4B - Monday, February 24, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Four games to go, but the hard work is done It was a matchup between the two best teams in the Big Ten, the ones perched atop the standings. Michigan and Michigan State were ahead of the rest of the pack, and this was the teams' last scheduled matchup of the year. If t didn't know better, I might say that this game would determine the Big Ten champion. The NEAL Wolverines ROTHSCHILD wouldn't have any tough games after this one, and the Spartans would continue to get their injured players back and in rhythm. Luckily for Michigan, itngot the grand prize - a season sweep and a Big Ten title. But not quite in the eyes of the team. "We know we've got four big games left, so it's definitely going to be tough," said sophomore guard Nik Stauskas, Even against Purdue, Minnesota, Illinois and Indiana? "To be honest, we try to treat every game that way, every game like a Big Ten Championship," said fifth-year senior forward Jordan Morgan. But wasn't this game even more for a Big Ten Championship? "We have four games to play," said Michigan coach John Beilein. "What it does do right now is put us in position to be in position. That's all it does." Fine. There arefour games left, but this was a signature win for a program that hasn't stopped stockpiling signature wins over the last four years. It was a game against Michigan's toughest rival in the most important game of the season. Yes, there are four games left, but because of this one, Michigan only needs to win three of the last four to win a share of the title, and if Michigan State loses again, for an outright title. All of the circled games on Michigan's schedule have come and gone. The tough part is over. The remaining games on the calendar are against teams in the bottom half of the Big Ten with the road contests coming against the conference's No. 9 and No. 11 squads. On Sunday, the Wolverines landed the big fish. At least one of the Wolverines' players felt that top player, and it's even harder way. to maintain that form once "We didn't talk a lot about you've become a marked man. the Big Ten Championship at For the last three weeks, the beginning Stauskas has of the been hounded (game)," said by opposing sophomore "It says that we're teams. forward Glenn b i Whatever Robinson back. Michigan's defensive III before back in so many weapons conceding that Indiana, he brought it ways. Nebraska, up late in the Iowa, Ohio contest. "But State and I said,'We're Wisconsin playing for a had, they stuck championship. We've got to win on the Mississauga, Ont. native. this game.'" But on Sunday, a switch Four games left, but this was turned in Stauskas' head. What the one where Nik Stauskas the other team did need not rediscovered how elite he can matter. He took it upon himself be. It's hard enough to become a to have the best game of his season, scoring 25 points on 69-percent shooting with five assists. "Maybe (it was) a little bit of the stage and me getting fed up with it," he said. "I'm a basketball player. I like taking pride in being one of the best players on the floor every time I step out there. "When teams shut me out, it's frustrating, and I didn't want to let that happen anymore." Four games left, but this one meant dominance over Michigan State. Having won six of its last eight against the Spartans, Michigan has asserted itself as the top basketball presence in the state, at least for the time being. Six of eight isn't just a few good years - it's sustained success. It's Keith Appling and Adreian Payne having come and gone without ever winning in Ann Arbor. With four wins in the next two weeks, it means two Michigan Big Ten titles to Michigan State's one for its senior class. Over a four-year period when Michigan sports have been pockmarked by mediocrity on the football field, where the Spartans have laid Michigan to waste, the basketball team swung back. Michigan State may have stolen the gridiron, but Michigan has taken the hardwood. "It says that we're back," Beilein said. "Michigan's back in so many ways.... If you compete with Michigan State, then you're competing with all the other top schools. We hadn't been there for a while. It's just good to be in that position.... Consistency is the things that Wisconsin and Michigan State and Ohio State have been able to do. "Their kids don't know what it's like to (not) go to the NCAA Tournament. That's the mentality that we want." Of course, Michigan has to perform in thefour games left, but the title was earned on Sunday. The Wolverines' performance was the material that Big Ten championships are made of. Over the span of seven minutes in the second half, Michigan flipped a 48-43 deficit into a 64-52 lead. It was a run Michigan State couldn't withstand and one that has Michigan sitting pretty for its first outright Big Ten championship since 1985-86. Four games left, but this was the big one. Rothschild can be reached at nealroh@umich.edu or on Twitter @nrohshild3. to sweep against Nebraska and in both of their games against Wisconsin. In Michigan's upset of the then-third-ranked Badgers in Madison, the three sophomores combined for 57 points. On the season, when they're all in double figures, Michigan is 6-2, with the two losses coming against then-No. 1 Arizona, and at home against Wisconsin. Sunday was a glimpse at what could be when Stauskas, LeVert and Robinson all perform at the top of their games. It's a team that can play the top- ranked Wildcats until the final possession, hand the Badgers their first loss at home this season and down a state rival in the most anticipated home game of the season. "We're a team that likes when other people succeed," LeVert said. "We really love each other out there. "So when we see one guy's got it going, we just try to get him the ball as much as possible." Unselfish and sharing the load is how the sophomore trio has set the Wolverines up for a chance to control their own destiny and take home the conference title. Days since MS last beat V 37' Days since Th last beat t 3,0 goo fl*ie Symptoms 04 OSCHIococcinum Te * 1 softs ewl rarE rh Y u yC'na eel Im edlate .onSasting ovgane enevEY -u U basketball Sophom( lichigan:Stauskas, LeVert and Robinson 7 combine for 63 points vs. MSU e State News By SIMON KAUFMAN Daily Sports Writer he Doily:- - - The Michigan men's basketball team has been waiting for a game like it had on Sunday for nearly a year. 5 9 It's been anticipating it since forward Glenn Robinson III announced his return last April, since guard Nik Stauskas emerged as the team's top player .Y~o u [this season and since guard Caris LeVert surfaced as the Wolverines' most-improved player. Michigan has been waiting to see the sophomore trio - each capable of single-handedly mc00m taking over a game - do so fo nicide e together. On Sunday, when the runl own He di~eethree shared, shot and scored in Y ostilkactinum for te ensemble fashion, the result was treahment a 79-70 win over Michigan State. offlIu-ike Stauskas, LeVert and sy19 Robinson combined for 63 IN13maw points - the most between them $="own* all season, scoring 25, 23 and 15 ............. points, respectively. In the first half, LeVert stepped up. With Stauskas and 399 P Robinson taking just seven e n~e e shots, LeVert attacked the rim -w ato keep the Wolverines in the game by himself. He scored 14 6 "9 points on 5-of-10 shooting from the field in the first 20 minutes, ma and his buzzer-beater 3-pointer ...... ----- . . as time expired at the end of FO the half helped cut Michigan I Ff State's lead to just two. The corner three cut what was once an il-point deficit into a one- Hll possession game and gave the *RE Wolverines the momentum heading into the second half. - 5 5 "It was kinda a bang-bang 2420 E StAdium B play," LeVert said. "(Michigan A , 48104 State guard Gary) Harris got 7U49756613 a layup at one end, and they probably thought the half was going to be over, and I just snuck out in transition and Nik , i5od~81found me. ... Us getting the last bucket, that was big for us, big for our crowd." In the second half, LeVert Dres lead Michigan took a back seat, and Stauskas it was a horrible pass because it and Robinson took control. The was way behind him," Stauskas two combined for the first 18 said. "And he kinda paused in points of the second frame. the air and reached back. It was With 13 minutes left in the a great play by Glenn." half, Stauskas finished a layup The 6-foot-6 forward had 11 to tie the game at 48. Just points in the half including two more than a m pulled up and k jumper at the to pull Michigan ahead by two points - a lead it wouldn't give back. In his best half of the season, Stauskas shot 7-of-10, including three treys, finishing with 21 points in the frame. With 2:33 lef Stauskas penet the hoop, drawi defenders, and, alley-oop dunk1 Robinson. Rob behind his heat threw the dunkc the Crisler Cent feet. "When I thre inute later, he nocked down a p of the key to free throws down the stretch to help seal the deal for the Wolverines. "I think all three of us were feeding "Us getting the off each other," Robinson said. last basket, it was "For them o, they're big for us, big for shooting the ,r ball well, or our crowd- driving, that (makes it) easy for my cuts." Added Michigan coach John Beilein: t in the game, "Everybody was really trated toward connected the whole game. We ng two Spartan had no one ball-begging. We had then tossed an no one not willing to share the to a wide-open ball because they hadn't had a inson reached shot in a while." d for the ball, It was just the fourth time down and drew in Big Ten play this season that er crowd to its each member of the threesome has scored in double digits. They w it, I thought accomplished the feat on the road