4B - April 22, 2013 1) rt>Nd The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com A breath of relief as Blue wins first game ADAM GLANZMAN/Daily Freshman forward Mitch McGary, who announced his return to Michigan Thursday, will be a key piece for the Wolverines. ProjectingTeam97 By LEV FACHER Freshmen midfielders Mike Daily Sports Writer Hernandez and Brad Lott scored within six seconds of one another Normally, it takes decades for midway through the first quar- a team to double its all-time win ter, giving Michigan an early total. Saturday afternoon, the 2-0 lead. Hernandez' score came Michigan lacrosse team did it in with 6:39 left in the period, and less than three hours. Lott's first career goal with 6:33 The Wolverines (0-6 ECAC, remaining, directly off of the 1-12 overall) defeated non-con- ensuing faceoff. ference ST. JOSEPH'S 8 Despite the hot start, the oppo- . MICHIGAN 11 Wolverines couldn't keep the nent St. momentum on their side for Joseph's, 11-8, earning their first longer than a minute in the first win of the season and the second half. The Hawks countered with in the two-year history of the a goal of their own just 34 sec- program. onds after Lott's tally, and when On senior day at Michigan Sta- Paras scored an unassisted goal dium, senior midfielder Thomas with less than two minutes in Paras scored three goals and the first quarter, the subsequent recorded two assists for the St. Joseph's goal came within 40 Wolverines. His skip shot from seconds once again. the left side with 10:49 remain- With 6:10 left in the second, ing in the game gave Michigan a sophomore attacker Will Meter three-goal advantage and all but took a crisp pass from Jackson, cemented its first-ever home win. moving left to right, and scored Freshman forward Kyle Jack- from 10 yards inside the "B" of son added two scores and two the Big Ten logo that rests near assists of his own, upping his goal the northeast 25-yard line of total to 17. Michigan Stadium. "It obviously felt great to get Even after out-shooting the that monkey off our back," Jack- Hawks 25-15 in the first half, son said. "We got off to a quick Michigan trailed 6-5 at halftime start, and we couldn't have asked - the one-goal difference was for a better result." the smallest halftime deficit the Added Michigan coach John previously-winless Wolverines Paul: "One of the great things had faced this season. about this team is that all year Michigan erased the margin they really haven't gotten down. early in the third quarter, thanks ... They're going to stick their to another brilliant goal from chest out a little bit more now." Meter. With 12:48 remaining in Weather conditions inside the the period, he evaded St. Joseph's Big House seemed more fitting defenseman Steve Dunn, sneak- for a contest on the gridiron in ing in towards the right side late November than for a lacrosse of the crease for an unassisted game in late April. But the most- backhand goal that tied thegame ly empty stands, temperatures at six. that dipped into the high 30s The Wolverines traded goals and snow flurries didn't stop the with the Hawks throughout the Wolverines from being energetic third quarter. Jackson's score from start to finish, refusing to midway through the period came let their last opportunity for a off an assist from Paras and left the fourth. In the final quarter, though, the home team took over. Paras opened up the scoring just 49 seconds in with a sidearm strike from the rightside, giving Michi- gan a 9-8 lead. Paras then assisted on Jack- son'sgoallessthanaminutelater, which came from eight yards to the right of the goal, nearly even with the crease, and gave the Wolverines a two-goal lead. The unfamiliar position of being in control late in the game didn't faze Michigan, though. Paras was unstoppable, complet- ing his hat trick - the last goal of the contest - with more than 10 minutes remaining. "We've been close a lot this year," Paul said. "It's good to go into the end of the season with the guys understanding that this is what it looks like when you put a complete game together." Freshman goalkeeper Ger- ald Logan recorded 15 saves and was particularly impressive in the fourth quarter, turning aside eightshots.Astopthatcamewith four minutes remainingencapsu- lated the Wolverines' momentum perfectly - a St. Joseph's laser bounced off of Logan's chest, an unexpected save, and was even- tually controlled by Michigan. The Wolverines had to be restrained by their coachingstaff in the game's final 30 seconds - the euphoric players repeatedly spilled onto the field from the sidelines, finally rushing toward Logan and mobbing one another in the south end zone, victors for the first time since March 4, 2012. "It feels good any way you put it," Paras said. "When the game was close, we kept reiterating to the guys that we wanted to go out and get that first win in the Big By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Editor Since the day Trey Burke decid- ed to return to Ann Arbor for his sophomore season, the 2012-13 Michigan men's basketball team was expected to contend for a Final Four. It didn't disappoint, either, remaining in the nation's top 10 for the entire season and eventually reaching its goal in Atlanta. Though Burke and junior guard Tim Hardaway Jr. have since departed in favor of the NBA Draft, freshmen forwards Mitch McGary and Glenn Robinson III chose to follow Burke's lead and stay for their sophomore seasons. Their decisions, along with anoth- er top-flight recruiting class, posi- tion the Wolverines for another Big Ten title and Final Four hunt. Despite the departure of Burke and Hardaway, Michigan essentially returns four start- ers - McGary started each game in the NCAA Tournament, while redshirt junior forward Jordan Morgan started nearly the entire regular season after holding the starting post spot throughout the previous two seasons. The Daily broke down the Wol- verines' upcoming roster, position by position: Point guard: When Burke picked up two quick fouls in the championship game against Lou- isville, freshman Spike Albrecht filled in more than admirably, net- ting 17 points on 4-of-4 shooting from 3-point range. In the second half, everyone was reminded of the Albrecht we saw - or didn't see - for much of the season, the one who hit just four 3-pointers in his 18 appearances during confer- ence play. Albrecht should see a rise in minutes from his 8.1 minutes per game average last season, and as he showed in the Final Four, his shooting touch gives him the capability to score in bunches, but he'll likely play in another reserve role. Albrecht will probably be the starting point guard when the Wolverines open their season in November, but like Matt Vogrich this year, he'll likely accept a diminished role in favor of incom- ing freshman Derrick Walton Jr. as the non-conference slate pro- gresses. Walton, a Detroit native, is the nation's No. 37 recruit - good for the eighth-best point guard - according to Rivals.com, which tabbed Michigan's incom- ing class at No. 12, second in the Big Ten behind Indiana. Walton, like Burke, is undersized - each stands at 6-feet tall -but is lauded for his passing and shooting abili- ties. His defense remains a ques- tion mark, but on offense, he's consistently been tabbed as a "true point guard" who could flourish in a Wolverine offense loaded with a wealth ofscoring options. Bottom line: No matter how well Walton or Albrecht play, this position will be a downgrade from the consensus National Player of the Year, who played more than 35 minutes per game. Inexperience could hamper Walton early on, but when given time to jelliwith all of his surrounding talent, Walton should be able to facilitate another dangerously talented Michigan offense. Wing: Hardaway's offensive production can be replaced, but can his defense? After being a defensive liability for most of his first two seasons, Hardaway turned into one of the Wolverines' most reliable perimeter defenders, often guarding the opposition's top outside threat. Michigan coaches have already said they're planning on employ- ing more lineups with two big men on the floor at the same time, which would allow Robinson to play at his natural position, small forward, rather than the under- sized power forward role he played for most of his freshman season. Given the circumstances, Robinson's play was respectable, but against bigger teams, he was abused defensively and disap- peared on the offensive end. At the small forward position, Rob- inson could terrorize opposing teams with his flexibility to play on the perimeter or post up small- er defenders, while his ability to find space in transition is as good as anyone in the country. Freshman guard Nik Stauskas isn't the porous defender he was at the start of the conference season, but he'll still benefit greatly from another offseason of strength and conditioning, as well as coaching. Combined with Robinson on the wing, the Wolverines are already looking at a formidable one-two punch, but perhaps the team's top wingman next season, incoming freshman Zak Irvin, hasn't even graduated high school. The five-star product, Indiana's 2012-13 Mr. Basketball, is Rivals. tom's No. 24 prospect. At 6-foot- 6, his measurables are similar to Hardaway, but he possesses greater ball-handling skills and an impressive knack for gettingto the basket or creating his own shot, which is solid. With so much top-heavy talent, it's easy to forget freshman guard Caris LeVert, who wasn't even a Wolverine commitment at this time last year. LeVert's 6-foot-5 frame was so scrawny that coach- es quickly decided to redshirt him, but they quickly changed their course when his play in prac- tice was too good to keep off the floor. LeVert is a superb perim- eter defender who has flashed an ability to shoot and rebound. His body should benefit tremendously from a full offseason in a colle- giate strength and conditioning program. Bottom line: Hardaway took the basketball program to a new level, but Michigan has a wealth of riches on the wing that might make forgetting Hardaway easy by the middle of next season. The top-four contributors here can score in a variety of ways, both in transition and in half-court sets, and despite the loss of Hardaway, should even provide an upgrade on the defensive end with Robin- son playing at small forward. Post: While Michigan will certainly miss Burke, McGary's departure could've rivaled Burke's in terms of setting the program back. With the freshman in Ann Arbor for another season, the Wolverines have their entire frontcourt back, which should set fear into opposing coaches. McGary averaged 6.2 points and 5.1 rebounds in under 20 minutes per game during confer- ence play last season, mostly off the bench, but took the nation by storm after a promotion into the starting lineup to kick off the NCAA Tournament. In over 30 minutes per game, he averaged a double-double, dominating some of the country's best post men, including Kansas' Jeff Withey. McGary was admittedly out of shape and wasn't eating right until the middle of the season and should build upon a better conditioning and eating regimen with another college offseason program. In the tournament, he reminded everyone why he was once ranked as the nation's No. 2 recruit, and he should only get better next year. But the frontcourt doesn't end with McGary. Earlier this week, Michigan coach John Beilein indicated that he'd use two big men on the floor at the same time for at least significant portions of games, something he has done very little of during his tenure in Ann Arbor. The days of the Wol- verines getting absolutely abused in the post ended this past season, but Michigan still struggled with post-orientedteams like Michigan State. That should change in the upcomingyear. Morgan is a three-year starter but never seemed to fully recover from a midseason ankle injury. A healthy Morgan - one of the conference's top low-post defend- ers - alongside a still-developing Jon Horford, gives the Wolverines three solid post players. Incom- ing forward Mark Donnal, who fell just outside the nation's top- 100 prospects, could challenge for playtime, and redshirt fresh- man Max Bielfeldt can provide a reliable few minutes per game if needed, as well. Bottom line: McGary flashed All-American potential in the NCAA Tournament, and assum- ing he doesn't regress, Michigan should actually be able to consis- tently outmuscle Big Ten teams in the post - something it hasn't been able to do in years. While the Wolverines won't always employ a two-post man lineup, they'll cer- tainly have the option to. So what does this all mean? Burke had the talent to win games all by himself, and he did so count- less times. While he'll be missed, Michigan will have a combination of talent and depth it hasn't had since at least the Fab Five years. Beilein has proven his wizardry time and time again when it comes to adjusting his system to his line- up, and that could shine through this year like never before. The Wolverines have so many offen- sive options - playing two bigs, going small, pushing the pace, playing in the half court - that their offense shouldn't skip a beat once Walton gains some experi- ence. Defense will again be the ques- tion mark, but with the ability to play two men in the post, oppos- ing teams won't be able to exploit a weakness down low like they could in years past. Michigan will be an even younger team than last year's, which was one of the nation's youngest. But if Irvin and Walton can adjust to the college game - and they should - the Wolverines are poised for another Big Ten title hunt and a top-10 finish. 0 1