In spite of a dominant stretch, Michigan head basketball coach Dusty May says the Wolverines aren't even close to reaching their full potential yet.
"It's just about stay the course and find a way to win ugly," Michigan basketball coach Dusty May said. "This experience ... will help us."
While Big Ten play is still in its early stages, the Wolverines and Spartans look to be on a collision course atop the conference
Dusty May met with the media for his weekly Monday press conference to discuss Michigan’s 5-0 start in Big Ten play and preview this week’s trip to Minnesota.
Michigan State (14-2) has won nine in a row under Tom Izzo, now in his 30th year on the job. The Spartans, ranked No. 16, clobbered Washington at home and won at Northwestern on Sunday (78-68) since the last poll came out.
No. 20 Michigan had a road meeting with a Minnesota team that entered Thursday winless in the Big Ten Conference. The Wolverines had a sloppy start to the game
"We don’t really care where the Spartans are," Michigan basketball coach Dusty May said. "But I think it adds more interest to the game."
The No. 20 Michigan Wolverines have silenced skeptics with their remarkable turnaround this season, staking their claim as one of the Big Ten’s premier programs. At 13-3 overall and an unblemished 5-0 in conference play for the first time since the 2020-21 season,
The Big Ten men's basketball season is still in its early stages, but in-state rivals Michigan and Michigan State appear to be on a collision course atop the conference standings. The No. 20 ...
Sonny Giuliano is an experienced sports writer for ClutchPoints who has been covering the NFL, NCAA Football, NBA, and NCAA Basketball for well over a decade. Sonny received his degree from Florida Gulf Coast University.
Trey Kaufman-Renn had his second double-double of the season, leading No. 17 Purdue to a win over No. 13 Oregon and extending the win streak to seven games.
More than 4,000 college football fans cast their votes Friday to crown the Big Ten ’s best “Seventh Inning Stretch” tradition, choosing Oregon’s “Shout” over two other candidates. The poll was conducted on X, formerly Twitter, by a user named @BigTenTed. “Shout” won the vote in a landslide, earning 78% of 4,586 votes.