Chicago, IL (Sports Network) - Arguably the best quarterfinal-round matchup in
the 2013 Big Ten Conference Tournament takes place on Friday afternoon, as the
fifth-seeded Michigan Wolverines do battle with the fourth-seeded Wisconsin
Badgers, the winner advancing to Saturday's semifinals to take on the survivor
of the Illinois/Indiana matchup.
Michigan has had a tremendous season, logging a 26-6 overall record, which
included a 12-6 league ledger. The Wolverines have won three of their last
four games, including an 83-66 thrashing of Penn State in the opening round of
this event on Thursday. The victory improved UM's record all-time in the Big
Ten tourney to 9-13, and while the team did win the inaugural conference
tournament crown back in 1998, it was later vacated by the NCAA.
Wisconsin was credited with a 21-10 overall record this season, which included
the same 12-6 league ledger as Michigan. The Badgers managed to knock off Penn
State in their regular-season finale last Sunday, 63-60, putting the brakes on
a brief two-game skid. UW is 15-13 all-time in the Big Ten Tournament, and the
team has a pair of championships to its credit, the most recent of which
occurred in 2008.
Michigan owns an 87-68 lead in the all-time series with Wisconsin, but it was
the Badgers who prevailed in the only meeting between the two this season,
65-62 in overtime in Madison back on Feb. 9.
Michigan is fortunate to have the Big Ten Player of the Year on its roster, as
Trey Burke was simply sensational in averaging 19.2 points and 6.8 assists per
outing. Tim Hardaway, Jr. (14.8 ppg, 4.7 rpg) also had a stellar campaign, and
Glenn Robinson III (10.9 ppg, 5.5 rpg) was highly productive in earning All-
Freshman Team honors. Not to be left out, Nik Stauskas (11.6 ppg, .460 3-point
FG percentage) helped form what is arguably the best backcourt trio in the
nation -- and all stats mentioned represent regular-season games only. Burke
scored 21 points to lead five players in double figures, as Michigan upended
Penn State in Thursday's opening round, exacting some revenge for a loss
suffered to the Nittany Lions on Feb. 27. The Wolverines shot 46 percent from
the floor while their counterpart shot 48.3 percent, but a 19-5 edge in points
from the foul line certainly played in integral role in helping the Maize and
Blue advance.
The Badgers own the Big Ten's top defense (56.0 ppg), and they rank ninth
nationally in that department. UW, which is led by Big Ten Coach of the Year
Bo Ryan, doesn't light it up at the offensive end (66.1 ppg), and it relies
almost exclusively on four rather modest scorers in All-Big Ten Second-Teamer
Jared Berggren (11.5 ppg, 7.1 rpg, 63 blocks), Honorable Mention selection Ben
Brust (11.3 ppg, 5.2 rpg, 76 assists), Ryan Evans (10.1 ppg, 7.5 rpg) and All-
Freshman Team member Sam Dekker (9.7 ppg). UW is as solid as they come in
terms of rebounding (+4.3 margin), while also taking very good care of the
basketball (only 9.6 turnovers per tilt).
The Sports Network