.... . DID PREVIEW Fear the freshman How do they do it? How do the Buckeyes lose three integral starters over the offseason - David Lighty, Dallas Lauderdale and Jon Diebler - and still retain so much talent on the roster? Head coach Thad Matta isn't typically considered an elite coach, but he's absolutely an elite recruiter (what he says to these kids to get them to Ohio State is beyond ,s.) The Buckeyes' success starts with you-know-who - returning NCAA Fresh- man of the Year Jared Sull- inger. Barring injury, Sully can take this team deep into the postseason single- handedly. Unfortunately for everyone else, he doesn't need to do it single-handed- ly. Sophomore point guard Aaron Craft, who may be the least imposing player in the conference outside of *ichigan's Matt Vogrich, is a highly capable point guard. And senior William Buford may be the top wing in the league, and he's got late-season experience. Bottom Line: Craft to Sullinger ... That connection is easier than easy Mac. (Get it?) fIX4 S Every year, Wisconsin contends in the Big Ten and makes the NCAA Tourna- ment (the Badgers have made the Big Dance in 13 straight years, the fourth-longest active streak in the country). Chalk it up to Bo Ryan. The Wisconsin coach never fails to instill his principles on his teams. Point guard Jor- dan Taylor said that Ryan won't recruit a player unless he knows he fits the Badger formula. The result is strong, physical defense, efficient (read: boring) offense with his swing system, and solid fundamentals. This season, the Badgers have a star in Taylor, perhapsthe bestpoint guard in the country. The key to Wisconsin's season will be how it reloads in the front court after three departures. Ryan mentioned Jared Berg- gren, Frank Kaminsky, Evan Anderson and Jarred Uthoff as bigs to watch. Guard Josh Gasser returns in the back- court after a solid freshman season. Bottom Line: Expect typical Wisconsin. Biggest disappointment? Mike Brue- sewitz already shaved off his ginger 'fro.. With point guard Darius Morris being the only part of the Wolverines' rotation from last year to depart, Michigan's lineup brings back the most continuity of the Big Ten teams. This could work to the Wolver- ines' advantage early in the year when opposing teams are still shuffling their lineups and figuring out what works. Fresh- men Trey Burke and Carl- ton Brundidge will replace Morris's minutes, and the rest of the roster can expect to see similar roles. After a breakout freshman season, Tim Hardaway will look to take on even more scor- ing to bring up a Michigan offense that finished near the bottom of the Big Ten in scoring. Senior captains Zack Novak and Stu Doug- lass will look to make their third seasons as co-captains count and help send this team deep into the NCAA Tournament. The next benchmark will be getting to the Sweet Sixteen. Bottom Line: Michigan hopes the new Crisler Arena will house a Bentley-like product. Purdue loses its top-two scorers but should be pretty good this year. That sentence only makes sense because of Robbie Hummel. The fifth- year senior forward was injured for the latter part of his junior year and all of his fourth year. He returns for the last season of his career, which started out promising. He scored in double-digits each season and led the Boil- ermakers in rebounding in his two full seasons. Hummel will be supported by senior guards Lewis Jackson and Ryne Smith, who both start- ed last season, but were in the shadows of seniors JaJuan Johnson and E'Twaun Moore. While Purdue put together a 14-4 conference record and finished second in the Big Ten last season, it got eliminated in the second round of the NCAA Tourna- ment and can't help but think of how good it could have been withsHummel on that team. This team hopes to open up the renovated Mack- ey Arena in style. Bottom Line: Robbie Hummel. Robbie Hummel. Robbie Hummel. Robbie Hummel. Robbie Hummel. It didn't matter that Mich- igan State wasn't ranked in either preseason top-25 poll. When the Big Ten rank- ings came out, the Spartans were right back where they always are: the top three. All-Big Ten senior forward Draymond Green will need to score, rebound and most importantly, prevent the leadership and chemis- try issues that plagued last year's team. The Spartans have a strong frontcourt, but need to replace their starters in the backcourt, including two-time All-Big Ten First Team point guard Kalin Lucas. Sophomore Keith Appling will step in at the point, while fifth-year senior guard Brandon Wood could be the second scoring option. The Spartans will play good defense, but need Appling to be serviceable enough to allow Green and Wood to put points on the board. If they can, watch out for the green and white. Bottom line: Nobody at Michigan cares how many days it's been since Michi- gan State beat the Wolver- ines in basketball, but it's a big number. Tubby Smith must feel a little like Alice in Wonder- land - you're not at Ken- tucky anymore, Tubby. The Golden Gopher headman has found coaching Minnesota a little more difficult having made the NCAA Tournament just twice in his four sea- sons. Last year, the Gophers didn't make any postseason tournament after dropping 10 of its last 11 games to fin- ish ninth in the conference. The Gophers still have one of the better frontcourts in the Big Ten with preseason All-Big Ten forward Trevor Mbakwe and center Ralph Sampson III. Mbakwe, in particular, is a force. But just like last season, point guard is a weakness. Freshmar Andre Hollins could seize the job immediately, though there are more experienced options in sophomore Maver- ick Ahanmisi and junior col- lege transfer Julian Welch. Quote: "Coming into every season, I always cry to lead the conference in rebounding. I want to lead in blocked shots too, but I have to battle with this guy (Sampson III) every day." - Mbakwe distinctly remember when I realized Michigan was get- tingsomething special in freshman point guard Trey Burke. It was March, and my bud- dies and I were pre-gaming - er, preparing - to go out on a Friday night. I was DJ-ing on my friend's Macbook, and after choosing a jam, I remem- bered that Burke's high- lights from his senior season at Northland High School in LUKE Columbus had PASCH been posted online earlier that day. So, with the bass still thumping, I opened YouTube and cued up the video. For two minutes, I watched Burke put on a clinic. He drains contested threes and scores in the lane over defenders eight inches taller than him. And as elusive as he is with the ball in his hands, he still knows when to dish to an open teammate. It's all very impres- sive. But I was just about ready to dismiss it as another recruiting video that strategically highlights a player's strengths and never his flaws. Then, the final clip floored me. A defender picks up Burke at half court, where he dribbles left to right. Trying to beat the press, Burke turns on the jets, but his opponent sticks with him nicely. Then, ina maneuver I wasn't aware was physically possible without shredding an MCL, Burke plants his right foot and stops on a dime. His defender, meanwhile, hits the deck - he wanted to stop with Burke, but his ankles gave out instead. As Burke calmly pulls up to bury a 3-pointer at the buzzer, my friends and I exploded in our best impressions of those Andl Mix- tape audiences from back in the day (OHHHHHH HOWDID HE - THAT WAS COLD-BLOODED). Seriously. Go watch the video. The clip comes at 2:27. Bottom line: this kid can ball. Inexperience aside, it's fair to label Burke the most athletic player on the Wolverines' roster - he may very well be the best athlete Mich- igan coach John Beilein has ever recruited. And whatever he lacks in height, he makes up for with quickness and agility. Ignore the coach-speak. Beilein says he won't name Darius Mor- ris's replacement at point guard until after the exhibition matchup with Wayne State on Friday. He claims that senior co-captain Stu Douglass is havingthe best fall practices of his career, and Burke's freshman cohort Carlton Brun- didge knows how to score the bas- ketball very well. Granted, he's probably not lying. Douglass and Brundidge are solid guards that fit Beilein's offense beautifully. But Douglass is a combo guard who's best suited as a shooter off the bench, and Brundidge is a tad behind Burke in his development and would ben- efit tremendously from a redshirt year, or at least a year with limited minutes. I sat down with Beilein last Thursday at Big Ten Media Day and busted his chops one last time before leaving the ballroom. I told him I knew he's just hiding his cards from his conference coun- terparts - that everyone believes Burke is getting the nod. He chuckled and reminded me that when he was coaching his own son at West Virginia, Patrick Beilein only had two career starts. Good point. Kind of. I guess he was illustratingthat he doesn't always do what people expect. But I don't buy it. Upperclassmen at Michigan understand the pains of having a freshman trying to run Beilein's intricate offense. We watched Morris's futile attempts a couple years ago. It was ugly. His whole season was a disappointment. And until he blossomed in his sopho- more season, we were all readyto dismiss Morris as a lost cause. So why make the same mistake with Burke? Because in some ways, Burke provides an offensive attack that Morris never could. The kid shot 3-pointers at a 47-percent clip (!) in his senior season. Morris knocked down just 25 percent of his triples last year, and that was always con- sidered his weakness. Opponents tell you the hardest part of defending Beilein's offense is that he spreads the floor incred- ibly well. His guards can shoot from the perimeter, which consis- tently keeps defenders honest and out of the paint. But when Morris ran the point, defenses were able to sag off of him and clogthe lane because they knew he wasn't going to pull up to shoot. Big Ten coaches are terrified at the prospect of Beilein having a natural shooter at the top of the key. His starting five - or at least what I believe his starting five will be - will consist of four deadly shooters. Burke will bringthe ball up and see Zack Novak (42 percent from 3-point range in conference play last season), Tim Hardaway Jr. (44 percent), Evan Smotrycz (36 percent) and center Jordan Morgan. And those guys aren't just shooting specialists. They all know how to get to the hoop when the situation calls for it. Iowa coach Fran McCaffery is particularly frightened. "The interesting thing for me is the seeming obsession with Mor- ris's departure," McCaffery said Thursday. "That's one guy. Hard- away is a pro, Morgan is a beast and they've got like 100 guys that could shoot threes and spread you out. "And you've got a great point guard, who may actually - I don't want to say he's better (than Mor- ris) yet, but he definitely shoots it better." Beilein - you're not fooling any- one. Burke's a youngster, and we'll all have to get over the inevitable growing pains that come with hav- ing a freshman floor general in the Big Ten. But Burke is your guy. And your opponents are afraid - very, very afraid. -Pasch will be quite embarrassed if Burke is not named the starting point guard. He can be reached at LPasch@umich. edu or on Twitter @LucasPasch Young frontcourt bulks up, looks to take step forward By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily Sports Editor If "bigger, faster, stronger" is the goal, then the Michigan bas- ketball team's frontcourt took care of the "bigger" and "stronger" parts this summer. Four of Michigan's big men are coming off their first year of expe- rience and used the offseason as an opportunity to bulk up, prepar- ing to bang with the biggest of the Big Ten this season. Sophomore forwards Jon Hor- ford and Evan Smotrycz, in par- ticular, return to the renovated Crisler Arena with more than just the lessons from last season. Horford, now 250 pounds, came back 28 pounds heavier than he was when the Wolverines fell to Duke in the round of 32 of the NCAA Tournament in March. Smotrycz, now 235 pounds, brought back 36 pounds to Ann Arbor - thanks to some steak, broccoli and cheese casserole and vanilla cake with chocolate frost- ing. "(Strength and conditioning) coach (Jon) Sanderson put a plan together for me," Smotrycz said. "My mom was cooking; all my favorite stuff, I was working out six days a week. I think that all came together and I put it all on." Michigan also returns its lead- ing low-post scorer and rebounder in redshirt sophomore Jordan Morgan, as well as sophomore Colton Christian and junior Blake McLimans. Six-foot-eight fresh- man Max Bielfeldt will also con- tribute some size. Morgan will likely start alongside Smotrycz, with Horford seeing significant minutes. Assistant coach Bacari Alexan- der said he is excited about what Horford's and Smotrycz's weight gains can add on the offensive end and on the glass. "You look at a person's ability to rebound the basketball when you talk about added strength," Alexander said. "I think adding that dimen- sion, you get a guy that becomes a statsheet stuffer." Alexander said that Smotrycz's added weight also allows him to initiate and welcome contact, yet he still has the chance to knock down shots. As for Horford, Alexander said he hasn't seen a body transforma- tion over an offseason like that of the 6-foot-9 sophomore. An area Michigan's big men will need to improve on is their rebounding. Last year, guard Zack Novak led the team in rebound- ing and Morgan was the only big man in the top five. Morgan pulled down 5.4 boards per game last year, and the next highest totals from the post players were Smotrycz's 2.3 and Horford's 2.0. "We need to grab a lot more rebounds, and it's probably one of my main goals to help out with the rebounding and do the dirty work," Horford said. "Novak's a good rebounder, especially for his size, but it's definitely time for a big man to step up and lead the team in rebounding." And with at least a year of expe- rience under the belt of all the post players except Bielfeldt, Michigan can expect more fluidity, as the guys know the offense and can be more comfortable in it. Whereas Ohio State, Wiscon- sin, and Purdue all lost a promi- nent post presence to graduation, the lack of moving parts for the Wolverines could be a distinct advantage, especially at the begin- ning of conference play. Although the year of experience should help the frontcourt's pro- gression, the absence of a bonafide point guard could hurt. Last year, then-sophomore Darius Morris, who left school early for the NBA, was able to create opportunities. off the dribble and get the big men easy points with dump offs and pick-and-rolls. But the new point guard - whether it's senior co-captain Stu Douglass or freshmen Trey Burke or Carlton Brundidge - won't have the physical presence that Morris had. "One of the things that Darius's length allowed is him to see a lot of people that others can't see," said Michigan coach John Beilein. "For our guards right now, Stu, Trey and Carlton, that is a chal- lenge because they're not as tall. But they do have very good vision on the perimeter." A rapport with the point guards can come with time, size cannot. And that could pose a "big" prob- lem for opponents. _gw.. 6B ( Tipoff - November 1, 2011 TheMichiganDaily - www.michigandaily.com 3B