

INDIANAPOLIS -- Before Michigan took the floor to face Gonzaga in the title game of the Players Era Championship back in November, Elliot Cadeau commented on something to his teammates.
"We're the best team ever assembled," Cadeau said at the time.
Michigan proceeded to go out and beat Gonzaga by 40.
From that point on, the Wolverines were the most dominant team in the country -- and they ended it on Monday the same way they looked all the way back on Thanksgiving Eve: as the best team in college basketball.
Michigan put an exclamation point on an historic season in Monday's national championship game, beating UConn, 69-63.
The Wolverines won the program's first national championship since 1989 -- and became the first team to beat UConn in the Sweet 16 or later since Michigan State beat the Huskies in the 2009 Final Four.
UConn's plan from the outset wasn't much different than the first few rounds of the NCAA tournament: Get the ball to Tarris Reed. He attempted three of the Huskies' first four shots, but was struggling to finish against the length and size of Michigan's Aday Mara. The Wolverines' edge in that area was a factor at the other end too, with three offensive rebounds and six points in the paint before the first media timeout.
The first 15 minutes of the game, however, mostly trended in UConn's direction. The Huskies kept Michigan out of transition, with the Wolverines having zero fast-break points in the first half -- and only one real opportunity to get out and run. Michigan tried to pressure the Huskies defensively and speed the game up, but UConn was able to take care of the ball. Much of that credit went to Malachi Smith, who gave Hurley great minutes with Silas Demary Jr. on the bench in foul trouble. Smith had four quick points and held his own against Michigan's backcourt.
UConn was controlling the tempo, holding its own on the backboards and getting a boost from Michigan's shooting struggles; the Wolverines went 0-for-8 from 3-point range in the opening period.
While Solo Ball was showing no ill effects of his foot sprain, scoring 12 first-half points despite also picking up two fouls, Michigan's Yaxel Lendeborg looked a shell of the player that earned All-American and Big Ten Player of the Year honors. He played all 20 first-half minutes, but went 1-for-5 from the field and was ineffective at both ends of the floor.
"I feel awful, I feel super weak right now," Lendeborg said on the broadcast at halftime. "I can't make anything ... I played really soft in that first half."
The Wolverines were overcoming their shooting issues by dominating two areas that are familiar to them: the paint and the free-throw line. They had a combined 33 first-half points from those areas, compared to UConn's 12. With two first-half fouls apiece on Ball, Demary and Reed, one of UConn's Achilles heels was showing up at the wrong time.
Michigan's first big momentum shift came on a hook-and-hold call against Alex Karaban with 3:16 left in the first half. It jumpstarted a 6-0 run for the Wolverines in 46 seconds, and sparked a 10-4 surge to finish the half and give Michigan a 33-29 lead entering the break.
Foul trouble continued to be a theme for UConn in the second half. Ball picked up fouls three and four and Demary picked up his third foul before the first media timeout after halftime.
A Cadeau three-point play on Ball's fourth foul put Michigan up seven with 16:20 to go -- Michigan's largest lead of the game to that point.
The Huskies had gone cold offensively and Michigan, inevitably, started getting more efficient on the offensive end. Cadeau hit the Wolverines' first 3-pointer of the game at the 12:56 mark of the second half to put them up 11 -- on the same play Lendeborg grabbed his first rebound and registered his first assist.
UConn was teetering and looked out of answers. The Huskies missed 13 consecutive 3-pointers at one point in the game.
Entering the final four minutes of the game, UConn was 5-for-21 on its first-shot offense in the second half, per ESPN Research, and the Huskies were 1-for-9 on shots contested by Mara. Michigan's size and length around the rim -- four blocks after halftime -- were a major deterrent.
The Huskies were unable to string together sustained momentum and put real game pressure on Michigan down the stretch. The Wolverines were open to letting them back in the game, but UConn failed to put together three or four possessions in a row of stops and makes. A Karaban contest and rebound gave UConn the ball with a five-point deficit, but he turned the ball over on the next possession, which resulted in a Mara alley-oop finish to push Michigan's lead back to seven.
UConn had another opportunity to cut the lead to four with two minutes left, but failed to convert a transition opportunity. Michigan went down the other end and Trey McKenney buried a dagger 3 to give the Wolverines a nine-point lead.
Share this article
Michigan beat UConn 69-63 by controlling the paint, winning the free-throw battle, and defending the rim with its size and length. The Wolverines also overcame a poor shooting start by staying efficient inside and forcing UConn into long scoring droughts.
Michigan's last national championship before this game was in 1989. Monday's victory gave the Wolverines their first title since then.
A hook-and-hold call against Alex Karaban with 3:16 left in the first half sparked Michigan's momentum. That play led to a 6-0 run in 46 seconds and helped Michigan take a 33-29 lead into halftime.
UConn struggled because Michigan's size at the rim disrupted shots and limited second-chance opportunities. The Huskies also went cold from 3-point range, including a stretch of 13 straight missed threes.
Elliot Cadeau and Trey McKenney delivered key late shots, while Aday Mara anchored the defense with rim protection and an alley-oop finish in the closing minutes. Michigan also got important production from its frontcourt and free-throw line throughout the game.






See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.