4B - March 19, 2012 T The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Loee MEN'S BASKETBALL Michigan falls victim to hemagicfinally ran out .Tem margfnac in itary u LI (-- l - [ l.fC .I [ lt)c7t C 1.1' l.[LI l..By NEAL ROTHSCHILD Daily SportsEditor NASHVILLE, Tenn. - UItimately, when March is over and bracket-pool managers pay out the pot, there are 67losers. It's funny, really. When you think of the NCAA Tournament, you imme- diately call to mind the jubilant win- ners. For me, it's Vermont's overtime upset of Syra- cuse in the first round LUKE of the 2005 PASCH tournament. I remember where I was, who I was watching with. I remember Gus Johnson's call of T.J. Sorrentine's shot "from the parking lot" to hammer the nail in Syracuse's coffin. The game had a David-and- Goliath feel to it - a bunch of under-recruited nobodies at a hippie school taking down a bas- ketball giant in March. Vermont fan or not, it was a powerful moment. Two days later, the Cata- mounts ran into Michigan State in the next round and lost hand- ily. I couldn't tell you where I was or what I was doingthat day. I got over it pretty darn quickly. Such is the beast of March Madness. So rarely do the cam- eras effectively capture the pain- ful images of those who don't make it to the end of the month. The chances of any one team sur- vivingto that point are absurdly marginal, yet they all hangtheir hopes on making it because believing otherwise would be sacrilege. For 67 programs, March is the cruelest month of the year. On Friday night, Ohio upset Michigan in Nashville, and the Wolverines became a footnote. Co-workers will gather round the water cooler on Monday and complain thatthe Wolverines screwed their brackets. They'll grumble over Michigan's short- comings and muse that the Bob- cats are rather well-coached for a team out of the Mid-American Conference. And that's that. Life moves on pretty quickly. After a weekend that sawa pair of two-seeds in Missouri and Duke fall on the same dayas Michigan, the Wol- verines' massive failure was a mere blip on the radar for the casual fan of college basketball. By the end of the month, only the winner matters. Perhaps it's some kind of neural mechanism. Your brain remembers the good. forgets the NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Michi- gan had won this game many times before. A week ago, Michigan over- came a nine-point deficit with under five minutes to play to beat Minnesota in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Tournament. Two weeks before that, the Wolverines found themselves down four points to Northwest- ern in the final minutes before pulling out an overtime victory. Earlier in the season, they had charged back from an eight-point deficit in the second half to down the Wildcats in overtime in Ann Arbor. And in marquee wins over rivals Michigan State and Ohio State, Michigan found a way to grit out nail-biting finishes. Of the Wolverines' nine losses, just three had not been decided by double digits - it was the close ones that they were often able to salvage. So, when Michigan found itself down nine points with less than nine minutes to play against Ohio at Bridgestone Arena on Friday night, the Wolverines were in their element. "We've been in this situation a million times this year," said freshman point guard Trey Burke. And so Burke played like he had a million times before. After having only scored four points at that point in the game, Burke dominated the next five minutes. He scored Michigan's next 12 points by getting to the rim, get- ting to the free-throw line and burying contested 3-pointers. And all of a sudden, the score went from 57-48 to 63-60 with four minutes left. It was just like so many other times this season. "We always have to believe, and we were believing the whole entire game," said sophomore guard Tim Hardaway Jr. "Down three with two or three min- utes left to go in the game, we were like, 'Yeah, we've been here before."' The Wolverines continued to stop the Bobcats on defense, and all they needed was to sinka shot or two to complete their come- back. "Everyone was confident," said senior guard Zack Novak. "We had the momentum, we had cut the lead down, we'd been in this situation before. We just got to play our game. We're a second- half team, that's it. We've done it all year." But there was a problem. "We just weren't hitting shots," Burke said. Shot after shot evaded nylon. Sophomore forward Evan Smotrycz, who hadn't missed all game, came up short on a layup as he slashed through the defense from the left wing. Burke missed a 3-pointer, and so did Novak. "We saw a little bit of light," said senior guard Stu Douglass. "We wanted the lead so bad, we wanted to tie it so bad. We fought so hard and we didn't want the season to end. Sometimes, you can kind of overdo it and over- think it a little bit" The Wolverines had surren- dered possession with under a minute left and needed a crucial stop. Burke got that stop by forc- ing Bobcat guard Nick Kellogg into a 10-second violation. There would be time to try to tie it or take it to the basket and foul to extend the game. "I thought, 'we'll hit a shot finally,' "Douglass said. "Percent- ages. The law of percentages, we'll hit a shot. I had confidence." That confidence meant con- fidence in Burke, who had come through all season. There was no reason to believe that it was going to be different this time. Burke missed his 3-point try, but Michigan was able to corral the offensive rebound and Michi- gan coach John Beilein called a timeout with 40 seconds left. Beilein's freshman was going to get another shot at it. As Burke dribbled the ball with the clock winding down in the Wolverines' last possession, he wore a wide smile on his face. He knew what he had done with the game on the line so many other times before. "It was confidence," Burke said. But then his shot went in-and- out. The Wolverines regained possession and had renewed life until Smotrycz flubbed a cross- over while his team tried to reset, and Ohio recovered the ball with seven seconds remaining. At that moment, the confidence that Michigan had felt the whole game - the whole season - van- ished. Things had gone according to the script the whole time, and as long as there was hope, the Wolverines knew they had it in the bag. And then the script flipped. "I looked up and I thought we had more time," Douglass said. "I looked over and it was 6.7 (seconds left) and I just couldn't believe it." Michigan had to foul and hope that Ohio guard Walter Offutt would miss both of his free throws so that the Wolverines could charge down the floor ands get a final chance. "There was still a possibility that Offutt was going to miss and so I think we called a timeout and drew up a play and talked strat- egy," Douglass said. "But it was kind of hard to pay attention. You knew he was going to hit one. It was hard to face reality at that point." Offutt effortlessly sank both of his tries, and reality struck. Sophomore guard Tim HardawayJr. remained confident after Michigan's loss to Ohio, fully expecting he will return Michigan to the Big Dance next season. bitterness. But on Friday night, after Michigan fell to an Ohio team that just wanted it more all game long, the images of a heart- breaking loss were forever sealed in my memory. I'll never forget watching soph- omore forward Evan Smotrycz stand on the court and pull his jersey over his head as the buzzer sounded. The kid had the most efficient shooting performance of his career and kept Michigan in the game throughout. But his turnoverto seal the Wolverines' fate in the final seconds would be the clip shown on SportsCenter on Saturday morning and what the office workers remember come Monday - and he knew it. Senior guard Stu Douglass untucked hisjersey and looked up at the basket. His last chance for postseason glory had been squan- dered, and he needed a moment to reflect. But Douglass and his teammates were hurried off the court so Temple could begin warming up for its second-round matchup with South Florida. March doesn't wait around for losers. I won't forget walking into the locker room afterward, seeing the blank stares, the teary eyes. There was a powerful silence, broken only by the muffled Bobcat cheers from the locker room next door. When I walked in, senior Corey Person strategically turned his chair in toward the locker and put his head in his hands to avoid the media onslaught for the next 15 minutes. Then, with just a few minutes left in the locker room, sopho- more guard Tim Hardaway Jr. came out of the showers to address the media. Unlike his teammates, he held his head up and spoke with clarity, with con- fidence. He didn't feel sorry for himself or his teammates, and he credited Ohio for playing a superb 40 minutes of basketball. Though it's too early to make promises, he announced that he is "definitely" coming back to Michigan for a junior season. Make what you will of that, but his tone was genuine. And as senior co-captains Zack Novak and Stu Douglass fought tears in front of the cameras, Hardaway Jr. looked forward to next March, when he'll be the veteran leader of this squad. I left Bridgestone Arena on Friday night with a new perspec- tive on March Madness. From the 2012 Tournament, I'll remember the faces of a group of kids whose season ended on March 16 instead of April 2. And should Tim Hardaway Jr. lead them to better fortune in March of 2013 - should they find glory and cutdown the nets - I'll remember thattheir journey started with that gut-wrenching loss on Friday night. . 0 0 0 0* !iERNST&YOUNG QualityIn Everything We Do