8A - Wednesday, December 10, 2014 . , :'. The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com MEN'S BASKETBALL Wolverines slowed on offense, fall to Eagles JAMES COLLER/Daily Sphomore forward Zak Irvin couldn't connect from long range in the final seconds to send the game to overtime. doomedyshooting O~me S00 l9 By LEV FACHER almost entirely to Eastern Daily SportsoEditor Michigan's defense. "That was as good a zone In theory, at least, it's Jim defense as I've ever seen at any BoeheimandtheSyracuseOrange time, anywhere," Beilein said. who know how to run a 2-3 zone. "That was as quick a zone defense In practice, it's Rob Murphy's as I've ever seen at any time, Eastern Michigan squad, which anywhere." held Michigan to just 21 first-half The Eagles' defensive points in a historic 45-42 loss quickness deprived the Wolverine Tuesday night at Crisler Center. offense of several of its staples. The Wolverinesfoughtthrough Michigan's resident sharpshooter the Syracuse zone en route to a - sophomore forward Zak Irvin 68-65 win Dec. 2, but were sur- -had a3-pointerblockedminutes piisingly unable to crack Eastern into the game and airballed a Michigan's defensive alignment, second soon after. ledl by Murphy, a Syracuse assis- Junior guard Caris LeVert, who tant under Boeheim from 2004- dropped 32 points against New 11. When they did crack the zone, Jersey Institute of Technology on it made little difference - Michi- Saturday, missed the rim entirely gan struggled on the few open on a 3-point attempt minutes looks it found and went a com- later, and Albrecht found onlythe bined 14-for-43 from the field. back rim on a deep trey attempt of "You're always going to have his own soon after. Collectively, 'nights when shots aren't falling," the Wolverines made just four of said junior guard Spike Albrecht. 21 attempts from beyond the arc. "That's when you find out how "We didn't get open shots," good you really are." Beilein said. "If you're missing a IfAlbrechttooktheWolverines' lot of open shots, you might have shooting performance as an a confidence issue. We didn't get answer, it wasn't a happy one. In many open shots." the first frame, Michigan went Having watched Michigan suc- 1-for-10 from 3-point range and cessfully navigate the Syracuse stumbled through a field-goal zone just seven days prior to his drought of14 minutes, 53 seconds. team's historic win, Murphy and Michigan coach John Beilein his staff had a chance to review credited the offensive struggles game tape that revealed how the Wolverines might attack the'-3. "We play our zones very simi- lar, if not the same," Murphy said. "We knew the actions they would run, but in saying that, you still have to guard it." The defeat marked Michigan's second straight home loss to an unranked opponent from a non- power conference. But Beilein's reasons for each loss differed. "One of the ways (NJIT) beat us was that we didn't have that same hustle, that same type of intensity that we need," Beilein said. "This was an intense game. Our guys really worked hard." Reboundingtoo, distinguished the Wolverines' markedly different attempts at beating the 2-3 from one another. "Who would think that we would get 17 offensive rebounds against Syracuse," Beilein asked, "and two against Eastern Michigan?" In the end, the Eagles proved it was their athleticism - not they name on their jersey and longtime status as a second-class school within Washtenaw County - that mattered to the Wolverines "Because it's a local team, they're really down," Beilein said of his squad's postgame mood. "We can't stay down. We've just got to move forward." After losing to NJIT, Wolverines suffer second upset By DANIEL FELDMAN Daily Sports Writer If you were looking for the Michigan men's basketball team to bounce back against Eastern Michigan with a dominant showing, E. MICHIGAN 45 you MICHIGAN 42 would've been sorely disappointed. But unlike against New Jersey Institute of Technology on Saturday, it wasn't hot shooting from the Wolverines' opponent that would keep Michigan from pulling away. It was simply that Michigan couldn't make a shot when it mattered, and Eastern Michigan did, even though .its shooting wasn't much better. Both teams shot 32.6 percent in the game, and Eastern Michigan (8-1) pulled out the 45-42 victory over Michigan, defeating the Wolverines, for the first time since Dec. 17, 1997. "The intensity was there from our side," said sophomore guard Derrick Walton Jr. "It's a little different from the last loss (against NJIT) when the team just hit tough shots. When we don't shoot the ball as we're accustomed to, you try to get it going in other areas. It's tough. It was just a tough night. It was hard to get it going today." Despite shooting just 6-for- 25 in the first half, Mi (6-3) entered the secon up by two, simply becau Eagles shot even more - 5-for-19. The theme would hol to the end, as Michigan be down three with 42 s left following an E Michigan turnover i backcourt. With a fres clock, Michigan had its of shots, and it went to guard Caris LeVert 1 the 3-point line. But j Michigan had so many it missed. Michigan would another chance in thev seconds of the game, af Eagles missed the froi of a one-and-one, but ti got loose near midcourt, ultimately rolling into " the backcourt where senior gel forward Max Bielfeldt picked it up and called ma] timeout. With 2.4 seconds left, sophomore guard Zak Irvin would force up a heave fron midcourt, but again, ti found no twine. Going against anoth zone defense, though q than Syracuse's from las Michigan struggled o offensive end. After rec 17 offensive reboundsa the Orange, Michigan just two on Tuesday, at outrebounded, 36-27. chigan "When we did get open d half shots, which was rarely, we ise the didn't make enough of those," poorly said Michigan coach John Beilein. "And we had some Id true costly turnovers that are would uncharacteristic, but it had a econds lot to do with their quickness astern and their style of defense." n the With a first-half field-goal h shot drought that lasted 13:43, option nothing seemed to go right for junior Michigan on Tuesday night. behind Besides Walton's nine first- ust as half points, there truly wasn't time another siginicant positive statistic for the Wolverines. have With the rest of the team waning contributing just 12 points in ter the the stanza, the Wolverines nt end would need late-game stops he ball and clutch baskets to have a chance. But with Irvin and 1hen we did Leertj tallying just open shots 10 points a piece, the . we didn't Wolverines came out le enough of short once 7 again, those." snapping their Big Ten leading 59-game streak n near without losing back-to-back he ball games. Despite the loss, though, er 2-3 Beilein still believes the season quicker is young, even with No. 3 t week, Arizona nex on deck. n the "This is the way it is all year ording long," Beilein said. "So there's against no panic button. n had "It is December 8 - nd was December 9 - and it is a long way." 4 J p A SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR WONDERFUL SENIORS FOR ALL THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS THIS YEAR ALEXA "PHINS UP" DETTELBACH DANIEL "SNAPCHAT FIEND" FELDMAN GREG "CAT LOVER" GARNO RAJAT "HAS MARKETABLE SKILLS" KHARE JESSE "WRITES FOR SPORTS AND OPINION?" KLEIN SHANNON "SOCIAL MEDIA PRO" LYNCH MARINA "STAR ATHLETE" NAZARIO JEREMY "BEST HAIR" SUMMITT ALEJANDRO "SUP GUYS?" ZUNIGA DON'T FORGET TO ORDER THE SENIOR EDITOR SWIMSUIT CALENDER BEFORE 2015! 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