Michigan defeated the No. 14 Montana Grizzlies in the first round by a score of 61–47.[5] They then reached the Sweet 16 by defeating the No. 6 Houston Cougars, 64–63, on a buzzer beater by Jordan Poole.[6] They made it to the Elite Eight by defeating the No. 7 Texas A&M Aggies, 99–72.[7] Michigan advanced to the Final Four by defeating the No. 9 Florida State Seminoles, 58–54,[8] and defeated the "Cinderella story" of the tournament, the No. 11 Loyola-Chicago Ramblers, in the Final Four by a score of 69–57.[1] Therefore, Michigan never faced a team seeded higher than sixth on its way to the title game.
In the first round, Villanova defeated the No. 16 Radford Highlanders, 87–61.[13] Villanova blew out the No. 9 Alabama Crimson Tide by a score of 81–58 in the second round.[14] In the Sweet 16, Villanova beat the West Virginia Mountaineers, 90–78.[15] Villanova won against the No. 3 Texas Tech Red Raiders, 71–59, to make the Final Four.[16] They defeated the Kansas Jayhawks by a score of 95–79 in the Final Four to reach the championship game.[17] In their victory over Kansas, Villanova set an NCAA Tournament Final Four single-game record with 18 three-point shots.[10]
The announced attendance for the game was 67,831. During the first half, Moritz Wagner of Michigan scored nine of the team's first 11 points,[20] as Michigan took a 21–14 lead. Villanova went on a 23–7 scoring run to end the half leading Michigan, 37–28.[2]Donte DiVincenzo, who entered the game off of the bench as a reserve player, scored 18 points out of Villanova's first 32. During the second half, DiVincenzo scored 11 consecutive points, putting Villanova 16 points ahead of Michigan. Villanova outscored Michigan by a score of 42–34 in the second half to win the championship by a score of 79–62. Villanova led Michigan in rebounds, 38–27, and limited the Wolverines to three three-point shots.[20]
With the 17 point victory, Villanova won each game in the tournament by double digit margins.[20] DiVincenzo scored a total of 31 points, the most in a national championship game by a player who did not start. DiVincenzo's 31 points led the game, and he was named the NCAA basketball tournament Most Outstanding Player.[21]
With the loss to Villanova, Michigan's record in the national championship game fell to 1–6, the worst record among teams that have previously won a national championship. This was the fourth consecutive loss in the championship game for the Wolverines since their sole title in 1989, having previously lost in 1992, 1993, and 2013 (the former two games were vacated due to a scandal).
Media coverage
The National Championship game was broadcast in the United States by TBS.[22]Jim Nantz provided play-by-play, while Bill Raftery and Grant Hill provided color commentary and Tracy Wolfson served as the sideline reporter. The pre-game and post-game shows included analysis by Greg Gumbel, Ernie Johnson Jr., Seth Davis, Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, and Charles Barkley.[23] TBS's sister channels, TNT and TruTV, also aired special broadcasts of the game, bring back the "Team Stream" broadcasts that catered to fans of the respective teams. Team Streams, which had been in use since the 2014 Final Four, returned after a one-year hiatus. Philadelphia-based announcer Scott Graham was the play-by-play man for Villanova's stream on TruTV, with former Villanova guard Randy Foye providing color commentary. NESN reporter and Villanova alum Kacie McDonnell worked the sidelines. On TNT's Michigan-centered broadcast, Michigan women's basketball play-by-play announcer Matt Park worked alongside former NFL kicker Jay Feely and CNN medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta, both Michigan alums. The game drew an estimated 10.3 Nielsen rating across the three networks, the lowest for a national championship game, but the highest on television for the night of April 2.[24]
ESPN International owns the international broadcast rights for 180 countries. In Canada, the game aired on TSN.[25] Radio coverage in the United States was provided by Westwood One.[26]