points, taking advantage of the Bruins’ lack of height as Cronin opted to play center Aday Mara just nine minutes.

The Bruins again struggled with their outside shot, going 2 of 20 from beyond the arc, while the Wolverines were 15 of 28. Therein that disparity was the difference and it seems, from here on out, wins and losses might be as simple as that.

The Bruins conceded nearly 50 points in the first half, but toward the end of the period, they found a coverage that seemed to work.

It was a risky approach. The Bruins pressured the Wolverines’ ball-handlers on pick-and-roll actions, trying to deflect entry passes to Goldin. Guards were left to protect the rim, so when those passes found their way through, the Wolverines’ big men had easy layups. When those passes were tipped, it resulted in stops and allowed the Bruins to get out on the break.

It was especially effective when Kobe Johnson was on the help side. He timed passes and stripped Goldin on consecutive rolls, winning possessions for the Bruins.

Johnson then hit a 3 from the top of the key to bring the Bruins within one possession. The Bruins took their first lead after a sequence where Eric Dailey Jr. beat the shot-clock buzzer, then Dylan Andrews stole the ensuing inbounds pass and found Dailey for an and-1 layup.

The Wolverines eventually figured out the Bruins’ pesky pick-and-roll coverage. They started going away from their high pick-and-roll action, instead putting the ball in guard Tre Donaldson’s hands and letting him work.

Donaldson hit a trio of 3-pointers to restore a double-digit lead as the Wolverines pulled away.

The Bruins didn’t have enough offense to keep up.

They didn’t on Tuesday and they haven’t all season. They rely on their defense to wreak havoc and create offense. But in a game against a team like Michigan, which can slow you down and spread you out, there’s enough counters to that defense to minimize its effectiveness.