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March 24, 2021 - Image 16

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SportsWednesday

BROOKS, BROWN JR.
LEAD MICHIGAN TO WILD

VICTORY OVER LSU

INDIANAPOLIS — By the end of it, Michigan could finally exhale.

Eli Brooks wiggled free from a scrum with the rebound as serenades of cheers washed down from a

boisterous crowd. In the frontcourt, he dribbled out the inevitable.

A special season will last at least one more game.

In a high-flying shootout, the Wolverines (22-4 overall, 14-3 Big Ten) outlasted upset-minded LSU

(19-10), 86-78, to punch a ticket to the Sweet Sixteen. For the fourth consecutive NCAA Tournament,

Michigan survives into the second weekend.

“That’s where you want to be, that’s where you dream of playing,” Brooks said after the game with a

smile. “That’s what we expect at Michigan. But you have to earn it.”

The upstart Tigers ensured the Wolverines did just that. For forty minutes, Michigan could not so

much as breathe.

LSU’s much-acclaimed fifth-ranked offense proved to be as advertised. The Tigers, buoyed by

freshman sensation Cameron Thomas, roared out of the gates with an 8-2 start. Thomas, utilizing his

6-foot-4 frame to shoot over a series of smaller defenders, tallied a quick eight points of his own.

Michigan’s offense floundered, enabling LSU to carry a nine point advantage deep into the

first half. The Wolverines failed to capitalize on their height advantage — forward

Darius Days, at 6-foot-7, drew the assignment on 7-foot-1 freshman center Hunter

Dickinson. Throughout the first 13 minutes, Dickinson managed just one field

goal attempt.

An emerging track meet seemed to play into LSU’s hands. During

timeouts, the Michigan huddle remained optimistic.

“There were a lot of possessions out there where we could have held

our head down because LSU made a great run, got the lead early in

the first half,” Michigan coach Juwan Howard said. “But our team

stayed the course.”

After scuffling early, Michigan weathered the blitz, exploiting

a porous LSU defense that entered with the 124th ranked unit

in KenPom’s adjusted defensive efficiency. Senior guard Eli

Brooks led the charge with 13 first-half points, including a trio

of 3-pointers.

LSU’s white-hot start proved unsustainable. Though

the Tigers led for all but two minutes in the first half,

Michigan claimed a tenuous one-point advantage at the

break.

“I think the defense really sparked it, sparked

our pace,” Brooks said. “Just the intensity that we

brought on the defensive end. We limited them to

one shot. We made everything hard in those four

minutes and rebound(ed) the ball, got out, ran

in transition.”

Momentum, though, proved to be fleeting.

An early 8-0 spurt placed the Wolverines

back on their heels, ensuing a seesaw affair.

Michigan responded with a 10-0 run. The

Tigers, ever resilient, battled back with an 8-0

stretch of their own.

An air-balled 3-pointer from Brooks,

followed by a Thomas 3-pointer, stretched the

LSU lead to five. Again, Michigan managed to respond.

With 8:57 minutes to go, senior guard Chaundee Brown Jr. drilled a catch-

and-shoot 3-pointer from the corner. Minutes later, he again found the back of

the net, stretching the Michigan lead to eight.

Brown, bouncing back down the court, turned around to face thousands

of Michigan fans, thrusting his arms into the air and basking in his

newfound glory. The Wolverines, after 34 minutes spent enduring punches,

could taste it.

With 3:56 minutes to play, the tide turned permanently. Sophomore

wing Franz Wagner, scuffling throughout most of the game, drained

an off-the-dribble 3-pointer, putting Michigan up a game-high nine.

On his way back down the court, he pounded his chest, arms raised in

celebration.

At last, the pesky Tigers relented, long faces draping their

countenances.

Michigan danced up the tunnel. Howard, lingering behind for

a radio interview, was the last man off the court. Motioning to the

fans on hand, he held up four fingers — one for each victory the

Wolverines need to capture a championship.

“The motto of today was, the words that were shared with the

group: empty the tank, empty the tank,” Howard said. “Our guys did

that.”

And finally, they could let out a collective sigh of relief.

86

JARED GREENSPAN

Daily Sports Writer

78

Allison Engkvist/Daily | Design by Jack Silberman

THE SWEET SIXTEEN:

WEST REGION
#1 GONZAGA

#5 CREIGHTON

#6 USC

#7 OREGON

EAST REGION
#1 MICHIGAN

#4 FLORIDA STATE

#11 UCLA

#2 ALABAMA

SOUTH REGION
#1 BAYLOR

#5 VILLANOVA

#3 ARKANSAS

#15 ORAL ROBERTS

MIDWEST REGION
#8 LOYOLA CHICAGO

#12 OREGON STATE

#11 SYRACUSE

#2 HOUSTON

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