Advertisement

Michigan basketball loses first game in sloppy, mistake-filled blowout at Minnesota, 75-57

Michigan basketball is undefeated no longer.

The Wolverines lost their first game of the season at Minnesota, 75-57, on Saturday in their worst performance of the season.

Michigan finished with almost as many turnovers (19) as made field goals (22) and scored well under one point per possession. And despite facing a Minnesota team that chucked up plenty of wild shots, the Wolverines could not completely close the deficit despite numerous runs that cut into the Gophers' lead before collapsing and trailing by as much as 23 points.

Not having guard Eli Brooks (strained right foot) didn't help. But Michigan didn't play well — not nearly as well as it needed to win on the road.

First-half woes

Minnesota center Liam Robbins dunks as Michigan Wolverines center Hunter Dickinson looks on during the first half at Williams Arena in Minneapolis, Jan. 16, 2021.
Minnesota center Liam Robbins dunks as Michigan Wolverines center Hunter Dickinson looks on during the first half at Williams Arena in Minneapolis, Jan. 16, 2021.

Michigan opened Saturday's contest by playing one of its worst halves of basketball all season. The Wolverines were woeful in just about every aspect of the game: In the first 20 minutes, they had more turnovers (11) than made field goals (10) and shot just 41.7% from the field. Not having Eli Brooks hurt, but we saw Michigan make mistakes that it hasn't yet made in Big Ten play. Center Hunter Dickinson, who has been efficient against double teams, threw the ball away constantly and had four first-half turnovers. The Wolverines threw up wild, contested shots. And even though Chaundee Brown made two long jumpers from the corner, he had a foot on the line each time, costing Michigan two points.

The only saving grace for the Wolverines was that their opponent was not much better. Minnesota spent much of the first 10 minutes of the game chucking up bad shots, and although it turned the ball over just three times, it shot 12 of 34 from the field in the first half and 0 of 11 from 3-point range. Even an average performance would've seen the Gophers enter halftime with more than the seven-point lead they actually had. As it stood, they never were in danger of giving up that lead to Michigan.

Losing Brooks hurts

Brooks has always flown under the radar but his importance to this team cannot be understated. He is among the best defenders in the Big Ten and was a key reason the Wolverines blew out Minnesota in their first game. But he is just as crucial to Michigan's offense and rotation: Right now, Michigan has just two guards in the rotation in point guard Mike Smith and Brooks. The Wolverines have done just fine by either playing the two together or staggering them across lineups, with at least one of the two on the floor at all times. Without Brooks, that meant Smith had to carry a heavier load than usual (although he was used to playing heavy minutes at Columbia). It also moved others up a step in the rotation: Brown, who has excelled off the bench, started, while freshman guard Zeb Jackson, who has played sparingly all season, entered the game at a couple crucial junctures.

Michigan dealt with similar situations last season with Isaiah Livers' injury problems and various absences from then-point guard Zavier Simpson and Eli Brooks; when you have an established rotation that works, things don't always go swimmingly when that rotation is disrupted and has to be re-worked.

Howard's substitution patterns cost Michigan

Michigan Wolverines head coach Juwan Howard reacts during the first half against Minnesota at Williams Arena in Minneapolis, Jan. 16, 2021.
Michigan Wolverines head coach Juwan Howard reacts during the first half against Minnesota at Williams Arena in Minneapolis, Jan. 16, 2021.

Juwan Howard has been one of the best coaches in the country this season with what he has been able to do with Michigan's roster, but his substitution patterns last season cost the Wolverines at times and did so again Saturday. Howard was in a difficult spot without Eli Brooks, as it left him with just one true guard (Smith) in the rotation. Michigan started Chaundee Brown in place of Brooks and Brown gave the most consistent effort of any player on the floor. In the second half, he hit a 3 and then forced a 10 second violation, giving Michigan the ball down six points. Brown was subbed out, Minnesota went on a 7-0 run and then Brown picked up two quick fouls when he re-entered the game. During that stretch, Brown's sub — freshman guard Zeb Jackson — took and missed two 3s and threw the ball away after Michigan forced a turnover.

Meanwhile, center Hunter Dickinson had a rough performance filled with turnovers as Minnesota double teamed him in the post, but Dickinson still gives Michigan the best chance at beating a team like the Gophers even when he's throwing the ball away. Backup center Austin Davis scored a couple times down low off passes from teammates and scored off a post-up, but he biffed one layup, was blocked on a dunk and simply could not anchor Michigan's defense.

Perhaps this is being too critical, as Brooks' absence really hurts Michigan Still, Howard's rotation could've been tighter at times.

Contact Orion Sang at osang@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @orion_sang. Read more on the Michigan Wolverines and sign up for our Wolverines newsletter. The Free Press has started a new digital subscription model. Here's how you can gain access to our most exclusive Michigan Wolverines content.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Michigan basketball loses first game in sloppy, mistake-filled blowout