All season long, Michigan blitzed past its opponents with a combination of high-powered offense and smothering defense that more often than not resulted in blowout victories. But in Monday night’s national championship game, UConn made the Wolverines work for it.
It probably isn’t fair to call it a sloppy game, but it was definitely a grind. Michigan won, 69–63, just the fourth time that it was held below 70 points and the fourth-fewest points UConn scored in a game this season. Both teams posted their lowest field-goal percentages of the season (38.2% for Michigan and 30.9% for UConn). The Wolverines, after hitting at least 10 threes in each of their first five NCAA tournament games, went 2-for-15 from deep. That’s 13.3%, the fifth-worst three-point percentage in national title game history, and second-worst among teams that won the game.
“You know, all year we’ve been just finding ways to win,” Michigan’s Elliot Cadeau told reporters after the game. “We made two threes the whole game. We wasn’t making shots. We weren’t. We had a couple assists, not as many as we usually do, but we constantly just been finding ways to win all year, no matter how everybody is playing.”
Cadeau led all scorers with 19 points and was named Most Outstanding Player. Michigan needed him to step up, too. The team’s best player, forward Yaxel Lendeborg, was dealing with knee and ankle injuries and was clearly diminished. He finished with 13 points, shooting just 4-for-13 from the floor and missing all five of his three-point attempts.
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