The Commercial Appeal

Big Ten, shut out of Final Four, a big flop

- Michael Marot

INDIANAPOL­IS – The Big Ten spent most of this season talking about being the nation’s best basketball conference.

It pointed to a league-record nine teams ranked one week in December and how its teams comprised nearly half of the top 10 many more weeks. It sent a conference-record nine teams into NCAA Tournament play, which was being contested entirely in Big Ten country.

Turns out, it was a big flop.

The conference that ruled the regular season was shut out of the Final Four, with the final blow coming Tuesday night when Michigan lost 51-49 to No. 11 seed UCLA in the South Region championsh­ip. The Wolverines (23-5) lost twice in three weeks at Lucas Oil Stadium and now head home without the Big Ten Tournament crown or the date in Saturday’s national semifinals they wanted.

“Very disappoint­ing for our guys.” Michigan coach Juwan Howard said. “It came down to one possession, that’s how it goes sometimes. The game of basketball sometimes comes down to one or two possession­s that can really help or hurt you and we came up short.” Howard has been here before.

Twice as a player he helped lead the Wolverines to national championsh­ip games, falling short in both.

A year ago, the Wolverines appeared poised to make a strong postseason run when the COVID-19 pandemic shut down both the conference and NCAA tournament­s.

This time, Michigan and Illinois earned No. 1 seeds and appeared to have the makeup to stick around until the final weekend. Instead, eighth-seeded Loyola Chicago upset the Fighting Illini in the second round, and Michigan went down on a night it struggled offensively.

“When you don’t make shots, it makes things a little more difficult,” senior guard Eli Brooks said after scoring eight points on 3-of-8 shooting.

The Wolverines had plenty of chances to stay alive.

Franz Wagner missed a 3-pointer with 11.1 seconds to go, and Brooks couldn’t score on the put-back. Mike Smith missed an open 3 and then, after the refs put 0.5 seconds back on the clock, Wagner missed an open 3 to seal the league’s fate.

Michigan played better than most. Some may argue the continual Top 25 matchups or challengin­g late-season schedules wore down the league’s top teams. Others may contend the extra week inside the Indianapol­is bubble for the Big Ten tourney was to blame. None of it really matters, though. The Big Ten finished 8-9 in the NCAA Tournament, with only Michigan reaching the Sweet 16. Second-seeded Ohio State and fourth-seeded Purdue didn’t even make it out of the first round, and the Bruins managed to play their way from the First Four to the Final Four by eliminatin­g both Michigan State and the Wolverines.

It’s enough to make all that regularsea­son talk ring hollow.

“Right now this game is still very fresh,” Howard said. “It’s going to be tough to sleep tonight.”

 ?? MYKAL MCELDOWNEY/INDIANAPOL­IS STAR ?? Michigan forward Brandon Johns Jr. shoots against UCLA guard Jaime Jaquez Jr. on Tuesday.
MYKAL MCELDOWNEY/INDIANAPOL­IS STAR Michigan forward Brandon Johns Jr. shoots against UCLA guard Jaime Jaquez Jr. on Tuesday.

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