No. 6 Michigan outlasted Wake Forest 85-84 in overtime, powered by standout performances from Elliot Cadeau and Aday Mara, sending an early warning that the Wolverines may be ready for a deep March push.
The new college basketball season handed No. 6 Michigan its first gut check—an instant classic in Detroit, where the Wolverines survived an upset bid from Wake Forest 85-84 in overtime. This is not just another November result. Thanks to the heroics of Elliot Cadeau and Aday Mara, we leave with immediate answers—and new questions—about Michigan’s toughness and Big Dance prospects.
Inside Michigan’s Overtime Escape
The Wolverines, fresh off a season-opening blowout and preseason hype, showed resilience when a 13-point halftime lead evaporated. Elliot Cadeau finished with 17 points, including the decisive free throw in the final seconds of overtime. That ice-in-veins moment was followed by Wake Forest’s Nate Calmese, who missed a potential game-winner at the buzzer—cementing Michigan’s 2-0 start.
Yet it was Aday Mara’s near triple-double—18 points, 13 rebounds, six assists, and five blocks—that shifted the game’s momentum. Mara’s rim protection and ability to facilitate from the post erased panic during Michigan’s shooting slump (the team started 0-for-12 on 3s in the second half).
The Big Picture: What This Win Means for Michigan
- Depth is Delivering: Beyond Cadeau and Mara, the Wolverines boasted crucial contributions from Roddy Gayle Jr. (13 points), Morez Johnson Jr. (10 pts, 8 reb), and Yaxel Lendeborg—a preseason All-America forward—even as his double-digit scoring streak ended at 23 games.
- Clutch DNA: Michigan rallied in regulation when Gayle hit a tying three after Wake staggered through three turnovers in as many minutes. The team’s poise in late-game situations is a promising sign as March looms.
- Transfer Impact: With Cadeau (North Carolina) and Lendeborg (transfer, streak of double-digit games now snapped) stepping into leadership, Michigan’s roster construction is already bearing fruit.
How Wake Forest Turned This Into a Near-Upset
- Juke Harris (19 pts) and Mekhi Mason (16 pts) kept the Demon Deacons in striking range, while Myles Colvin chipped in vital bench scoring and pressure defense.
- Coach Steve Forbes, now 3-20 versus AP Top 25, backed a blueprint that nearly pulled a signature win for a program hungry for its first NCAA Tournament return since 2017.
- Missed free throws and turnovers down the stretch haunted Wake, as a late Calmese turnover and missed shots in overtime proved fatal.
Season Implications: Early-Season Tests That Build March Toughness
No team wins a title in November, but victories like this forge the mettle that championship squads need in March. Emerging stars stepping up under pressure, late-game composure, and the ability to win ugly—Michigan displayed all three. With early poll recognition, every possession is magnified, and the Wolverines just signaled they belong in the national conversation.
Wake Forest walks away disappointed but not defeated—this performance makes an emphatic ACC statement as the Deacons set their sights on breaking a years-long tournament drought.
Fan Buzz: What This Game Means in the Broader College Basketball Landscape
- Wolverines’ Ceiling: Michigan fans immediately debate whether Cadeau’s late-game heroics are a preview of deeper postseason runs, or a sign the offense relies too heavily on him and Mara.
- Transfer Focus: The new-look lineup, stacked with high-impact transfers and a fresh coaching staff, draws comparisons to programs that have rapidly reloaded and contended (see: recent Kansas and Texas squads).
- Wake’s Grit: Deacs supporters have hope after standing toe-to-toe with a top-10 team, sparking “what if” scenarios had those last free throws or possessions broken differently.
For sharp fans and analysts alike, this game now becomes an early marker—the kind that shapes narrative and seed lines when Selection Sunday arrives. Eyes turn to Michigan and Wake Forest’s next outings. Expect more fireworks.
What’s Next
- Michigan: Heads to face TCU, a chance to tighten late-game execution and prove top-ten status isn’t a mirage.
- Wake Forest: Looks to regroup at home against UMass-Lowell, fine-tuning for the ACC grind and their tournament chase.
The instant drama—clutch shots, defensive grit, and coaching decisions under pressure—is what defines November in college hoops. For in-depth, immediate breakdowns of every game that matters, keep reading onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most expert-driven sports analysis anywhere.
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Sources:
AP Top 25 Poll,
AP College Basketball Hub