Michigan v UConn: Would Raw Talent or Coaching Prove More Important?

by Team Del Genio

Wednesday, Apr 22, 2026
Handicapping the national championship college basketball showdown between Michigan and UConn was complicated by injuries from both Final Four games. 

The Monday afternoon update for the game later that night confirmed that Michigan’s Yaxel Lendeborg and UConn’s Solo Ball were both expected to play despite getting injured in their Final Four games on Saturday. On Lendeborg, while he was emphatic after the Wolverines’ 91-73 victory against Arizona that he was going to play in this game, we still considered it a real possibility that he would not take the court before that update (and the oddsmakers would adjust the line accordingly). In similar circumstances, both Tyrese Haliburton (in the NBA finals last year) and Kevin Durant (in the NBA finals when he was a Golden State Warrior) suffered major injuries when trying to play through pain. They already signed their NBA contracts. Lendeborg was risking his first payday in the NBA. Because it looked like the injury situation was stable for this evening, we proceeded with the handicap.

At first glance, handicapping the 2026 national championship game presented a challenging question. On a short turnaround, what is more important: raw basketball talent or head coaching? The against-the-spread record for the teams that the oddsmakers install as the favorite in the title game was imposing. Those favorites in the national championship game were on 17-8 and 33-22 against the spread runs. When the oddsmakers installed these favorites in the title game by at least three points, they had covered the point spread in twelve of the last sixteen championship games. In the last three seasons in the NCAA tournament, when the oddsmakers installed favorites of six or more points, they were on a 69-39 run against the spread. Signing off on a Michigan team that was outscoring its opponents by +21.6 points per game in this tournament was more than understandable. 

Yet it did ignore some conflicting trends that are quite imposing, going the other way. UConn was now on an 18-1 run against the spread in the NCAA tournament since 2023, with Dan Hurley as their head coach. They were 15-0 against the spread after the first round of the NCAA tournament over that span. Michigan head coach Dusty May took FAU to the Final Four two years ago, yet this will be Hurley’s third time coaching in the title game in the last four years. Final Four teams with the more experienced head coach in the Final Four from previous seasons had a 73-46 straight-up record and a 64-54-1 against the spread record when playing in the Final Four or title game. History says the coaching experience that Hurley has in this game matters. The Huskies had the advantage in the first game on Saturday. Hurley had more experience with the short turnaround and the unique expectations and surroundings of championship Monday.

The betting market may have been underplaying how good this UConn team had become. They beat Duke, the last team to beat Michigan. They thwarted Illinois in the Final Four, 71-62, holding the number one team in offensive efficiency to their second-lowest scoring output of the season (with their lowest scoring output being when UConn held them to 61 points in a 13-point victory in November). The Huskies also had wins against Michigan State and Florida to give them a 5-1 record against top-ten teams. Hurley would not make the mistake that Arizona head coach Tommy Lloyd made in trying to make Michigan in a track meet. The left foot injury Solo Ball got early in the game against the Illini was concerning, yet he played through it and scored 13 points. If he was limited, Hurley had options off the bench to replace him with either Jaydon Ross or Jaylin Stewart. Hurley had his team peaking for the NCAA tournament. He constructed a roster designed to succeed in games like this. His players had no doubts that they were capable of winning, especially after their 19-point comeback victory against Duke. Playing for UConn means playing for a program that had a 6-0 record in the national championship game and a 13-1 record in the Final Four and beyond. Those Huskies teams had covered the point spread in 12 of those games, and they have covered the point spread in all six of those title games.

Which, for us, brought everything back to Lendeborg. He was dealing with two injuries: an MCL sprain in his knee and a re-aggravated lower right ankle sprain from a mishap during the Big Ten tournament. Those were not one-day injuries. Under normal circumstances, the doctors suggest it takes weeks to fully recover. May had conceded that he expected Lendeborg to be limited. He was their best player. He was not going to be close to 100%. We hoped he would not suffer the worst-case scenario that happened to Haliburton and Durant. Yet the oddsmakers were pricing Michigan as if Lendeborg was 100% because the market was apparently not thinking it would matter. The oddsmakers were not pricing the Huskies as an improved team late in the season versus their full-season numbers because the market was ignoring it. The oddsmakers were siding with talent overwhelming head coaching experience in these championship moments because that was what the market was shouting. We had been concerned about the season-ending injury to sophomore L.J. Cason, who was a spark plug scorer off the bench and perhaps their best 3-point shooter. Now with the Lendeborg injury, the scoring options were getting even thinner, and this may finally be the game where his absence would hurt this team. In their losses against Duke and Purdue, the Wolverines got stuck in slower-paced games where their scoring was dependent on their half-court offense, which was not nearly as dominant. Michigan’s showdown with Arizona was considered by many to be the de facto national championship game. At less than full strength, when the Huskies slow this game down, play rugged defense, and pound the offensive and defensive glass, how would the Wolverines respond if they find themselves in a dog fight in the second half? Perhaps Michigan still wins the game, yet Hurley’s track record and the style of play his teams use strongly suggest this game will be closer than expected in a very dangerous spot for the Wolverines. 

That final statement proved prescient. While Michigan led the game throughout, their biggest lead was only at the 5:44 mark of the second half when they took a 56-45 lead. Yet UConn always kept the game close and even pulled within four points with seventeen seconds left before the Wolverines scored the final two points to win the national championship, 69-63. Hurley got the slow pace he wanted to keep it close. Lendeborg demonstrated courage by playing 36 minutes, yet he admitted he was too tentative and scored only 13 points and missed all five of his shots from 3-point land. The margins were thin, yet our pre-game analysis proved true, and we won our NCAA-B Game of the Year for the 2025-26 season.

Good luck - Team Del Genio.

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