The predetermined leader of the Michigan men's basketball team watched as the confetti fell.
The final game of the regular season had just ended with another victory, and his Wolverines celebrated as champions.
Michigan finished alone atop the Big Ten standings for the first time since 1986. All was just as Mitch McGary had hoped for and dreamed of before the season began.
But McGary had nothing to do with it.
Instead, the player many hoped would lead Michigan to that pinnacle was engrossed in his new roles: acting as assistant "coach" and leader of the bench mob, and watching from the sideline as the Wolverines tossed aside early struggles to become one of this year's biggest surprises in a league full of them.
Michigan finished with a 15-3 conference record, the league's best offense and its Player of the Year in Nik Stauskas — a guard who transformed from scrappy, quick-shooting freshman to a dominant sophomore. The Wolverines won their final five regular-season games, then two more in the conference tournament before falling in the title game to Michigan State.
Now, somehow, coach John Beilein's team could be an underdog once more in the NCAA tournament.
Despite the Wolverines competing in the national title game a year ago and overcoming McGary's injury to win the Big Ten by three games, Michigan heads into the Big Dance about as under the radar as a No. 2 seed can possibly be.