Michigan
College basketball transfer portal cycle 2024 winners and losers: Michigan moves fast, Villanova falls short
A few stragglers are still hanging out on college basketball’s free agent wire, mulling where to play during the 2024-25 season. But as mid-June arrives, the overwhelming majority of players in the transfer portal have announced their destinations. Rosters around the country are coming into focus, and it’s becoming more obvious who the winners and losers were during the 2024 offseason.
It was a period marked by a record number of coaching changes, and those changes led to major roster overhauls around the country. While John Calipari’s move from Kentucky to Arkansas and Mark Pope’s subsequent jump from BYU to Kentucky stole the spotlight, there were 68 Division I job changes in total.
As expected, the Razorbacks and Wildcats have done well for themselves on the transfer market with the backing of strong NIL collectives. Slightly more surprising is how strong of a class first-year USC coach Eric Musselman has assembled after leaving the Arkansas job. Musselman worked the portal well during his time in the SEC and used it to build a pair of Elite Eight teams.
Now, it’s becoming clear he’ll have a chance to do the same with the Trojans as they transition to the Big Ten. The Trojans are among our winners.
Let’s take a deeper look at the winners and losers of college basketball’s 2024 portal cycle.
Winner: Oats rebuilds Alabama roster again
Alabama’s roster was already shaping up nicely when the May 1 deadline to enter the portal arrived. Then, Nata Oats received a commitment from elite shot blocker Cliff Omoruyi (Rutgers) and got Mark Sears back from his NBA Draft exploration. With Auburn transfer guard Aden Holloway, 2023-24 AAC co-Player of the Year Chris Youngblood (South Florida) and sharpshooting wing Houston Mallette (Pepperdine) also in the fold, the Crimson Tide will be Final Four contenders once again. Key returners Latrell Wrightsell Jr. Grant Nelson and Jaren Stevenson round out what will be a veteran roster filled with a diverse array of playmaking. — David Cobb
Loser: Villanova’s late rally not enough
Villanova did some work in the portal by adding Miami transfer Wooga Poplar and a trio of mid-major players with at least some promise. But did the Wildcats do enough to reach the NCAA Tournament in Year 3 under coach Kyle Neptune? It still looks like an uphill climb after the departures of rotation pieces TJ Bamba (Oregon) and Brendan Hausen (Kansas State) along with the expiration of eligibility foor key players like Justin Moore, Tyler Burton and Hakim Hart. Neptune will need incoming guards Jhamir Brickus (La Salle) and Tyler Perkins (Penn) to hit, and he may also need substantive contributions from his freshman class, which is not ideal. This transfer haul needed more pop. — Cobb
Winner: Texas Tech adds right pieces
Second-year Texas Tech coach Grant McCasland rounded out his transfer class with the addition of promising transfer forward JT Toppin (New Mexico), who also considered staying in the NBA Draft. Toppin was the Mountain West Rookie of the Year, and he’ll pair with assist guru Elijah Hawkins (Minnesota) to supplement a returning core that includes three double-digit scorers. Former Drake wing Kevin Overton and ex-Pitt big man Federiko Federiko are also nice adds that will help the Raiders on their quest to go 2 for 2 on reaching the Big Dance under McCasland’s direction. While TTU did lose leading scorer Pop Isaacs to Creighton, he wasn’t a particularly efficient player. — Cobb
Loser: Colorado heads to Big 12 with new roster
Colorado’s biggest losses were to the NBA Draft in the form of KJ Simpson, Tristan Da Silva and Cody Williams. However, the departures of J’Vonne Hadley (Louisville), Luke O’Brien (Georgia Tech) and Eddie Lampkin (Syracuse) leave the Buffaloes without a single player who started more than five games last season. Washington State transfer Andrej Jakimovski is the only Division I transfer addition, which means coach Tad Boyle will be in the difficult position of relying on some unproven commodities as his program makes the transition to the Big 12. — Cobb
Virginia Tech is getting a makeover for the 2024-25 season, and it’s going to take a great coaching job from Mike Young to get the Hokies back to the NCAA Tournament after consecutive NIT appearances. Leading scorer Sean Pedulla is using his final season of eligibility at Ole Miss, while No. 3 scorer Lynn Kidd is off to Miami after a breakout season. With rotational mainstay and 3-point marksman Hunter Cattoor graduated as well, an under-the-radar transfer class will have to pop. The headliner is former Temple guard Hysier Miller, but he shot just 35.3% from the floor last season. If Young can coax substantive contributions from Duke transfer Jaden Schutt, then perhaps VT will remain competitive in the ACC. But on the whole, it appears more was lost than gained this offseason. — Cobb
Winner: Kansas adds perimeter pop
A lack of depth and perimeter punch proved fatal for Kansas last season. There will be no such issues for the Jayhawks in the 2023-24 season. Even with Johnny Furphy syaing in the NBA Draft, KU has positioned itself for a return to Big 12 supremacy by landing a blockbuster transfer haul. AJ Storr (Wisconsin), Rylan Griffen (Alabama), Riley Kugel (Florida and Zeke Mayo (South Dakota State) are each in the CBS Sports Transfer Rankings and will combine to give coach Bill Self a deep group of offensive weapons to pair with an excellent returning core of Dajuan Harris Jr., KJ Adams Jr. and Hunter Dickinson. – Cobb
Loser: Seton Hall disintegrates after NIT title
Congratulations on the NIT title, now go rebuild your roster from scratch. That’s the reward coach Shaheen Holloway got after guiding his alma mater to a 25-12 record and thrilling NIT championship win over a 32-win Indiana State team. While some of the Pirates’ numerous departures were relatively insignificant, losing starters Kadary Richmond, Dre Davis and Dylan Addae-Wusu to the portal stings. Richmond is an especially painful loss as the multi-faceted point guard was a first-team All-Big East performer. It will take a Herculean effort for SHU to find adequate replacements at this point in the cycle. – Cobb
Winner: Cal cleans up in the portal
Cal’s incoming transfer portal class is headlined by former McDonald’s All-American Andrej Stojaković, the son of former NBA star Peja Stojaković. After spending his freshman season across the Bay Area at Stanford, Stojaković committed to Mark Madsen and the Bears despite receiving interest from blue bloods like North Carolina and Kentucky. Stojaković is one of six incoming transfers with Air Force forward Rytis Petraitis, Michigan State center Mady Sissoko, Minnesota forward Josh Ola-Joseph, Vanderbilt’s Lee Dort and North Dakota’s BJ Omot being the others that will help the program transition from the Pac-12 to the ACC. – Cameron Salerno
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Loser: Miami’s star power takes a hit
Miami stars Norchad Omier and Poplar jumped into the transfer portal less than a week before the deadline to enter. Omier was coming off a season in which he averaged 17 points and 10 rebounds, while Poplar averaged 13.1 points. With star freshman Kyshawn George entering the draft, Miami (15-17 in 2023-24) will be without three of its top scorers heading into a new-look ACC. It’s been 13 months since Miami made the Final Four, but a lot has changed. – Salerno
Winner: May makes an impression at Michigan
It didn’t take long for May to leave his mark as the new Wolverines coach. His first order of business was landing four-star guard Justin Pippen, the son of NBA legend Scottie Pippen, to Michigan’s incoming recruiting class. In the transfer portal, May landed one of his former star players at FAU (center Vladislav Goldin) to go along with Alabama’s Sam Walters, Ohio State’s Roddy Gayle Jr., Auburn’s Tre Donaldson, Yale’s Danny Wolf, and North Texas’ Rubin Jones. – Salerno
More: Roddy Gayle Jr. to Michigan among portal cycle’s best fits
Loser: Wisconsin loses two key players
The departures of Chucky Hepburn (Louisville) and AJ Storr (Kansas) leave big holes to fill for the Badgers, who struggled down the stretch after a 16-4 start. Hepburn was a three-year starter at point guard with a reputation for stingy perimeter defense, while Storr served as a much-needed offensive spark in his lone season with the program. Former Central Arkansas guard Camren Hunter and ex-Northern Illinois forward Xavier Amos are on the way, but the Badgers will need their returning core to increase its productivity. – Cobb
Winner: Penny does it again
Last offseason, Memphis landed a transfer portal class that included Jahvon Quinerly, Jordan Brown, and David Jones. This cycle, Hardaway landed Texas’ Tyrese Hunter, Illinois’ Dain Danija, and Tulsa’s PJ Haggerty.Haggerty spent his first college season at TCU before breaking out in his redshirt freshman campaign. With Hardaway only signing one high school player from the 2024 cycle, the incoming transfer class will have an opportunity for a big role from Day 1. – Salerno
Loser: Indiana State’s coach, key players depart
When Josh Schertz departed for the vacant job at Saint Louis just days after losing in the NIT final to Seton Hall, he took the program’s best player with him. Indiana State star big man Robbie Avila, better known for his various nicknames such as “Larry Nerd” or “Cream Abdul-Jabbar” was one of the top available players in the portal. He wasn’t the only player the program lost, as Isaiah Swope followed Schertz to Saint Louis, and star guard Ryan Conwell transferred to Xavier. For a program that was ranked in the Associated Press Top 25 poll for the first time since Larry Bird played at the school, losing those players and Schertz is a devastating blow. – Salerno
Winner: UCLA, USC add big names ahead of Big Ten arrival
After a disappointing 2023-24 campaign that saw UCLA miss the NCAA Tournament for the first time in Mick Cronin’s tenure, he reloaded the roster with players who have experience. One of those players is USC star wing Kobe Johnson, who didn’t go far to find his next home. Cronin also added former blue-chip recruit Skyy Clark from Louisville, Oregon State’s Tyler Bilodeau, Oklahoma State’s Eric Dailey, and more.
On the other side of Los Angeles, new USC coach Eric Musselman has been working the portal aggressively. The Trojans’ transfer portal class is full of veteran players such as Boise State’s Chibuzo Agbo Jr., Michigan’s Terrance Williams, Northern Colorado’s Saint Thomas, UC San Diego’s Bryce Pope, Yale’s Matt Knowling, Bowling Green’s Rashaun Agee, UMass’ Josh Cohen, and Penn’s Clark Slajchert. All the incoming players will have an opportunity to compete for playing time right away because most of the 2023-24 roster is gone. – Salerno
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Winner: Indiana finally gets some guards
Indiana’s haul includes three players from the CBS Sports Transfer Rankings and a fourth in Luke Goode who played a key role for an Elite Eight team at Illinois. The headliner is big man Oumar Ballo from Arizona, but guards Myles Rice and Kanaan Carlyle are the breath of fresh air that the IU backcourt has been needing. Rice earned Pac-12 Rookie of the Year honors at Washington State in 2023-24 while Carlyle averaged 11.5 points as a freshman at Stanford. If they can shoot it decently well from 3-point range, the Hoosiers should be in the Big Ten’s upper crust. – Cobb
Winner: DePaul’s reboot has strong start
Former Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann is hitting the ground running at what is arguably the worst job in a major college basketball conference. DePaul hasn’t been to an NCAA Tournament since 2004 and is coming off a 3-29 season. But with the transfer class Holtmann is putting together, don’t be surprised if the Blue Demons make strides in his first season. Backcourt players Conor Enright (Drake), Jacob Meyer (Coastal Carolina), Isaiah Rivera (Illinois-Chicago) and David Thomas (Mercer) each shot 40% or better from 3-point range at their last stops. Many of the frontcourt additions have perimeter shooting acumen as well. Holtmann faces a long road to making DePaul relevant in the Big East, but he’s off to a good start. – Cobb
Winner: Ole Miss gets more dynamic
Ole Miss loaded up on bucket getters, landing five transfers who averaged 13.5 points or more last season. Power conference additions Dre Davis (Seton Hall) and Sean Pedulla (Virginia Tech) will help in the backcourt while mid-major additions Mikeal Brown-Jones (UNC Greensboro) and Malik Dia (Belmont) are versatile forwards who can also step out and shoot. Davon Barnes from Sam Houston is a 6-foot-5 wing who hit 39.1% of his 3s this past season. With shot-swatting centers Moussa Cisse and Jamarion Sharp gone, coach Chris Beard is moving in a more athletically fluid, offensively dynamic direction with his second roster. – Cobb
Loser: The Ivy League is now losing undergrads
The Ivy League has been losing graduate transfers for years since the league doesn’t allow graduates to play. What’s different about this portal cycle is the number of quality undergraduates leaving the Ivy League. Players such as Malik Mack (Harvard to Georgetown) Danny Wolf (Yale to Michigan), Tyler Perkins (Penn to Villanova) and Kalu Anya (Brown to Saint Louis) are departing some of the nation’s most prestigious academic institutions for NIL paydays elsewhere. Given the academic standards and limited access for transfers to Ivy institutions, it’s nearly impossible for coaches to find suitable replacements. I tackled this topic more in-depth earlier in the week. – Cobb
Winner: Missouri loads up for redemption
Third-year Missouri coach Dennis Gates is looking to reclaim the winning trajectory he established during a 25-win debut campaign by bringing in a class that includes three players from the CBS Sports Transfer Rankings. A fourth transfer, Marquest Warrick, was a four-time All-Horizon League player at Northern Kentucky. Tony Perkins from Iowa is a physical guard with distribution chops, Jacob Crews from Tennessee Martin is an elite 3-point shooter and Mark Mitchell from Duke is a versatile forward with NBA upside. The Tigers have upgraded their talent in a massive way following a horrific 0-18 SEC season. – Cobb
Loser: Dayton is depleted
Dayton relied heavily on six players during a 25-8 season. Two of them are transferring out as Koby Brea (Kentucky) and Kobe Elvis (Oklahoma) each hit the portal. With star forward DaRon Holmes II staying in the NBA Draft, the Flyers have a hefty bit of rebuilding to do as coach Anthony Grant enters his eighth season. Transfer additions Posh Alexander (Butler) and Zed Key (Ohio State) will help keep the Flyers near the top of the A-10. But getting back to 25 wins might not be feasible. – Cobb
Winner: Marquette’s silence is golden
Sometimes, no news is good news. Such is the case with Marquette, whose roster has no outbound or inbound transfers. Tyler Kolek and Oso Ighodaro declared for the draft, but Shaka Smart’s Golden Eagles will return a solid nucleus and have more minutes available for a young crop of internally developed players who should be ready to step into rotation roles. – Cobb
Loser: Minnesota gets wiped out
Eight players started seven or more games for Minnesota as the Gophers improved from nine wins in 2022-23 to 19 wins in 2023-24. But six of them are transferring out, leaving coach Ben Johnson to frantically mine the portal for reinforcements as he enters a critical fourth season. – Cobb
Winner: Xavier is reloading
Xavier finished 16-18 in coach Sean Miller’s second season after reaching the Sweet 16 as a No. 3 seed in the first year of his second stint with the Musketeers. Given the caliber of transfers Miller has landed, expect to see the Musketeers back in the Big Dance. Guards Ryan Conwell (Indiana State), Marcus Foster (Furman) and Dante Maddox Jr. (Toledo) are big-time bucket getters from strong mid-major programs. Frontcourt players John Hugley IV (Oklahoma) and Lassina Traore (Long Beach State) will also add production to a roster that is expected to have veteran forwards Jerome Hunter and Zach Freemantle back from injury. – Cobb
More Winners and Losers: Why North Carolina, Oregon headline 247Sports’ list
Michigan
Michigan Lottery Daily 3, Daily 4 results for March 9, 2026
Powerball, Mega Millions jackpots: What to know in case you win
Here’s what to know in case you win the Powerball or Mega Millions jackpot.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY
The Michigan Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at March 9, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Daily 3 numbers from March 9 drawing
Midday: 3-7-3
Evening: 1-1-6
Check Daily 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Daily 4 numbers from March 9 drawing
Midday: 1-6-5-2
Evening: 8-4-6-3
Check Daily 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Poker Lotto numbers from March 9 drawing
KD-QH-5C-7D-8D
Check Poker Lotto payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Fantasy 5 numbers from March 9 drawing
24-30-36-37-39
08-09-30-35-36
Check Fantasy 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Daily Keno numbers from March 9 drawing
04-05-10-12-15-22-26-34-38-44-47-49-52-56-57-59-62-67-71-72-76-80
Check Daily Keno payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Millionaire for Life numbers from March 9 drawing
06-16-26-41-43, Bonus: 03
Check Millionaire for Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize
All Michigan Lottery retailers can redeem prizes up to $600. For prizes up to $99,999.99, winners have the option to submit their claim by mail or in person at one of Michigan Lottery’s Regional Offices.
To claim by mail, complete a ticket receipt form, sign your winning ticket, and send it along with original copies of your government-issued photo ID and Social Security card to the address below. Ensure the names on your ID and Social Security card match exactly. Claims should be mailed to:
Michigan Lottery
Attn: Claim Center
101 E. Hillsdale
P.O. Box 30023
Lansing, MI 48909
For prizes over $100,000, winners must claim their prize in person at the Michigan Lottery Headquarters in Lansing located at 101 E. Hillsdale in downtown Lansing. Each winner must present original versions of a valid government-issued photo ID (typically a driver’s license or state ID) and a Social Security card, ensuring that the names on both documents match exactly. To schedule an appointment, please call the Lottery Player Relations office at 844-887-6836, option 2.
If you prefer to claim in person at one of the Michigan Lottery Regional Offices for prizes under $100,000, appointments are required. Until further notice, please call 1-844-917-6325 to schedule an appointment. Regional office locations are as follows:
- Lansing: 101 E. Hillsdale St. Lansing; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Livonia: 33231 Plymouth Road, Livonia; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Sterling Heights: 34700 Dequindre Road, Sterling Heights; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Detroit: Cadillac Place, 3060 W. Grand Blvd., Suite L-600, Detroit; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Grand Rapids: 3391-B Plainfield Ave. NE, Grand Rapids; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Saginaw: Jerome T. Hart State Office Building, 411 E. Genesee Ave., Saginaw; Phone: 844-917-6325
For additional information, downloadable forms, and instructions, visit the Michigan Lottery’s prize claim page.
When are Michigan Lottery drawings held?
- Daily 3 & Daily 4: Midday at 12:59 p.m., Evening at 7:29 p.m.
- Fantasy 5: 7:29 p.m. daily
- Poker Lotto: 7:29 p.m. daily
- Lotto 47: 7:29 p.m. Wednesday and Saturday
- Lucky for Life: 10:38 p.m. daily
- Daily Keno: 7:29 p.m. daily
- Millionaire for Life: 11:15 p.m. daily
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Michigan editor. You can send feedback using this form.
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Wojo: May’s Wolverines complete rivalry sweep and historic Big Ten run, rile Izzo
Michigan coach Dusty May on 90-80 win over Michigan State at Crisler Center
The Wolverines swept the home-and-home series in the rivalry for the first time since the 2013-14 campaign.
Ann Arbor – The Wolverines were pushed, pushed hard. As they have all season, they pushed back even harder.
This was Dusty May’s vision of his Michigan program bathed in maize, in a packed, loud Crisler Center. The Wolverines completed one of the most dominant regular seasons in Big Ten history by going 29-2, 19-1 in the conference. And almost as important, 2-0 against their rivals.
May brought Yaxel Lendeborg for this reason and this season, and specifically for this game. Roughed up last year by Michigan State, the Wolverines toughened up and loaded up, and completed a season sweep of Tom Izzo’s squad with a 90-80 victory Sunday.
The outcomes – 83-71 in East Lansing in January – belied the competitiveness of the games. The Spartans battled and led by four midway through the second half Sunday, but UM came in waves, led by Lendeborg’s 27 points and 5-for-6 shooting from 3.
Michigan deserves its plaudits for a historic run, and MSU (25-6) deserves credit for setting the standard and stoking the motivation. This is how rivals can push each other when they’re not busy pounding each other and swearing at each other. In his second season, May has picked up quickly on what the game means, and how it’s won.
The Wolverines will head to the Big Ten Tournament as the No. 1 seed, and assuredly a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. After the confetti fell and the Big Ten championship banner was raised, May took a moment to relish it. Just a moment, though.
“This journey, everything comes at you so fast,” May said. “We just did something incredibly difficult together, so rewarding and gratifying. And our journey is only three-fourths of the way done.”
UM among national title favorites
Michigan will be one of the favorites to reach the Final Four and win the national championship. Especially if Lendeborg elevates as he did on this day, taking over the game just when the Spartans seemed primed to wreck UM’s fun.
That’s what should be extracted from a rivalry that gets needlessly toxic at times. Of course there were more flashpoints, including yet another technical foul on Jeremy Fears Jr., after a leg kick to the groin of UM guard Elliot Cadeau. Izzo defended his star by saying there was no intent, but there have been too many incidents to dismiss. Izzo should be as miffed at Fears as anyone, although he insists it wouldn’t have become an issue if May hadn’t publicly pointed it out after the first meeting.
You can’t just call it rivalry gamesmanship when there’s ample video evidence. UM also has been called for several technicals – notably by Aday Mara – without disagreement.
If the Spartans made the Wolverines tougher and angrier, perhaps UM is returning the favor. While Michigan has risen in remarkable fashion under May, Izzo certainly isn’t retreating, as fired up after the game as he was during it. At the end, the student section serenaded the Spartans with “Little Brother!”, an old taunt that was especially biting this time.
It’s what happens in a rivalry, no different than the jeers the Wolverines have endured at the Breslin Center. Izzo has had so much control, he’s not accustomed to the other side getting edgy too.
“I guess the crowd didn’t watch the game because I’m nobody’s damn little brother, and neither is my team,” Izzo snapped. “I’m at Michigan State, and no matter what those people think, we’ve done it longer and better than most. … They’ve had a hell of a year. We’ve had a hell of a year.”
Izzo hasn’t encountered a UM coach willing to play the rivalry game as smoothly and passive-aggressively as May, so perhaps the tension was unavoidable. After this game, they shook hands for about two seconds, approximately 1.5 seconds longer than the postgame encounter in East Lansing.
“I didn’t know how big this rivalry was,” May said. “Rivalries are awesome for sports. When they swept us (last year), they earned it, they kicked our butt. They made us better. … Trust me, they’re gonna be coming after us next year, and we’re gonna be coming after them.”
It actually could happen sooner if they collide in the Big Ten tourney. Frankly, it might be better if they go their separate ways for now, because both teams have bigger goals than settling rivalry scores. Both can do significant damage in the tournaments.
The Spartans have a battle-tested threesome – Fears, Jaxon Kohler and Carson Cooper – and a physical, tenacious defense. The Wolverines have an imposing frontline of Lendeborg, Morez Johnson Jr. and Mara (when he’s not in foul trouble), and a physical, tenacious defense. This was a terrifically combative clash, with the Wolverines not pulling away until the final minutes.
Lendeborg and Fears are the favorites for Big Ten Player of the Year, and the best player on the best team seems the logical choice to me. Lendeborg made the big plays at the big moments, 8-for-12 from the field and 6-for-6 from the free-throw line. His season numbers aren’t overwhelming – 14.3 points, 7.3 rebounds – partly because UM has a deep nine-man rotation. It’s down to eight with the loss of L.J. Cason, which requires more from others.
More from Yaxel? He didn’t need to be asked twice.
“There’s no way in heck I was letting the seniors come out and lose their last game here,” Lendeborg said. “We all had goals and hopes of being the best Michigan team ever assembled, but now that we’re in the middle of pretty much accomplishing that, it’s amazing. Nobody has any selfish motives. It was just my time to be aggressive.”
Lendeborg ‘has a lot more in his tank’
Lendeborg, a pricey 6-9 portal addition who chose UM over the NBA, said he came here with three goals: Win the Big Ten; win Player of the Year; win the national title. For it to happen, he has to be the engine.
“Yaxel has a lot more in his tank,” said Roddy Gayle Jr., who scored 15. “It’s kind of my responsibility to keep pushing him. He’s an incredible player, especially when he’s out of his head and playing ball freely. I truly believe Yaxel is the best player in the country.”
Lendeborg is part of a four-man portal class that turned the Wolverines from a good team into a powerhouse. They haven’t been bashful about their ambitions, ever since they launched an incredible run with three November victories in Las Vegas – by 40 over San Diego State, by 30 over Auburn, by 40 over Gonzaga. They’ve won 24 games by double-digits,10 by 30-plus and seven by 40-plus (Big Ten record).
May doesn’t fire back often, but he does chafe at the notion the Wolverines simply bought a bunch of talent. Some have called the Wolverines “mercenaries” and questioned his program-building methods, an odd complaint in the world of NIL and rampant transfers.
“We’ve heard a lot about this super team we had,” May said. “But we looked at (the analytics) – KenPom had us 11 preseason, AP had us No. 7. Not typical for a super team. Our secret sauce is how great of teammates these guys are. Period.”
He doesn’t waste time worrying about it, but his boss has something to say. AD Warde Manuel stood at the edge of the Crisler Center court as the team celebrated and was asked if he hears the gripes.
“That bothers me,” Manuel said. “There’s a lot of people across the country spending a lot of money not having the success we’re having. You have to look at why. And the why is the pieces of the puzzle that have come together, and the way Dusty leads.”
May led them from 8-24 the year before he arrived to 29-2 and the Big Ten championship. He’s shown he’s willing to take on all challenges, including from a storied rival and an iconic coach. Sure, it can get caustic at times, but wherever the Wolverines and Spartans go from here, they’ll know what helped push them.
bob.wojnowski@detroitnews.com
@bobwojnowski
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