2017–18 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team explained

Coachrank:2
Aprank:7
Hc Year:11th
Mode:Basketball
Year:2017–18
Team:Michigan Wolverines
Logo Alt:A blue block M with maize-colored borders and the word Michigan across the middle.
Conference:Big Ten Conference
Short Conf:Big Ten
Record:33–8
Conf Record:13–5
Champion:NCAA tournament, Runner-up
Big Ten tournament champions
Bowl:National Championship Game
Bowl Result:
L 62-79 vs. Villanova

The 2017–18 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team represented the University of Michigan during the 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wolverines, led by head coach John Beilein in his 11th year, played their home games for the 51st consecutive year at the Crisler Center in Ann Arbor, Michigan. This season marked the program's 102nd season and its 101st consecutive year as a member of the Big Ten Conference.

The entering class included 2017 Michigan Gatorade Player of the Year and Mr. Basketball of Michigan Isaiah Livers. Kentucky transfer Charles Matthews became eligible to play this season after sitting out the 2016–17 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, while graduate transfer Jaaron Simmons became eligible to play immediately. The departing class included graduating seniors Zak Irvin and Derrick Walton who had completed their eligibility, and graduating seniors Mark Donnal and Andrew Dakich. In addition, D. J. Wilson declared for the 2017 NBA draft with two years of eligibility remaining. Jeff Meyer and Billy Donlon also departed prior to the season to take assistant coaching positions at Butler and Northwestern, respectively, and were replaced by DeAndre Haynes and Luke Yaklich.

During the regular season, the team finished tied for fourth in the Big Ten Conference. They earned a 5th seed in the 2018 Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament, where they won the championship, thus defending the title won by the 2016–17 Wolverines in the 2017 Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament the year before. The Wolverines finished the season with a 33–8 record, setting a program record for wins during a season. The team earned the third seed in the 2018 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament and reached the Championship Game before losing to Villanova.

Departures

Zak Irvin and Derrick Walton graduated during their senior seasons for the 2016–17 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team. Mark Donnal and Andrew Dakich graduated with one year of eligibility remaining, which they could use under the graduate transfer rule to play elsewhere.[1] [2] Donnal committed to play with the Clemson Tigers.[3] Dakich committed to play with the Quinnipiac Bobcats,[4] but could not gain acceptance into his preferred graduate program. Dakich announced in July that he had committed to play with the Ohio State Buckeyes.[5] On June 20, Michigan assistant coach and former Butler Bulldogs assistant coach Jeff Meyer left the program to join former Michigan assistant coach LaVall Jordan's staff at Butler.[6] On June 26, Chicagoan and assistant coach Billy Donlon left the program to become an assistant under long-time friend Chris Collins at Northwestern.[7] On October 11, Fred Wright-Jones left the team, but remained at Michigan as a student on a full academic scholarship.[8]

Preseason

In April 2017, some early pollsters included Michigan among the expected preseason top 25 teams: ESPN (#22),[9] and Sports Illustrated (#23).[10] However, most early polls omitted the team: Yahoo!,[11] USA Today,[12] NBC Sports,[13] CBS Sports,[14] Sporting News[15] and Bleacher Report.[16] At the time, ESPN's Eamonn Brennan felt it was a "foregone conclusion" that D. J. Wilson would declare for the 2017 NBA draft,[9] with Sports Illustrated projecting him as a first round selection.[17] On April 10, both D. J. Wilson and Moe Wagner declared for the 2017 NBA draft, but did not hire agents, which gave them until May 24 to withdraw their names and retain their athletic eligibility to return to Michigan.[18] On April 25, Ohio grad transfer Jaaron Simmons announced that if he did not remain entered in the 2017 NBA draft, he would transfer to Michigan. Simmons, a 2017 first team All-Mid-American Conference honoree who averaged 15.9 points and 6.5 assists in 2016–17, had declared for the draft without hiring an agent on March 28.[19] On April 30, Jeff Goodman of ESPN reported that Wagner and Wilson were invited to the NBA draft combine and Walton was named as an alternate.[20] On May 23, the addition of Simmons as a graduate transfer was made official as Simmons removed himself from the NBA draft process.[21] On May 24, Wagner withdrew his name from the NBA draft and Wilson did not.[22] Following the deadline for returning to college and its announcements, Michigan was not ranked by some media outlets, including ESPN,[23] CBS Sports,[24] NBC Sports,[25] USA Today,[26] Fox Sports,[27] and Yahoo! Sports,[28]

In the fall preseason, Wagner was selected to the 10-man preseason All-Big Ten team.[29] He was also one of two Big Ten players named to the 21-man Karl Malone Award watchlist.[30] He was a preseason John R. Wooden Award and Naismith College Player of the Year watchlist honoree.[31] [32]

2017–18 recruits and personnel

On October 23, 2015, four-star recruit Jordan Poole became the first commitment for the Class of 2017 after home gym visit from Beilein and assistant coach Jordan and multiple Michigan campus visits. Poole had several competing offers including Illinois, Indiana, Nebraska, Memphis, Marquette, and Auburn.[33] [34] [35] As a junior, Poole was a 2016 WBCA All-State Boys Basketball first team selection.[36] On June 20, 2016, reports confirmed that Michigan had recruited Kentucky transfer Charles Matthews, who played his freshman season for the 2015–16 Kentucky Wildcats. Matthews would have to sit out the 2016–17 season.[37] [38] Michigan confirmed the story on July 1.[39] The same day, Poole announced that he would transfer from Rufus King High School in Wisconsin to La Lumiere School in Indiana where he would experience a campus lifestyle, play a schedule with several ESPN broadcasts, and be teamed up with unsigned class of 2017 prospects Brian Bowen and Jeremiah Tilmon.[40] [41] On July 19, Spring Grove Area High School point guard Eli Brooks committed to Michigan over offers such as defending national champion Villanova, Ohio State, N.C. State, Temple and Kansas State.[42] On August 7, 2016 Isaiah Livers committed to Michigan over contenders Michigan State, Butler, Minnesota, California and Boston College.[43] [44] On July 15, 2017, it was announced that Naji Ozeir would join the Michigan basketball team as a preferred walk-on.[45] Ozeir, who had an offer withstanding from Wayne State to play on scholarship, had previously played for the Lebanese under-17 national basketball team in the 2015 Arab National Cup.[46] Luke Wilson was added to the roster as a preferred walk-on on September 1, 2017.[47] On the morning of the season-opening exhibition game, the team announced that student manager C. J. Baird would be elevated to the roster.[48] In December, the team added Rico Ozuna-Harrison, who had been practicing with the team since walk-on tryouts in October, to the roster.[49] Ozuna-Harrison had been a captain for the 2017 Cass Tech team that won the school's first Detroit Public School League title since 1998.[50]

Livers was named 2017 Michigan Gatorade Player of the Year and Mr. Basketball of Michigan.[51] He is Michigan's 11th Mr. Basketball of Michigan, but the first since Manny Harris in 2007.[52] Poole was a member of the 2017 Dick's National High School Champion La Lumiere team.[53] [54]

On August 4, 2017, Michigan announced that it had hired Luke Yaklich and DeAndre Haynes away from the Illinois State Redbirds to serve as assistant coaches. At the same time, the team promoted Chris Hunter from director of player personnel to director of basketball operations.[55] [56]

Future recruits

2018–19

On December 22, 2016, junior recruit David DeJulius became the first commitment for the Class of 2018 after receiving a December 17 offer following his career-high 46-point, 7-rebound, 5-assist performance of December 17 in leading East English Village Preparatory Academy over Dakota High School.[57] [58] Brandon Johns became the second commitment for the Class of 2018 when he committed to Michigan on June 29, 2017, over several other schools including hometown Michigan State, along with fellow Big Ten universities Indiana, Iowa, and Purdue. At the time of his commitment, Johns was considered by several recruiting sites, such as 24/7Sports as well as ESPN, as the top recruit from Michigan in the Class of 2018.[59]

In mid-June 2017, junior recruit Taylor Currie committed to Michigan, becoming, at the time, their first commitment for the Class of 2019. Two weeks later, Currie announced that he would be reclassifying and would be set to join the Class of 2018 marking the third member of the class.[60] On September 22, 2017, Ignas Brazdeikis became the fourth; at that time he was ranked in the top 50 in the 24/7Sports composite top 100 rankings for recruits of the class of 2018. Brazdeikis committed to Michigan over schools such as Vanderbilt and Florida.[61] On September 29, 2017, Currie decommitted from Michigan, dropping the amount of 2018 recruits to three.[62] On October 2, 2017, Adrien Nunez became the fourth member of the 2018 recruiting class. Nunez received much attention over the summer scouting period and drew praise for his shooting ability; he committed to Michigan over schools such as Penn State, Texas A&M, and Boston College.[63] In October, Michigan added its fifth recruit to the 2018 recruiting class with the addition of Colin Castleton, who selected Michigan over Illinois. Castleton noted his connection with new Michigan assistant coach Luke Yaklich as a driving force behind communication with Michigan.[64]

Johns and DeJulius finished second (2,792 points) and third (2,542), respectively, to Michigan State recruit Foster Loyer (3,691) in the 2018 Mr. Basketball of Michigan voting.[65] All five finalists were Big Ten conference recruits (Michigan-2, Michigan State-2, Purdue-1).[66] Brazdeikis repeated as the Ontario Scholastic Basketball Association MVP in 2018 after earning the award in 2017.[67] [68]

Regular season

November

Michigan began the season with a victory over North Florida. Although the game was tied with 11:03 remaining, Michigan won 86–66. Michigan was led by Duncan Robinson with a game-high 21 points, while Charles Matthews posted 20 points in his Michigan debut, marking the first time Michigan had two 20-point scorers since March 3, 2015.[69] [70] On November 13, Michigan defeated Central Michigan 72–65. Michigan had five double-digit scorers, including Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman who led the team with 17 points and Moe Wagner who contributed his second consecutive double-double, and third of his career. With seven lead changes in the game, Michigan took the lead for good with 8:47 remaining.[71] [72] On November 16, Jon Teske, who had previous career highs of four points and three rebounds, led Michigan with a 10-point, 11-rebound double-double as Michigan overcame its third second-half deficit in three games against Southern Miss.[73]

In the first round of the 2017 Maui Invitational Tournament (its fifth) on November 20, against Louisiana State, Michigan overcame an eight-point deficit with 12 minutes remaining to take a nine-point lead with five minutes remaining only to lose 75–77.[74] [75] In the consolation bracket, Michigan defeated the next day on the strength of Matthews' first career double-double (22 points and 10 rebounds). Michigan set or tied school single-game tournament records in scoring margin (38), field-goal percentage (64.9), assists (22), three-pointers made (15), three-point attempts (28), three-point percentage (53.6), steals (nine), turnover low (eight) and blocks (six).[76] [77] On November 22, Michigan defeated Virginia Commonwealth (VCU) 68–60, earning a fifth-place finish in the Maui Invitational Tournament. Michigan was led by Robinson with a game-high 18 points. Michigan trailed by three points with two minutes remaining, before the Wolverines outscored VCU 11–0 down the stretch.[78] [79] On November 26, Michigan defeated UC Riverside 87–42 on the strength of double-doubles by Wagner (21 points, 10 rebounds) and Matthews (17 points, 12 assists). It was the team's first pair of double-doubles in a game since Glenn Robinson III and Trey Burke did so for the 2012–13 National Runner-up Wolverines on January 6, 2013.[80] [81] On November 29, Michigan lost to (#13 AP Poll/#11 Coaches Poll) North Carolina 71–86 in the ACC–Big Ten Challenge. Michigan was led by Wagner with a team-high 20 points. This was the first meeting between the two teams since the 1993 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game.[82] [83]

December

The 2018 Big Ten tournament was held at Madison Square Garden in New York City.[84] Due to the Big East's use of that venue for the 2018 Big East tournament, the Big Ten tournament took place one week earlier than usual, ending the week before Selection Sunday.[85] As a result, each team played one road game and one home conference game in the first week of December.[86]

On December 2, Michigan defeated Indiana 69–55 in its Big Ten conference opener. Jordan Poole led the team with a career-high 19 points, while Muhammad-Ali Abdur Rahkman added eight points and a career-high 11 rebounds, and Eli Brooks added five points and a career-high six assists.[87] [88] Two days later, Michigan lost to Ohio State 62–71, after leading by as many as 20 points with 1:31 remaining in the first half. Michigan was led by Wagner with a team-high 14 points, and one rebound shy of a double-double.[89] [90] On December 9, Michigan defeated UCLA 78–69 in overtime. Michigan trailed by 15 points with 14:48 remaining in regulation, and tied the game with 10.9 seconds left to force overtime. Michigan was led by Wagner with a team-high 23-points, while Matthews added 20 points, marking the second time this season Michigan had two 20-point scorers in a game. Michigan forced 20 UCLA turnovers, with 12 coming off of steals. Zavier Simpson set a career-high with four steals, while Robinson tied a career-high with four steals. Michigan won despite shooting 8-for-22 on its free throws (including 2-for-13 by Wagner and Matthews), but Eli Brooks converted the two game-tying free throws when it mattered.[91] [92] Muhammad-Ali Abdur Rahkman's first career double-double (17 points and 10 rebounds), helped Michigan defeat Texas 59–52 on December 12. Michigan remained ahead of Texas for the final 35:36 of the game, although Wagner injured his ankle with 7:36 remaining.[93] [94] On December 16, Michigan defeated Detroit 90–58. Michigan was led by Matthews with a game-high 20 points, while Jon Teske made his first collegiate start and recorded his second career double-double (15 points and 10 rebounds). The game marked the first collegiate basketball game at Little Caesars Arena. Detroit was coached by former Michigan assistant coach Bacari Alexander and was led by former Wolverine Kameron Chatman who posted 18 points and 13 rebounds.[95] [96] On December 21, Michigan handed winless Alabama A&M Bulldogs a 97–47 defeat behind a career-high 31 points by Matthews, who became the first Michigan player to score 30 points since Aubrey Dawkins in March 2015. Michigan forced a season-high 25 turnovers.[97] [98] On December 30 Michigan defeated Jacksonville 76–51 in Wagner's return to the lineup. Abdur-Rahkman posted his first 20-point performance of the season on 7-for-7 shooting from the field.[99] [100]

January

On January 2, 2018, Michigan defeated Iowa 75–68. Simpson and Abdur-Rahkman led scoring with 15 points each, while Isaiah Livers added a career-high 13 points.[101] [102] On January 6, Michigan defeated Illinois 79–69 as six players reached double figures. Wagner led the way with 14 points and a season-high-tying three blocks in his first double digit scoring effort since his injury. It was the first time Michigan had six players reach double figures since a 2017 contest against Indiana.[103] [104] On January 9, Michigan lost to (#5 AP Poll/#7 Coaches Poll) Purdue 69–70, ending their seven-game winning streak. Michigan was led by Simpson with a career-tying 15 points and career-high six rebounds. After trailing by as many as 14 points in the first half, Michigan took its first lead following back-to-back triples from Simpson with 4:30 remaining in the second half. Vincent Edwards then tied the game at 69 with 2:28 remaining in the game. The game remained tied until the final four seconds when Isaac Haas made his first free throw attempt to give Purdue the win.[105] [106] On January 13, Isaiah Livers replaced Duncan Robinson in the starting lineup,[107] as Michigan won their rivalry game against (#4 AP Poll/#4 Coaches Poll) Michigan State 82–72. Wagner led the Wolverines with a career-high 27 points. There were 13 lead changes and 11 ties throughout the game. The win marked their first victory on the road against a top-five ranked team since defeating (#3 AP Poll/#3 Coaches Poll) Michigan State on January 25, 2014; it was also first win at Breslin Center since 2014.[108] [109]

Following the win, Michigan entered the 2017–18 basketball rankings for the first time on January 15 at #23 AP Poll and #24 Coaches Poll.[110] On January 15, Michigan defeated Maryland 68–67. After trailing by 14 points in the first half and 10 points at halftime, Michigan scored the first ten points of the second half in 3:02 of play and built up a 10-point lead with 5:50 remaining. However, Maryland eventually posted a go-ahead three-point shot with three seconds remaining, before Abdur-Rahkman recorded two free throws with 1.2 seconds remaining, giving him exactly 1,000 career points and the Wolverines the win. Michigan was led by Wagner with 18 points and 11 rebounds for his fourth double-double of the season. Other Michigan highlights included seven consecutive three-point shots.[111] [112] On January 18, Michigan lost to Nebraska 52–72, the Cornhuskers first win over the Wolverines since 1964, snapping Michigan's 10-game winning streak against them. Matthews led the team with 15 points, and eight rebounds. The 20-point loss was Michigan's most lopsided defeat against a Big Ten opponent since losing to Michigan State by 23 points in February 2013.[113] [114]

On January 21, Michigan defeated Rutgers 62–47. Michigan was led by Wagner with 16 points, while Simpson added 10 points and a career-high eight rebounds. Michigan's defense held Rutgers to just 47 points, 22.5 points below its 69.5 points per game average. During the game the 1967–68 team was honored as the first team to play at the Crisler Center, as part of arena's 50th anniversary celebrations.[115] [116] On January 25, Michigan lost to (#3 AP Poll/#3 Coaches Poll) Purdue 88–92. Michigan was led by Abdur-Rahkman with a then career-high 26 points. There were 24 lead changes and five ties during the game.[117] [118] On January 29, Michigan defeated Northwestern 58–47. After falling behind 19–11 early in the first half, Michigan held Northwestern without a point for over 10 minutes and held on for a victory due in part to a season-low five turnovers, while forcing 16 Northwestern turnovers. Michigan was led by Matthews with a team-high 14 points, seven rebounds and a career-high three steals, while Poole added eight points and a career-high three assists.[119] [120]

February

On February 3, Michigan defeated Minnesota 76–73 in overtime. Wagner (16 points, 10 rebounds) and Matthews (13 points, 11 rebounds) both posted double-doubles, marking the second time this season Michigan had two players record a double-double in the same game. Michigan took its first lead of the game with 16:15 remaining in the game. Minnesota then obtained its largest lead of the game at ten points five minutes later.[121] [122] On February 6, Livers was sidelined in the second minute of play,[123] as Michigan was upset by Northwestern 52–61. Michigan was led by Wagner with 20 points and nine rebounds, one rebound shy of his second consecutive double-double.[124] [125] On February 11, Michigan reached 20 wins with an 83–72 victory over Wisconsin. Michigan was led by Wagner with 20 points and 11 rebounds, for his seventh double-double of his career. Michigan rode a 22-point half time lead to victory as Robinson returned to the starting lineup, where he recorded 14 points and made four three-point shots in the first half.[126] [127] After missing the better part of two games,[128] Livers returned to the starting lineup on February 14,[129] as Michigan defeated Iowa for a second time by a 74–59 margin. The team posted a season-high 13 steals, including a season-high four from Wagner and three from his backup Jon Teske. Robinson posted a season-high six three-point shots, giving him 18 points, while Abdur-Rahkman contributed 18 points with a season-high seven assists. With his six three-pointers, Robinson surpassed Zack Novak for sixth all-time on Michigan's career three-point leaderboard with 215 for his career.[130] [131] On February 18, Michigan defeated (#8 AP Poll/#9 Coaches Poll)[132] Ohio State 74–62 in their final home game of the regular season. Michigan was led by Abdur Rahkman with 17 points. Prior to the game Michigan honored seniors Abdur-Rahkman, and Robinson, graduate student Jaaron Simmons and undergraduate student assistant Austin Hatch during senior day.[133] [134] On February 21 Michigan defeated Penn State 72–63. Robinson led the way with 19 points off the bench and the team had a season-high 84 percent free throw percentage, which included going 9-for-10 in the final minute of the game.[135] [136] On February 24, Michigan defeated Maryland 85–61 in the final game of the regular season. Michigan was led by Abdur-Rahkman with a career-high 28 points, including 22 points in the first half. Michigan's 24-point victory was the worst home loss for Maryland since the 1997–98 Terrapins lost to Duke by 32 points in 1998. The win was the Wolverines' first win at Maryland since 1937.[137] [138]

Postseason

Big Ten tournament

On March 1, Michigan opened its 2018 Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament play with a 77–71 overtime victory over Iowa. Michigan survived a rough shooting night (56% on free throws and 16% three-point field goals) and foul trouble (Wagner and Abdur-Rahkman fouled out) to get the victory. Matthews led the way with 16 points, but Robinson made the go ahead three point shot with 2:17 remaining in overtime and the sank two free throws to give Michigan a two-possession lead with 10 seconds remaining.[139] [140] [141]

The next day, Michigan defeated Nebraska 77–58 in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten tournament. Michigan was led by Abdur-Rahkman with 21 points, while Wagner recorded his seventh double-double of the season with 20 points and 13 rebounds. Michigan's defense held Nebraska to just 30% shooting for the game (16-of-53), including 1-of-20 during a 13:32 stretch in the first half. Robinson scored his 1,000th career point on his second 3-point field goal of the first half. Abdur-Rahkman (5–5) became the second player in the history of the Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament to be perfect on at least 5 three-point shots in a single game.[142] [143] [144] On March 3, Michigan defeated (#2 AP Poll/#2 Coaches Poll) Michigan State 75–64 in the semifinals of the Big Ten tournament. With the win, Michigan advanced to the Big Ten tournament final for the second consecutive season, and snapped Michigan State's 13-game winning streak. Michigan was led by Abdur-Rahkman, Simpson and Wagner with 15 points each. Wagner scored his 1,000th career point in the second half of the game, becoming the 54th Wolverine to reach the milestone.[145] [146] [147]

On March 4, Michigan defeated (#8 AP Poll/#8 Coaches Poll) Purdue 75–66 to claim their second consecutive Big Ten tournament championship. They became the first fifth seed to win the championship and the first team to win consecutive tournament championships since Ohio State in 2010 and 2011. Michigan was led by Wagner with a team-high 17 points, and was named tournament MVP, while Abdur-Rahkman recorded 15 points and was named to the All-Tournament Team.[148] [149] [150]

NCAA tournament

On March 15, Michigan began their participation in the 2018 NCAA tournament with a 61–47 victory over Montana in the first round. Michigan was led by Matthews with 20 points and a career-tying 11 rebounds, for his fourth double-double of the season. After Montana jumped out to an early 10–0 lead, Michigan's defense held Montana to just 32.1% shooting for the game, including 1-of-14 during a ten-minute stretch to start the second half. The second half was delayed for over 10 minutes with 17:53 remaining when the shot clocks lost power.[151] [152]

On March 17, Michigan defeated (#21 AP Poll/#19 Coaches Poll) Houston 64–63 in the second round, following a game-winning buzzer beater three-point shot by Poole as time expired. Abdur-Rahkman and Wagner led the scoring with 12 points each. There were 17 lead changes and 12 ties during the game, while neither team ever led by more than six points. With the win, Michigan advanced to its fourth Sweet 16 in six years.[153] [154] On March 22, Michigan defeated Texas A&M 99–72 in the regional semifinals. Abdur-Rahkman led with 24 points, while Wagner added 21 points, and Matthews 18 points. Michigan made 10 of its 14 three-pointers in the first half to take a 52–28 lead at halftime. Eight different Wolverines made a three-point field goal, setting a program record for most players to make one in an NCAA tournament game. Michigan posted 12 steals, including a career-high six by Simpson, which tied a Michigan NCAA tournament record. Michigan's 99 points were the sixth most in program history in the NCAA tournament, and the most they've scored since scoring 102 against East Tennessee in 1992. Michigan's 61.9% shooting was its second-best in program history in the NCAA tournament. With the win, Michigan advanced to its third Elite Eight in six years.[155] [156] [157]

On March 24, Michigan defeated Florida State 58–54 in the regional finals. Michigan was led by Matthews with 17 points. With the win, Michigan advances to the Final Four for the eighth time in program history and for the first time since 2013. Michigan set a single-season program record with its 32nd victory of the season, surpassing the previous record of 31 wins set by the 1992–93 and 2012–13 teams. Michigan's defense held Florida State to just 23.3% (7-of-30) shooting in the second half.[158] [159] Matthews was named West Region Most Outstanding Player and was joined on the West Region All-tournament team by Wagner and Abdur-Rahkman.[160] With the Wolverines men's basketball team advancing to the Final Four and the 2017–18 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey team advancing to the Frozen Four, it was the fourth time that both programs made their respective final four tournaments during the same season, and just the sixth time overall.[161] [162]

On March 31, Michigan defeated Loyola–Chicago 69–57 in the national semifinals. Michigan was led by Wagner with 24 points and a career-high 15 rebounds, for his eighth double-double of the season, while Matthews added 17 points. Wagner became the third player with at least 20 points and 15 rebounds in a national semifinal game, and the first to do so since Hakeem Olajuwon in 1983. Michigan thus advanced to its seventh national championship game, and first since 2013, and set a single season record with its 33rd victory.[163] [164]

On April 2, Michigan lost to (#2 Coaches Poll/#2 AP Poll) Villanova 62–79 in the National Championship Game. The loss snapped Michigan's 14-game win streak that dated back to February 6, and was the longest active winning streak in the nation. This was Michigan's longest winning streak since winning the first 16 games to start the 2012–13 season.[165] Michigan was led by Abdur-Rahkman with 23 points, who finished his collegiate career as Michigan's all-time leader in games played with 144 games.[166] [167] Wagner was Michigan's only representative on the Final Four All-Tournament Team.[168]

With the loss to Villanova, Michigan’s record in the national championship game fell to 1-6, the worst record among teams that have previously won a national championship. This was the fourth consecutive loss in the championship game for the Wolverines since their sole title in 1989, having previously lost in 1992, 1993, and 2013.

Schedule and results

The team's motto that could be seen on some of the team's athleticwear was "Do More, Say Less", which was the name of a song by Ann Arbor rapper P. L. that pays tribute to the team.[169] |-!colspan="12" style="background:#; color:#;"|Exhibition|-!colspan="12" style="background:#; color:#;"| Regular season|-!colspan=9 style="background:#;"|Big Ten tournament|-!colspan=9 style="background:#;"|NCAA tournament

Roster

Coaching staff

Name Position Year at MichiganAlma Mater (year)
Saddi Washington Assistant Coach 2nd Western Michigan (1998)
DeAndre Haynes Assistant Coach 1st Kent State (2006)
Luke Yaklich Assistant Coach 1st Illinois State (1998)
Support Staff
  • Chris Hunter – Director of Basketball Operations
  • Chinedu Nwachukwu – Director of Player Personnel
  • Bryan Smothers – Video Analyst
  • Devon Mulry – Graduate Manager

    Rankings

    See main article: 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings.

    Statistics

    The team posted the following statistics:[170]

    NameGPGSMin.MPGFGFGAFG%3FG3FGA3P%FTFTAFT%RBRPGAst.APGPFDQTOStl.Blk.Pts.PPG
    39 39 1078 27.6 216 409 0.528 63 160 0.394 75 108 0.694 57 221 278 7.1 33 0.8 120 3 56 38 20 570 14.6
    41 41 1234 30.1 205 414 0.495 34 107 0.318 87 156 0.558 53 174 227 5.5 98 2.4 88 2 84 30 26 531 13
    41 41 1432 34.9 179 415 0.431 73 195 0.374 97 129 0.752 27 131 158 3.9 132 3.2 65 1 30 35 7 528 12.9
    41 19 1059 25.8 122 277 0.44 78 203 0.384 57 64 0.891 19 81 100 2.4 44 1.1 99 2 25 27 16 379 9.2
    41 29 1085 26.5 115 246 0.467 24 84 0.286 47 91 0.516 18 115 133 3.2 150 3.7 55 0 61 53 2 301 7.3
    39 0 476 12.2 75 175 0.429 40 108 0.37 43 52 0.827 3 50 53 1.4 22 0.6 40 0 25 20 6 233 6
    41 2 506 12.3 53 98 0.541 0 1 0 35 61 0.574 57 78 135 3.3 15 0.4 66 0 15 23 26 141 3.4
    40 22 604 15.1 54 114 0.474 21 58 0.362 8 12 0.667 36 57 93 2.3 16 0.4 44 0 23 12 11 137 3.4
    26 0 136 5.2 21 54 0.389 10 31 0.323 6 11 0.545 11 10 21 0.8 8 0.3 6 0 4 7 1 58 2.2
    31 12 311 10 19 63 0.302 10 41 0.244 8 13 0.615 9 24 33 1.1 30 1 16 0 13 12 3 56 1.8
    33 0 264 8 18 44 0.409 6 18 0.333 8 14 0.571 4 20 24 0.7 35 1.1 26 0 21 2 0 50 1.5
    Austin Davis 16 0 50 3.1 9 14 0.643 0 0 1 3 0.333 7 15 22 1.4 0 0 15 1 3 1 6 19 1.2
    Brent Hibbitts 5 0 15 3 3 5 0.6 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 1 3 0.6 1 0.2 2 0 1 0 1 9 1.8
    CJ Baird 5 0 8 1.6 2 3 0.667 1 2 0.5 0 0 0 1 1 0.2 1 0.2 0 0 1 0 1 5 1
    Naji Ozeir 2 0 7 3.5 1 2 0.5 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0.5 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 1
    Luke Wilson 2 0 7 3.5 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
    Rico Ozuna-Harrison 1 0 3 3 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    TEAM 41 42 40 82 2 17
    Season Total 41 1092 2335 0.468 361 1011 0.357 474 717 0.661 345 1020 1365 33.3 585 14.3 644 9 380 261 126 3019 73.6
    Opponents 41 948 2227 0.426 222 676 0.328 478 663 0.721 345 1009 1354 33 412 10 729 530 172 129 2596 63.3

    Honors

    Following the season, Wagner was a second team All-Big Ten selection by the coaches and the media; Abdur-Rahkman was an honorable mention selection by both the coaches and the media; and Robinson was named the All-Big Ten Sixth Man of the Year by the coaches.[171] [172] Wagner was an All-District selection by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association based upon voting from its national membership.[173] Wagner was an All-District selection by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association based upon voting from its national membership.[174] He was a second team selection in the Big Ten by the National Association of Basketball Coaches.[175] The team had five members earn Academic All-Big Ten honors for maintaining a 3.0 grade point average: Austin Davis, Matthews. Robinson, Jaaron Simmons, and Wagner.[176] Wagner was the Most Outstanding Player of the Big Ten tournament and Abdur-Rahkman was on the All-Tournament team.[149] In the NCAA tournament, Matthews was named West Region Most Outstanding Player and was joined by Wagner and Abdur-Rahkman on the West Region All-tournament team.[160] Wagner was named to the Final Four All-Tournament Team.[177]

    Team players drafted into the NBA

    Wagner was drafted with the 25th pick in the first round of the 2018 NBA draft, becoming Michigan's 27th first round selection and 7th under head coach Beilein.[178] He was the fourth and final 2017–18 Big Ten Conference player drafted in the first round of the 2018 draft,[179] and the fourth of eight drafted overall in the draft.[180] [181]

    Year Round Pick Overall Player NBA Club
    1 25 25 Los Angeles Lakers
    1 28 28 Golden State Warriors
    2 12 42 Detroit Pistons
    Sources:[182]

    See also

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Michigan basketball's Mark Donnal gets release, can transfer. March 29, 2017. March 28, 2017. Detroit Free Press. Snyder, Mark.
    2. Web site: @GoodmanESPN status update. March 29, 2017. March 28, 2017. Twitter. Goodman, Jeff.
    3. Web site: Mark Donnal transferring from Michigan to Clemson. May 3, 2017. May 1, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    4. Web site: Andrew Dakich transferring from Michigan to Quinnipiac. June 16, 2017. May 5, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    5. News: The stars aligned for Andrew Dakich and Ohio State, and the ex-Michigan PG couldn't pass on this chance. MLive.com. 2017-09-24. en-US.
    6. Web site: Jeff Meyer leaving Michigan to join LaVall Jordan's staff at Butler. June 21, 2017. June 20, 2017. MLive.com. Quinn, Brendan F..
    7. Web site: Northwestern hires Billy Donlon as assistant basketball coach. July 11, 2017. June 26, 2017. Chicago Tribune. Ryan, Shannon.
    8. Web site: Fred Wright-Jones departs Michigan basketball team. October 12, 2017. October 11, 2017. MLive.com. McMann, Aaron.
    9. Web site: College hoops' royalty leads Way-Too-Early Top 25 for 2017–18. April 4, 2017. April 3, 2017. ESPN. Brennan, Eamonn.
    10. Way-Too-Early Top 25 rankings for the 2017–18 college basketball season. April 4, 2017. April 3, 2017. Sports Illustrated. Davis, Seth.
    11. Web site: Way-too-early top 25 for the 2017–18 college basketball season. April 4, 2017. April 3, 2017. Yahoo!. Eisenberg, Jeff and Henry Bushnell.
    12. Web site: College basketball's super early preseason top 25 teams for the 2017–18 season. April 4, 2017. April 4, 2017. USA Today. Gleeson, Scott.
    13. Web site: 2017–18 College Basketball Preseason Top 25. April 4, 2017. April 3, 2017. NBC Sports. Dauster, Rob.
    14. Web site: After UNC's national championship, here's an early look at next season's Top 25 (and 1). April 4, 2017. April 4, 2017. CBS Sports. Parrish, Gary.
    15. Web site: Arizona, Duke top way-too-early NCAA basketball rankings for 2017–18. April 4, 2017. April 4, 2017. Sporting News. Fagan, Ryan.
    16. Web site: Preseason NCAA Basketball Rankings 2017–18: Super-Early Top 25 Experts' Poll. April 4, 2017. April 4, 2017. Bleacher Report. Miller, Kerry.
    17. NBA Mock Draft 3.0: Tourney Shakes Up Board. April 4, 2017. April 4, 2017. Sports Illustrated. Sharp, Andrew.
    18. Web site: Moritz Wagner, D.J. Wilson declare for NBA draft, won't hire agents. April 11, 2017. April 10, 2017. Goodman, Jeff. ESPN.
    19. News: Jaaron Simmons picked Michigan over Dayton, Kansas and Ohio State, but is still considering NBA. MLive.com. 2017-04-26. en-US.
    20. News: Sources: Lonzo Ball won't attend draft combine, might be joined by lottery prospects . Jeff . Goodman . . April 29, 2017 . April 30, 2017.
    21. News: Wolverines Welcome Simmons as Graduate Transfer for 2017–18. 2017-05-23. en. June 3, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170603020932/http://www.mgoblue.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/052317aab.html. dead.
    22. Web site: Moe Wagner returning to Michigan, D.J. Wilson staying in draft. May 24, 2017. May 24, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    23. Web site: Arizona makes huge move in Way-Too-Early Top 25. May 25, 2017. May 25, 2017. ESPN. Medcalf, Myron.
    24. Web site: College basketball rankings: Kentucky moves up to No. 5 in the Top 25 (and one). May 25, 2017. May 25, 2017. CBS Sports. Parrish, Gary.
    25. Web site: 2017–18 College Basketball Preseason Top 25: Post Early Entry Deadline. May 26, 2017. May 25, 2017. NBC Sports. Dauster, Rob. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170529024202/http://collegebasketball.nbcsports.com/2017/05/25/2017-18-college-basketball-preseason-top-25-2/. May 29, 2017. mdy-all.
    26. Web site: College basketball's updated preseason Top 25 for the 2017–18 season. May 26, 2017. May 26, 2017. USA Today. Gleeson, Scott.
    27. Web site: College basketball's updated Top 25 following the NBA draft deadline. May 26, 2017. May 25, 2017. Fox Sports. Torres, Aaron.
    28. Web site: A post-draft deadline look at college basketball's 2017–18 preseason Top 25. May 26, 2017. May 25, 2017. Yahoo! Sports. Eisenberg, Jeff.
    29. Web site: Big Ten Men's Basketball Preseason Honors Announced. October 27, 2017. October 19, 2017. CBS Interactive. BigTen.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20171022165252/http://www.bigten.org/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/101917aac.html. October 22, 2017. dead. mdy-all.
    30. Web site: 2018 Men's Basketball National Preseason Watch Lists. October 27, 2017. October 24, 2017. CBS Interactive. BigTen.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20171029034854/http://www.bigten.org/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/102417aaa.html. October 29, 2017. dead. mdy-all.
    31. Web site: Citizen Naismith Trophy Watch List Released Citizen Naismith Trophy. naismithtrophy.com. en-US. 2017-11-09.
    32. News: John R. Wooden Award Presented by Wendy's Announces 2017–18 Preseason Top 50. John R Wooden Award. 2017-11-14.
    33. Web site: Report: 4-star 2017 SG Jordan Poole, a Michigan target, to announce Friday. October 29, 2015. October 20, 2015. MLive.com. Quinn, Brendan F..
    34. Web site: Four-star shooting guard Jordan Poole commits to U-M. October 29, 2015. October 23, 2015. Detroit Free-Press. Snyder, Mark.
    35. Web site: Milwaukee King basketball standout Jordan Poole commits to Michigan. October 29, 2015. October 23, 2015. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Stewart, Mark.
    36. Web site: Anderson, Hauser share WBCA player of the year honor. March 22, 2016. March 20, 2016. Wausau Daily Herald. Johnson, Tim.
    37. Web site: Michigan lands former Kentucky guard Matthews. Johnson, Raphielle. NBC Sports. June 21, 2016. June 20, 2016.
    38. Web site: Charles Matthews picks Michigan as transfer spot, source says. Goodman, Jeff. ESPN. June 21, 2016. June 20, 2016.
    39. Web site: Michigan Adds Matthews, Wright-Jones to Roster. July 13, 2016. July 1, 2016. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. July 20, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160720194233/http://www.mgoblue.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/070116aaa.html. dead.
    40. Web site: Jordan Poole transfers to prepare for Michigan. August 9, 2016. July 5, 2016. The Detroit News. Paul, Tony.
    41. Web site: Michigan hoops 2017 commit Jordan Poole transferring for senior year. August 9, 2016. July 1, 2016. Detroit Free Press. Snyder, Mark.
    42. Web site: 2017 PG Eli Brooks commits to Michigan. August 9, 2016. July 19, 2016. MLive.com. Quinn, Brendan F..
    43. Web site: Isaiah Livers, a 4-star 2017 forward from Kalamazoo Central, commits to Michigan. August 9, 2016. August 7, 2016. MLive.com. Quinn, Brendan F..
    44. Web site: Scout's Take: ESPN 100 PF Isaiah Livers to Michigan. August 9, 2016. August 7, 2016. ESPN. Rankin, Reggie.
    45. Web site: Officially committed to the University of Michigan! #GoBluepic.twitter.com/wZ6tK7CVrJ. Ozeir. Naji. 2017-07-15. @Naji_Ozeir. 2017-07-15.
    46. News: Novi's Ozeir gains international hoop experience. USA TODAY. 2017-07-15. en.
    47. Web site: 67 Days to B1G Basketball: Michigan Adds Two Walk-Ons. September 18, 2017. September 4, 2017. SB Nation. Steedman, Bryan.
    48. Web site: Michigan basketball elevates student manager C.J. Baird to roster. November 3, 2017. November 3, 2017. MLive.com. McMann, Aaron.
    49. Web site: Michigan basketball team adds a new player. December 18, 2017. December 18, 2017. MLive.com. Kahn, Andrew.
    50. Web site: Michigan's Moritz Wagner will miss Alabama A&M game with foot injury. December 21, 2017. December 20, 2017. Detroit Free Press. Baumgardner, Nick.
    51. Web site: Kalamazoo Central's Isaiah Livers wins Michigan Gatorade Player of the Year honors. March 22, 2017. March 20, 2017. MLive.com. Nothaft, Patrick.
    52. Web site: Incoming Recruit Livers Named Michigan's Mr. Basketball. March 22, 2017. March 21, 2017. MGoBlue.com. CBS Interactive. https://web.archive.org/web/20170321205221/http://www.mgoblue.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/032117aaf.html. March 21, 2017. dead.
    53. Web site: No. 1-seeded La Lumiere wins DICK'S Nationals title over Montverde Academy. March 20, 2018. April 1, 2017. USA Today. Halley, Jim.
    54. Web site: Jordan Poole and Jaren Jackson Jr., future rivals at U-M and MSU, claim high school national title. March 20, 2018. April 1, 2017. MLive.com. Quinn, Brendan F..
    55. Web site: Michigan basketball announces coaching hires; Chris Hunter promoted. August 8, 2017. August 5, 2017. MLive.com. McMann, Aaron.
    56. Web site: Michigan hires Yaklich and Haynes as assistants. August 8, 2017. August 4, 2017. USA Today. Associated Press.
    57. Web site: Michigan basketball coaches 'cheered and clapped' when 2018 guard David DeJulius committed. December 29, 2016. December 28, 2016. MLive.com. Purcell, Jared.
    58. Web site: Michigan scores first commitment in 2018 class from PG David DeJulius. December 29, 2016. December 22, 2016. MLive.com. Quinn, Brendan F..
    59. Web site: Four-star forward Brandon Johns commits to Michigan. Burkhardt. Dylan. 2017-06-29. UM Hoops.com. 2017-06-29.
    60. News: Michigan commit Taylor Currie will reclassify from 2019 to 2018, arrive at U-M one year early. MLive.com. 2017-06-30. en-US.
    61. News: Four-star wing Ignas Brazdeikis (2018) commits to Michigan. MLive.com. 2017-10-03. en-US.
    62. Web site: Three-star forward Taylor Currie decommits from Michigan UM Hoops.com. umhoops.com. September 29, 2017 . en-US. 2017-09-30.
    63. Web site: Class of 2018 wing Adrien Nunez commits to Michigan UM Hoops.com. umhoops.com. October 3, 2017 . en-US. 2017-10-03.
    64. Web site: Four-star big man Colin Castleton commits to Michigan UM Hoops.com. umhoops.com. October 4, 2017 . en-US. 2017-10-04.
    65. Web site: Future Spartan Foster Loyer of Clarkston is named 2018 Mr. Basketball. March 20, 2018. March 19, 2018. MLive.com. Purcell, Jared.
    66. Web site: A final look at Michigan's five Mr. Basketball finalists. March 20, 2018. March 19, 2018. MLive.com. Purcell, Jared.
    67. Web site: @OntarioSBA status update. April 2, 2018. April 12, 2017. Twitter. Ontario Scholastic Basketball Association.
    68. Web site: @OntarioSBA status update. April 2, 2018. March 16, 2018. Twitter. Ontario Scholastic Basketball Association.
    69. Web site: Michigan pulls away late for 86–66 win over North Florida. November 12, 2017. November 11, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    70. Web site: Wolverines Use Second-Half Burst to Down North Florida in 2017–18 Opener. November 12, 2017. November 11, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    71. Web site: Abdur-Rahkman scores 17 in Michigan's 72–65 win over Chips. November 14, 2017. November 13, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    72. Web site: Wolverines Grind Out Win Over Chippewas in In-State Tilt. November 14, 2017. November 13, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    73. Web site: Teske lifts Michigan to 61–47 win over Southern Miss. November 17, 2017. November 16, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    74. Web site: LSU rallies late for 77–75 win over Michigan in Maui. November 21, 2017. November 21, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    75. Web site: Wolverines' Rally Against LSU Falls Just Short in Maui Opener. November 21, 2017. November 21, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    76. Web site: Michigan rolls over Chaminade 102–64 at Maui Invitational. November 22, 2017. November 21, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    77. Web site: Michigan Rolls Past Chaminade at Maui Invitational. November 22, 2017. November 21, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    78. Web site: Michigan beats VCU 68–60 for fifth in Maui. November 22, 2017. November 22, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    79. Web site: Wolverines Outlast VCU in Final Maui Matchup. November 22, 2017. November 22, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    80. Web site: Wagner's double-double leads Michigan past UC Riverside. November 27, 2017. November 26, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    81. Web site: Wolverines Dominate UC Riverside in Wire-to-Wire Win. November 27, 2017. November 26, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    82. Web site: No. 13 UNC beats Michigan 86–71 in Big Ten/ACC Challenge. November 29, 2017. November 29, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    83. Web site: Wolverines Drop B1G/ACC Challenge Matchup at No. 13 North Carolina. November 29, 2017. November 29, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    84. News: Big Ten tournament at MSG in 2018. USA Today. 2017-04-14. en.
    85. News: Here are the top 10 games on the Big Ten's weird 2017–18 conference schedule. CBSSports.com. 2017-08-18. en.
    86. News: Here are the top 10 games on the Big Ten's weird 2017–18 conference schedule. CBSSports.com. 2017-08-18. en.
    87. Web site: Quick start lifts Michigan to 69–55 win over Indiana. December 2, 2017. December 2, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    88. Web site: Wolverines Roll Past Indiana in Big Ten Home Opener. December 2, 2017. December 2, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    89. Web site: Furious rally powers Ohio State to 71–62 win over Michigan. December 4, 2017. December 4, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    90. Web site: Early Lead Stolen in Road Loss to Buckeyes. December 4, 2017. December 4, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    91. Web site: Wolverines overcome 15-point deficit, beat UCLA 78–69 in OT. December 9, 2017. December 9, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    92. Web site: The M-pire Strikes Back to Upset UCLA in OT. December 9, 2017. December 9, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    93. Web site: Abdur-Rahkman leads Michigan over Texas 59–52. December 13, 2017. December 12, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    94. Web site: Abdur-Rahkman's Double-Double Boosts U-M in Road Win at Texas. December 13, 2017. December 12, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    95. Web site: Michigan rolls to 90–58 win over Detroit Mercy. December 16, 2017. December 16, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    96. Web site: Wolverines Run Detroit, Top Titans in Motor City. December 16, 2017. December 16, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    97. Web site: Matthews leads Michigan past winless Alabama A&M, 97–47. December 22, 2017. December 21, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    98. Web site: Matthews' Career Day Propels U-M Past Alabama A&M. December 22, 2017. December 21, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    99. Web site: Abdur-Rahkman leads Wolverines past Dolphins 76–51. December 31, 2017. December 30, 2017. ESPN. Associated Press.
    100. Web site: Abdur-Rahkman's Season High Leads U-M over Jacksonville. December 31, 2017. December 30, 2017. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    101. Web site: Michigan beats Iowa 75–68. January 2, 2018. January 2, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    102. Web site: Wolverines Kick Off New Year with Big Ten Road Win at Iowa. January 2, 2018. January 2, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    103. Web site: Michigan beats Illinois 79–69 for 7th straight win. January 6, 2018. January 6, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    104. Web site: Wolverines Overcome First-Half Deficit to Top Illini. January 6, 2018. January 6, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    105. Web site: Haas' free throw gives No. 5 Purdue 70–69 win over Michigan. January 10, 2018. January 9, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    106. Web site: Wolverines Rally, but Fall to No. 5 Boilermakers in Final Seconds. January 10, 2018. January 9, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    107. Web site: Michigan freshman Isaiah Livers may get first start at Michigan State. February 16, 2018. January 12, 2018. Detroit Free Press. Sipple, George.
    108. Web site: Wagner scores 27, Michigan beats No. 4 Michigan State 82–72. January 13, 2018. January 13, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    109. Web site: Wolverines Grab Rivalry Road Win Over No. 4 Spartans. January 13, 2018. January 13, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    110. Web site: College basketball rankings: Ohio State, Michigan enter coaches poll top 25: The Buckeyes and Wolverines are ranked for the first time this season. January 16, 2018. January 15, 2018. CBS Sports. Boone, Kyle.
    111. Web site: No. 23 Michigan barely beats short-handed Maryland 68–67. January 16, 2018. January 15, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    112. Web site: Abdur-Rahkman Sinks Terps, Hits 1,000 Points with Winning Free throws. January 16, 2018. January 15, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    113. Web site: Palmer scores 19, leads Huskers in 72–52 rout of Michigan. January 18, 2018. January 18, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    114. Web site: Wolverines Overwhelmed by Cornhuskers in B1G Road Test. January 18, 2018. January 18, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    115. Web site: No. 23 Michigan rebounds with 62–47 win over Rutgers. January 21, 2018. January 21, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    116. Web site: Wolverines Outlast Scarlet Knights in Low-Scoring Affair. January 21, 2018. January 21, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    117. Web site: No. 3 Purdue holds off Michigan 92–88 for 16th straight win. January 25, 2018. January 25, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    118. Web site: Wolverines Fall Short of Comeback in Top-25 Matchup at Purdue. January 25, 2018. January 25, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    119. Web site: No. 24 Michigan outlasts Northwestern 58–47. January 30, 2018. January 29, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    120. Web site: Michigan's Defense Sparks Comeback Win Over Northwestern. January 30, 2018. January 29, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    121. Web site: No. 24 Michigan holds on to beat Minnesota 76–73 in OT. February 3, 2018. February 3, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    122. Web site: Wolverines Fight Off Golden Gophers in Overtime Win. February 3, 2018. February 3, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    123. Web site: U-M's Isaiah Livers suffers sprained left ankle 61–52 loss at Northwestern. February 16, 2018. February 7, 2018. Detroit Free Press. Sipple, George.
    124. Web site: McIntosh scores 24, Northwestern beats No. 20 Michigan 61–52. February 6, 2018. February 6, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    125. Web site: Wolverines' Early Lead Slips Away in Road Loss at Northwestern. February 6, 2018. February 6, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    126. Web site: Hot-shooting 1st half helps No. 20 Michigan beat Wisconsin. February 12, 2018. February 11, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    127. Web site: Wolverines Hold Off Wisconsin Rally to Win in Madison. February 12, 2018. February 11, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    128. Web site: Beilein updates on Livers injury, foul shooting struggles after road win. February 16, 2018. February 11, 2018. MLive.com. Kahn, Andrew.
    129. Web site: Michigan Basketball Instant Recap: U-M Handles Iowa, 74–59. February 16, 2018. February 14, 2018. Rivals.com. Balas, Chris.
    130. Web site: Robinson scores 18 as Wolverines beat Hawkeyes 74–59. February 15, 2018. February 14, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    131. Web site: Robinson's Hot Shooting Leads Wolverines to Sweep of Hawkeyes. February 15, 2018. February 14, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    132. Web site: Men's Basketball In The Polls: Five conference teams are ranked or receiving votes in the Associated Press/USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll. February 19, 2018. February 12, 2018. BigTen.org. CBS Interactive. https://web.archive.org/web/20180218061137/http://www.bigten.org/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/021218aad.html. February 18, 2018. dead. mdy-all.
    133. Web site: No. 22 Michigan tops No. 8 Ohio St 74–62, helps other rival. February 18, 2018. February 18, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    134. Web site: Wolverines Upset No. 8 Buckeyes in Home Season Finale. February 18, 2018. February 18, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com.
    135. Web site: Robinson leads No. 17 Wolverines over Penn State. February 22, 2018. February 21, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    136. Web site: Wolverines Extend Win Streak to Four Games at Penn State. February 22, 2018. February 21, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    137. Web site: No. 17 Michigan beats Maryland 85–61 for 5th straight win. February 24, 2018. February 24, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    138. Web site: Michigan Throttles Maryland in Regular-Season Finale. February 24, 2018. February 24, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    139. Web site: No. 15 Michigan overcomes Iowa in OT 77–71 in Big Ten. March 1, 2018. March 1, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    140. Web site: Michigan Grinds Out Overtime Win Over Iowa in Big Ten tournament Opener. March 1, 2018. March 1, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    141. Web site: Postgame Notes: Michigan-Iowa. March 2, 2018. March 1, 2018. CBS Interactive. BigTen.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20180302164032/http://www.bigten.org/sports/m-baskbl/recaps/030118aaf.html. March 2, 2018. dead. mdy-all.
    142. Web site: No. 15 Michigan deals blow to Nebraska's NCAA hopes, 77–58. March 2, 2018. March 2, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    143. Web site: Wagner's Double-Double Guides Michigan Past Nebraska, Into B1G Tournament Semis. March 2, 2018. March 2, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    144. Web site: Postgame Notes: Michigan-Nebraska. March 2, 2018. March 2, 2018. CBS Interactive. BigTen.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20180303110209/http://www.bigten.org/sports/m-baskbl/recaps/030218aag.html. March 3, 2018. dead. mdy-all.
    145. Web site: Michigan ends top-seeded Spartans' 13-game winning streak. March 3, 2018. March 3, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    146. Web site: Wolverines Down Spartans, Advance to B1G Tournament Final. March 3, 2018. March 3, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    147. Web site: Postgame Notes: Michigan-Michigan State. March 3, 2018. March 3, 2018. CBS Interactive. BigTen.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20180304113247/http://www.bigten.org/sports/m-baskbl/recaps/030318aad.html. March 4, 2018. dead. mdy-all.
    148. Web site: Michigan beats Purdue to win 2nd straight Big Ten tournament. March 4, 2018. March 4, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    149. Web site: Back-to-Back: Wagner, Teske Power Michigan to Second Straight B1G Tournament Title. March 4, 2018. March 4, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    150. Web site: Postgame Notes: Michigan-Purdue. March 5, 2018. March 4, 2018. CBS Interactive. BigTen.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20180305142711/http://www.bigten.org/sports/m-baskbl/recaps/030418aab.html. March 5, 2018. dead. mdy-all.
    151. Web site: Michigan plods to 61–47 win over Montana in NCAA first round. March 16, 2018. March 16, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    152. Web site: Michigan Eases into NCAA Second Round with Win Over Montana. March 16, 2018. March 16, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    153. Web site: Poole's buzzer-beating sends Michigan past Houston, 64–63. March 18, 2018. March 18, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    154. Web site: March Madness: Poole Sends Michigan to Sweet 16. March 18, 2018. March 18, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    155. Web site: Streaking Michigan routs Texas A&M 99–72 in West semifinals. March 22, 2018. March 22, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    156. Web site: Michigan Proves Elite in 27-Point Win over Texas A&M. March 22, 2018. March 22, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    157. Web site: Wolverines to Face No. 9 Seed Florida State for Spot in NCAA Final Four. March 24, 2018. March 23, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    158. Web site: Oh Blue!: Michigan nips Florida St 58–54 to reach Final Four. March 25, 2018. March 24, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    159. Web site: Hello, Final Four! Michigan's Defense Reigns Against Florida State. March 25, 2018. March 24, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    160. Web site: @MarchMadness status update. NCAA. March 26, 2018. March 25, 2018.
    161. Web site: Michigan Clinches Trip to 25th Frozen Four with Win Over BU. March 25, 2018. March 25, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Garske, TJ.
    162. Web site: Michigan makes it a double on final fours. March 26, 2018. March 26, 2018. The Detroit News. Paul, Tony.
    163. Web site: Wagner, Michigan end Loyola's run 69–57 in Final Four. March 31, 2018. March 31, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    164. Web site: Wolverines Take Down Loyola Chicago to Advance to NCAA Championship Game. March 31, 2018. March 31, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    165. Web site: Michigan Set to Face Villanova for National Championship. April 1, 2018. April 1, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    166. Web site: Villanova takes title, 79–62 over Michigan behind DiVincenzo. April 3, 2018. April 3, 2018. ESPN. Associated Press.
    167. Web site: Michigan Comes Up Short Against Villanova in National Championship Game. April 3, 2018. April 2, 2018. CBS Interactive. MGoBlue.com. Wyrot, Tom.
    168. Web site: Moritz Wagner, Charles Matthews have decisions to make about NBA Draft. April 5, 2018. April 3, 2018. Detroit News. Hawkins, James.
    169. Web site: Wolverines Give New Meaning to the Term 'Big Dance'. April 5, 2018. March 25, 2018. MGoBlue.com. CBS Interactive. Kornacki, Steve.
    170. Web site: 2017–18 Michigan Wolverines Roster and Stats. April 5, 2018. Sports-reference.com.
    171. Web site: Wagner, Robinson and Abdur-Rahkman Earn Big Ten Honors. February 27, 2018. February 26, 2018. MGoBlue.com. CBS Interactive. Wyrot, Tom.
    172. Web site: Big Ten Unveils Men's Basketball Postseason Honors on BTN. February 27, 2018. February 26, 2018. BigTen.org. CBS Interactive. https://web.archive.org/web/20180227094314/http://www.bigten.org/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/022618aad.html. February 27, 2018. dead. mdy-all.
    173. Web site: USBWA Names 2017–18 Men's All-District Teams. United States Basketball Writers Association. April 11, 2018. March 6, 2018.
    174. Web site: USBWA Names 2017–18 Men's All-District Teams. United States Basketball Writers Association. April 11, 2018. March 6, 2018.
    175. Web site: National Association of Basketball Coaches Announces 2017–18 Division I All-District Teams. April 11, 2018. March 13, 2017. National Association of Basketball Coaches.
    176. Web site: Winter Academic All-Big Ten Selections Announced. March 29, 2018. March 21, 2018. MGoBlue.com. CBS Interactive. Blevins, Ben.
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