20'- March 24, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaify.com There's a new normal in Ann Arbor hance The Rapper stood onstage ina No. 10 Michigan basketball jersey, the word "Chance" written where freshman EVERETT point guard COOK Derrick Walton's name usually is. It was Saturday night at Hill Auditorium and the young rapper from Chicago was in between songs and his signature high-pitched laughs. . He strolled up to the mic stand and said, "I was watching your game earlier. Congrats on the win." The Wolverines had just defeated Texas, 79-65, for a game that vaulted them into the Sweet 16 for the second straight year. 'That announcement got applause and cheers, but the sound didn't come close to replicatingthe noise that came from the crowd after the next thing he said. "Y'all got a few more wins left, though." It was a statement, declarative more than wishful. Because, well, why not? This team lost its three best players from last year's Final Four squad. This team is succeeding with a true freshman running the show at point guard, despite the fact that Walton is averaging less than three assists per game. This team is relying ni potential NBA lottery pick Glenn Robinson III to regain his confidence and figure out his offensive role, even though the kid goes from inert to aggressive to inert again quicker than a bad burrito. But why would people expect Michigan get back to the Final Four this year? I can't handle losing. I can't handle ateam underachieving, that's the most disappointing part. And this team definitely underachieved." We're here now, in the new normal of Michigan hockey, where postseason wins are scarce and a 74-year old head coach is losing like nobody could have predicted. The Michigan football team is somewhere in the middle. Last season was the worst in recent memory, but there's a new offensive coordinator. The offensive line had more holes than a paper plate after steak night, but Michigan is considering trying to sign former Alabama offensive lineman Chad Lindsay. The defense was inconsistent at best, but prized recruit Jabrill Peppers should have a hand in fixing that. So on and so on. Last week, after fifth-year senior quarterback Devin Gardner tried convincing reporters that the Wolverines are considering a true freshman for their starting quarterback job, someone asked him if Michigan was now a basketball school. Gardner chuckled and said, "This is a football school. This is Michigan - you know that." He might be right. He might not be. But the fact he even had to answer the question means there is a new normal in Ann Arbor, where excitement about spring football practice is minimal, the hockey team is sitting at home and the basketball team is making a habit of dancing late into March. cook can be reached at evcookgumich.edu or on Twitter @everettcook r MICHbLASW ILLIA M S/Naily Chance The Rapper pertormed at Hill Auditorium wearine a Michigan basketball No. 10 jersey, evidence of a changing of the guard is Wolverine sports, writes Cask. The answer is because this is the new normal in Ann Arbor: a basketball team that contends on a national stage every year, run by a coach, John Beilein, who thrives in situations where he is expected to fail. In a loaded Big Ten conference, without Trey Burke, Tim Hardaway Jr., Mitch McGary or a consistent Robinson, Beilein went out and led the Wolverines to an outright Big Ten title for the first time in almost 30 years. So on Saturday, when the Longhorns were supposed to give Michigan issues with their size, fifth-year senior center Jordan Morgan went out and had the best offensive game of his career. He scored 15 points and grabbed 10 rebounds against a center who had two inches and 40 pounds on him. Red Berenson sat in the With this team, and with plush, blue chair he always Beilein, matchups don't matter sits in, facing reporters after a anywhere except for on paper. first-round loss in the inaugural After the game, Beilein said Big Ten Hockey Tournament to reporters, "I just love the to Penn State on Thursday. fact that we have the program The Michigan hockey team where I dreamt Michigan could spent 22 straight years in the be when we came here." NCAA Tournament before last We're here season, long now, in the enough for a new normal recent college of Michigan W e're here now, in graduate to basketball, live in a world where the new normal. where the postseason Wolverines wins are had never expected and been left out of a 61-year old head coach is living postseason hockey. a dream only he could have That streak ended last year, predicted. as all streaks do. Michigan had a chance to return this *** season with one win against the Nittany Lions, a first-year varsity program, but failed even though freshman goalie Zach Nagelvoort had 63 saves. In almost 93 minutes of double- overtime game action, the Wolverines could manage only one goal against ateam that gave up close to four per game in the regular season. The 2-1loss started a new streak, and sent Michigan back to Ann Arbor, back to the new normal. Since losing in the national championship game four seasons ago, the Wolverines have yet to win an NCAA Tournament game. The seniors of next year's team have never won a game in the Dance. In that chair on Sunday, Berenson told reporters, "I'm getting closer (to retirement). Smug Morgan re senior stop Texas big mei Michigan rolls Sweet 16 By DANIEL WASSER Daily Sports Editor MILWAUKEE - A lit than 30 minutes after down his final rebound day to complete a double a -eporter began to ask Morgan something abou doubted a little bit." "A little bit?" Morg: interruptingthe questio hearty chuckle. He was back in th locker room where, a day he took question afterq about how the Michiga basketball team, but spe he, was going to stop th 9; 285-pound Texas, Cameron Ridley. Twenty-four hours smug Morgan was g while answering qt rot only about howl down Ridley to the tun points on 2-of-5 shoot also about his 15 points rebounds - both season "We spent two who hearing about how hard it was going to be "JO to stop those guys in the is post," Morgan said. "That's IS the fun part. .h Just proving th everybody wrong. "You see teams like this, you hear stuff and you just go of and show them ... wha been doing all year." The two-day prepara the Longhorns had M coach John Beilein about how his und frontline would be able t Texas - one of the biggest frontcourts.I and his backup, redshir forward Jon Horford, ha struggled with foul trou .The Longhorns avera s than 26 foul shots per game - just a few less than the nation's 1 as leader - a testament to the high into number of shooting fouls they draw, despite not being in the country's top 50 in fouls drawn. "We were very concerned tMAN about how we were going to ,r stop (Ridley), but (Morgan) kept telling me, 'Coach, I got it. I got tle more it,"' Beilein said. "I was worried pulling about foul trouble and we said, d of the 'Max, you've got to be ready,' -double, 'Jon, you've got to be ready.' And Jordan Jordan handled it all by himself t "being beautifully." Did he ever. an said, Morgan handled Ridley's n with a load while hardly taking a break; his 35 minutes on e same Saturday matched a career yearlier, high. In that game, in February question of his 2011 sophomore season, n men's the Wolverines upset No. 6 Ohio cifically State while Morgan held All- e 6-foot- American Jared Sullinger to forward 6-of-14 shooting. . It was that lead-in to that later, a game, specifically Morgan's rinning eagerness to carry the load and uestions quell so many doubters, that he shut reminded Michigan assistant e of six coach Bacari Alexander so ing, but much of Morgan's focus before ,and 10 the Texas game. highs. "I kind of chuckled a little le days bit because he was frowning at some of the dining- )rdan Morgan room staff at the hotel on the 'This and I was like, 'Jordan, It' tour and I what's . going on?' " nk he feels it." Alexander said. "He was like, 'I'm just thinking all that about Ridley.' To that end, ut there Jordan is the type of guy who's t we've wired to try to rise to the occasion. tion for "It was extremely personal." lichigan Morgan agreed. fretting "I was excited for this one," lersized he said. "Everyone's like, o handle 'Oh, he's only 6-(foot)-8, 240 nation's (pounds). How is he going to Morgan hold his own?' Just showing I junior everybody - I ain't got a lot of ve each body fat on me. There's been a ble. lot of weights lifted over these ge more last five years and I'm not about sponds to doubts VICTORS From Page lB start time Saturday t' ready. It's a scenario that th the spotlight onthe coa When there's a week to for a game, each staff h. fleshed out the major co - it's up to the players t execute. In one day, you few things to key in on and express the message. According h to assistant t coach Bacari o Alexander, the coaching staff emphasized r three things leading up to the game: neutralizing Texas on the glass, cont penetration off the driv playing post defense. The Longhorns had t advantage rebounding Saturday, but Michigan job in the other areas. T guards had to rely on th shot to score, and 285-p load Cameron Ridley w to six points on five sho post. "We're pretty confide the fact that we have su deep level of content in how we play, our play li changing defensive sch that it puts us at a comp advantage," Alexander of course, after thisc there was more deflecti Beilein. Seven hundred number, even he admitt He's one of six coachesi country to reach that nt "It means you've bee coaching a long time," B said. "It means you've g of losses, too." o get rusts ches. prepare as )ncepts o pick a e und He said that the Sweet 16 seemed like such a long shot in his early days of coaching that he'd retire when he finally got there. He didn't retire when he did it with West Virginia, so there was more toiling and more redirectingpraise. "His leadership style, he chooses to operate in obscurity," Alexander said. "He understands the cumulative effect of what a program represents." erstands Fifth-year senior Jordan Morgan battled for a double-double against Texas. e cumulative the job ffeCt of what Mcia' coaches did in a program the one-day prep to the represents." one-day jobs they did in the Tournament last year. Before the rolling VCU game, all the talk was of the e and full-court press - The Havoc - that was goingto befuddle he Michigan's small guards. Result? Michigan 78, Rams 53. did its A week later, the next time 'exas Michigan had a day to get ie jump ready, there was discussion 'ound how the team had yet to as held face a defense as athletic as ts in the Florida's. Result? Michigan 79, Gators ent in 59. ch a Maybe there couldn't have terms of been a more fitting way for st, our Beilein to get No. 700 - the emes, type of game that highlights 'etitive the brains behind the scenes. said. The type of game in which Beilein could flex his cerebral muscle. And then after the game, he one, could flex his pipes. on from "I think it's awfully poetic," is a big Alexander said. "To get 700 :ed it. wins in any sport, it's sweet in the Especially when it leads to the umber. Sweet 16." !n teilein Rothschild can be reached ot a lot at nealroth@umich.edu or on Twitter @nrothschild3 to just roll over." Michigan's perimeter offense will certainly garner the majority of the offensive headlines, as its 14 3-pointers were an NCAA Tournament school record. But Morgan's efficiency in the paint (4-of- 7 shooting) and at the line (7-of-8) gave the Wolverines a healthy inside-out presence not all that different than the one Texas was supposed to threaten Michigan with. But at the end of the day, it was Morgan's defensive effort that stands out most. With little production down low, Texas never really got going, shooting just 37.1 percent from the field. "(Ridley) really likes to play bully ball and push people in the paint," Morgan said. "I didn't move." It has been a longtime coming for the fifth-year senior, atctimes one of the faces of the program and at others, like throughout last year's NCAA Tournament run, an emergency reserve used sparingly. A year ago, when Michigan was in the same round against VCU, "he couldn't have been lower in his life," Beilein recalled of the game where Morgan didn't play a single minute. Now, though, few teams in the country are playing as well as the Wolverines and it's Morgan at the helm, navigating the Sweet 16 team headed to Indianapolis. "It kind of makes me think about Michael Jackson's last concert tour - it was called the 'This Is It' tour," Alexander said. "Jordan Morgan is on his own 'This Is It' tour and I think he feels it every time he steps on the floor - those are the most important 40 minutes of his life." We cover all 27 sports Check MichiganDaily.com throughout the week for more HOW IS YOUR WNIT BRACKET LOOKING? @theblockm