The smiles and sheepish grins began spreading wider and wider around the 9:13 mark of the second half, following back-to-back eye-popping buckets from Michigan center Aday Mara, the second of which extended the Wolverines’ lead to 13 points. He followed his skyscraping alley-oop dunk with a remarkable offensive rebound-turned-twisting-reverse layup that drew a foul and produced a traditional three-point play. Mara and frontcourt partner Morez Johnson Jr. beamed with glee. Senior forward Will Tschetter unleashed a screaming fist pump. All of it in recognition of what the moment represented: the Big Ten title was secure. Michigan arrived at State Farm Center needing to win just one of its final three games in order to secure an outright Big Ten regular season championship. And while a highly ranked showdown against No. 10 Illinois figured to be the most difficult of those opportunities — especially since it was away from home — the Wolverines hardly seemed to care. They ballooned a seven-point halftime advantage into a lead that swelled as high as 21 in the second half, thoroughly demoralizing a crowd that was ready and waiting to play spoiler. Instead, the evening ended as just another impressive Michigan victory in a season chock-full of them, the 84-70 score on Friday night somehow failing to properly capture the gulf between these two teams. The Wolverines, now humming toward a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, are legitimate national championship contenders. And Illinois head coach Brad Underwood now sits with the harsh reality that his team, almost certainly, is not. Here are my takeaways: 1. The Wolverines are deserving Big Ten champions Michigan center Aday Mara celebrates with teammate Will Tschetter during the second half against Illinois. (Photo by Geoff Stellfox/Getty Images) Following Michigan’s loss to then-No. 3 Duke in a high-profile, non-conference matchup earlier this month — a game in which head coach Dusty May’s group was out-toughed and out-muscled in a manner that surprised the Wolverines — it was easy to question whether that showing was indicative of what might happen in the NCAA Tournament against teams from beyond the Big Ten. Were the Wolverines truly as good as their performances have been all season? Or did they rack up one blowout victory after another against a schedule that was largely devoid of elite opposition? The answers to those questions won’t be revealed for another few weeks as Michigan…
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2026-02-28 04:49:48

