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UFR: Michigan @ Purdue

Raw data in .xls format here.

Half 1

1st half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims 7:36 3-7 -4
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Shepherd, Sims 1:34 3-4 -1
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Shepherd, Gibson 1:19 5-2 +3
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Shepherd, Gibson 1:18 6-0 +6
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Shepherd, Sims 2:51 0-2 -2
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Wright, Sims 3:01 3-8 -5
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Wright, Sims :20 2-0 +2
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims 2:54 2-2 0
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Sims :01 0-0 0
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Gibson :06 2-0 +2
Total 20:00 26-25 +1

Half 2

2nd Half Differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims 1:32 2-3 -1
SOME EVENT OF NO SIGNIFICANCE
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Shepherd, Sims 2:13 2-2 0
Merritt, Douglass, Wright, Shepherd, Sims 3:28 3-7 -4
Merritt, Douglass, Wright, Shepherd, Gibson 1:20 0-5 -5
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Shepherd, Gibson :39 0-2 -2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Shepherd, Sims 2:03 2-5 -3
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Shepherd, Sims :05 0-2 -2
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Wright, Sims :56 1-3 -2
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Wright, Sims 1:40 3-3 0
Douglass, Lee, Wright, Shepherd, Sims 1:39 1-2 -1
Douglass, Lee, Wright, Shepherd, Gibson 1:05 0-2 -2
Douglass, Lee, Wright, Puls, Gibson 2:01 5-3 +2
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Wright, Puls, Gibson 1:19 3-3 0
Totals 20:00 23-42 -19

Game totals

Lineup Totals
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims 9:08 5-10 -5
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Wright, Sims 3:01 3-8 -5
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Wright, Sims :20 2-0 +2
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Shepherd, Sims 4:16 4-7 -3
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Shepherd, Gibson :39 0-2 -2
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Wright, Sims 1:40 3-3 0
Douglass, Lee, Wright, Shepherd, Sims 1:39 1-2 -1
Douglass, Lee, Wright, Shepherd, Gibson 1:05 0-2 -2
Douglass, Lee, Wright, Puls, Gibson 2:01 5-3 +2
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Wright, Puls, Gibson 1:19 3-3 0
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Shepherd, Sims 1:34 3-4 -1
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Shepherd, Gibson 1:19 5-2 +3
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims 2:54 2-2 0
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Sims :01 0-0 0
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Gibson :06 2-0 +2
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Shepherd, Gibson 1:18 6-0 +6
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Shepherd, Sims 2:51 0-2 -2
Merritt, Douglass, Wright, Shepherd, Sims 3:28 3-7 -4
Merritt, Douglass, Wright, Shepherd, Gibson 1:20 0-5 -5
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Shepherd, Sims :05 0-2 -2
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Wright, Sims :56 1-3 -2
Total 40:00 49-67 -18

Individual players:

Manny Harris 18min -4
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1
Midrange 0/3 1/1
3-point 0/1

Aside from the elbow, Manny didn’t have a particularly good game. He complemented bad shooting with a bunch of turnovers as well.

Laval Lucas-Perry 20min -12
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange 0/1
3-point 1/1 0/3

LLP’s shooting is mostly frightening because he’s missing the really easy ones. That speaks to a mental hurdle. Hopefully Beilein will be able to take care of that with a long week of prectice.

Zack Novak DNP
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point

Suspended, yo.

DeShawn Sims 30min -6
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/2 1/1 0/2
Midrange 0/2
3-point 2/4

As Michigan’s best offensive weapon for most of the day, Purdue was able to concentrate on him. Both 3-point makes came early in the game (Michigan’s first 6 points).

Kelvin Grady 17min -13
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 0/1
Midrange
3-point 0/1

Didn’t look to shoot the ball, and got surprisingly little playing time. As the most consistent 3-point shooter on the team, he could have been used better once Harris went out.

Zack Gibson 11min -10
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point 1 3/3

His makes were notable (a thunderous dunk and the tip-in to give Michigan a halftime lead), but he was fairly quiet.

Stu Douglass 23min -7
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange 0/1
3-point 0/1 0/2 0/1

Shot the ball horribly, but he actually wa on a number of positive shifts.

CJ Lee 29min -9
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1/1
Midrange 1
3-point 0/1 0/1

When CJ Lee plays 3/4 of the game, your team is undermanned; he made the gritty walkon plays we’ve come to associate him with.

Jevohn Shepherd 18min -13
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 2/2 0/1 1/1
Midrange 0/1
3-point 0/1 1/1

He is so athletic, but his basketball skill is so limited. It’s a shame Beilein didn’t have another year with him, as Jevohn could have been made into a real player if he’d had a legitimiate coach for more than 2 years.

Anthony Wright 17min -15
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point 1/1 0/1 0/1

I’m actually surprised his differential was that close to zero. He was on the floor for pretty much the entire Purdue run early in the second half that toasted Michigan’s chances to win. He can’t shoot to save his life, either..

Eric Puls 3min +2
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange 1/1 0/1
3-point 1/1

Dude can shoot the ball, but at 150 lbs soaking wet, he’s a major defensive liability. If only players could redshirt 2 years, he could add some bulk and become a good player down the road. He should contribute in future years if he can add weight.

What This Says…

Manny Harris and Zack Novak are both really important to this team (and maybe Novak will have his shooting stroke back after an extended practice period with no games to break it up). By the way, I’m disgusted in Purdue’s reputation as this awesome defensive team: if I could describe them in one word, it would be dirty. Chris Kramer is the best example of this, as he flops more than Anderson Varejao, and does more grabbing, bumping, getting through screens using the point of his elbow, etc., than any player I can recall (and it’s a shame the conference rewarded him for it by naming him the Defensive POY last year). Coming out in a mask because he had a little cut on his skin was particularly douchey. I’m now convinced that Purdue’s defensive reputation is built more upon getting away with a bunch of dirty stuff, rather than actually being good on defense (which they are as well, to be fair).

Manny Harris’s ejection was ridiculous, as the refs changed their original call after seeing Kramer was bleeding. By the way, they thought Kramer had broken his nose, which was a fair assumption based on the rolling on the floor he did. Alas, that was all part of his acting job, since the only blood came from a small cut on his nose. Harris didn’t even hit him hard enough to knock him down (watch the replay: he falls opposite of the direction he got hit, and about a half second later), and had Harris moisturized his elbows before the game, this would have been an innocuous offensive foul.

Posted under Analysis, Basketball

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Quinton Washington Goes Blue

GoBlueWolverine hints (in header), and MGoBlog’s Brian Cook confirms, that offensive lineman Quinton Washington of Timberland, SC, has pledged his word to sign with Michigan tomorrow, and wil announce said decision at 3PM today. Washington, a 6-4, 300-lb player who will likely end up at offensive guard, is Michigan’s 21st commitment of the 2009 class, and hopefully opens the floodgates for a few more commitments to round out the recruiting year.

Recruiting Notes
Early in the recruiting process, it appeared to be highly likely that Washington would end up at one of the South Carolina schools. His coach, Art Craig, is well-connected within the state, and it seemed he might steer his top player to either the Cocks or Tigers. When his original top 5 came out in June, the Wolverines were listed… as #6. With Quinton not expecting to make a decision until after his senior year of football, however, the Wolverines had plenty of time to make up ground. Washington visited Michigan for the Wisconsin game, and witnessed the epic comeback in the Big House. On that visit, the Wolverine staff made sure Quinton knew they wanted him to suit up in maize-and-blue when he got to college. After that time, Michigan was never far from the top of Washington’s recruitment. Despite late pushes by Tennessee and Miami of Florida, the final decision came down to Michigan and South Carolina. Washington went with his heart and his head, picking the Wolverines.

Player Notes
Washington was listed as a top-10 player in South Carolina’s lowcountry before his senior season, and his high recruiting rankings would bear that out (he is a 4-star Guard to Rivals, a 3-star to Scout). Washington was honored for his skills not only by finishing as a finalist for the state’s Mr. Football award, but also by being selected to the Shrine Bowl, as well as the ESPNU/UnderArmour All-American Bowl. Washington’s game is strength, and he won the state Weightlifting Championship in the heavyweight division. Washington’s game will be improved by working a bit on his quickness in the zone scheme once he gets to college.

Video

Video Posted from Quinton’s Gallery on Takkle.com

Posted under Football, Recruiting

Recruiting Update: Signing Day ’09 Minus 1

The 2009 board, including extraneous prospects, can be seen here: 2009 Recruting Board.

As for the information on still-realistic prospects:

There has been a massive downturn in confidence among the Michigan internet fanbase for two important prospects. FL QB Denard Robinson has been downgraded significantly (with Florida now being considered the favorite, although he won’t be able to play QB there). Florida Gator Country is still not confident on Denard, but they’ve certainly changed their tone from the last few days, citing “murmurs”:

IS THERE STILL A CHANCE? I don’t think this one is likely for Denard Robinson, but I have definitely been hearing some murmurs to suggest that Denard is a possibility in this class. Do I think it’s likely? …

…and the Miami Herald has some fluff on Robinson’s final decision. The Toledo Blade says he’ll anounce his decision at the same time as Witty, but that isn’t accurate from what I’ve heard, so take it for what it’s worth.

The other prospect of dwindling confidence is PA WR Je’Ron Stokes. Michigan had been considered a pretty strong front-runner for Stokes ever since his visit, and so the other schools Stokes was considering (Tennessee and Illinois) spent all their effort talking down Michigan. Stokes is evidently worried about not getting the ball enough, not getting enough playing time, and even Rich Rodriguez being fired after this year, all of which are vary from moderately stupid to hilariously ridiculous. Regardless, Michigan is no longer a prohibitive favorite, and they likely trail one of the other schools at this point.

SC DE Sam Montgomery has trimmed his final list to three schools, and Michigan ain’t one of ’em. Conventional wisdom has him signing with either UNC or LSU.

SC OL Quinton Washington was widely regarded to be down to just South Carolina and Michigan coming into the week, and Phil Kornblut confirms that is the case, and that Washington hadn’t announced his decision as of last night, because he hasn’t decided:

“He’s a confused young man right now,” [Timberland coach Art] Craig said. “He’s torn completely in half,” between USC and Michigan.

If you take out Kornblut’s little addendum, it can be deduced that his heart and his head may be telling him different things. Washington is still expecrted to make a final decision sometime today.

LA DT Commit DeQuinta Jones is expected to announce at 12:30 tomorrow between Michigan, Arkansas, or Tennessee.

No updated information on FL CB Adrian Witty or OK DT Commit Pearlie Graves, so everything can be considered status quo on those two for the time being.

Is it possible that Michigan hops on a fewer sleeper prospects if they dont land the majority of these guys? It’s certainly possible, but I’d be surprised if it was more than one or two guys. The more likely scenario is they bank a couple scholarhips for ’09 (give them to preferred walkons during the season) and hopefully gear up for a big 2010 class.

Posted under Football

Recruiting update: Signing Day ’09 Minus 2

2009 Board.

With just a couple days until 2009 prospects sign their letters of intent, the information should be coming fast and furious for Michigan recruiting fans. As such, updates on the 2010 class are suspended until at least Thursday (and probably even later than that). Without further ado, here’s the latest information on all the recruits that Michigan is currently in the running for (as well as a few eliminations of other guys):

First, some removals:
MI QB AJ Westendorp committed to Central Michigan.
FL QB Austin Dantin committed to Toledo.
OH OL Marcus Hall selected Ohio State, in the shocker of the century.
PA OL Tahir Basil (who had pretty much no Michigan interest), committed to Lafayette.
MN CB Varmah Sonie. Committed to Northern Iowa.

FL CB Adrian Witty has set a press conference at 11AM on Signing Day to announce his decision. No word on whether his teammate, QB Denard Robinson, will announce at that time as well. Even is he doesn’t, the announcement from Robinson will probably come some time on Signing Day. For good measure, here’s a little fluff on Robinson. Indications are still (with no definitive word) that the two are a package deal, which would help Michigan.

SC OL Quinton Washington will announce later today or tomorrow between Michigan and South Carolina. Michigan and USC insiders are equally confident on this one, so there is no indication which one he’ll select.

PA WR/slot Je’Ron Stokes will announce his decision sometime on Signing Day. He is thought to be choosing between Michigan, Illinois, and Tennessee. I’ve also re-added Stokes to the board, because regardless of his commitment to Tennessee, he’s clearly open, and Michigan may in fact be the favorite.

SC DE Sam Montgomery took his final official visit (to Tennessee) this weekend, and now:

Montgomery is considering the Vols along with Clemson, USC, Michigan, North Carolina and LSU. “We have to go home and make some comparisons and throw things around and go from there,” Mrs. Montgomery said. “The list does have to be trimmed. We’ll possibly cut some tonight. We’ll be in contact with some schools to get some answers and some clarifications. Distance is not going to be a factor.”

Montgomery plans to announce Wednesday morning on ESPN.

Schools will be eliminated (I assume somewhat publicly) as he goes, with a final decision announced Wednesday morning on ESPN (I assume ESPNU).

DT commits Pearlie Graves (from Oklahoma) and DeQuinta Jones (of Louisiana) are wavering, and have been for quite some time. I assume we’ll hear confirmation of final choices from those two by Signing Day. Michigan really needs at least one, and preferably both of them, to pick the Wolverines.

Most other recruits are pretty much out of the question, though there’s a possibility that the Wolverines pick up a sleeper or two. Everyone else will stay on the board for the time being until there’s official reason to remove them.

Posted under Football, Recruiting

UFR: Ohio State II

Raw data in .xls format here. Apologies for the delay in getting these UFRs published. With the next game not until Thursday, The Purdue edition is coming tomorrow.

Half 1

1st half differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:29 4-8 -4
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 1:40 0-5 -5
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Gibson, Sims 1:06 0-2 -2
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Shepherd, Gibson 2:24 0-4 -4
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Sims 1:30 5-0 +5
Grady, Lucas-Perry Lee, Harris, Sims :32 0-1 -1
Grady, Lucas-Perry Lee, Wright, Sims 2:46 4-5 -1
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Wright, Gibson 2:08 3-3 0
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 2:43 0-4 -4
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Wright, Gibson 1:42 2-2 0
Total 20:00 18-32 -18

Half 2

2nd Half Differential
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 6:58 18-11 +7
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 2:25 2-4 -2
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:03 6-3 +3
Grady, Douglass, Lee, Novak, Sims 2:03 2-3 -1
Grady, Lee, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:33 5-8 -3
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims :17 3-0 +3
Grady, Lee, Harris, Novak, Sims :16 0-3 -3
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims :40 0-2 -2
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Douglass, Shepherd, Gibson :45 0-0 0
Totals 20:00 36-36 0

Game totals

Lineup Totals
Lineup Time on Floor Score Differential
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 10:14 25-19 +6
Grady, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Wright, Sims 2:46 4-5 -1
Merritt, Douglass, Harris, Shepherd, Gibson 2:24 0-4 -4
Merritt, Douglass, Lee, Harris, Sims 1:30 5-0 +5
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Lee, Harris, Sims :40 0-2 -2
Merritt, Lucas-Perry, Douglass, Shepherd, Gibson :45 0-0 0
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Wright, Gibson 2:08 3-3 0
Douglass, Lucas-Perry, Harris, Novak, Sims 2:25 2-4 -2
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Sims 4:43 6-8 -2
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Gibson, Sims 1:06 0-2 -2
Grady, Lucas-Perry Lee, Harris, Sims :32 0-1 -1
Grady, Lucas-Perry Lee, Wright, Sims 2:46 4-5 -1
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Novak, Gibson 2:43 0-4 -4
Grady, Douglass, Harris, Wright, Gibson 1:42 2-2 0
Grady, Douglass, Lee, Novak, Sims 2:03 2-3 -1
Grady, Lee, Harris, Novak, Sims 3:49 5-11 -6
Total 40:00 68-59 +9

Individual players:

Manny Harris 34min -16
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 2 1/2 1/3 1/3
Midrange 0/1 1
3-point 0/1 2/3

Manny didn’t shoot particularly poorly, and a few of his misses could have conceivably been called fouls. It was the turnovers that Manny really hurt the team with on this day.

Laval Lucas-Perry 20min 0
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1
Midrange 0/1
3-point 1 2/2 0/1

LLP shot better than I would have guessed from watching the game. It would probably be best for him to not start a few games to get his head right, and hopefully he’d be more effective off the bench.

Zack Novak 27min -8
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1 0/1
Midrange
3-point 0/1 2/4 0/3

Bad day shooting, though he did his standard job rebounding and making various hustle plays. Also, he got suspended for elbowing a dude in the face.

DeShawn Sims 30min -6
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1 2/3 1/3 1/1 1/2
Midrange 0/3
3-point 0/1

Really tough day for DeShawn. He started off pretty well, then faded down the stretch (as has become a pretty strong trend lately). He has to play the lion’s share of minutes, is often guarding (and being guarded by) bigger guys, and gets worse looks as his teammates decide to start jacking ill-advised threes.

Kelvin Grady 30min -11
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point 1/1

Not a whole lot of shooting from Kelvin, which is too bad, because he’s certainly one of the best three-point shooters on the team, if not the best. He set his teammates up with a lot of decent looks still.

Zack Gibson 11min -10
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point 0/1

When Sims struggles, the team really neeeds Gibson to step up and prove his worth. Ohio State does have much better big men (and more depth) than Michigan, but Zack’s perfomance was truly bad.

Stu Douglass 21min -15
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane 1
Midrange 0/1
3-point 0/2 0/1 0/1

Yikes. Maybe stepping in for LLP in a starting role isn’t what Douglass needs right now. He’s really been struggling lately as well.

CJ Lee 12min -6
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point 0/1

Standard CJ Lee.

Anthony Wright 7min -1
Location 0 1 2 3 F
Lane
Midrange
3-point 0/1

When Anthony Wright is playing outside of garbage time (and more than a minute here and there), it’s probably not a good thing for the team’s success.

What This Says…

After the terror that was the opening few minutes of this game, Michigan’s players really settled down and played the Buckeyes evenly for the remainder of the game. Of course, playing even isn’t good enough when you start in an 18-point hole. The shooting was subpar, but Michigan would be able to get through this if it wasn’t for the horrendous turnovers they had. In the .xls sheet, look at all the times Michigan didn’t even have a shot attempt while Ohio State was scoring 6 or 8 points. That’s all due to turnovers. Of course, the Buckeyes helped Michigan a bit by turning it over a bunch themselves. The final score of this game is a little wider than the contest actually was, as Michigan had a technical and a flagrant foul late in the game, and were fouling the Buckeyes at the end to try to extend it.

A couple comments on how unbelievably stupid the BTN analyst was (these are drawn straight from the .xls):

  • Michigan’s first 3-pointer in 10 shot attempts prompts the announcer to say “Michigan has been almost exclusively a perimeter team [this game].” At that point, 14 of Michigan’s 20 shot attempts (70%) had been from inside the arc.
  • After Michigan gets an offensive rebound, “This will give Michigan a rare opportunity for some second-chance points.” At that point in the game, Michigan already had 8 offensive rebounds, and they ended up beating the Buckeyes in offensive rebounding by a wide margin of 13-4.

Of course, color analysts are often stupid, but BTN has some of the worst of the bunch (don’t even get me started on football). It seems that, especially with this Michigan team, they go into the game with the assumption that Michigan will only shoot threes, and won’t get any offensive boards, and they continue to hammer on those points, even as such trivial matters as “facts” go completely against what they’re saying.

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Big Ten 2009 Recruiting Class Rankings 2-1-09

Action since last rankings:
1-25-09 Purdue loses commitment from Shayon Green.  Iowa gains commitment from Matt Murphy. Conor Boffeli. Iowa gains commitment from Dakota Getz.
1-26-09 Michigan State gains commitment from Denzel Drone. Wisconsin gains commitment from Jacob Pederson. Wisconsin gains commitment from Dezmen Southward. Iowa gains commitment from Stephane Ngoumou.
1-27-09 Notre Dame loses commitment from Nyshier Oliver.
1-30-09 Ohio State gains commitment from Kenny Guiton. Indiana gains commitment from Nick Turner. Iowa gains commitment from Nolan McMillan.

I’ve also bolded the recruits from each school who are enrolled (per Rivals) and moved them to the top of their ranking level, since enrolling early is something of an advantage for recruit and should be reflected in the rankings. Obviously, the Rivals lists aren’t complete, so if you know of anything that needs to be fixed, let me know in the comments.

New Rankings:

#1 Ohio State – 24 commits
LB ***** Dorian Bell
CB ***** Corey Brown
RB **** Jaamal Berry
DE **** Melvin Fellows
CB **** CJ Barnett
WR **** James Jackson
MLB **** Storm Klein
MLB **** Jordan Whiting
RB **** Jordan Hall
OG **** Corey Linsley
OT **** Jack Mewhort
S **** Jamie Wood
WR **** Justin Green
RB **** Carlos Hyde
WR **** Chris Fields
CB **** Dominic Clarke
WR **** Duron Carter
DE *** Jonathan Newsome
TE *** Reid Fragel
DT *** Adam Bellamy
FB *** Adam Homan
LB *** Zach Boren
OL *** Sam Longo
DT *** Johnny Simon
QB *** Kenny Guiton
#2 Michigan – 20 commits
DT ***** William Campbell
QB **** Tate Forcier
S **** Vladimir Emilien
DE **** Anthony LaLota
CB **** Justin Turner
OL **** Taylor Lewan
RB **** Fitzgerald Toussaint
WR **** Jeremy Gallon
OL **** Michael Schofield
DT **** DeQuinta Jones
DE **** Craig Roh
DT **** Pearlie Graves
WR **** Cameron Gordon
S *** Mike Jones
LB *** Brandin Hawthorne
RB *** Vincent Smith
S *** Isaiah Bell
RB *** Teric Jones
S *** Thomas Gordon
K ** Brendan Gibbons
#3 Michigan State – 22 commits
RB **** Edwin Baker
RB **** Larry Caper
SLB **** Chris Norman
OL **** David Barrent
WR **** Donald Spencer
DT **** Blake Treadwell
QB **** Andrew Maxwell
OL **** Nate Klatt
LB **** Jeremy Gainer
TE **** Dion Sims
LB *** Denzel Drone
WR *** Dana Dixon
LB *** Tyquan Hammock
OL *** Micajah Reynolds
WR *** Patrick White
DE *** Dan France
LB *** Denicos Allen
WR *** Bennie Fowler
OL *** Henry Conway
K ** Kevin Muma
TE ** Derek Hoebing
DE ** Corey Freeman
#4 Penn State – 26 commits
QB **** Kevin Newsome
LB **** Gerald Hodges
OT **** Eric Shrive
CB **** Darrell Givens
S **** Derrick Thomas
LB **** Glenn Carson
K *** Anthony Fera
C *** Ty Howle
DE *** Sean Stanley
S *** Stephen Obeng-Agyapong
S *** Malcolm Willis
CB *** Stephon Morris
WR *** Brandon Felder
OT *** Adam Gress
OL *** Nate Cadogan
RB *** Curtis Dukes
ATH *** Devon Smith
WR *** Shawney Kersey
CB ** Mike Wallace
OL ** John Urschel
QB ** Curtis Drake
OG ** Frank Figueroa
WR ** Christian Kuntz
OT ** Mark Arcidiacono
DE ** Garry Gilliam
DE ** Jordan Hill
#5 Notre Dame – 16 commits
LB **** Zeke Motta
OL **** Chris Watt
RB **** Cierre Wood
WR **** Shaquelle Evans
OL **** Alex Bullard
LB **** Dan Fox
OL **** Zach Martin
RB **** Theo Riddick
DT **** Tyler Stockton
S *** E.J. Banks
LB *** Carlo Calabrese
TE *** Tyler Eifert
P *** Ben Turk
TE ** Jake Golic
K ** Nick Tausch
OL ** Jordan Cowart
#6 Illinois – 22 commits
WR **** Kraig Appleton
DT **** Lendell Buckner
OT **** Leon Hill
QB **** Nathan Scheelhaase
RB **** Bud Golden
WR **** Terry Hawthorne
OL *** Jamar Bass
OL *** Aaron Gress
DT *** Akeem Spence
ATH *** Eric Watts
OL *** Andrew Carter
FB *** Greg Fuller
OL *** Hugh Thornton
DT *** Tank Carradine
WR *** Steve Hull
S *** Tommie Hopkins
CB ** Joelil Thrash
OL ** Jake Feldmeyer
LB ** Darryl Lee
TE ** Justin Lattimore
DE ** Tom Kynard
Ath ** Walt Aikens
#7 Wisconsin – 20 commits
DT **** Jared Kohout
DE **** Shelby Harris
DE **** David Gilbert
RB **** Montee Ball
LB *** Conor O’Neill
DE *** Tyler Dippel
OG *** Ryan Groy
QB *** Jon Budmayr
OT *** Zac Matthias
TE *** Brian Wozniak
MLB *** Chris Borland
OL *** Travis Frederick
LB *** AJ Fenton
WR *** Jeff Duckworth
DE *** Pat Muldoon
OL ** Casey Dehn
S ** Jason Peprah
CB ** Darious Thomas
TE ** Jacob Pederson
DB ** Dezmen Southward
#8 Minnesota – 18 commits
RB **** Hasan Lipscomb
WR **** Hayo Carpenter
OL *** Jeff Wills
QB *** Moses Alipate
C *** Ed Olsen
OT *** Josh Campion
WR *** Victor Keise
OL *** Brooks Michel
LB *** Kendell Gregory-McGhee
DB *** Kerry Lewis
TE *** Ra’Shede Hageman
DT *** Joey Searcy
DE *** Matt Garin
S *** Kenny Watkins
Ath *** Bryant Allen
LB *** Brent Singleton
DE ** Nick Rengel
K ** Dan Orseske
#9 Indiana – 16 commits
QB *** Edward Wright-Baker
DT *** Adam Replogle
WR *** Jamonne Chester
WR *** Duwyce Wilson
OL *** Charles Chapman
QB *** Dustin Kiel
OL *** Colin Rodkey
CB *** Lawrence Barnett
K *** Mitch Ewald
S *** Nick Zachery
S *** Demetrius Carr
S *** Ted Bolser
OL *** Pat McShane
DE ** Javon Cornley
OL ** Aaron Price
LB ** Damon Sims
RB ** Nick Turner
#10 Northwestern – 18 commits
OL **** Patrick Ward
QB *** Evan Watkins
DE *** Davon Custis
LB *** Damien Proby
RB *** Mike Trumpy
DE *** Anthony Battle
LB *** Will Studlien
OL *** Taylor Paxton
DB *** Davion Fleming
RB *** Arby Fields
LB *** Roderick Goodlow
OL ** Brian Smith
WR ** Drew Moulton
LB ** Tim Riley
LB ** Tyler Scott
DE ** John Plasencia
K ** Jeff Budzein
S ** Cooper Gerami
#11 Purdue – 17 commits
RB **** Al-Terek McBurse
DE *** Antwon Higgs
DT *** Eric McDaniel
TE *** Gabrison Holmes
WR *** Xavier Reese
WR *** Eric Williams
DT ** Cody Davis
DE ** Trevor Foy
S ** Ishmael Aristide
WR ** Gary Bush
QB ** Rob Henry
WR ** Josh Johnson
DT ** Brandon Taylor
DB ** Chris Quinn
DT ** Xavier Melton
DE ** Justin Kitchens
QB ** Najee Tyler
#12 Iowa – 17 commits
WR **** Keenan Davis
RB **** Brandon Wegher
WR *** Jordan Cotton
FB *** Brad Rogers
TE *** Conor Boffeli
OL *** Nolan McMillan
WR ** Stephane Ngoumou
OL ** Matt Murphy
LB ** Dakota Getz
OL ** Drew Clark
DT ** Scott Covert
OL ** Brett Van Sloten
TE ** Anthony Schiavone
LB ** Tyler Harrell
LB ** Shane DiBona
LB ** Martin Hopkins
CB ** Joshua Brown
QB ** Micah Hyde

Posted under Football, Recruiting

Correspondent: Michigan Wrestling vs. Northwestern

Reader Kenny Greenia took in the wresting meet  against Northwestern. College wrestling is actually very fun and Michigan has a very storied program. In case you don’t know, if a wrestler wins by seven or less points, it’s a decision and the team gets 3 points. A win by 8 points to 14 points garners that team 5 points. Without further ado…

Michigan wrestled to a 17-17 tie against Northwestern today, and much to Donovon McNabb’s chagrin, there is no tiebreaking procedures in college wrestling right now. Each team won 5 of the 10 matches, and each team got 2 majors decisions (wins by more than 8) and 3 decisions. The theme this meet seemed to be overmatched wrestlers giving tough matches to save team points, and that will show up in the match by match a few times. With that, on to the matches. Michigan kids will be in blue.

125: Brandon Precin (3rd) Dec. Micheal Watts (15th) 9-3

I was pretty wrong here, thinking that Precin was a lock for the major. It looked bad for Watts when Precin started out with a takedown and then a 2 point near-fall with a fireman’s tip into a tilt to jump out to a 4-0 lead, but Watts was able to get a reversal by sliding out the back. Watts kept Precin down until about 10 seconds left in the match, but Precin was able to get the escape, making it 5-2 after the first. The next 2 periods were less exciting, Precin tacks on an escape after choosing down in the 2nd and gets another takedown using a double leg. Watts chooses down in the third and gets an escape but not before Precin locks up his riding time point, and Precin gets another double leg takedown. The match ends 9-3.

Wildcats lead 3-0

133: Eric Metzler Dec. Zac Stevens 4-3

This one was a great match, even though Stevens lost. Stevens came out of the gate very aggressive and got an early takedown, but Metzler was able to escape after a restart when a stalemate was called with about 2 minutes left in the first. Despite a lot of action by both wrestlers, there was no more scoring in the first, although Stevens was close to a takedown using a front headlock late in the period. Stevens chooses down in the second and is able to escape quick, but Metzler shoots a quick double leg that Stevens defends nicely and gets a stalemate. The same scene plays out, with Metzler shooting right off the whistle, and another stalemate is called. Metzler starts the third period down, and gets out quick, making the score 3-2. Stevens takes a cue from Metzler and shoots a single leg off the whistle, but Metzler defends it well. Another restart, and another single, this time from Metzler, and again no points are scores, although this time we get blood time because Metzler has injured his finger. Metzler is feeling well enough when the match restarts though, and takes another single, this time converting on it, and scoring the final points of the match, making it 4-3.

Wildcats lead 6-0

141: Kellen Russell (5th) Dec. Keith Sulzer (16th) 4-2

Another great match, the Wolverines come out on top though. Sulzer comes out shooting, which doesn’t serve him well in this instance, as Russel is able to score a takedown by circling around on a bad shot attempt, and ride him out the rest of the period. Russel chooses down to start the 2nd, and almost gets a reversal, but the referees rule no change. Thankfully he’s able to escape off the restart with 30 seconds left, making the score 3-0 at the end of the second. Sulzer chooses down to start the 3rd, and manages to get the reversal, but Russel is out immediately. Both wrestlers grind out the final minute in the period, but neither scores a takedown, and neither has a minute of riding time, meaning the match ends 4-2, giving the Wolverines their first victory.

Wildcats lead 6-3

149: Andrew Nadhir Maj. Dec. Mark Weber 12-4

I was WAAAAY off here, thinking Weber would win, although he should have only given up a decision if not for some…odd…officiating near the end. For a major decision, this match started out very slow, with no scoring in the first. Both wrestlers were content to tie up and work for position, but Weber is hit with a stalling warning late in the period. Nadhir chooses down to start the 2nd, and gets up easily, then shows the same amount of ease taking Weber down. Weber gets up and out for the escape but Nadhir is able to get his ankle and work that into a takedown on the edge with almost no time left in the period, which then ends 5-1. Weber chooses down for the 3rd, and again is up and out quickly, but Nadhir hits a very deep double and brings Weber to the mat hard. Weber gets out again, but gets taken down, again, and then gets another escape. At this point the score is 9-4, and then the officiating takes a turn for the worst. After getting warned for stalling, an odd occurrence when up 9-4, Nadhir gets in on a leg attack, and Weber gets his hips out in a sprawl attempt, prompting the official to call him for stalling and give Nadhir a point. If that is not wierd enough, as Nadhir works up, Weber dives to get a leg to prevent the take down and the ensuing major, and even though he manages to get ahold of the event, the referee gives Nadhir the takedown, ending the match at 12-4, and giving Northwestern an extra team point, which will be very important in the final score.

Wildcats lead 10-3

156: Jason Welch (15th) Dec. Aaron Hynes 6-2

Tough match by Hynes, keeping it close against a very, very tough leg wrestler. First period has a lot of scrambling but the only points occur late in the clock when Welch gets the better of Hynes. Welch chooses down to begin the 2nd and is out quickly. Hynes regains the advantage with a single leg but Welch gets the reversal and puts on the legs, riding him out. 5-2 going into the third, and Hynes chooses down, despite Welch’s prowess on top. Welch gets the legs in quickly and proceeds to ride Hynes out, switching between both legs in and a cross body ride. Welch manages to get the riding time point, ending the match at 6-2.

Wildcats lead 13-3

165: Justin Zeerip Maj. Dec. Kyle Bertin 9-1

Zeerip really stepped up today and got a HUGE win here, against a decent kid, although not the one I thought he would wrestle. Zeerip is the aggressor throughout the first period, working some short offense and a leg attack but doesn’t convert on anything, and the first period ends without any score. Zeerip chooses down to start the 2nd and gets up quickly, and manages to defend a single by Bertin on the edge of the mat. Bertin thinks too much of his single and takes kind of a sloppy shot, and Zeerip manages to lock a cradle up and get a takedown with it, but doesn’t get any nearfall, ending the period at 3-0. Bertin chooses down to start the third, and Zeerip manages to ride him long enough to build up his minute, despite getting warned for stalling. Bertin gets up and gets his escape, but Zeerip works some offense again and nearly comes up with a takedown before they go out of bounds. Zeerip does manage to get another takedown late in the period, getting in on a leg attack and managing to put Bertin to his back, getting the 5 count and all 3 of his near-fall, and riding him out the rest of the period. Adding in his riding time point, Zeerip gets the 9-1 major decision in an incredibly clutch match.

Wildcats lead 13-7

174: Steve Luke (1st) Dec.Robert Kellog 11-5

Kellog wrestled the kind of match his team needed him to, going in knowing he can’t win and with no objective other than save as many team points as possible. The first period happened the way it should, with Luke getting the early takedown and then letting him up to his feet, or cutting him, in order to try and work more from neutral. Luke does this twice more in the first, and manages to get Kellog warned for stalling, ending the period 6-3. Kellog starts the 2nd by choosing bottom and Luke first try’s working a chicken wing, but gives up quickly and just lets him up. Luke is trying to work some more offense and Kellog keeps backing up, getting him called for stalling and giving Luke a point. Luke does manage another takedown and Kellog gets up again before the period ends with Luke up 9-5. Luke chooses down in the third and gets out quickly, but after they are neutral Kellog latches onto the ankle to try and prevent Luke from getting another takedown, which would give him the major in addition to his riding time. Kellog battles out the third and somehow manages to avoid another takedown, and after riding time Luke wins by a final score of 11-5.

Wildcats lead 13-10

184: Jake Herbert (1st) Maj. Dec. Anthony Biondo (12th) 16-6

Biondo came up with an incredibly gutsy performance here, holding Herbert to a 16-6 major decision and not giving up any back points or stalling points. Herbert put on a takedown clinic all match, and was able to get 3 in the first, letting Biondo up twice to make the score 6-2. Herbert starts the 2nd period down and immediately stands up. Biondo manages to only give up 2 takedowns this period, sandwiched around 1 escape for him, making it 11-3 going into the third. Biondo goes down to start the third and Herbert lets him up and is again only able to take him down twice, even though Biondo gets warned for stalling. Biondo gets let up after each takedown as Herbert is working for more points, but they finish the match in neutral, and after riding time Herbert gets the major 16-6, although the story here is that Biondo gives him the toughest match he’s had so far. Yes, Biondo failed to register a takedown or a point that Herbert did not give him, but Herbert has only had 2 matches that lasted all 7 minutes this year, and the other 2 were 14-1 and 15-1, each against top 15 wrestlers. Herbert is very good, and should give Brent Metcalf, a Michigan native, a run for his money when it comes to the Hodge Trophy for the nations best wrestler.

Wildcats lead 17-10

197: Tyrell Todd (6th) Maj. Dec. John Schoen 16-5

Michigan comes up with another big match here, with an injured Ty Todd absolutely dominating John Schoen. Todd sets the tone of this match early with a single leg, picking Schoen up and bringing him back to the mat so hard Schoen loses a contact lens. After Schoen takes some injury time to find his contact lens and probably call his parents to tell him he loves them, just in case, Todd cuts him loose on the restart, and Schoen manages to avoid a takedown for the rest of the period, despite getting warned for stalling, ending the first with Todd up 2-1. Schoen starts the 2nd period off on bottom, and Todd stays on him to get his minute of riding time before letting him go. Schoen gets dinged for stalling, giving Todd another point, and Todd gets another takedown. Todd lets him up again, and Schoen is clearly running away, getting dinged again for stalling and giving Todd another point, ending the period at 6-3. Todd chooses down and gets out easily, then takes Schoen down and lets him up. Schoen dinged again for stalling, this time its 2 points for Todd, and if he gets called again he is disqualified and Todd earns 6 team points. With this looming over his head Schoen stops backup up and Todd works another 2 takedowns before the period ends. Add in his riding time advantage and Todd gets the major decision 16-5.

Wildcats lead 17-14

285: Eddie Phillips Dec. Ben Kuhar 3-2

This one is as close as close can get, with Phillips edging out the win in double overtime. It looks a lot like a heavyweight match right off the whistle, as both wrestlers are very aggressive, tying up with each other, and giving each other a lot of pressure. It looks like someone might get thrown but both of them do a good job of keeping the other from getting a secure enough hold to feel good about a throw. The first ends with no scoring, and Phillips starts the 2nd period down, and immediately gets a reversal using a switch off the whistle, and starts in on a head lever ride. After a potentially dangerous call, Kuhar is able to work his way out, and after more tying up, the period ends. Kuhar goes down to start the third and gets the escape to even the score 2-2, and after more tying up and a few shot feints, the match goes into overtime. The first overtime, which lasts a minute and starts neutral, looks very much like most of the match, a lot of wrestling for better position, and no takedowns. After the first OT period, they go into double overtime, which is split into two different periods, each 30 seconds long, and each starting from referees position, or top and bottom. Phillips goes down in the first period, and is out on a standup about halfway into it. Kuhar is down in the second 30 second period, and Phillips manages to ride him out the full 30 seconds, giving him the gutty 3-2 victory, and getting the team a tie.

Final: Michigan ties Northwestern, 17-17

Summary

All in all, not a bad performance by Michigan. A great meet if you like suspense, with a lot of matches that were in doubt late, or barely put into majors late. Not the result the Wolverines were looking for, but still, anytime you wrestle a Big Ten team and don’t lose, its a decent day. Tommorow, Michigan will be in Cliff Keen , again, wrestling the 19th ranked team in the country, again. This time, though, it will be the Indiana Hoosiers, who are tied with Northwestern at the moment at 19th in the NWCA coaching poll. I’ll try to have a rundown of the team up before the 2 P.M. start, but if I end up too busy prepping for the Super Bowl, I think Michigan ends up getting their first Big Ten win tommorow, and I think they get big matches from Ty Todd and Anthony Biondo.

Posted under Other Sports

Michigan v. Notre Dame Liveblog

The action should get going shortly before 7:30. Be here or be gueer.

Posted under Hockey

Post Game: Michigan vs. Purdue

Purdue 67 – Michigan 49

At the end of the first half it was 26-25 Michigan after a last second tip by Gibson as time expired.  The first half Manny was quiet and Novak was suspended. Michigan got some good production from DeShawn Sims early and then the bench brigade, mainly Sheppherd and Gibson, was key in providing a lot of the first scoring.

The first half was pretty brutal offensively overall. Michigan didn’t score for the first 6 minutes of the game yet only trailed by 4 points.  Michigan played tough and hustled hard on defense even though they were overmatched at more than a few positions.

The second half is where it all went to hell. Usually there isn’t a particular play in a basketball game, much less a 18 point blow out,  but this game is defenitely an exception. Like most games, Manny Harris was frustrated as he would go to the basket, get mauled and have to get back on defense when the ref didn’t blow his whistle.  Before the 18 minutes mark in the second half, Manny had the ball outside the 3 point arc on the wing. The defender, Robbie Hummel [UPADTE: It was Kramer. My rage got the best of me], was right up in Manny’s face playing tight D.  Manny brought his arms with the ball around and accidentally caught Kramer in the nose with an elbow.  Kramer went to the ground holding his nose.  There was blood, and the Purdue fans were howling for more. Immediately a foul was called. Manny looked around for a ref, so he could give him the ball. All of a sudden they called it a flagrant personal foul and Manny was heading to the locker room. The rule book (pg 87) says:

Art. 4. Flagrant personal foul, live ball.
A flagrant personal foul shall be a personal foul that involves severe or excessive contact with an opponent or involves contact that is extreme in nature while the ball is live.

I guess there isn’t anything in there about intent, so if the official thinks that the contact is that far out of the realm of normal play, he has every right to throw Manny out. But it wasn’t a dirty play. Manny wasn’t trying to hurt the player; he wasn’t even trying to hit the Purdue player. Obviously it should be a foul. There was contact and the defender had his position, but there shouldn’t have been an ejection for that.

Speaking of the refs, they were pretty awful the entire games. Like most Big Ten crews, they love to call stupid, ticky-tack fouls, yet don’t call muggings at the rim. I really don’t get it, at all.

After that, everything went to hell in a handbasket. Purdue got hot and Michigan was rattled. They couldn’t get anything going offensively and that affected their defensive ability.  Eventually it got to be too much. Around the 11 minute mark, most observers could tell the game was effectively over.

They were able to lead a good Purdue team at the half without Novak, who is arguably Michigan’s 3rd or 4th best player. No way Michigan had a chance without Manny for the second half. Manny averages 32 minutes a game, but only could play 18. Novak averages 26 and played none.  Playing on the road against a team with better talent, it was just too much for this team to overcome.  They played hard, but when Anthony Wright, CJ Lee and David Merrit all have to play serious minutes, the team is not going to win much.

Do you think that the ejection was the wrong call? Let us know in the comments.

Posted under Basketball

Michigan vs. Purdue Live Blog

Can Michigan pull the upset? Will there be enough grit without Novak? Figure it out here. We’ll get started a bit before 1pm.

Posted under Basketball

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