[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

Michigan State 77, Michigan 70 Comment Count

Alex Cook February 24th, 2019 at 7:03 PM

In the biggest game of the season thus far, Michigan State came to Ann Arbor and dealt Michigan its first home loss. All-American point guard Cassius Winston was the best player on the floor: his 27-point, 8-assist performance emphatically rejected the notion that Zavier Simpson was his kryptonite. State scored 1.24 points per possession, by far the highest output allowed by Michigan's normally excellent defense. After a high-octane first half, both teams settled in, but State was able to go on one of its impressive second half runs. Over a seven-and-a-half minute stretch, the Spartans outscored the Wolverines 17-4. Michigan didn't have the firepower to mount a comeback.

Michigan State is without four starters from last season’s team — two left for the NBA and two have been injured — but there’s been little drop-off, if any. Tom Izzo handed the keys of the offense to Winston, and consequently, State has one of the best offenses in the country. Winston was superb today: Michigan hedged ball screens aggressively all game, and Winston was patient and consistently made the right play. Winston’s passing against an over-extended defense opened up good looks for the Spartan role players, and they delivered. Kenny Goins, Xavier Tillman, and Matt McQuaid combined for 43 points, and they all played solid defense.

Winston’s play was essential to State’s victory, but Michigan kept pace for a while and actually threatened to build a substantial lead in the second half. Michigan State switched all ball screens, and the Wolverines were able to effectively attack that look for a while. Eventually State tightened up, and instead of pulling away from Michigan with their customary flurry of threes and transition buckets, their defense fueled a slow climb into a comfortable lead. Michigan’s offense stagnated, and State’s mismatched defenders won their one-on-one battles for most of the second half. The Wolverines’ eight combined assists were one away from tying their season low, and while Simpson scored a team-high 19 points for Michigan, he had more turnovers (3) than assists (2).

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Campredon

The first half was a track meet. Both teams gave up good looks, and both offenses took advantage. Goins knocked down a couple of early threes; State frequently had him set a screen from Winston, and then spot up from near the top of the key — he also attacked closeouts and had 13 first half points. State led 27-20 halfway through the fhalf, but a quick 8-0 run put Michigan back into the lead. Teske was quite active on the offensive glass against State’s scrambled defense, and Simpson knocked down a few threes. Both teams scored efficiently in the first half, and State held a slim 39-37 at the break after McQuaid hit a three over a flopping Jordan Poole and Tillman got out in transition and hit two free throws.

Winston had a few nice plays to start the second half (a beautiful floater, two free throws after attacking Teske, and a tough shot over Simpson), but Michigan’s defense — which had tightened since about midway through the first half — forced State into some tough looks for a while. Meanwhile, Ignas Brazdeikis got going: he drove on Aaron Henry and scored two at the free throw line, knocked down all three free throw attempts after getting fouled by McQuaid, and threw down a two-handed dunk after driving baseline on a Goins closeout. That dunk put Michigan up 51-45 and prompted an Izzo timeout. Michigan scored 14 points before the first TV timeout, but would go ice cold from there.

From there, both teams missed a ton of threes — they combined to shoot 2-22 in the second half, and State didn’t make a single one — but Winston was able to create good looks and Michigan wasn’t. As the Spartans went on their decisive run, they held the Wolverines to just one made basket (a Simpson layup) over 13 possessions. Michigan had carless turnovers, missed threes, some of which were open, and contested shots near the basket that didn’t go in. By the time the Wolverines finally created a good look with Teske scoring on a layup off a back screen, State had opened up a modest lead. Michigan’s aggressive ball screen defense started to concede quality shots again, as State made the right reads and moved the ball. They also took care of the ball: their six turnovers were a season low.

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Campredon

The Spartans responded to that Teske basket with a Tillman post-up — he sealed Teske and threw down an easy dunk. Michigan trailed 64-57 with about five minutes left and couldn’t string together enough scores and stops to close the deficit. McQuaid made a couple of key plays — he got a baseline jumper to rattle in after a great defensive possession by Michigan, and extended another after coming away from a scrum with an offensive rebound. Much like in Michigan’s win in East Lansing last season, the home team spent quite a bit of time fouling; Winston knocked down nine of ten free throws over the last two minutes of the game. Jordan Poole knocked down two late threes (the first threes made by either team that half), but State stayed one step ahead and wound up dribbling out the win.

Despite the attrition, State came away with a vital result in the Big Ten title race with an upset on their rival’s home floor. MVP chants from the visiting fans rang out as Winston sealed the game from the free throw line, and he deserved them. His performance was the story of the day, and Zavier Simpson and the Wolverines will have a chance at revenge when Michigan travels to East Lansing for the rematch in two weeks.

[Box score after the JUMP]

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Comments

Don

February 25th, 2019 at 6:46 AM ^

I didn’t miss a goddamn thing about Sam’s schtick. He adopted a laughing, faux “Z can’t possibly compete with Cassius” in response to those who were touting Winston’s play, but it was overt sarcasm on Webb’s part—his plain and obvious message was that z was going to outplay Winston.

bronxblue

February 24th, 2019 at 8:23 PM ^

MSU played better and deserved the win, but for all of the talk about how well Winston played (and he did), MSU also had some luck.  They turned the ball 6 times; that's basically their season low and WELL below their season average.  In a game that was close to the end, those extra possessions mean a lot.

Michigan will have to play better in EL, and in particular Poole has to figure out what he's doing on both ends of the court, but I absolutely can see UM taking this game and turning it around these next couple of games.

SDCran

February 24th, 2019 at 10:18 PM ^

on my rewatch, you are probably more correct than I would have said watching it live.  Winston had 2 would-be turnovers on bad passes that were intercepted by other players on his team.   They also had 2 balls tipped that went right to people for hoops (as opposed to Poole’s almost steal, and Winston’s tip on Iggy that led to a run out).  

They also had two blantant this travels on pump fakes that led directly to baskets.  And then there is the travel call on Livers.  

J.

February 25th, 2019 at 3:23 AM ^

Livers traveled.  He started to pass, changed his mind mid-motion, and started to dribble instead.  The problem was that he had already started his feet, so they landed again before his dribble actually started.

You're right about missed travel calls, although they went both ways -- Matthews traveled at least once that I saw without getting called, as did X.  One of the main differences of this game was that MSU took advantage of its missed calls more than Michigan did; Matthews missed the shot after he traveled.

footballguy

February 25th, 2019 at 1:23 PM ^

There could be about 10 more travels called every game. We definitely had a few missed, and so did they, but they were minor travels.

Livers was a blatant travel. You can't let that one go

I also think some people on here shouldn't watch basketball. The number of people that seem to have an emotional breakdown over calls and non calls (which is a big part of basketball) is pretty high. 

footballguy

February 25th, 2019 at 1:26 PM ^

And to discern the two: sometimes players travel, but they're moving so quickly it's hard to tell. This happens a lot in basketball and isn't that big of a deal.

Livers literally was walking with the ball and blantantly traveled. When you do this, and you're the only guy on one side of the court, it has to be called. 

shoes

February 24th, 2019 at 8:28 PM ^

Winston is much better than last season. I watch as many BT games as I can including MSU and he has looked quicker to me this year. I hoped that was an illusion and that Z would frustrate him like last year, but alas. 

Our high hedges were not effective.

 

footballguy

February 24th, 2019 at 8:40 PM ^

I think this point is underrated. We know Cassius, and have seen him play a few games against us. But just like Teske can make an enormous stride in the off-season, a multi year starter can do the same thing.

I think that idea has been lost and not spoken about just because we've seen him and Simpson match up multiple times before. We just kind of assumed Cassius would stay the same, when clearly he has not. 

March 9th should be fun. Our boys play very well when they're pissed 

bronxblue

February 24th, 2019 at 10:05 PM ^

Winston has surprised me this year.  He's definitely a better all-around player than last season, and while he's still not great defensively he's at least passable.  He definitely is playing like an All American, and deserves the accolades he's receiving.  I do think people are overreacting a bit here, though; Simpson had a good game against him as well.  If Michigan had gotten really anything from Matthews or Poole until the very end they probably win this game.  And Winston still needed 27 shot attempts to get his 27 points, and the last 5-6 were intentional foul shots.  His passing was great and guys like Tillman and Goins finished them, and that's a huge reason why they won.   But I also saw him look terrible against Illinois, struggle against OSU, and hell wasn't all that great against Rutgers.  

I do wonder how he'll play in East Lansing.  Michigan will likely have Matthews healthier to throw at him, and for all his magic this was still a couple-possession game until the end.  Beilein has shown a good ability to make adjustments.

Franz Schubert

February 25th, 2019 at 10:52 AM ^

Gotta pick up pressure mid court and stop hedging. Winston is just too good a passer to have Teske out at the perimeter hedging. Watch the Illinois game against MSU. The game plan was available but UM decided to do the worst thing possible. Let Winston work and get his but take the 3 point line away and Winston will wear down. Bad gameplan.

SDCran

February 24th, 2019 at 10:22 PM ^

I will give a meh to this one.   He had 18 points (including the 2 fouls shots after that bad call on Teske) going into the last 2 minutes.   He had to hit 2-3 really tough shots to get there.   I don’t think he was dominating anyone.   Simpson did fine, including 15 points of his own at that same time.   

PublicSector

February 24th, 2019 at 8:41 PM ^

Matthews had 4 points and ZERO rebounds. Obviously he was playing injured. Didn't have his normal quickness to get his shot. If he was healthy we could have used him on Winston more. Hopefully he's healthy in 13 days.

Boner Stabone

February 24th, 2019 at 8:48 PM ^

The key was MSU did not turn it over.  It was their season low and for some reason our defense was below average today.  The three point shooting this year has been awful. Poole and Matthews played awful and Beilein did not have his best coaching day.

On a day where we needed to play an average to above average game, we played bad.

Bill22

February 24th, 2019 at 8:55 PM ^

The game turned on the Poole leaving his feet foul with one second on the shot clock.  He handed them 3 points at a time we couldn’t afford it.  That play swung the game IMO.

J.

February 25th, 2019 at 3:18 AM ^

That was the correct call.  Two reasons: 1 - it was a blocked shot, and MSU hadn't re-established position in the frontcourt after the shot was blocked; 2 - I don't think he actually touched the floor in the backcourt before throwing the ball forward again.  It's not enough for the ball to cross the midcourt stripe; the player must establish possession in the backcourt for the violation to occur.

Bill22

February 25th, 2019 at 10:22 AM ^

It would have been phenomenal for the Refs to have seen it that way, but when has that ever happened?  If you leave your feet, as a defender, you’re going to get called for a foul.  Every time.  You can’t put yourself in that position.  Especially 30 feet from the basket and 1 sec on the shot clock!  Poole has to be smarter than that.  I love the kid, but he needs to learn from that mistake.

Franz Schubert

February 25th, 2019 at 10:56 AM ^

That was huge. I think benching Iggy when he was on fire and feeling it was the game changer. Once Iggy went to the bench the team scored 1 basket in over 8 minutes. Beilein s history of bizarre substitutions is his only weakness. It’s like he doesn’t understand momentum.

J.

February 25th, 2019 at 2:01 PM ^

Or, he understands that momentum is a myth -- or, more accurately, that streaks can only be detected after the fact.  The hot hand is a fallacy.  It has to be, because people use it both ways: he's "hot," so give him the ball, or he's "due," so give him the ball.  They can't both be true; in fact, neither is.

MgoFunk

February 24th, 2019 at 9:13 PM ^

This is not a knock on the officiating which was fairish (they kept going back and forth on whether it was going to be ticky tack or maul ball) but if Winston can use the Higdon stiff arm to create space and literally shove Simpson with both arms off the ball to create space I feel like we need to adopt this style of play.  Simpson would sit people down I think.

Durham Blue

February 24th, 2019 at 9:29 PM ^

Seemed like MSU wanted this game more.  As well they should've because we've been taking their lunch money as of late.  They outhustled Michigan for more than a handful of offensive and defensive rebounds.  They passed well and found good looks.  And they hit their shots, especially when it mattered most.  No shame in losing today.  Winston is really good.  Give credit to MSU, they came to play.  But we have another shot and can break their hearts on their home floor.  This was a fun game other than the final 5 minutes.  Looking forward to the next game.

Muttley

February 25th, 2019 at 1:03 AM ^

Remember the 89 team got run out of Crisler by Illinois on the last day of the season.  (And there was no BTT back then.)

This certainly hurts our Big Ten regular season title hopes, as there's no control over Purdue winning out, but a BTT title or a deep run in the Big Dance is still in front of the team.

Soulfire21

February 25th, 2019 at 7:18 AM ^

Unlike in past years it feels like we peaked in December and are starting to flounder down the stretch. Part of that I’d imagine is other teams being able to figure us out toward the end of the season but still, seems like we used to really begin to excel at this part of the season. Our offensive output has been pretty putrid for about 10 games or so.

Booted Blue in PA

February 25th, 2019 at 11:55 AM ^

we took our foot off the gas with a 6pt lead, for some reason

mcquaid  pulled a divincenzo on us

we failed to get the ball to our big when he was on the post against a guard on several possessions

our failure to make one extra pass to a wide open Iggy and/or livers in the corner more than once

msu won, but we killed ourselves with unforced errors