V V V S V w 0 9 0 0 SB Friday, November 14 2014 // Tip Off The inflection point of Michigan basketball story by Daniel Feldman, Daily Sports Writer The Michigan men's basketball team is in a slump as it enters the beast that is the Breslin Center the night of Jan. 27, 2011. Losers of six straight games and carrying a 1-6 conference record, the Wolverines are in East Lansing having not won there since 1997. Up 57-55 with 33.3 seconds left against Michigan State, Darius Morris catches an inbounds pass from the sideline. Before the game, John Beilein told Morris to shoot it if the Spartans went through a ball screen. This was news for a player who led the team in assists and would go on to set a single-season program record in the statistic. As Morris dribbles over half court, Keith Appling guards him before switching off as Morris gets to the free-throw line. With the shot clock down to four, Morris plants his lead foot on the Spartan logo in the paint and dishes the rock toward Stu Douglass, who stands behind the 3-point line on the right side of the court. "It's only fair to say that game was an inflection point of where the program's heading," said Zach Novak. "If we win this game, the season is turned around. ... If we could win that game, we could win any game." After a disappointing 2009-10 season, not much was expected of Michigan in 2010-11. The team had lost its four tallest players and two leading scorers - Manny Harris and DeShawn Sims - and was picked to finish last in the Big. Ten. With no seniors on the squad, the team lacked any true veterans besides Douglass and Novak. The preparation for the season started earlier than usual for the Wolverines. Allowed an overseas trip every four years, the team traveled to Belgium to play four games against professional teams. Beilein found it to be advantageous for such a young team to begin practicing in August. The team went 1-3 on the Europe tour. "Everyone was like, 'Oh, they're going to suck,' even though we were playing top-