The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Sporta Tuesday, April 9, 2013 - 7 . TOP LEFT: Freshman guard Caris LeVert leaps to alter a Cardinal shot. TOP RIGHT: Freshman forward Mitch McGary tries to shoot over a Louisville defender. BOTTOM: Sophomore guard Trey Burke winces in agony during the second halfMonday, LouisVille picks apart Saying goodbye to Trey >IY, wins rebounding battle late in game By COLLEEN THOMAS two minutes to play. That lead, Daily SportsEditor thanks to Behanan's four offen- sive rebounds, proved too big for ATLANTA - What Michigan Michigan to overcome. finally figured out during its "It just came down to defense, NCAA Tournament run seemed we should've played better to disappear in the final 20 min- defense," said freshman for- utes of its season. ward Glenn Robinson II. "We The Wolverines held their had a stretch that we missed own against some of the best two or three shots in a row, college basketball players in which isn't good when you're the country - Nate Wolters, not getting stops. Jeff Withey, Michael Carter- "They stepped (the defense) Williams - but couldn't find an up second half - we kind of low- answer to Louisville's Chane ered it second half. We needed Behanan defensively in the to stay on the glass, they got National Championship game. more offensive rebounds, the Down by eight points with less game basically flipped." than three minutes to go in the - In the first half, though, it second half and looking to get looked like Michigan had Lou- some stops defensively, Michi- isville's number defensively, gan forced Cardinal guard shutting down most of the Car- Peyton Siva to take a less- dinals' shooters and dominat- than-ideal 3-pointer, which ing the boards. The Wolverines he missed. Behanan, outmus- outrebounded Louisville, 17-12, cling freshman forward Mitch at the half and tallied 13 of their McGary, grabbed the offensive 38 points off of seven offensive rebound, but missed. rebounds. Louisville got two more Behanan had just one tries until its forward, Gorgui rebound in the first half, but Dieng, committed a foul, send- found his rhythm in the second ing Michigan sophomore guard half in the paint. Often times, Trey Burke to the free-throw he'd find himself open down line. Though Burke cut the low, as McGary came up to play lead to six points at the charity help-side off of a pick-and-roll, stripe, 20 precious seconds had and could lay it in for an easy ticked off the clock due to sec- two points. ond- and third-chance posses- But it wasn't just Behanan left sions for the Cardinals. open under the basket. Siva kept And on Louisville's next pos- attacking Michigan's defense, session, Behanan did the exact driving to the lane and taking same thing, grabbing two of easy layups or finding an open his own misses before finally basket in transition en route making a layup to put Louis- to his 14 second-half points. In ville up by eight with less than total, Louisville tallied 34 of its 82 points in the paint, 22 of which came in the second stan- za. "I thought we could've done a better job hedging their ball screens so they couldn't split us easily and get to the rim," Rob- inson said. "I think that was the biggest thing. We might've stepped up and helped a little too much, giving them easy drop-offs and layups." But if the Cardinals missed on any of their offensive posses- sions, Behanan or Dieng were under the basket waiting for the rebound. Behanan had 11 rebounds, seven offensive, and 11 points in the second half to help Lou- isville completely dominate the boards. The Cardinals out- rebounded the Wolverines, 20-10, and had 22 points in the paint in the second stanza alone. For the game, Louisville had a 32-27 advantage on the boards and won the offensive rebounding battle, 15-8. Foul trouble didn't help the Wolver- ines, either. McGary picked up his fourth foul halfway through the second half, which he said made him play a bit tentatively against Louisville's big men in the paint. "They're relentless down there," said Michigan redshirt junior Jordan Morgan. "They had two or three guys going after the ball, they're going after it even after you get the rebound. They were able to get some put-backs, and that helped them take control of the game." ATLANTA - W ith six minutes left in Michigan's 82-76 loss to Louisville in the Nation- al Cham- pionship, Trey Burke launched himself off the ground and toward the back- EVERETT board, stretching COOK his arm as far up as it could possibly go, trying to stop the trajectory of Louisville guard Peyton Siva. It was a breakaway play in transition, one-on-one, point guard against point guard. Siva rose up with his right hand, cra- dling the ball, trying to slam it up and over Burke. Any other point guard either lets Siva go or goes to strip the ball in the air. Burke went to block it. Ninety seconds prior, the sophomore point guard had been lying facedown on the court, try- ing to recover after being fouled hard on a drive. He had been beaten up all game by the physi- cal Cardinal defense, and it was starting to take its toll. Burke got up and walked to the free-throw line, head down. Jor- dan Morgan caught him before he got to the stripe, telling Burke to lift his head. Morgan knew his point guard was hurting. The redshirt junior center told him, "Just keep fighting. Just six more minutes." Burke nodded, but missed the first free throw. He muttered somethingunder his breath, took a breath, stepped forward and made the second one. He was in pain. But in the open court against Siva, the 6-foot Burke got up higher than he had all season. Half of his forearm was above the rim, .where his hand met nothing but the ball. It was a clean rejection, a per- fect defensive play and a perfect snapshot of two leaders leaving everything on the line. Then, a whistle. Burke was called for the foul, and Siva made both his free throws. After the game, 11 players and coaches were asked if the play was clean. All 11 said it was, but all said it ultimately didn't affect the outcome. There were so many other plays that swung the game. All 11 praised the point guard for being able to even get there. "If there's one person who can't hang his head, it's Trey," said freshman guard Nik Staus- kas. "He's carried us all year long." There's a story that Michigan assistant coach LaVall Jordan likes to tell about Burke. Inthe first opengym of Burke's Michigan career in the sum- mer of 2011, Jordan approached Burke and asked him, "You like winning, don't you?" Burke, then 19, responded, "Coach, I win. That's what I do." Jordan knew that Burke had won the Ohio State Champion- ship as a sophomore in high school, so he laughed and nod- ded, trying to humor his young point guard. Dead serious, without a glint of humor, Burke looked up at Jordan, shook his head and said, "Coach, I win. That's what I do." That's not the interesting part. The interesting part is that Jordan believed Burke, the soon to be freshman who hadn't yet played in a collegiate game. Jordan could see the drive that earned Michigan a Big Ten title last year and brought it six points away from a national champion- ship this year. After two years, Ann Arbor has seen it, probably for the last time Monday. He almost left last year, but on April 9,2012, he said, "I felt like it was the best deci- sion for me to stay my sophomore year and compete for a national championship next year." After sweeping the four major National Player of the Year awards and getting the Wolver- ines to Atlanta, Burke accom- plished what he wanted to. For him, there's nothing left to accomplish at Michigan. It's almost a foregone conclusion he will play in the NBA next year. But on Monday, he was still a Wolverine, and he was still the best player in the country, still the player capable of making shots 30 feet from the basket. Every time it felt like the game was slipping away, there was Burke, willing Michigan back into it. He finished the contest with a game-high 24 points while'miss- ing just four shots and tallied six of i.iLigan's last 10 points. He couldn't, wouldn't let his team let it slip away. "He's a superhero. A mytho- logical figure," said senior cap- tain Josh Bartelstein. "I've never enjoyed playing with anybody so much. He's the best basketball player I've ever played with, and I've played with some good play- ers. That kid is going to have an unbelievable career in the NBA." It's not a one-man game, though. With 40 seconds left, Burke knew Michigan needed to foul, but also knewhe had four of his own. Manically, he tried waving freshman guard Caris LeVert - or anyone he could find - over to commit the infraction. Nobody else understood, and time kept ticking away. Burke's last two shot attempts fell short. At 1:42 a.m., a pocket of con- fetti fell from the rafters, the last of the celebration. The court was already being disassembled, the nets already cut down. The game, season and career was over. Trey Burke wins. That's what he does. On Monday, there was nothing more he could have done - he had nothing more to give. With the seconds ticking down, Siva walked over to Burke and gave him a hug, a nod of respect. He saw what Jordan saw, back before Burke came onto the national scene. Siva knew that there was no point guard in the country that could have made that play, because there was no point guard in the country like Trey Burke. -Cook can be reached SEE MORE PHOTOS ONLINE @THEBLOCKM I @MICHIGANDAILY MICHIGAN DAILY.COM FACEBOOK.COM/THEMICHIGANDAILY I