LSU
on attack with Michigan State on deck
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[March 26, 2019]
One program is busy proving
people wrong. The other is back where many always expected it to be.
That's the essence of the matchup when No. 2 Michigan State takes on
No. 3 LSU in the East Region semifinals of the NCAA Tournament on
Friday at Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C.
The Spartans, who are playing in their 14th Sweet 16 under coach Tom
Izzo, had failed to get out of the first weekend of the tournament
in each of the past three seasons but are back after bouncing
Bradley and Minnesota in the first two rounds.
The Tigers, the regular-season champion of the SEC, were counted out
by many when coach Will Wade was suspended indefinitely after he was
allegedly caught on a wiretap discussing a possible payment to a
player. Instead of crumble, the Tigers rebounded to beat
upset-minded Yale then won in the final seconds over Maryland on
Tremont Waters' drive and scoop.
"It was a good weekend for us as far as winning," Izzo said. "We had
mixed feelings on how we played, then I watched the rest of the
tournament and realized so many teams had struggles in games.
"We're excited for the opportunity to play another weekend. There
are only 16 teams left and the weather is getting nice, days are
getting longer and we're practicing at the right time of the year."
It was reaching the point where getting this far was hardly a sure
thing for a Michigan State team that is playing in its 22nd straight
NCAA Tournament, the third-longest active streak behind Kansas (30)
and Duke (24).
After reaching the Final Four in 2015, Michigan State lost as a
tournament favorite in the first round in 2016 to Middle Tennessee
State and followed that with two second-round exits - in 2017 to
Kansas and last season to Syracuse.
Now that the Spartans have overcome the first-weekend woes, they're
focused on getting to the eighth Final Four under Izzo, something
that starts with LSU but would include a win over either No. 1 Duke
or No. 4 Virginia Tech.
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Michigan State Spartans forward Xavier Tillman (23) shoots the ball
against Minnesota Golden Gophers guard Amir Coffey (5) during the
second half in the second round of the 2019 NCAA Tournament at Wells
Fargo Arena. Mandatory Credit: Peter Casey-USA TODAY Sports
"We do want to win the weekend and the only reason I do is I learned
that from some great programs around the country," Izzo said. "It's
what you do after you get your program to a certain level when
winning a game in the NCAA Tournament doesn't matter anymore.
"I know conventional wisdom says you have to win your first one
before you win the second one, but that's just not the way we
operate. Today we'll look at all three teams a little bit and we'll
try to figure out what they do. ... The goal still is to win the
weekend and we'll try to prepare that way."
When it comes to winning the weekend, LSU (28-6) is starting to
figure, "Why not us?"
Even with Javonte Smart cleared to return to the lineup, many
believed the pressure of not having their coach would lead to a
quick exit for the Tigers. Instead, interim coach Tony Benford has
the Tigers believing.
Waters will have a marquee matchup with All-Big Ten point guard
Cassius Winston. Both can score, control the tempo, and get after it
on defense.
Benford is the first interim coach since Michigan's Steve Fisher in
1989 to take a team this far in the tournament. It's LSU's first
trip to the Sweet 16 since reaching the Final Four in 2006 and 10th
overall.
"It's huge for these guys," Benford said. "They're the ones that
paid the price. They've been through a lot. We know the story of
adversity these guys have gone through."
--Field Level Media
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