2B - March 10, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Nine Michigan facts we know to be true This is all new and a little overwhelming. All you know as true is no longer true. Michigan is a ... basketball school? These are heady times for Michigan. A bit confusing, ZACH too. The HELFAND Michigan men's basketball team has won the Big Ten title with surprising ease. The football and hockey teams seem, respectively, overpowered and inconsistent. No one is quite sure how to act. To help you navigate this strange, new basketball world, here is a revised list of truths for the Michigan sports fan. This is what we know to be right. This is what you can believe in. 1. The underclassman is king. Nik Stauskas climbed the ladder to cut down his portion of the net. The Crisler Center cheered just a little louder than for anyone else. This was Senior Day for Jordan Morgan, but it was likely Stauskas' farewell game too. He held up the net and waved to the crowd. By now, the panic is familiar. Each April, the same questions appear, just with different names. Will Manny Harris stay? (No.) Darius Morris? (No.) Trey Burke? (Yes. Then no.) Glenn Robinson III? Mitch McGary? Stauskas? Rather quickly, Michigan has become dependent on its youngest players. This is a good problem to have. But for the foreseeable future, Michigan will only go as far as its underclassmen take it. Believe in the underclassmen. You don't really have any other choice. 2. Glenn Robinson III is better than you think. But cut Michigan fans a break on this one because they're new to this basketball thing. Most players are not Burke or Stauskas or Caris LeVert. Most develop slowly and unpredictably. Most are like Robinson. Believe in him, and he may reward that belief with important 3-pointers from the corner. 3. November is meaningless. This one should be easy to remember: Michigan basketball in November is about as meaningful as Michigan football in November has been. (Read: not much.) Sure, the early part of the season reveals a little about a team. But try to reserve judgment and panic until New Years to avoid ridicule later. Consider: Michigan State probably should've lost to Columbia. North Carolina lost to Belmont. Michigan lost to Charlotte. The Wolverines have rebounded admirably from that most grave of setbacks. They somehow clawed back from the adversity of early losses to Iowa State, Duke and Arizona. Believe in March. Believe in April. Beware of the false prophets of November. 4. The 1-3-1 zone is applicable in all situations. The power of the 1-3-1 zone is boundless. The zone hypnotizes opposing offenses. It bewildered Indiana Saturday, creating 12 second- half turnovers and powering Michigan's win. Beilein has been shy to use the 1-3-1 because, he says, he's afraid of surrendering easy 3-pointers. That's logical. But teams don't have much time to prepare for the zone, and it almost always succeeds in slowing down a hot offense, at least for a few possessions. Beilein has learned to use it more, and so can you. Put it down when you're stumped on your next Stats exam. With four friends, use it to mystify the bouncers at Rick's and cut the long line. When driving the caravan to the Big Ten Tournament, put three people in the middle row and one in the back. The 1-3-1 is good and just. Believe in the 1-3-1. 5. Beilein knows what he's doing. When in doubt, reread No. 3. Then No. 4. 6. Spike Albrecht has never actually committed a blocking foul. Well, sure he has. He probably committed multiple against Indiana. But he scored 17 points in the freaking National Championship Game, so when he gets whistled for three blocking fouls in15 minutes of play against the Hoosiers, you're outraged with the calls. Believe in Spike Abrecht. Believe in the charge. 7. Nik Stauskasjumper. Believe in the jumper (because you probably don't have much time left). 8. Caris LeVert has a plan. LeVert is shifty, but not in the way other players are shifty. On Saturday, Yogi Ferrell bounced and bounded past Sophomore forward Nik Stauskas may have played his final game at the Crisler Center and cut down the nets Saturday. defenders. Ferrell was shifty. Ferrell was smooth. Trey Burke could change speeds and control the tempo of a game. He glided through the lane. Burke was shifty. Burke was smooth. LeVert is not smooth. LeVert is shifty - like a kid learning to drive a manual transmission is shifty. He lurches and stops and then accelerates much faster than anticipated. And then the ball goes in. Nothing wrong with that. Believe in LeVert. 9. Championships feel like this. There's confetti on the ground at the Crisler Center, and the place is still mostly full. Charles Woodson is posing for photos with the team. The rim is bare, because Beilein is holding the net above his head. Atop a ladder, he waves it and, to no one in particular, says, "Thank you, thank you, thank you." Then he climbs down and smirks and looks out to a full crowd to tell a story. "Kathleen just reminded me," he says, referring to his wife. "When we came here seven years ago, there was about three or four thousand people at our first game. My son, Andy, said to me, 'Tell me again why we came to Michigan?"' Nearby, Stauskas is searching for his maize and blue Canadian flag. Jordan Morgan, in tears at his farewell hours earlier, smiles big. Moments ago, Tom Crean walked, briskly and alone, through the tunnel, scowling so severely that his lower lip nearly touched his nose, as if he were trying to swallow his own head. Now, Derrick Walton Jr. and Zak Irvin hold up the trophy: Michigan is the outright Big Ten Champions for the first time in almost three decades. "Tonight showed why people come to Michigan," Beilein says. Believe it. Helfand can be reached at zhelfand@umich.edu and on Twitter @zhelfand. Morgan, Wolverines end home slate with win By NEAL ROTHSCH Daily Sports Editor Jordan Morgan had special history with India Assembly Hall Bloomington is the o Ten venue where the INDIANA fifth-year MICHIGA senior hadn't won a game. Eve the Hoosiers kept M from a Big Ten title l on the final game of the season in dramatic fashi To make it personal, Morgan's missed tip-in buzzer that was respons the devastating ILD Ten Championship this season, this game meant something, and it showed as Michigan put I some together a strong second half to sna. win on Senior Day, 84-80. in The team celebrated after the nly Big game by cutting down the nets on the south goal as confetti tO fell, taking pictures with the N 84 trophy and posing with Charles Woodson. n more, "I can't say enough about ichigan (Morgan)," said Michigan coach ast year John Beilein. "His willpowerover regular his five years, it came to fruition on. today. And our team, it was sort it was of like that the whole game. Not at the many things went well for us. sible for At the beginning, the ball was bouncing their way, they were making great has been an plays. "All of a aZing year so sudden, we just ar ofa stuck in there, 'ar. So far." just like Jordan has over his five years." Fittingly, gan was it was Morgan leading the way. to ease Fresh off shedding tears minutes before tip-off as the Crisler Center t the crowd saluted him with a rousing s had ovation, Morgan promptly scored ight Big the Wolverines' first six points and went on to have one of his best games as a Wolverine. "It was fun to start the game out like that," Morgan said. "I did my best to just keep the emotions separate, keep that whole walking thing kind of short and just move right on so I didn't spend too much time reminiscing and gettingall soft." The pregame waterworks were nothing, however, compared to his emotions earlier in the week. "It was worse before that," Morgan said. "That was pretty calm compared to (a Big Ten Network) interview." He'd continue to plague the Hoosiers (7-11 Big Ten, 17-14 overall) throughout the evening, tying a season-high 15 points on 88-percent shooting with 10 rebounds to record his first double-double of the season. The restof the teamwas shaky, on defense at least, in the first half as Indiana opened up a double- digit lead and went into halftime up 42-36. Michigan's offense was sound and took care of the ball, but the Hoosiers hit their first eight attempts and shot 60 percent for the half. Tensions hit a boiling point in the final minutes of the half when, after a series of non-calls, Beilein loss on Senior Day last year. The game marked the start of Morgan's collapse in playing time, as Mitch McGary "It am4 f Jordan Morgan, Michigan's lone senior, played a game to remember in the Wolverines' win over Indiana Saturday night. played most of the postseason, and Mori left to watch Space Jam his mood. Never mind tha 12th-ranked Wolverine already locked up the outr harangued officials enough to earn a technical foul - an oddity for the normally stoic coach. The Wolverines, however, led by Morgan, wasted little time reversing course after the break. The center blocked a shot by Hoosier guard Stanford Robinson and led the transition in the opposite direction, culminatingi made free throws by sophomor forward Glenn Robinson III. Michigan (15-3, 23-7) woul string together a 13-2 rui within five minutes of the star of the half, and Indiana wa out of answers. It was then th Wolverines' turn to push the lea The University of Michigan's Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health & Society Scholars Program present Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Populati'on Health: Past, Present & Future Featuring more than 20 international experts reflecting critically on the meaning of population health, its accomplishments over the past 10 years, and challenges and opportunities. SPEAKERS INCLSBE: n into double digits. e Then Robinson drained a 3-pointer from the corner to give d Michigan a decisive edge. n "I practiced that shot so many t times," Robinson said on the court s after the game, blue and maize e ticker tape by his feet. "It feltgreat d coming out of my hands." Beilein echoed Robinson verbatim. He knew it was a shot Robinson practiced all the time, and he knew it was good as soon as it was released. Morgan may have received all of the adoration from the fans and on the video board, but it was Robinson who scored 20 points, and sophomore guard Nik Stauskas who led the team with 21 points. As sophomore point guard Spike Albrecht hit a pair of free throws with 20 seconds left to help ice the game, Morgan stood at the opposite end of the court and threw a fist pump high into the air. It took five years, but he had gotten the best of Indiana. "It was fun," Morgan said. "It was just a lot of fun to be out there playing, playing well. I love playing with these guys, some of the best teammates. It has been an amazing year, so far. So far." Paula Sveman George Davey Smith George Kaplan Paula Lantz Johan Mackenbach J. Michael McGinnis, 0avid W.Wiliams University of Calitirnis, Untsy of Brist l University of Michigan George Washington Erasmus University Institute of Medicine of Harvard University San Francisco UK University Medical Center the National Academies Netherlands COMPLETE INFORMATION+REGISTER: 2014PopulationHealth.us of