Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Michigan's top 5 tournament games


The Michigan Wolverines' magical tournament ride continues Thursday when they take on the Oregon Ducks in this year's Sweet 16, and it took a couple of memorable performances last weekend to get to Kansas City.

Michigan is certainly no stranger to memorable March Madness moments, and today we'll count down the top 5 tournament games in the program's history.

5. The Rematch - March 18, 2017


The last time Michigan faced Rick Petino's Louisville Cardinals they walked off the court in defeat in the 2013 National Title Game. Last Sunday's rematch was supposed to be no different due to the plethora of physical and athletic big men at Petino's disposal.

Michigan's strength all year has been their perimeter game and ability to neutralize opponents with the three point shot, and was widely considered their only shot to pull the upset.

But this game was memorable because the Wolverines did the exact opposite.

After hitting a team-record 16 3's in a wild 92-91 shootout in their first round game against Oklahoma State, the Wolverines stepped outside of themselves to erase a nine point second half deficit and beat the Cardinals at their own game with a gritty post-dominate performance.

A memorable maize and blue-collar tournament win over a physically imposing opponent.

4. Introducing...The Fab Five - March 29, 1992


A young, brash, and ultra-talented group of Michigan freshmen entered the 1992 NCAA tournament with much fanfare and little expectation. The 6 seed Wolverines caught a couple of breaks and found themselves a game away from the Final Four.

Their opponent? The number 1 seed and hated rival Ohio State Buckeyes led by Big Ten Player of the Year Jim Jackson. The team that swept the Wolverines that year during conference play.

Michigan's Fab Five (Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard, Jimmy King, Ray Jackson) battled tooth-and nail with the heavily favored Buckeyes to squeak out a 75-71 overtime victory. Images of Howard hitting the "cabbage patch" dance at the final buzzer remains etched in the memory of Michigan fans worldwide.

It was the signature moment in the rise of the cultural phenomenon...and was the first time that an all-freshmen starting five made it to the Final Four.

3. The Comeback - March 22, 1993

The Fab Five were no longer freshmen and no longer flying under the radar when they entered the 1993 NCAA Tournament. The Wolverines were now a number 1 seed and heavy favorite to return to the Final Four.

UCLA, their second round opponent, had other plans.

The Bruins were essentially playing a home game in Arizona that day, and jumped out to a lead that ballooned to as much as 19 points.

The Wolverines clawed their way back (no pun intended) to force overtime behind Chris Webber's 27 point, 14 rebound performance, but often-overshadowed Ray Jackson made this one memorable.

With the game tied in the final seconds of overtime Jackson tipped-in a Jalen Rose miss at the buzzer to stun the crowd and eventually advance to their second straight title game.

2. The Comeback II - March 30, 2013


This game holds a special place in my heart because I was in the stands to witness this with my own two eyes. The heavily favored number 1 seed Kansas Jayhawks dominated the game for 38 minutes against Michigan in their 2013 Sweet 16 match up.

Then...point guard and National Player of the Year Trey Burke made himself a Michigan legend.

The Wolverines, who were down by five with 21 seconds left to play, inexplicably stormed back behind a nifty drive to the basket by Burke, a missed free throw by Kansas on the front end of a 1 and 1, and a 30 foot three point heave by Burke to force overtime.

Michigan held on in the extra period for an improbable come from behind victory. The most thrilling basketball game I've ever attended on any level.

1. Cutting down the nets - April 3, 1989


After firing their head coach heading into the big dance, Michigan entered the 1989 NCAA Tournament with assistant coach Steve Fisher at the helm. The Wolverines rattled off five straight victories behind one of the best tournament performances in NCAA history from Glenn Rice to face Seton Hall in the title game.

A nip and tuck affair ended with Michigan guard Rumeal Robinson hitting two clutch free throws to seal the victory and give the Wolverines their first and only National title.

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