After Yaxel Lendeborg's 'awful' first half, his Michigan teammates lifted him up and the rest is history ā 'We needed Mad Yax, not Sad Yax'
After Yaxel Lendeborg's 'awful' first half, his Michigan teammates lifted him up and the rest is history ā 'We needed Mad Yax, not Sad Yax'
Jeff EisenbergTue, April 7, 2026 at 6:31 AM UTC
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INDIANAPOLIS ā The best player on college basketballās best team could not hide his frustration.
Yaxel Lendeborg hated that the knee and ankle injuries he suffered two days earlier were preventing him from showcasing his All-American form with Michigan locked in a tight battle against UConn on Monday night and the national championship at stake.
He winced and punched the air in frustration when he airballed an open jump shot. He walked off the floor with his jersey between his teeth after he blew a defensive assignment. He even described his first-half performance to Turner Sports sideline reporter Tracy Wolfson as āawfulā and āsuper weak.ā
āI was very tentative,ā Lendeborg said. āI felt like I was holding our team back. I felt like we could have been up way more early in the game. I kept having opportunities to make a play and I couldnāt make a play.ā
One of the biggest reasons Michigan was able to stave off UConn and grind out a 69-63 victory was because Lendeborgās teammates refused to allow the Big Ten player of the year to let his disgust with himself fester. Nimari Burnett patted Lendeborg on the chest and told him his teammates were with him. L.J. Cason urged Lendeborg to stop being so hard on himself and reminded him that the Wolverines wouldnāt have reached the national title game without him. Roddy Gayle told him an off-color joke to get him to stop playing āsoftā and to play more aggressively.
āYax is a very emotional guy, so I think it was my duty to push him to get out of his feelings,ā Gayle said. āI felt like we needed Mad Yax, not Sad Yax.ā
Michigan's Yaxel Lendeborg is attended to by training staff during the first half of the national championship game. (Patrick Smith/Getty Images) (Patrick Smith via Getty Images)
Mad Yax finally showed up in the final six minutes of Mondayās game as Michigan was trying to stave off a desperate UConn comeback. The 6-foot-9 do-it-all forward scored seven of his 13 total points over a span of 90 seconds, burying a 3-pointer, putting back his own miss and drawing a foul, and sinking a pair of free throws to keep the Wolverinesā advantage at nine despite a couple of clutch UConn 3-pointers.
āWe understood that he wasnāt 100% physically,ā Burnett said. āI mean, he probably wasnāt even 50%, but he persevered for that though and he did whatever it took for his team to win. He sprinted through screens even though his body didnāt feel like going. That just shows you his selflessness, his selfless nature to give to this team and help us win a national championship.ā
Lendeborgās grit helped Michigan complete a dominant season with the programās first national title since 1989. The Wolverines (37-3) pummeled the likes of Gonzaga and Villanova in non-league play, won the outright Big Ten title by four games and then demolished their first five NCAA tournament opponents by an average of nearly 22 points.
The driving force behind Michiganās success was Lendeborg blossoming into the āDominican LeBron,ā as teammates nicknamed him. It was the best year of Lendeborgās life ā and one he didnāt see coming a few years ago when he believed that playing college basketball wasnāt for him.
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Michigan's Yaxel Lendeborg looks on after the Wolverines beat the UConn Huskies 69-63 in the 2026 NCAA tournament national championship game. (Patrick Smith/Getty Images) (Patrick Smith via Getty Images)
Lendeborg thought that working a warehouse job was going to be his life, but his mom, Yissel Raposo, refused to accept it. She forced him to board a flight to Yuma, Arizona, and go to junior college at Arizona Western.
That was the start of a five-year journey that took Lendeborg from the anonymity of junior college basketball, to a breakout season at UAB last year, to becoming the centerpiece of this formidable Michigan team. He was averaging 21 points and 7.3 rebounds per game in the NCAA tournament before his ill-timed injuries against Arizona on Saturday threatened to end his season early.
āI definitely felt like I did all this for nothing in that moment,ā Lendeborg said Saturday. āI definitely had to calm down for a little bit, speak to myself, get out of my thoughts.ā
Two days of nonstop treatment allowed Lendeborg to take the floor on Monday night with just some tape on his injured knee. He didnāt have the game of his dreams, but that didnāt diminish his joy when Michigan captured the national title.
Championship cap perched on his head and blue and yellow confetti pooled at his feet, he wrapped his mom in a bear hug as soon as he saw her.
How did Raposo feel at that moment?
āSo happy,ā she said. āGrateful. Blessed.ā
Did she have any doubt her son would push through the injuries?
āNo, because heās a warrior,ā Raposo responded.
Before she could say more, Lendeborg interrupted with a āCome on, mom!ā It was time for him to cut his strand of net.
For Lendeborg, a day of hellacious frustration ended with a moment of pure joy.
Source: āAOL Sportsā