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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 11:56 a.m., Friday, March 13, 2009

CBKB: Big Ten: Michigan State wins 64-56, top seed still possible

By NANCY ARMOUR
AP National Writer

INDIANAPOLIS — Good thing the NCAA selection committee doesn't count style points when selecting the No. 1 seeds.

Chris Allen led three Spartans in double figures, and No. 7 Michigan State kept its hopes for a top seed alive with a 64-56 victory over scrappy Minnesota on Friday in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten tournament. It was Michigan State's sixth straight win, and ninth in 10 games.

But if the Spartans (26-5) were trying to impress the NCAA selection committee, well, there's always that game Saturday against Ohio State. The Buckeyes beat Wisconsin 61-57 on Friday.

"It wasn't pretty," coach Tom Izzo admitted.

The Spartans were outplayed by the Gophers in the first half. They finished shooting 48 percent, had 16 turnovers and were just 19-of-31 from the free throw line. And until making a few free throws in the last minute, they were threatening to finish with one of their lowest point totals of the season.

Allen finished with 17 points, Big Ten player of the year Kalin Lucas had 12 and Marquise Gray added 11.

"This time of year, you're never going to blow teams out by 30, 40 points," Gray said. "It's always going to be a close game."

Damian Johnson had 19 and Devron Bostick added 12 for Minnesota, which now has to wait to see if its 22-10 record will be good enough for its first trip to the NCAA tournament since 2005. The Gophers played in the NIT last year.

The Gophers did their best to make things interesting at the end. After Goran Suton made a pair of free throws to give Michigan State a 58-46 lead with 2:41 to play, Colton Iverson scored on a layup and Paul Carter converted a three-point play. Johnson scooped up a Lucas turnover and scored on a layup to pull Minnesota within 58-53 with 1:23 to play.

But the Spartans went 6-of-8 from the free throw line in the last minute to seal the victory.

"We've had a pretty good year. Not a great year but a good enough year," Minnesota coach Tubby Smith said. "I think looking at the competition and the way we played, obviously we had a tough month — February — but those five games we lost that month were all on the road. So hopefully that accounts for something."

With former No. 1s Pittsburgh and Connecticut losing Thursday and higher-ranked Oklahoma going down, too, Michigan State still has an outside shot at one of the four top seeds in the NCAA tournament. But the Spartans probably need to add the Big Ten tournament title to its regular-season crown.

And if the committee is looking for fast-paced, entertaining basketball, the Spartans are in trouble.

The Big Ten's trademark is hard-nosed, defense-oriented, physical basketball — some call it boring — and this was it at its finest. Both teams left with plenty of floor burns, and it seemed as if there was a whistle on every other possession. But everybody seemed to be channeling his inner Shaq at the free throw line, with the teams combining to go 32-of-58 at the line.

"Man, I don't know what was wrong with both teams," Lucas said. "I'm a great free throw shooter. I think I missed three or four free throws, but every time I shot it, it felt good."

That was the least of Michigan State's problems early on.

The Spartans never looked comfortable in the first half, unable to find their rhythm offensively. The Gophers actually outrebounded them, too. Just by one, but it's a rarity for anyone to outmuscle the stingy Spartans.

"They're young and they are scrappy, and today they kind of brought it to us in the first half," Travis Walton said. "In the second half we kind of picked it up. But they did a great job of changing defenses on us."

The Spartans started showing some of their regular spunk at the end of the first half, when Lucas missed a jumper, darted in to grab his own rebound and made a layup. It only gave Michigan State a 33-30 lead at the half, but the Spartans celebrated as if it was the game-winner, with Lucas jumping up to bump shoulders with one of his teammates.

Raymar Morgan kept it going, opening the second half with an alley-oop.

"Any time you get those kind of plays, I think it elevates your team's energy a bit," Izzo said. "It was a good play for us, good way to start out the second half."

Suton, limited by foul trouble in the first half, followed with back-to-back buckets inside. Then Walton and Durrell Summers connected on the play of the day. Sprinting upcourt, Walton whipped the ball to Summers, who was already positioned near the basket.

Leaping high, Summers snagged the ball and stuffed it one-handed, bringing the Spartans bench and their fans to their feet. Another dunk by Gray gave the Spartans a 44-36 lead, the largest either team had to that point, and Minnesota wouldn't get close again until Iverson's layup.

"If you have lures of grandeur, of being something bigger than this, we have to get better as a team," Izzo said. "We just got that little run in the second half, and that was the difference in the game. So I am satisfied that we're moving on. I'm not as satisfied with some of the things we did late and we made some mistakes that maybe we'll discuss when we get back."