Sports

/

ArcaMax

Paul Sullivan: Fab ending for Michigan as the Wolverines hold off UConn for their 1st title in 37 years

Paul Sullivan, Chicago Tribune on

Published in Basketball

INDIANAPOLIS — The Big Ten had waited 26 long years to win a national championship in men’s basketball.

To put things in perspective, that was even longer than the wait list for tickets to Bozo’s Circus.

But that legendary drought finally ended Monday at Lucas Oil Stadium when Michigan held off UConn 69-63 in the NCAA Tournament championship game for its first title since 1989.

As confetti fell and the partisan, maize-and-blue crowd sang their theme song, “Mr. Brightside,” it became quite obvious that destiny was calling them.

Chicago-born guard Nimari Burnett, who won an Illinois state title his freshman year at Morgan Park, now has bookends for his trophy case, when he decides to build one.

“I’m going to have to take this moment over winning state,” Burnett told me afterward. “There were so many emotions. I was sobbing. knew I was going to cry. Even at shootaround today I was getting emotional. But being in the moment with my guys, I feel so blessed, so grateful. Just soaking up the moment.”

A game marred by poor 3-point shooting all around ended with UConn making a belated comeback in the final minutes, only to fall short and miss a chance at a third title in four years. Trailing 67-63, Huskies star Alex Karaban, who was 18-1 in tournament games, had a chance to pull the Huskies to within one.

But Karaban missed a 3-pointer with 17 seconds left, and Michigan guard Trey McKenny hit a pair of free throws on the other end to seal it, as the Wolverines’ celebration began.

Guard Elliott Cadeau led Michigan with 19 points and was named Most Outstanding Player, while former Thornton grad Morez Johnson Jr. added 12 points and 10 rebounds.

The Wolverines overcame 13% 3-point shooting (2 for 15) to win a slugfest that looked more like a slogfest at times.

No matter.

Not-so-pure Michigan, perhaps, but enough to get the job done.

“We’ve been finding ways to win like this all year,” forward Yaxel Lendeborg said. “We started off really, really bad offensively, and our defense was the reason we won most of those games. Today was the same thing. We had a big lead and started getting more defensive rebounds and making tougher plays.”

Thus ended a Big Ten saga that a generation of alums from several schools endured. The Big Ten, a power conference with arguably more power than any of its peers, sent eight teams to the title game since Tom Izzo’s 2000 champions from Michigan State, and all eight came away empty-handed, sometimes in heartbreaking fashion and other times in a rout.

There was Illinois losing to North Carolina in 2005 to end its dream season, and Purdue falling to UConn in ’24 in the Boilermakers’ bid for their first title. Both great teams, but just not good enough when it mattered most.

Enter Michigan, which failed to finish the job in title games against Louisville and Villanova in 2013 and ’18, respectively. This Wolverines team was supposed to be a different animal, a truly dominant team that was ready to make a statement.

The Wolverines (37-3) came into Monday’s game on a mission to prove they weren’t just great, but the best in Michigan’s history and perhaps one of the best teams in tournament history. They were the first team to score 90 or more points in their first five games of the tournament, and had pummeled another top seed, Arizona, by 18 points in the semifinals. They went 19-1 in the Big Ten, and their only nonconference loss was to Duke.

After an offensive struggle Monday, coach Dusty May’s team might not be able to claim “best team ever” status, especially after the unbeaten Indiana team from 1976 was honored during the game. But they can still claim the fictional Michigan crown, or at least make an argument.

“I think we are (the best),” Lendeborg said. “I’m waiting for the Fab Five to give us their approval, but if they do, let it be said we’re the best team ever.”

Burnett wasn’t quite ready to push the Fabs out of the picture yet. As a student of history, he knew how important they were to changing the culture in basketball and America in the 1990s.

 

“The national championship in 1989 and ours in 2026 solidifies itself,” Burnett said. “But the Fab Five set the way for us. They set the path for us to achieve greatness like we did together today, so shout out to them.”

It almost ended badly for Michigan. A game marred by atrocious shooting ended with UConn making a belated comeback in the final minutes. The Huskies had established the tempo early in the game, and with Michigan starting out cold from the outside it was obvious this was not going to be another 90-point performance by the Wolverines.

Michigan missed all eight 3-point attempts in the first half, and the injured Lendeborg wasn’t contributing offensively, scoring only four points and going without a field goal until a layup with three minutes left.

But the Wolverines held UConn to 33% shooting and went into the locker room with a 33-29 lead, then began to meld together at the outset of the second half. When Cadeau nailed their first 3-pointer in 12 attempts seven minutes into the half, Michigan suddenly had an 11-point lead and was in control for the first time.

UConn tossed up brick after brick, missing 11 straight 3-point attempts in the second half until Braylon Mullins sank back-to-back 3s on consecutive possessions, conjuring up thoughts of the miracle ending against Duke in the Elite Eight.

Another 3 by Karaban cut the deficit to six with 2:30 left, but Huskies guard Solo Ball missed a layin and McKenney sank a 3 on the other end to switch the momentum back. While McKenny missed a pair of free throws to keep UConn’s hopes alive, the Wolverines overall were 25 of 28 from the line while UConn went 12 of 16.

UConn coach Dan Hurley spent most of the game making painful grimaces over foul calls he didn’t agree with, as is his MO. He was baited by a reporter to blame the refs, but to his credit, he only mentioned the free-throw disparity in passing. This was not going to be another Geno moment, like another UConn coach had last weekend.

“It’s such a physical game,” Hurley said. “I mean, Michigan is so physical. Again, it’s not the reason why we won or lost the game. (They were) plus-13 at the free throw line, plus-12 in attempts. I just felt the first half foul trouble, we were positioned if we didn’t have that to potentially go into halftime with a lead.

“You go in with a lead and they make a run, you’re down five instead of 11. But also, a problem for our team is undisciplined fouling at times. It’s hard to ref that game. We both played so hard.”

He then mentioned how great the refs were. No Geno here.

Lendeborg, a grad transfer from UAB, played despite a left knee strain and a bone bruise from the Arizona game. He wasn’t his usual self, scoring 13 points and missing all five 3-point attempts. Landeborg said afterward he was only 50% but tried to save his strength to make a push at the end.

“I tried my best,” he said. “We got the win, so I’m just glad I got it done.”

Earlier in the postseason, Lendeborg told a reporter he was offered somewhere from $7 million to $9 million to play for Kentucky. While Kentucky coach Mark Pope denied the claim, it was obvious Michigan emptied its piggy bank to sign the transfer. Lendeborg, who only started playing basketball near the end of high school, was worth every cent.

“I say it all the time — I don’t belong on the court with these guys that have been doing this their whole lives,” he said. “But we’re champions. I don’t care what they say about my body. I’ve sacrificed so much to get here. I came here because of my mom’s spirit, her will, and continuing to believe in me. Eventually I got support from more people and I started believing in myself a little more.

“Today was one of those days I had to dig deep inside and find out who I really was.”

On a day where not everything worked the way they would’ve liked, the Wolverines dug deep and found out who they really were — national champions.

Even the Fabs could never say those words.

____


©2026 Chicago Tribune. Visit chicagotribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus