2B - February 3, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Morgan leads charge in Michigan turnaround The Michigan basketball team was going to its first Sweet Sixteen since 1994, and Jordan Morgan couldn't even bring himself to smile. The Detroit native kept his eyes on the floor to avoid looking at the countless family and EVERETT friends COOK from his hometown that had come to see Michigan's starting center play in the first two rounds of the 2013 NCAA Tournament at the Palace of Auburn Hills. After starting 27 of the team's 31 games before the tournament, Morgan was replaced by a freshman - Mitch McGary - in the lineup. McGary went on to score a combined 34 points in those two games, the start to a tournament run so dominant it would land him on the preseason All-American team as a sophomore before this season. Morgan would play a grand total of one minute. The freshman was celebrating. The redshirt junior felt completely broken. It took Morgan until the following day off to feel happy again, but even then, he played just 25 total minutes over the course of Michigan's postseason run. After the season ended with a loss to Louisville in the national championship game, Morgan got back to Ann Arbor and knew he needed to change something. Letting his happiness be defined by playing time wasn't healthy or productive. So began the summer of Jordan, the transformation from someone who defined his own success by minutes and points to someone who could care less about individual statistics. And so began the spark to help turn Michigan's season around after it struggled in non-conference play and dropped out of the Top 25 earlier this year. If Morgan doesn't have that humiliation in the Palace, he doesn't have the open mind he needed to grow last spring and summer. For the 10th-ranked Wolverines, whose recent 10-game winning streak was snapped on Sunday in a 63-52 loss to Indiana, that growth has made all the difference for one of the youngest rosters in college basketball. handle starting the season on the bench, playing four minutes in a road loss to Iowa State or three minutes in that loss to Arizona. But this Morgan did. When McGary got injured, the fifth- year senior stepped in like nothing had changed. Since the injury, Morgan is shooting almost 80 percent from the floor to go along with his 23 minutes and eight points per contest, even though his game has never been about stats. It's always been about taking charges, hustling for loose balls and playing smart defense. "That's kind of my game, because unfortunately, I'm not as talented as some of the guys on our team so I've got to rely on that stuff," Morgan said. "But when you've got the talented guys, the guys who people look toward as go-to guys, when they start to buy into that stuff, it changes the whole direction of the team." For a player whose biggest contributions don't always show up on the stat sheet, getting Michigan to remember what brought this program from the basement to national prominence might be his biggest victory yet. The Wolverines needed to learn how to become selfless, but they couldn't have done it without Morgan learning the same lesson, too. "I've grown in that area since then, but that's what I needed to grow, to go through that," Morgan said. "I was completely broken. ... I had to stop worrying about my own personal glorification. I don't need to have the articles, the playing time, the points, to be satisfied with myself, but I had to go through that tournament to really have an open mind and heart this off-season to learn that lesson." Cook can be reached at evcook@umich.edu and on Twitter Severettcook Fifth-year senior forward Jordan Morgan, Michigan's most veteran player, has seen the program progress from middle-of-the-pack into a national powerhouse. have experienced nothin but a sold-out Crisler Cez and a trip to the national championship game intl year and a half in Ann A When this year's team watched film of Morgan' redshirt year in 2010, no could believe that the lo bowl of Crisler wasn't re close to full. Morgan, the only remaining 4 player from the last tale Wolverine team to of not make the NCAA Tournament, had to remind them what it ig recruits and told them they nter needed to get back to what Michigan did best. heir "We took some tough losses, rbor. at Duke and all that, and I think during those games, we 's really struggled to see that body winning games in those type wer of road environments against motely teams like that is so much more than just the talent," he said. "It's ' not as the little things that nted as some one team is willing to do the guys on that the other team isn't. our team." That was so engrained in our program before Like Morgan, the Wolverines needed to lose in order to learn how to win. "I think (losing) helped us a lot," Morgan said. "I don't know if that's the only answer, butI think that's what worked, losing those tough games in those tough environments. Losing to teams that we weren't supposed to lose to. That stuff helped. Us dropping out of the Top-25, once you start losing like that, people start calling everyone overrated. 'Oh, Glenn Robinson is overrated,' 'oh, Nik Stauskas, he isn't that good.' You need a little bit of that, especially with a young team." Morgan's spring started with an exercise he did in a management class called "Reflected Best Self." He asked neonle from all different areas of his life when he had performed his best. Every single answer was from a time when he put himself before others. With that in mind, he took a trip to Africa as part of a program called Athletes in Action. There, he had a renewal in his faith, coming to the understanding that God needed to be in every aspect of his life, including basketball. After those experiences, it didn't matter that McGary decided to come back for his sophomore season, and it didn't matter when the preseason All-American had back surgery in December. Morgan's focus didn't change at all, because he realized his true happiness only came from focusing on helping other people, in basketball or not. The same Morgan who couldn't smile in the Palace last year wouldn't have been able to was like to play on a nationally irrelevant team. Really, he's been reminding the young players of this all season. One of Michigan's toughest defeats of the season was a 10-point loss on the road against Duke. In the locker room after that game, Morgan stood up and told his teammates they had to stop relying on their talent alone. Scouting reports needed to be taken seriously. Knowing the other team's tendencies might change five or six plays, but how much would that help in a 10-point loss? When Morgan was a younger player, the Wolverines had to know that scouting report inside and out. They had to hustle for loose balls and rebounds. The talent wasn't there - they had no other choice if they wanted to win. In that locker room in Durham, N.C., Morgan stood up in a room full of potential NBA lottery picks and touted because that's how we had to win. More times than not, we weren't the most talented team, so we had to win by executing better, boxing out harder, crashing harder, diving on the floor. "But then once you get a bunch of really talented guys - which we now have - I think it did take a couple little bruises here and there to realize that it's more than just our talent that's going to win games." Since then, the Wolverines have lost just twice, to then- No.1 Arizona in the middle of December and on Sunday, and have vaulted into first place in the Big Ten. So while a perfect conference record might have been nice, losing in Assembly Hall on Sunday might not be the worst thing in the world. Michigan had to revisit itself after those losses to Arizona and Duke, which turned the season around. y of Michigan's phomores who The majorit veterans are so THE BOARD FOR STUDENT PUBLICATIONS SEEKS NEW MEMBERS The University of Michigan Board for Student Publications is recruiting new members for three year terms beginning in April. The Board is responsible for three publications: The Michigan Daily, the Michiganensian yearbook, and the Gargoyle. Because the Board is committed to realizing diversity's benefits for itself and for the publications it oversees, the Board is particularly interested in recruiting members of the University community (faculty, staff and students), or the general public who are members of underrepresented groups and who have experience and expertise in journalism, law, finance, or fundraising. All interested persons are encouraged to apply. For more information and application forms,please contact Mark Bealafeld, Student Publications General Manager at 734-418-4115, extension 1246, or nbealafe@urmich.edu. a l~ihe for applications itFebruary 12th. Fifth-year senior forward Jordan Morgan has performed well as a starter since Mitch McGary underwent back surgery. Comeback epitomizes rivalry By MAX BULTMAN Daily Sports Writer Forgeteverythingyou'veheard about rivalries being limited to revenue sports, especially when its Michigan vs. Ohio State. As if the Wolverines' 151-147 road victory wasn't exciting enough on its own, the meet featured some unusual gamesmanship in a desperate attempt to emerge victorious. In a sport where every hundredth of a second is pivotal, high-tech swimsuits can make the difference between winning and losing. So, before the meet, Michigan coach Mike Bottom and Ohio State coach Bill Wadley made a simple gentlemen's agreement: no swimmers competing for points would wear tech suits. Athletes swimming an exhibition heat to make a Big Ten qualifying time were free to wear one of the speedy, knee-length suits, but anyone going for points had to wear a speedo. For the first part of the meet, that agreement was upheld. Then came the 200-yard backstroke. The Buckeyes' Michael Gallagher led most of the race wearing a high-tech jammer before being overtaken at the end by a teammate and Michigan senior Ryutaro Kamiya. But in the very next race, the 200-yard breaststroke, the Buckeyes' tech suits led them to a huge victory over junior Richard Funk, who had previously been unbeaten in the event this season. Following the second consecutive race with Ohio State swimmers wearingtech suits, the Michigan men's swim and dive Twitter account posted a quote from Bottom: "I'm not going to lose when someone suits up against us," read the tweet. Some Michigan swimmers entered the locker room and emerged intech suits of their own for the 100-yard butterfly, taking the top two spots in the event and sending a message to the other side of the pool deck. "All of a sudden the tech suits started appearing on the Ohio State side," Bottom said. "So my goal was to put the suits on for one race and show them that if we decided to do that for the rest of the meet, that's what it would look like." Bottom's plan worked. Sophomore Dylan Bosch won the 100-yard butterfly in 46.63 and was closely followed by senior John Wojciechowski in 46.89. By the next race, both teams were back in speedos. But while the tech-suit fiasco brought plenty of drama to the rivalry meet, the two teams didn't need any added excitement. The Buckeyes (3-1 Big Ten, 9-1 overall) won both the 200- yard medley relay and 400- yard freestyle relays by half a second, the first time this season Michigan (5-0, 8-0) didn't win a relay event. SeniorConnor Jaeger answered back, though, out-touching Ohio State's Alex Miller to takethe500- yard freestyle in 4:24.92. "Michigan had to win that race," Jaeger said. "It wasn't a matter of how much it was by or how close the race was." Bottom praised the leadership of his senior captain,but also cited an important piece of wisdom from associate coach Josh White during a 20-minute break in the action. Ohio State had come out strong, including a sweep of the 100-yard backstroke, and the Wolverines were in unfamiliar territory - comeback mode. But nothing was going to stop Michigan from doing that Saturday, not even tech suits. ,q h S