S portslVonday N I I y The team no one wanted has its moment Red-hot NJIT stuns Michigan at Crisler W ith 13.6 seconds left in one of the great- est upsets in college basketball history, Al- Tariq Lynn was two rows behind the visitor's bench, smil- ing from ear BUTMA to ear. New Jersey Insti- tute of Technology coach Jim Engles was tense, not caving in to the optimism Lynn exuded eight feet behind him. NJIT wasn't supposed to have a prayer Saturday. No. 17 Michigan was going to roll the Highlanders, then put in its substitutes and roll them some more. "Coming into the season, I sort of penciled this one in as an 'L,"' Engles would later say. This was a team coming off a Final Four and an Elite Eight in its last two seasons against the lone independent in Division I men's college basketball - a team that's independent for a reason. No one wanted the NJIT Highlanders, the team that went 0-29 in 2007-08. They've been trying to get into the America East for years, but the league won't take them. But here's the thing about the team no one wants: it's made up of players that no one wanted - no one except NJIT. And when a team like that gets a national stage against a ranked opponent, they tend to remember how unwanted they once were. They play better than they're supposed to. They play better than maybe they even are. And Michigan coach John Beilein knew they would. "Those guys, the crowds don't faze them," he said. "Those guys live on the road." That's what happened Saturday when Damon Lynn, the, Highlanders freshman guard who wanted to playat Michigan, dropped 20on the Wolverines. He saw every Derrick Walton Jr. 3-pointer and matched it. He wasn't fazed by Caris LeVert's bank shot and kept going. What did he have to lose? So Lynn's dad, Al-Tariq, stood there with time frozen, smiling and remembering how See BULTMAN, Page 2B Nation's only Division I independent knocks off No.17 Michigan By JAKE LOURIM Daily Sports Editor Appalachian State had Armanti Edwards in 2007. New Jersey Institute of Technology had Damon Lynn on Saturday. Lynn scored 20 points as NJIT pulled off one of the biggest upsets in college basketball history, shocking the Michigan men's basketball team at Crisler Center, 72-70. NJIT, which joined Division I in 2006, went'0-29 in 2007-08 and is the nation's only Division I independent, pulled it off when freshman guard Aubrey Dawkins' desperate last-second full-court shot fell well short at the buzzer. With 4.3 seconds left, NJIT's Daquan Holiday sank two free throws to make it a three- point game. The Highlanders fouled Michigan freshman forward Kameron Chatman on purpose with 2.6 seconds left. Chatman made the first free throw and missed the second intentionally, but NJIT pulled down the rebound with 1.2 seconds left, and the fans began to file out of Crisler Center. "New Jersey deserved to win the game today," said a despondent Michigan coach John Beilein. "They were the better team today." Four days removed from a win over Syracuse, Saturday was a lesson in consistency for a young Michigan team, and the Highlanders were more than willing to capitalize. They shot 59 percent and made 1i of 17 attempts from beyond the arc. Lynn was 6-for-10 from long range, including two step-back daggers in the final 4:32 that helped preserve the lead. Still, with less than a minute left, NJIT had the ball and led by only one. Michigan forced a miss as the shot clock went down, but after a battle for possession under the basket, Holiday emerged with the ball. The Wolverines fouled him immediately, and he lay outstretched on the floor, pumping his fists with victory imminent. See NJIT, Page 20 HE MEANS BUSINESS U Athletic Director Jim Hackett is here to stay, as he proved in Tuesday's press conference. SportsMonday Column, Page 2B FRESHMAN WALL Michigan needs more out of its freshmen to accompany the scoring of its four veterans, writes Simon Kaufman. Page 4B