The redemption song ofJordan Morgan Breakdown: 'M' vs. Louisville ATLANTA - et's crunch this remark- able, ridiculous and insane season down into one moment. Let's condense it, split away the narratives and plays, and find the core and the heart of why this Michigan men's basketball team is playing for a national championship on Monday night. It comes in one of the auxil- iary locker rooms in the underbelly of r the Georgia Dome, away from the EVERETT court and COOK hidden from the cameras. Just like they do after every win, the Wolverines elect a play- er to lead them in "The Victors." It's selected by the players, not the coaches or anyone else. On Saturday, after Michigan's 61-56 win over Syracuse, the man leading the song played five minutes, didn't corral a single rebound and scored just three points. Seven other Wolverines scored more than he did, and he was the only player who saw action that didn't record a rebound. What Jordan Morgan did have was a pair of charges and a dunk that sent the Wolverines to their first National Champi- onship game since 1993. For a player who started 27 games this year, but played a combined total of one minute in the first two rounds of the NCAA Tourna- ment, it was a night of redemp- tion. With 19 seconds left and Michigan clinging to a two point lead, Morgan jumped from one side of the key to the other, throwing his body in the path of Syracuse guard Brandon Triche, who was barreling down the lane, trying to tie the game. The play sealed the win. After the game, the players said the charge would go down as the biggest offensive foul in the history of Michiganbasket- ball. The Wolverines have the National Player of the Year and more future NBA talent than almost any other team in the country, but take away the high- lights and the hype, and a charge - the actcof being voluntarily run over - was celebrated more than any other play. "That's the definition of our team, from a guy who was starting and was first team All- Defense, to not playing one min- ute - (Morgan) just stayed with it," said senior captain Josh Bar- telstein. "He knew he was going to get his moment, and when you get your chance, you make the most of it." Added redshirt sophomore Jon Horford: "I don't know if the fans understand that was the biggestcplay of the game." Eighteen seconds later, junior forward Tim Hardaway Jr. almost fell out of bounds trying to collect a rebound. The ball got to Morgan, who was around midcourt. He needed only one dribble before taking off, jam- ming Michigan's national title berth in with two hands. This is someone who didn't play a single minute in Michi- gan's win over Virginia Com- monwealth in the second round of the tournament. He was visibly frustrated after the game, visibly frustrated about havingto take a backseat to the emergence of freshman forward See MORGAN, Page 2B By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Editor In week 10 of the season, Michigan and Louisville were each ranked in the AP Poll's top three. Three weeks later, with the Wolverines positioned atop the polls, the Cardinals had fall- en all the way to No. 12. By time the NCAA Tourna- ment kicked off two months later, those roles were flipped, with Louisville as the bracket's top overall seed and Michigan as a No. 4 seed, falling somewhere in the No. 13-16 range. None of that matters anymore, as the Wolver- ines and Cardinals, the nation's last two teams standing, will bat- tle it out on Monday night for the National Championship. The Daily breaks down Mon- day's matchups. Point guard: Perhaps the only point guard that has a real advan- tage over sophomore Trey Burke, Aaron Craft, willbe watching the title game in Columbus, nearly 600 miles from Atlanta. But with that being said, Louisville's Pey- ton Siva is no slouch. The senior is making his sec- ond career Final Four appear- ance, and despite sometimes erratic decision making, he's paced the Cardinals through a grinding Big East season, leading them to conference regular sea- son and tournament crowns. Burke, on the other hand, displayed consistency like no player anywhere in the country on his way to being a consensus National Player of the Year recip- ient. But in the tournament, he's looked less than stellar at times. See BREAKDOWN, Page 3B TERESAMATHEW/Daily WINTER CLASSIC IN A2 The NHL lockout stalled plans for a year, but Detroit and Toronto will face off at the Big House on Jan. 1, 2014. Page 4B FRESH OFF THE BENCH Freshmen Caris LeVert and Spike Albrecht carried Michigan through a rough first half Saturday. Page 3B