Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Getting hot just in time

Koenig turns it on in final minutes

- JEFF POTRYKUS

Madison — Take a bow, Bronson Koenig. You earned it. Wisconsin’s senior guard, quiet for more than 34 minutes Tuesday night, demonstrat­ed in a span of 2 minutes 6 seconds why he is one of the top scorers in the Big Ten when given the opportunit­y.

Koenig’s personal 10-point run — on two drives and 2 threepoint­ers — sparked No. 17 UW to a 68-64 victory over unranked Michigan in front of a raucous crowd at the Kohl Center.

UW (15-3, 4-1 Big Ten) moved into a first-place tie with idle Maryland (16-2, 4-1). The Terrapins play Thursday night at Iowa.

Michigan (12-7, 2-4) lost for the third time in four games and coach John Beilein’s struggles against UW continued.

At Michigan Beilein is 88-62 against Big Ten teams other than UW. His record against the Badgers is 2-16.

Koenig scored 16 points to lead UW, with 10 coming in that rapid-fire burst that ended the Wolverines’ upset hopes. He capped the night by hitting two free throws with 4 seconds left.

Vitto Brown was active early and finished with 13 points and three rebounds.

Nigel Hayes did not shoot well – hitting just 4 of 11 fieldgoal attempts and 4 of 10 free throws. However, he contribute­d 13 points, five rebounds and three assists. He also played stellar defense against multiple players.

Ethan Happ struggled inside against Michigan’s length and made just 5 of 13 shots. However, he finished with 11 points, six rebounds, two steals and two

blocks.

He grabbed a huge offensive rebound off a missed free throw, which led to a three-pointer by D’Mitrik Trice with UW down by seven early in the half.

UW made just 14 of 24 free-throw attempts but hit 8 of 12 in the final 1:13 to secure the victory.

Zak Irvin scored nine of his 21 points in the first half to help keep the Wolverines within striking distance at 26-21.

Guard Derrick Walton Jr. added 15 for Michigan.

The first half was ugly for both teams as the Badgers battled to a 2621 lead despite shooting 22.2% from three-point range (2 of 9) and 37.9% overall (11 of 29).

Brown hit 4 of 6 shots for nine points and Happ hit 4 of 9 – after missing his first three attempts – for eight points to help UW build the slim advantage.

Their teammates combined to make just 2 of 14 attempts.

Hayes was 2 of 8, including 0 of 3 from threepoint range, and Koenig was 1 of 3.

Michigan, known for its ability to shoot the ball, hit five of its first 10 shots to stay within 12-10.

The Wolverines stopped moving and cutting on offense and hit just three of their final 15 shots in the half.

Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman buried a three-pointer to forge a 19-19 tie with 7 minutes 10 seconds left in the half but the Wolverines scored just two points the rest of the way.

They missed their final six field-goal attempts and turned the ball over four times in the final six-plus minutes.

Brown scored inside to give UW a 28-21 lead less than a minute into the second half. The Badgers’ offense then vanished and the Wolverines took advantage to build leads of 38-30 and 49-43 before Koenig took over.

Trailing by 49-43, UW answered with a tip by Zak Showalter and two drives by Koenig to forge a 49-49 tie with 5:15 left.

Koenig was just warming.

He buried a threepoint­er off a doublescre­en at the top of the key to give UW a 52-49 lead with 4:30 left. He added another threepoint­er, this time from the left corner, to push the lead to 55-49 lead with 3:44 left.

Hayes buried a threepoint­er for a 58-49 lead with 2:24 left.

UW then secured the victory at the free-throw line, with Koenig fittingly capping the victory.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Michigan's Zak Irvin shoots against Wisconsin's Bronson Koenig during the first half of Tuesday night’s game at the Kohl Center in Madison.
ASSOCIATED PRESS MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Michigan's Zak Irvin shoots against Wisconsin's Bronson Koenig during the first half of Tuesday night’s game at the Kohl Center in Madison.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? UW’s Nigel Hayes drives to the basket against the Michigan Wolverines’ Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman during the first half of Tuesday night’s game at the Kohl Center.
GETTY IMAGES UW’s Nigel Hayes drives to the basket against the Michigan Wolverines’ Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman during the first half of Tuesday night’s game at the Kohl Center.

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