,;;: Monay 0 The Michigan Daily ( michigandaily.com March 25, 2013 The New Routine? Sweet Sixteen Wolverines dominate VCU to' advance to fourth round of NCAAs By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Editor AUBURN HILLS, Mich. - All week long, the Michigan men's basketball team had to listen to talk about being a common upset pick, if not at the hands of South Dakota State, then by upstart, "Havoc"-reeking Virginia Com- monwealth. Saturday afternoon, in a maize-and-blue-packed Palace of Auburn Hills, it was the Wolver- ines who sent a statement loud and clear: they are for real. Michigan flexed its muscles early and often, blow- VCU 53 ing out MICHIGAN 78 the Rams, 78-53, to earn the program's first Sweet Sixteen trip since 1994. "We're human, we watch TV, we watch games and we see the brackets and peoples' predic- tions," said sophomore point guard Trey Burke. "That's defi- nitely motivation for us. "We showed a lot of people that we're hungry and that we're still good." The Wolverines (12-6 Big Ten, 28-7 overall) closed the first half on an 11-2 run to take a 15-point lead into halftime and didn't look back. After the teams trad- ed buckets in the second half's opening minutes, Michigan - led by the intensity of freshman forward Mitch McGary- proved to be too much for VCU and its vaunted pressure defense to handle. McGary, an animal all day inside the paint and on the glass, finished with a game and career-high 21 points on 10-of- 11 shooting and a career-high 14 rebounds. His 34 minutes were also a career high. Mean- while, Burke and junior guard Tim Hardaway Jr. played with a poised demeanor, often break- ing through the Rams' full-court pressure, nicknamed "Havoc," with ease. Burke recorded 18 points and seven assists, while Hardaway finished with 14. From the get-go, it was obvi- ous McGary's energy would be the difference, and he was quick to note that it extends beyond just the stat sheet. "Everybody feeds off it," McGary said. "Everybody start- ed feeling it, and we just kept it going. "Our team was having fun out there. Everyone was feeding off each other and it was really ener- getic.... I feel like we wanted ita bit more." While many pundits assumed the Wolverines would struggle to keep pace with VCU - espe- cially after the Rams bea their second-round oppo- nent, Akron, by 46 points on Thursday - it was VCU (12-4 Atlantic 10, 27-9 overall) who looked out of sorts. Michigan outscored the Rams 15-4 in transition and scored 17 points of of turnovers, com- pared to VCU's 10. Freshman forward Glenn Robinson III found himself open in transition all day long, chipping in 14 points and nine boards. Despite what the experts said, the Wolver- ines knew they play their best basketball when they're able to get into transition and' play in space. After watching VCU during Friday's film ses- sion, several Michigan players noted thatthey felt confident that if they could break the press, that they'd have a field day. "Once we saw their type of pressure, we knew that their defense could turn into our offense," Burke said. "We knew that we didn't necessarily have to run alot of half-court sets just because if we break the press, we're going to have numbers, and that's what we did." The Wolverines dominated the rebounding battle, 41-24, includ- ing 17 offensive boards. Theyalso shot 52 percent, including 55.2 percent in the second half as they continued to widen the margin. Throughout the game, the Wolverines' bench looked to be having as much fun as it did See SWEET 16, Page 2B Hello, Mitch Mc Gary AUBURN HILLS, Mich. - Jordan Morgan has been the starting center for this Michigan basketball team for three years. Besides junior forward Tim Hardaway Jr., he has been around longer than any member of the starting lineup. Out of Michigan's 32 games this year, the redshirt junior started 27 of them. He was lauded for beingthe defensive captain in the middle, the under- rated key to the Wolverines' suc- s. His stats were ever over- whelm- - averaging around five points and five rebounds a game - but Michigan, especially on defense, didn't look the same without him. Yet in Michigan's 78-53 win over Virginia Commonwealth on Saturday, the win that pushed Michigan to its first Sweet Six- teen appearance since 1994, Morgan didn't play a single min- ute, and that was the right decision. Saturday, againstthe Rams, the Wolverines needed the man who has EVERETT een back- COOK ngup organ ost of the year. They eeded their behemoth, heir human lightning od, the man known ore for his energy nd crowd-pleasing ntics than his ctual play. They needed reshman forward itch McGary, who did things to the Rams' front- court that Michi- gan hasn't seen all season. This game was supposed to be about VCU's "Havoc" defense, and the guard play that goes along with it. In a way, it was, but it was also about McGary's emer- gence on a national stage. In November, he was more of a caricature of a post player. There were moments of athletic brilliance, when you shook your head and wondered how some- body 6-foot-10 could move that gracefully. He was a fan favorite early, known for waving his arms and diving for loose balls more than post moves or points. Reminders that he hadn't pieced it all together would appear - a missed dunk here, a slipped defensive rotation there. He had the tools, but hadn't showcased it in a complete game. Then Saturday happened - the emergence of "Hercules," at least according to Michigan assiStant coach Baccari Alex- ander. He played 34 minutes, scoring 21 points on 10-of-11shooting while pulling down 14 rebounds. Every single one of those num- bers is a career-high. Right from the get-go, McGary's energy and intensity set the tone, muscling his way around a defender for a big dunk less than two minutes into the game. He was all over the court, finding open seams in the fast break and using his bigbody for offensive put backs all afternoon. The double-double came just a couple minutes into the second half, on a play where McGary put back an offensive rebound, got fouled and made the free throw. After the game, VCU for- ward Juvonte Reddic said that McGary outworked him in the game. Plain and simple. There were stretches in November when that would have been tough for McGary to sus- tain over 34 minutes of play - he would look gassed after four- minute spans on the court. "He came in weighing in the 250s, ballooned up a little bit, you know, enjoyingthe cafeteria See MCGARY, Page 26 THE STREAK The Michigan hockey team's 22-year NCAA Tournament streak ended Sunday. The Daily takes a look back at the run. >>See Section C ONE, TWO, THREE, GO * The Michigan softball team started off the Big Ten season the way it typically has: with a sweep, this time, over Purdue. Page 4B