Tennessee forward Jarnell Stokes thought he beat Michigan forward
Jordan Morgan to the spot on a drive to the basket with 6.0 seconds
left in Friday night's Midwest Region semifinal at Lucas Oil
Stadium.
Morgan and the Wolverines thought otherwise.
So did official David Hall and his vote was the only one that
mattered.
Stokes' offensive foul denied the Volunteers a chance to complete a
comeback from a 15-point deficit midway through the second half as
second-seeded Michigan held on for a 73-71 victory.
It was the last in a series of clutch plays for Morgan, an
unheralded 6-foot-8 senior who many thought would be devoured by
Tennessee's beefy 1-2 post tandem of Stokes and Jeronne Maymon.
Instead, Morgan outscored the duo by himself, netting a team-high 15
points on 7-of-9 shooting from the field and grabbing a game-high
seven rebounds.
"I thought he took it personally," Wolverines guard Nik Stauskas
said of the talk that the Volunteers would dominate in the paint.
"He made their big guys earn everything they got."
Stokes managed just 11 points on nine shots from the field and
Maymon scored only one bucket, playing just 17 minutes as he stayed
in foul trouble all night.
Still, 11th-seeded Tennessee nearly erased a 60-45 hole with 10:55
remaining after it figured out a way to stop Michigan (28-8) while
using the scoring of guards Jordan McRae and Josh Richardson to
rally.
McRae accounted for 13 of his game-high 24 points in the last 11
minutes, drawing the Volunteers (24-13) within 72-71 on a baseline
drive after a turnover with 10.8 seconds left. Richardson netted 19.
But after Michigan guard Caris LeVert stepped out of bounds while
catching an inbounds pass with 9.6 seconds remaining, giving
Tennessee a chance to pull off an unexpected win, neither McRae or
Richardson got a say on the most critical sequence.
The Volunteers isolated Stokes on Morgan. Stokes drove the left
baseline, lowered his shoulder and made contact with Morgan. Hall
emphatically signaled charge.
"I don't think I fouled him," Stokes said, "but you have to give
(Morgan) credit. He anticipated the play and got the call."
[to top of second column] |
Tennessee coach Cuonzo Martin was clearly unhappy with the call. "I thought both guys were moving," he said, "but the referee called
it a charge."
Stauskas scored the last of his 14 points on a free throw with 2.1
seconds left but missed the back end of a one-and-one. However, all
the Volunteers could get was a hurried 55-footer by McRae that was
not close as time expired.
The end-of-game comeback almost wiped out a beautiful first 30
minutes for Michigan, which shot 55.1 percent from the field,
including 11-of-20 3-pointers, and put four players in double
figures.
Forward Glenn Robinson III scored 13 points for the Wolverines,
which will play either Kentucky or Louisville in Sunday's regional
final, and LeVert added 10 — all in the first half.
But Michigan's comfortable lead was on the verge of disappearing
until Morgan stepped up one more time against an opponent who was
supposed to have its way with him.
"It doesn't matter who we play," LeVert said. "Everyone thinks we
won't have the advantage inside. But Jordan was motivated to play
this game. He made a great play at the end."
NOTES: Tennessee coach Cuonzo Martin played with Glenn Robinson, the
father of Michigan F Glenn Robinson III, at Purdue from 1991 to
1994. ... Robinson III, injured Wolverines C Mitch McGary and
Volunteers G Jordan McRae all participated in the LeBron James
Skills Academy last summer in Las Vegas. ... Tennessee is one of
only five teams in Division I to rank in the top 20 nationally in
offensive and defensive efficiency, joining Florida, Louisville,
Virginia and Wichita State.
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|