was the difference." That was the first time all game that Michigan scored on three con- Secutive offensive possessions - the Wolverines shot just 33-percent from the field. But down just two points with 53 seconds remaining, the Wolverines knew they couldn't hesitate. The stage was set for Morris, and he took the game into his hands in "You don't work hard all summer just to come up short." the Wolverines' final possession. For Morris, the net was probably as small as it's been all season, but he cut into the lane, took the fade-away jumper with 34 seconds left and he drained it to knot the game. In overtime, Kansas's offense was more productive than it was early on. The Jayhawks made two 3-pointers and 8-of-9 free throws to spoil any hopes of a Michigan upset. After 45 minutes of play, the Wol- verines walked off their home court, dejected. Although they stuck with one of the nation's best teams, Morris wasn't looking for any silver lining in the outcome of the game. "It's always good to play closely against a nationally-ranked team like this, down to the wire and over- time, but I'm not really into moral victories and I don't think my team is either," Morris said. "You don't want to work hard all summer just to come up short - that's not our goal. Our goal is to get these wins and hopefully make the (NCAA) Tournament" ESTES From Page 1B team's close loss represented one of those such 'wins,' he was characteristically unenthusiastic in his response. The truth is, all of his Wolver- ine teammates should be so bitter. It's very easy (and tempting) to see this game from that posi- tive point of view. After all, here was asteam picked to finish at or near the bottom of the Big Ten. Its opponent Sunday was one of the most talented and powerful teams in the country. The Jayhawks will be a popu- lar Final Four pick when all the prognosticators start filling out their brackets come March. For- mer Ohio State great Clark Kel- logg was here to call the game for CBS. And it would shock nobody if, when he broadcasts the Tourna- ment's Championship game in Houston in a couple months, it's Kansas cutting down the nets. And then there were the Wol- MORRIS From Page 1B for a big game like this - I'd probably blame it on that." But how many big games are needed before Morris and his team realize they can't afford to get off to such a slow start? Everybody knows the Wolver- ines are young, but there's likely an expiration date for the "we're just too young" excuse. Entering Sunday, Morris aver- aged 7.7 points and 5 assists per game against ranked opponents, including Wisconsin, which had the fourth most votes of unranked teams when the Wol- verines played in Madison. Both WANT U PDATES ON THE NEXT COACH? FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @MICH DAILY SPORTS verines. Their expectations have gone up with their surprising start to the season, but this is still a team with exactly two upperclass- men and four first-year regulars. The scene was telling when sophomore guard Matt Vogrich entered the game in the first half. Vogrich was matched up with Jayhawk guard Josh Selby, a freshman sensation. Selby was ranked the No. 1 recruit in America out of high school; Vogrich was No. 137. Vogrich picked Michigan over respectable programs Notre Dame and Stanford; Selby chose Kansas over Connecticut, Ken- tucky, and Syracuse, among other powerhouses. Selby was suspended for the first nine games of the season for receiving improper benefits as a recruit; the most anyone ever offered Vogrich on the AAU cir- cuit was a ham sandwich. But here was Michigan, which found itself down 25-10, which shot 26.1 percent from the field in the first half, which didn't make a shot until nearly seven minutes are well below his season aver- ages. For the first half of Sunday's game, it looked no different, as Morris finished up the opening frame 2-of-7 from the field with just two assists. He managed the shot clock poorly. He struggled to find scoring opportunities. And when there were openings, he failed to execute. Then, a new Darius Morris stepped onto the court in the second half. He was suddenly his cool and confident self again - patient, but not too patient - no longer afraid to attack the Jay- hawk defense aggressively. "We were calmer," Morris said. "Emotionally, we settled down, and we started running our Y S had elapsed in the game. Here were the Wolverines - nowhere near as long, athletic or talented as their opponent - forc- ing the Jayhawks to play at their pace, throwing zones at them and causing a season-low point total even with the extra period. Wow, one might say, how did such a bad team manage to hang with Kansas for so long? They should be proud of themselves. "I mean, we proved that we can play with them, but how far does that really go?" redshirt freshman forward Jordan Morgan pondered to nobody in particular after Sun- day's game. "We wanted to beat them. We were in a position to beat them ... We were there, we should've won that game." It would be unwise for Michigan to take solace that it "should've" won, or that it was even in a position to do so. Sure, everyone has said the Wolverines are still a year or two from truly competing. And the players could see it that way - that just playing tough against Kansas should be some- stuff, just playing our basketball. Things started opening up, we kept fighting, kept fighting, and things went our way." Granted, outside of the clutch fadeaway he hit to send the game into overtime, Morris shot about as poorly in the second half as he did in the first. But there was still a mood change in Crisler Arena after halftime. Everybody felt it about a minute in, when Morris found an open Jordan Morgan on the pick-and-roll. With open space and neither of Kansas's Morris twins in sight, Morgan, a redshirt freshman center, slammed one home with authority. Nobody knows what could have happened in Crisler Arena on Sunday had the Wolverines thing to build on, a point of satis- faction for a group repeatedly told that they aren't good enough. That would be the easy way out. Everyone talks about the future with this Michigan team, willing to put this year aside as just preparation for the next few seasons. The future, though, can- not just be a convenient crutch to demand anything less than excel- lence. Any team that can shoot 33.3 percent (14.3 percent from 3-point range) and still find itself with an overtime lead over the third-ranked team in the country isn't a squad built solely for the future. Michigan proved it can play with anyone this year. The Wolverines, then, should perhaps just be angry after this loss (and they damn well shouldn't be anywhere near con- tent). "We feel like we can be really good, not (just) down the road, but this year," Morgan said. Good news, Jordan. The sec- ond-ranked Buckeyes are coming to your place in a couple days. Here's your chance to prove it. played like that in the first half. With a combination of Michi- gan's stout defense and Kansas's poor shooting, it's possible that the Wolverines could have come out victorious by the end of regu- lation. So when Morris forced over- time with seconds left, Michigan proved one thing. Not that it has the ability to come back strong in the second half - people knew that already. Not that it could compete with some of the best competition in the country - it had already proven that too. On Sunday, Morris and his offense proved that they need to stop being too patient and start games stonger in order to win the big matchups. * AhIFEST Li Concerts 'VIP Parties 'eutiful Beaches 'ljif 1stin8 'etasaruasts ,.---.. : ' r f ' .. ., ,