ON TO ATLANTA SMICIA 7,FLORIDA 59 Wolverines advance to the Final Four for the first time since 1993 By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Editor ARLINGTON, Texas - For the first time in 20 years, the Michigan men's basketball team is headed to the Final Four. Right out of the gates, the Wolverines unleashed an offen- sive onslaught on Florida, the nation's No. 2 defensive team. Michigan took the game's open- ing tip and never looked back, winning79-59. The victory sends the Wolver- ines to Atlanta, where they'll play Syracuse on Saturday for a chance to appear in the title game. It's Michigan's first Final Four since 1993, but that run, as well as a Final Four appearance in 1992, have been wiped from the record books. The program's last official Final Four was the 1989 National Championship team. Michigan sealed the win with its five seniors on the floor to the chorus of "It's greatto be a Mich- igan Wolverine" chants through- out Cowboys Stadium. "That was the highlight of the day for me," said redshirt sophomore forward Jon Horford. "They deserved it. For them to get in there and get an opportu- nity, it was beautiful." Senior guard Josh Bartelstein was the first Wolverine to climb the ladder and snip off a piece of the nets, as Michigan coach John Beilein looked on. It's the coach's first Final Four in his 34 years coaching. "I didn't know how to act, actually," Beilein said. "I just was silent and in awe of trying to take everything in." Afterwards, in the locker room, Beilein received the first Gatorade shower of his career. The Wolverines never trailed and led by as many as 24 points in the first half, entering halftime with a 17-point lead. The eventu- al 20-point victory was the larg- est margin in an Elite Eight game since 1999 until Louisville sur- passed that margin in the second Sunday game. Michigan scored the game's first 13 points, opening the con- test on a 23-5 run. Freshman guard Nik Stauskas broke out of a recent 3-point shooting slump in spectacular fashion, draining his first seven shots including six from long range. Stauskas said that he knew he'd have a big shooting night after his first shot in pregame warm-ups went down. "I was due for one of these games - it's been a while," he said. "My teammates did a real good job of finding me when I was open. My shot felt good, so I was just letting them fly." Each of Stauskas's first four 3-pointers were from the left corner, where the freshman pri- marily operates in the offense. Florida seemingly had no answer for the spacing Michigan imple- mented, as it repeatedly left Stauskas unattended. "Nik didn't have to do any- thing, he was just standing in the corner and we were finding him," said junior guard Tim Hardaway Jr. "Our big men did a great job of just rolling to the basket and collapsing defense, and us guards were just finding him on half court and on fast breaks. So it was easy for him." Stauskas led all scorers with 19 first-half points, includ- ing back-to-back triples with five minutes left in the half to extend the Wolverines' lead to 41-17. Stauskas finished with 22 points, tying his career high on 7-of-8 shooting. Meanwhile, Florida (14-4 SEC, 29-8 overall) struggled to connect on nearly anything, as Michigan played some of its best defensive ball of the year. The Wolverines held the Gators to a 2-for-10 clip from 3-point range, while forcing 15 turnovers. Michigan, on the other hand, had one of its most efficient offensive nights of the year. The Wolverines shot 52.6 percent from long range, and outscored Florida, 21-4, in transition. Michigan (12-6 Big Ten, 30-7 overall) came out of the locker room cold, allowing the Gators to pullwithin12bythe secondhalf's first official timeout, but the Wol- verines never flinched. Fresh- man forward Glenn Robinson III jammed home a monstrous dunk out of the break, and fresh- man point guard Spike Albrecht stole the ensuing inbound pass and finished an acrobatic layup. Florida couldn't muster enough offense to ever cut the deficit to less than 12 thereafter. Albrecht said he's been making plays like that since high school. "Sometimes the inbounder gets a little lackadaisical with it and they just kind of throw it out," Albrecht said. "I saw that he wasn't really looking, so I kind of faked liked I was going back on defense and then I just jumped it. "That was kind of arisk-reward play. If I missed it, Coach Beilein would probably have been pretty upset with me, so I'm just happy it went our way." Sophomore point guard Trey Burke, who was named the South Region's Most Outstanding Play- er, finished with 15 points, eight rebounds and seven assists, while turning the ball over only once. Stauskas and McGary, who reg- istered 11 points and nine boards, joined Burke on the region's All- Tournament team. The Wolverines will take on a fellow No. 4 seed in the Orange, renewing a coaching rivalry between Beilein and Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim that dates back to Beilein's days in the Big East. But preparation for that, Beilein said, is for another time. "I know we've got our work cut out for us, but I'm not going to worry about that until tomor- row or maybe the next day," Beilein said. TOP: The Michigan men's basketball team celebrates its victory Sunday and ascension to the NCAA Final Four. (Photo: TODD NEEDLE/Daily, Illustration: Daily Design Staff) BOTTOM: Teammates mob sophomore point guard Trey Burke Friday at Cowboys Stadium. (TODD NEEDLE/Daily) WEATHER 'Z HI: 40 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAItYCOM Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail Crowd greets men's basketball team at Crisler TOMORROW L LO: 25 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. 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