8A - Wednesday, January 18, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam 8A -Wedesda, Jnuay 18 202 Te Mihign Daly mihigadaiyco Sophomore guard Tim HardawayJr. added 10 points in the Wolverines' 60-5ยง victory over Michigan State at Crisler Arena on Tuesday. It was Michigan's third consecutive win over the Spartans, the longest winning streak against MSU since 1991 Wolverines knock o ffSpartans again By LUKE PASCH The Spartans retained the lead Daily SportsEditor until Burke snagged a rebound on the defensive end with 40 seconds For the first time since 1998, to go and pushed the ball in tran- Michigan has beaten Michigan sition. He started to go up with it State in three straight meetings but instead dished to senior guard on the hardwood. and co-captain Stu Douglass just Following senior guard and before landing. Douglass finished co-captain Zack Novak's open- with an easy layup to take the ing 3-point- lead, 60-59. er, No. 20 MSU 59 That would be the final score. Michigan MICHIGAN 60 No. 9 Michigan State (4-2,15-4) (5-2 Big Ten, got the ball to its leading scorer - 15-4 overall) led the whole contest senior forward Draymond Green before relinquishing the lead with - for the final possession, bute ic just under seven minutes left in failed to sink the last second, off- the game after a Brandon Kearney balance shot from the foul line, 3-pointer from the corner. and Michigan closed out the win. A minute later, freshman point Burke impressed in his rivalry guard Trey Burke tied the con- debut, looking poised and pouring test on a triple of his own from in a game-high 20 points on 8-of- the top of the key, only to lose the 11 shooting. The young stud was lead again on an Austin Thornton also stingy on the defensive end, 3-pointer that came seconds later. tallyingtwo blocks and two steals. "Trey, like I've said before, he's going to be a great player," said sophomore guard Tim Hardaway Jr. "He's going to be a great player, and if he keeps on doing what he's doing right now, I don't see why (he wouldn't be) Big Ten Player of the Year in upcoming years." Douglass also played wellinhis first start since the season opener against Ferris State, always seemv ingto deliver when his team need- ed it most. He started in place of struggling sophomore forward Evan Smotrycz, who had shot a miserable 2-of-19 from the field over the previous three contests. In the waning moments of the first half, as Michigan State nearly erased a 10-point deficit on a 9-0 run, Douglass nailed a 3-pointer, getting fouled hard by a Spartan defender. He went to the free- throw line and completed the four-point play to kill Michigan State's momentum and help the Wolverines take a 36-29 lead into the locker room at halftime. The play evoked images of Novak's four-point play from last season at the Breslin Center in East Lansing. Michigan State opened that contest with a 6-0 run, but Novak neutralized the momentum on a 3-pointer from the corner, while being fouled. "If you don't want that last- second shot, I don't know what you're doing playing basketball," Douglass said. Michigan had to overcome.a couple of major disadvantages to come out of this one with a vic- tory. The Wolverines finished just 6-for-21 from behind the arc (28.6 percent), largely due to the recent shooting woes of Hard- away Jr. and Smotrycz, who were combined 0-for-6 on the day. The pair combined for a woeful 0-for- 12 from long range in Saturday's game at Iowa as well. Compare that to the Spartans, who shot an efficient 7-for-15 from downtown on clutch shooting. "We did enough things to win the game, we did enough things to lose the game," said Michigan State coach Tom Izzo. "But when you do enough things to lose the game, you're not going to win them on the road, especially in your rival's backyard." The Spartans also did solid work cleaning up the glass, out- rebounding the Wolverines, 31-18, and only allowing two offensive boards from Michigan. But Mich- igan coach John Beilein insists. that that was part of the game plan. "We're not going to rebound great in that game," he said. "We sent three people back on every possession - we weren't trying to get offensive rebounds. ... We were trying to take away their transition game, so there's sort of a method to our madness." Ultimately, players agree that one of the biggest advantages Michigan had was the crowd at the Crisler Center, which at times was the loudest it's been this sea- son. In all likelihood, it was the loudest home crowd Burke has ever played in front of "The Maize Rage was great for us, and they kept us energized down the stretch," Burke said with a smile on his face. "It feels great, just to be able to give Zack and Stu this win, them playing against Michigan State their last time here. That was the greatest feeling." Burke proves mettle in win nu knowa player is truly elite, is truly something special, when he deserves a nickname. We're in an era that is, com- pared to the past, simply embarrassing. when it comes to dishing out nicknames. Maybe our generation ofY sportswriters just isn't cre- BEN ative enough. ESTES Maybe play- ers are now so reserved when dealing with the media that they don't present a persona to the press that leads itself to an easy nickname. In any case, these days, it's pretty standard to just take someone's full name and A-Rod or D-Mo it. (I refuse to legitimize the nickname "Butterfly" that some tried to force on former Michigan point guard Darius Morris.) I bring this up because, after the way he played in Michi- gan's 60-59 win over Michigan State on Tuesday night, Trey Burke officially needs a nick- name. I vote for "Trey the Truth," though I worry that rapper Trae Tha Truth isn't popular enough for it to catch on widely. But there's plenty of time to figure out abetter one later on, since it's clear that the freshman point guard is going to be terrorizing defenses - whether in the Big Ten or in the NBA--for many years to come. After leading all scorers with 20 points and key- ing the Wolverines to a huge win over the Spartans - their third straight in the in-state series, proving that the rivalry is, once again, a real rivalry - there's no doubt left that Burke is the team's best player. Michigan coach John Beilein (as well as the media) was reti- cent for most of the season to go too far in anointing Burke. After all, despite earning the title of Ohio's Mr. Basketball his senior year of high school, Burke was just an ordinary three-star recruit, maybe a four-star to some scouting services. Burke really arrived at the Maui Invitational, immediately asserting himself in Michigan's first game against Memphis. Playing in such a big-time atmosphere against so many teams, the Columbus native was unfazed. He even seemed to thrive in the limelight. That should have been the first clue as to Burke's true potential - the great ones live for the big moments and rise to them, using those times to lift theminselves to heights they couldn't otherwise reach. "I just felt like I had to make big plays," Burke said after the Michigan State game. "Coach Beilein told me one of my jobs was to make big plays tonight, to get the team what we want every time down on offense.... I can't say I was the best player out there. There were just times out there I had to make a big play for my team." Maybe Burke can't say that he was the best player out there, but I'll say it for him. And those big moments are the reason why. All night he was responsible for the most important momentum plays for Michigan. There was his and-one layup, followed by his trap of Michigan State guard Travis Trice, which forced Trice to burn a timeout with 9:34 left in the first half. The Spartans cut into the Wolverines' lead later in the frame, and Burke responded by stealing the ball in the back- court and scoring over Draymond Green. His play gave Michigan its first double-digit lead of the night, and it was the loudest Crisler Cen- ter has been in my two years cov- ering the team (though not as loud as when the final horn sounded.) Burke saved his best for when the Wolverines needed it the most, scoring when Michigan State stole the lead and the momentum, and when he was no doubt the most tired. With Michigan down three points with 5:29 left in the game, Burke calmly launched a 3-pointer from NBA range to tie it back up. A minute later, down four points, he attacked the rim and hita foul shot to cutthe deficit once more. And somehow, some way, Burke avoided getting swallowed by Green and two other players in transition with 35 seconds left, deftly weaving and flipping the ball to senior guard Stu Douglass for the winningbasket. He was the only player doing anything for Michigan on offense in those instances and in other long stretches against the tena- cious Spartan defense. "That kid walks the walk, so he can talk the talk," said senior guard Zack Novak. "I've told him, whatever he says, I'll back him 100 percent." How funny it now seems that Wolverine fans were worried about how the team would be able to replace Morris. Obviously, you'd want both players on your squad, but there's no doubt that, if forced to pick, you'd go with Burke - even the freshman ver- sion - every time. And ina situa- tion like the NCAA Tournament game against Duke, who would you rather have taking a last shot? Morris, who could never figure out how to shoot consistenly? Or Burke, who can hit any sort of jumper that he damn well pleases? Perhaps Burke will break down soon, will hit the prover- bial freshman wall. It's a valid concern, considering he averages 34.5 minutes a game, the highest on the team. But I'm not worried about it. He just seems to have that extra something that will keep that from happening. He's not like most other players in that regard, like Spartan guard Keith Appling, who coach Tom Izzo said was too fatigued atthe end of the game. (Appling, a sophomore, only played 31 minutes.) This isn't a slight to Tim Hard- away Jr. or any other Michigan player, but rather a statement about Burke's ability. He'll bethe engine that drives the Wolverines for as long as he's around Ann Arbor. After the game, I asked Beilein where his team would have been without Burke. "Don't want to even think about that," he said. No need to. Burke is there, and Michigan need onlybe thankful for that. Someone get this guy a nickname. Estes can be reached at benestes@umich.edu. 0t