Griffin, No. 2 Oklahoma overpower Michigan
Player of year candidate has 33 points, 17 rebounds in 73-63 victory
![]() Dave Kaup / Reuters Oklahoma starters (from left to right) Willie Warren, Taylor Griffin, Blake Griffin and Tony Crocker cheer on their teammates during the closing moments of the Sooners' 73-63 victory over Michigan on Saturday. |
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KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Michigan bumped Blake Griffin around, knocked him to the floor, even bloodied his nose. There were no wrestling takedowns, but the Wolverines still gave it to him pretty good.
Nothing worked.
Oklahoma’s bulldozer of a power forward took the hits and kept rolling, finishing with 33 points and 17 rebounds in a 73-63 victory over Michigan on Saturday night to send the Sooners back into the NCAA’s round of 16 for the first time in six years.
“He’s a fantastic player on a fantastic team,” Michigan coach John Beilien said.
Still sore after being dumped head over heels by Morgan State’s Ameer Ali, Griffin played part of the first half with a cotton swab in his nose and had to cover up a scratch on his elbow after being knocked around by the Wolverines.
Like he has all season, the 6-foot-10, 251-pound sophomore shrugged off the beating and kept charging, scoring 20 points in the second half for the second-seeded Sooners (29-5). They’ll face the Syracuse-Arizona State winner in next week’s South Regional finals in Memphis, Tenn.
“This was so much fun,” Griffin said. “This is what we play for and it’s just fun when everybody is playing well and everybody is doing their thing.”
Michigan (21-14) pulled off a mild upset in the opening round by withstanding Clemson’s relentless pressure and were hoping to make it two in a row against the bigger Sooners. The 10th-seeded Wolverines overcame foul trouble in the first half to keep it close and cut a 13-point lead to three with just over 6 minutes left, but just couldn’t find a way to stop Griffin.
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“It was almost a dream because we weren’t sure where we could go,” said Sims, who had six rebounds. “I not sure if other people thought that we would be in this position, but we kind of felt in our minds that we worked hard and something had to pay off.”
It could have been a better outcome if Michigan could have found a way to stop Griffin.
The Wolverines tried a variety of tactics, doubling him, sagging in the lane, bumping him around. None of seemed to phase Griffin.
A power forward with a linebacker’s mentality, he had 13 points — two on a tomahawk dunk over Laval Lucas-Perry — and nine rebounds by halftime. He opened the second half with a putback and a power move through a triple team under the basketm and added two more scores by powering through double teams.
Then came The Dunk.
Building momentum near the 3-point line, Griffin launched himself skyward from the right side of the lane. He sailed over Michigan’s Zack Novak and, with his elbow above the rim, threw down a vicious one-handed dunk that left the backboard shaking.
Normally stoic, Griffin stood for a few seconds after his did-he-just-do-that dunk, chest heaving, taking in the moment. Even Michigan’s fans had to cheer.
“That was a heck of a play,” Oklahoma coach Jeff Capel said. “You know, if you made that, you probably would yell or do something, too. I know I would have.”
Griffin finished 14-for-20 from the floor and tied Michael Beasley’s Big 12 record with his 28th double-double to send Oklahoma to its deepest NCAA run since Hollis Price led the Sooners to the East Regional final in 2003.
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Griffin usually gets his points and rebounds no matter what the opponent tries. A frontrunner for national player of the year, he averages nearly 22 points and was the nation’s top rebounder at 14.3 per game.
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