Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Michigan stuns another

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INDIANAPOL­IS — Moe Wagner scored a career-high 26 points and spurred a furious second-half rally to send Michigan past Louisville 73-69 and into the Sweet 16.

The seventh-seeded Wolverines (26-11) have won seven games in a row, including six consecutiv­e after a frightenin­g plane accident before the Big Ten Tournament. Michigan also earned a ticket to regional semifinals for the first time since 2014.

MICHIGAN 73, LOUISVILLE 69

INDIANAPOL­IS — Moe Wagner gritted his teeth, pumped his fist and stuck out his mouthpiece to the crowd’s delight Sunday.

A few minutes later, the tough German took a couple more bows — first on the baseline in front of Michigan’s bench, then with the rest of his teammates near midcourt.

Suddenly, the often overlooked 6-foot-11 forward was the well-deserved center of attention.

Wagner scored a career-high 26 points, made the basket that spurred Michigan’s furious second-half rally and capped the day with a three-pointer to give the Wolverines the lead for good as they knocked off second-seeded Louisville 73-69 to reach the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2014.

“He’s got the mentality where he wants to make the play,” said Derrick Walton Jr., who drove in for Michigan’s final basket with 29 seconds left. “He just makes the right play at all times. He has the calls to make the big plays, so we feed off him because he’s not afraid of anything.”

Wagner’s fearlessne­ss has played a big part in Michigan’s improbable late-season run.

In late February, Michigan was just 19-11 and trying to keep its NCAA Tournament hopes alive. Since then, it has won seven consecutiv­e, six coming after a frightenin­g plane accident on their way to the Big Ten Tournament.

So it seemed only fitting that the emotion, poise and momentum Michigan mustered over these past few weeks would help them fight their way off the ropes. Again.

Trailing 45-36 with 16:09 to play, Wagner made a layup that started a 17-6 run to give Michigan its first lead since the opening minutes of the game. When Wagner knocked down a three-pointer with 6:39 to go to break a 55-55 tie, the Wolverines never trailed again.

Afterward, Michigan’s players celebrated by jumping around near midcourt, then walking next to the pep band and pumping their fists toward yellow-clad fans as the school fight song boomed.

Once inside the locker room, Coach John Beilein playfully squirted his players with a water gun.

“A little damp right now,” Beilein said as the postgame news conference began. “But our guys, we started a tradition of taking a shower, I guess, without going into the shower after good wins. It’s not stopping.”

At least not in Indianapol­is.

Despite going 3-3 in their previous six games, Louisville (25-9) came into Sunday as a small favorite.

Coach Rick Pitino was 3-1 in head-to-head matchups with Beilein and the Cardinals had made it to the Sweet 16 in each of their previous four NCAA appearance­s.

But after sitting out last year’s tourney because of a school-imposed postseason ban, the Cardinals’ hopes were doused largely because of Wagner’s ability to repeatedly get to the basket. That was all it took in a matchup between the two teams that played for a national championsh­ip four years ago.

“We made some poor switches,” Pitino said. “Probably the weakness of our team this year has been our defense. Our offense in the last ten days or two weeks, we’ve gotten significan­tly better because we worked inside to out.”

Donovan Mitchell finished with 19 points, seven rebounds and five assists to lead Louisville. Deng Adel had 16 points and Mangok Mathiang added 13.

Not much went as expected, though.

Louisville’s pressure defense forced only six Michigan turnovers and the Cardinals wound up just 5 of 20 on three-pointers.

Walton had 10 points, seven rebounds and six assists despite going 3 of 13 from the field. And two days after making a school record 16 three-pointers in a tourney game, the Wolverines were just 6 of 17.

Instead, they pounded the ball inside to D.J. Wilson, who had 17 points, three blocks and two steals, and the gritty Wagner, who spent most of Friday’s first-round victory in foul trouble.

On Sunday, he used his fresh legs to do the dirty work so well that the usually reliable, quiet sophomore screamed in celebratio­n.

“We always believed in ourselves,” Wagner said. “I just said to Coach B, we only shot six threes today and we won. So it’s awesome. We played gritty basketball, and I think we can be proud of that.”

OREGON 75, RHODE ISLAND 72

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Tyler Dorsey hit a contested go-ahead three-pointer from the top of the arc with 38.4 seconds to play, E.C. Matthews airballed a long three in the waning moments trying to force overtime, and third-seeded Oregon rallied in the second half to beat upstart No. 11 Rhode Island and reach the Midwest Regional.

Dorsey also tied the game with a three with 1:45 remaining on the way to 27 points before teammate Dillon Brooks took a charge on the other end for Oregon (31-5).

With Oregon’s season on the brink of an early NCAA Tournament exit, Brooks found his shooting stroke as he often does and scored 19 points despite a 7-for20 shooting day. Dorsey made 9 of 10 shots with four three-pointers.

Rhode Island nearly scrapped and hustled its way into the next round, with Stanford Robinson matching his career high of 21 points as the Rams (25-10) had their nine-game winning streak snapped to end the season.

 ?? AP/MICHAEL CONROY ?? Michigan forward Moe Wagner (left) drives on Louisville forward Ray Spalding (right) in the second half of the Wolverines’ 73-69 victory over the second-seeded Cardinals in the Midwest Regional in Indianapol­is, Ind. Wagner had a team-high 26 points for...
AP/MICHAEL CONROY Michigan forward Moe Wagner (left) drives on Louisville forward Ray Spalding (right) in the second half of the Wolverines’ 73-69 victory over the second-seeded Cardinals in the Midwest Regional in Indianapol­is, Ind. Wagner had a team-high 26 points for...

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