The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com March 31, 2014 - 3B Michigan a legacy years in the making INDIANAPOLIS - Legacies are supposed to be easy to pin down. A team's season was a disappointment, a fairytale, one to remember or anything but. But what is the legacy of this one, the 2013-14 Michigan men's basketball team - the one that entered the DANIEL year with WASSERMAN so much promise, only to fall flat in November and December before rolling off 10 straight wins en route to a runaway Big Ten Championship? Last season's team was supposed to be good, but its shocking run to No. 1, and six weeks later, to the national title game, stole our hearts because it was so unexpected. This year, for the first time since the Fab Five left Ann Arbor, a Final Four wasn't just a goal. "Last year, we just wanted to get there," said Glenn Robinson III. "We knew we could, but we just wanted to getthere. This year, we expected to be back in the same position and we expected to make it to the Final Four." Sunday night, they were close. But they fell short when Nik Stauskas' desperation heave caromed off the backboard to bring the Wolverines' season to an end. The season was a letdown - sort of. "I remember that day when we lost to Arizona," Stauskas said, his eyes still red and moist. "We were 6-4, and even Coach Beilein told us, he said, 'If we keep playing like this, we're not going to make the tournament.' 3-pointer away from a second Final Four in as many years. It was a disappointment and an accomplishment wrapped into one. But they'll be back. "The sun will come up tomorrow," said a smiling Michigan coach John Beilein. "I'll have a cup of coffee - it won't taste as good as it might've tasted, as it tasted for these last few games, but I'm really pleased with the direction of the program." So maybe that feeling is this team's legacy - one defined not by an isolated season, buta cemented program. Players come and then they go, and in the next two weeks, a few likely will. But the Michigan program is going nowhere but up. We'll probably never see another Jordan Morgan at Michigan under Beilein - a scholarship player who had to scrap and claw and work harder than everyone just to prove that he really didbelong. Ann Arbor is now a basketball destination - a place where Final Fours, and not just NCAA Tournament bids, like during Morgan's early years, are the expectation. "That's all it ever was, just get better every year," Morgan said, tears running down his face. There won'tbe a Final Four banner from this team, but if it taught us anything, it's that there will be another sometime soon. Daniel Wasserman can be reached at dwass@umich.edu or on Twitter @dwasserman TERESA MATHEW/Daily Michigan coach John Beilein has led the Wolverines to two straight Elite 8 appearances and will still drink his coffee tomorrow - albeit with a different taste. That was the day that everything turned around." It was also the last day that Mitch McGary played in a Michigan uniform, and when it was announced a few days later that he would likely miss the rest of the season, all bets were off. But just when it seemed like the wheels had come off, the team started to play like it was supposed to all along. It won. At Minnesota, in Madison, against Michigan State twice. "We won the Big Ten by three games. Who the hell would've thought that?" said sophomore guard Spike Albrecht. They did it as atE Sure, Stauskas was Player of the Year and one of the best scorers in the land, but he was also the team's best passer. It started at the top, though, with Jordan Morgan, the eam, too. the Big Ten school to his ability to defend bigger opponents in the final few games of his career. Like its "This year, we captain, the team, too, was expected to doubted until mak itt th the end. Picked make it to the by manyto 55 lest each Final Four." oeec FinalFour- of their last three games, the players embraced their one expected us tobe in this position, no one wanted us - I'll say wanted - no one wanted us to be here right now," Robinson said. "We had that target on our backs once again. We came out and used that to our advantage and played as hard as we could every single night. "People are going to remember this team for its hardworking guys that no one thought could do it." So, in a sense, they did it. Without McGary, without Trey Burke and Tim Hardaway Jr., they were 2.3 seconds and a perfectly defended fadeaway consummate underdog who was underdog role. doubted every step of the way "People are going to definitely - from his recruitment in high remember the fact that no WrroutWHAT THEY TWEETED: X Vverines' luck fnally runs MICHIGAN VS KENTUCKY By DANIEL FELDMAN Morgan out, the Wolverines Daily Sports Writer went, at times, with an option that they love to play, despite the INDIANAPOLIS - Michigan gamble involved in it. had been in these situations "I feel like as a team, if before this year. The endings, we had a choice, we would though, hadn't gone like this. play 1-3-1 (zone defense) 20 The Michigan men's minutes a game," Horford said. basketball team has been lucky "Regardless of foul trouble, the this season. According to team really likes playing 1-3-1. coach John Beilein, the team It's very high risk, but it's very has created its own luck and high reward as well." used such fortunes to come out When Michigan entered the victorious. style of defense with 13-plus Sunday, inside Lucas Oil minutes left in the game, the Stadium, that last-minute luck results were immediate. finally ran out. Of course, the A Horford block led to Wolverines wouldn't be in such a fast break, resulting in a a situation if it weren't for their dunk by sophomore forward own play to begin with. Glenn Robinson III. The next When fifth-year senior possession, a defensive play forward Jordan Morgan came by sophomore guard Caris to the bench with 19:35 left in LeVert led to a dunk by Horford the game with his third foul, in transition to push the Michigan Wolverines' could've lead to four folded. ir "There's nothing points. Losing the In the best interior we can do. JI middle of the defender and second half, arguably best thought Caris did without the defender in heart of its general, the all he could." defense on Wolverines the court, could've let Michigan the game get could've away from them quickly. allowed a few Kentucky runs to Instead, the team persevered. end its season. With redshirt sophomore Max But it didn't. Bielfeldt and redshirt junior "We just hung in there and forward Jon Horford playing hung in there and they got away the '5,' Michigan stuck around from us a little bit," Beilein said. until Morgan returned nearly 10 "That shows what these kids minutes later. have done all year long. When It didn't come easy, of course. things are going well, they were With Morgan out, Kentucky pretty good at playing through continued what it had done up it. And when people would make to that point - it drove to the a run on them, we're still good." basket, crashed the boards and That's whywhenthe Wildcats got baskets right at the hoop had the ball for the final off first shots or off second possession after a four-shot long opportunities. possession by Michigan, which The four-headed monster ended appropriately with a tip of Julius Randle, Dakari in by Morgan, the Wolverines Johnson, Marcus Lee and Alex felt the game would go to Poythress produced 42 points overtime. Kentucky would miss and 25 rebounds, including 15 a buzzer beater. The game and offensive ones. Michigan's run of luck in the Michigan couldn't fight final seconds of games wasn't fire with fire. It didn't have about to end. the ability and strength of But then it did. Kentucky's big men. It wasn't Even with LeVert draped going to work. That's why, with all over him, Aaron Harrison drained a 3-pointer from NBA range with 2.3 seconds left. "There's nothing we can do about that," Robinson said. "I thought Caris did all he could to contest that." In Beilein's eyes, the sequence was exactly what he wanted on defense. With Kentucky as good as any team at getting into the lane and the risk of taking a charge so high, Michigan played contain defense and held Harrison behind the arc. Beilein "would have been upset if someone got to the rim on us," but Harrison didn't. He rose up from deep and left enough time on the clock for sophomore guard Nik Stauskas to get a half-court shot off to save Michigan's season. And while the shot didn't fall and the Wolverines' late-game fortune and season came to an end, the team wouldn't have wanted it to conclude any other way. "If we have to go down," Robinson said, "this is the way to go." "What an unbelievable run this team had!" - Nik Stauskas "5 years of pure fun.... Thank you Michigan." -Jordan Morgan Nik Stauskas dominated the first half and finished with 24 points on Sunday. 70 percent Jordan Morgan'sfield goal percentage, best in programhistory 124.1 Adjusted offensive efficiency, best in the KenPom era. *Stats via @DrewCHallett, a very worthy Twitter follow. TERESA MATHEW/Daily Sophomore Spike Albrecht and Michigan's guards had to contend with the Wildcats' size advantage in the paint.