He took a deep breath and wiggled his fingers as he stepped to the line, but his first shot was woefully short, perhaps a sign of nerves. His second shot rimmed out, too, and Michigan rebounded the ball. The Wolverines had life and set up the final play (whatever it’s called), which is the same one they used to defeat the University of Maryland earlier in the season.
“We have several variations and there are three or four options off of it,” explained John Beilein, the Michigan coach. The option they used worked perfectly.
Photo
As Livers went to throw the ball in, Abdur-Rahkman curled along the midcourt line and found himself open on the right side, the same side that Poole had set up. Livers threw the ball to Abdur-Rahkman — a pass from a “former pitcher to a former receiver,” Abdur-Rahkman noted. With the clock ticking toward zero, Abdur-Rahkman dribbled a few feet until Cougars guard Rob Gray came out to meet him.
Abdur-Rahkman dished the ball over to Poole, who jumped and gracefully unleashed his arcing, long-range shot. The ball hit the back rim and went through the basket after the buzzer had sounded and the red light had gone on, igniting a wild celebration that went from one end of the court to the other.
Poole, who played only 11 minutes and had only 5 points before that shot, jumped to his feet and began running around the court as his teammates tried to catch him and celebrate. The Houston players stood in shock, including Gray, who was held to 23 points after scoring 39 in Houston’s first-round game.
Newsletter Sign Up Continue reading the main story Please verify you're not a robot by clicking the box. Invalid email address. Please re-enter. You must select a newsletter to subscribe to. Sign Up You agree to receive occasional updates and special offers for The New York Times's products and services. Thank you for subscribing. An error has occurred. Please try again later. View all New York Times newsletters.
As Michigan celebrated, the referees went to the scorer’s table to review the play and ensure that Poole had got it off in time. But he knew he had.
“I don’t even know why they were looking at it,” Poole said. “I saw the light come on after I let it go. I knew it was good.”
Minutes after the win, Michigan players celebrated in the locker room by spraying bottles of water at one another — including on their freshman hero.
By the time reporters entered the room, the floor was basically one large puddle of water, and people wanted to know what happened.
Advertisement Continue reading the main story
“We had a Poole party,” Livers said.
CLOSE A look at Texas A&M, the team Michigan will face in the Sweet 16 on Thursday in Los Angeles. Video by Ryan Ford, Detroit Free Press Wochit
Michigan vs. Texas A&M on Thursday at 7:37 p.m. ET from Los Angeles in Sweet 16
John Beilein hugs his wife, Kathleen, after defeating Houston, 64-63, in the second round of the NCAA tournament Saturday. (Photo: Junfu Han, Detroit Free Press)
Michigan's bracket is now, officially, wide open.
On top of that, the Wolverines won't have to wait around all day to play basketball in Los Angeles on Thursday.
No. 3 seed Michigan (30-7) and No. 7 seed Texas A&M (22-12) will tip at 7:37 p.m. ET (TBS) on Thursday from the Staples Center in a West Region semifinal. For those on the west coast, that's 4:37 p.m. local time.
With both No. 1 Xavier and No. 2 North Carolina losing Sunday night, Michigan is now the highest remaining seed in the West Region, and the highest remaining seed on the entire left side of the bracket.
Read more:
Jordan Peele hilariously accepted congratulatory messages meant for Jordan Poole
Michigan's Jordan Poole made for March, all its madness
No. 1 Virginia, No. 2 Cincinnati and No. 3 Tennessee all lost during opening-weekend action in the South Region.
After Michigan's game in Los Angeles, No. 9 Florida State will play No. 4 Gonzaga for the right to play the Wolverines or Texas A&M in the West Region title game Saturday.
In the South it'll be No. 5 Kentucky vs. No. 9 Kansas State and No. 7 Nevada vs. No. 11 Loyola-Chicago.
Michigan, meanwhile, has opened as a 3 1/2-point favorite vs. Texas A&M.
Michigan vs. Texas A&M: Sweet 16 scouting report, pick
Download our Wolverines Xtra app for free on Apple and Android devices!
CLOSE Michigan basketball's Jordan Poole said he was "thirsty" for the ball in the final seconds of their game against Houston. The Wolverines advance to the Sweet 16 after defeating Houston, 64-63. Nicholas Baumgardner, Detroit Free Press
Michigan Wolverines guard Jordan Poole (2) celebrates with teammates after making the game-winning three-point shot to defeat the Houston Cougars. (Photo: Kelly Ross, USA TODAY Sports)
WICHITA, Kan. — Jordan Poole stood near his locker, drenched in water, reaching for his cell phone.
Michigan basketball's boisterous freshman from Milwaukee hit the power button and saw 394 text messages suddenly appear. Minutes later and without warning, that number jumped to 532.
"This is not OK," Poole laughed. "My teacher texted me. I made it."
Poole, the man of the hour who still hasn't found a shot he didn't like, will wear the tag of Michigan basketball hero for the rest of his life after his nearly 30-foot buzzer-beater pushed the Wolverines past Houston on Saturday and into the Sweet 16 with a 64-63 victory in the second round of the NCAA tournament.
Michigan (30-7) will play the winner of North Carolina/Texas A&M in the West Region semifinals Thursday at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.
More on 'the shot':
Michigan basketball's miracle win steeped in swag, ended in swish
Michigan gets stunning win over Houston with an 'overdose of swag'
Known by his teammates as the most energetic and talkative player on the roster, Poole might need more time to answer all those texts.
Michigan head coach John Beilein hugs his wife Kathleen Beilein after defeating Houston 64-63 in second round of the NCAA tournament at INTRUST Bank Arena in Wichita, Kan., Saturday, March 17, 2018. (Photo: Junfu Han, Detroit Free Press)
Though he was positive he'd be soaking up every minute of it.
"He's never going to shut up now," Michigan center Moritz Wagner said with a smile after embracing Poole with a bear hug.
After struggling to hit anything all night long, the Wolverines went to an old favorite in the exact right situation. In fact, the play U-M ran with 3.6 seconds left was the same one it used to beat Maryland near the buzzer earlier this season.
Isaiah Livers, a former pitcher, threw a pass to Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman, a former high school wide receiver and Michigan's best driver to the basket. Abdur-Rahkman's first instinct was to get as close to the basket as possible. Against Maryland, it worked as he was fouled on his way to the rim.
On Saturday in Wichita, he took two dribbles to his left and heard his loudest teammate screaming his name on the right wing.
Abdur-Rahkman to Poole. Poole at the buzzer.
Ball game.
"He just (yelled) 'Hamm,' and I looked up and saw he was open," said Abdur-Rahkman, citing Poole's nickname for him. "I had 100 percent confidence he was going to knock it down."
It's a play Michigan practices every three or four days. Zavier Simpson said the name for it was "Indiana." Livers said it was called "Tennessee." Abdur-Rahkman made sure reporters knew that coach John Beilein changes the name of it often.
More on Poole:
Michigan basketball's Jordan Poole made for March, all its madness
In fact, there are several different variations of the play, as Beilein puts his best baseball passer (Livers) on the baseline. With Charles Matthews and Duncan Robinson fouled out, Beilein inserted Ibi Watson to help set screens for Poole and Abdur-Rahkman. The ball goes to Abdur-Rahkman and shooters roll with him in search of the cleanest look at the basket possible.
He doesn't run it all the time. But he's 2-for-2 this season.
"I'm a little astonished with what just happened," Beilein said. "Jordan's growing every day. Growing in the right direction. He's a heck of a kid and it's going to be fun to watch him over the next couple years."
Michigan guard Jordan Poole (2) who scored a 3-point buzzer-beater is greeted by coaches and staff in the locker room at INTRUST Bank Arena in Wichita, Kan., Saturday, March 17, 2018. (Photo: Junfu Han, Detroit Free Press)
The stage was greater, of course, but Poole believes Saturday's moment was another night at the office.
During a scrimmage U-M allowed reporters to watch last week, nine days before Saturday's game, Poole canned deep buzzer-beaters at the end of the first and second halves. The second was a game-winner.
Never bashful and always a showman, Poole looked toward empty seats in the Crisler Center with a celebration no one saw.
On Saturday, he sprinted up and down the floor as the world watched.
"I was shooting (well) in warmups, I hit a 3 earlier in the game and, at that point, it was just repetition," Poole said. "It didn't feel bad. Let's just say that."
For Michigan, the entire scenario looked incredibly unlikely just seconds earlier as Abdur-Rahkman missed a runner in the lane that could've tied the game with 3.9 seconds to play. The Wolverines then fouled Houston forward Devin Davis, who had hit six free throws down the stretch.
But Davis walked to the other end and missed both. Wagner collected the rebound and immediately called timeout. From there, Beilein knew where he was going.
Michigan had one of its worst shooting days of the season on Saturday. Abdur-Rahkman missed all six 3-pointers he attempted. The Wolverines were 7 of 29 from deep before Poole's shot. At one point during the second half, U-M bricked three open looks in a single possession.
All things pointed toward Michigan's number being up.
Michigan guard Charles Matthews, left, talks to teammate guard Zavier Simpson as he calls his brother to celebrate defeating Houston in second round of the NCAA tournament in the locker room at INTRUST Bank Arena in Wichita, Kan., Saturday, March 17, 2018. (Photo: Junfu Han, Detroit Free Press)
Until it wasn't.
"We ain't done yet," Matthews shouted into his phone with his brother at the other end. "You're only as good as your last game and our last shot went in.
"I'm lit, man. I've got nothing to say."
The victory puts the Wolverines in the Sweet 16 for a second straight year and for the fourth time in the last six. Beilein has now tied Steve Fisher for all-time Sweet 16 appearance at U-M with four.
On top of that, this Michigan team became just the fourth in program history to record 30 wins in a season: Joining the 1989 national title team, the 1993 Final Four team and the 2013 national runner-up team.
And with that, Michigan will pack its bags for Los Angeles. But not before a bit of work, as Poole told reporters he still has a Greek mythology paper due in Ann Arbor on Monday.
The life of a heroic student-athlete, who now lives in Michigan mythology.
"I was thirsty (out there), definitely thirsty," Poole said. "I always felt like I'd be in a situation like that at the end of a game. My teammates tell me I've got ice in my game. I was definitely thirsty.
"And I just knocked the shot down."
Contact Nick Baumgardner: nbaumgardn@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter: @nickbaumgardner. Download our Wolverines Xtra app for free on Apple and Android devices!