WEST REGIONAL

Michigan State scraps past Saint Louis

3/18/2012
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Michigan State's Draymond Green, right, drives the lane past Saint Louis' Rob Loe.
Michigan State's Draymond Green, right, drives the lane past Saint Louis' Rob Loe.

COLUMBUS -- Draymond Green grabbed a mop in the final minute and helped sweep sweat off the floor.

Moments later, Michigan State finally brushed aside Saint Louis.

Green scored 16 points with 13 rebounds and set up Keith Appling’s crucial 3-pointer with 1:34 left, giving the top-seeded Spartans a 65-61 win over Saint Louis on Sunday and a spot in the round of 16 in the NCAA tournament.

Michigan State will play No. 4 seed Louisville in the West Regional semifinals Thursday in Phoenix.

Appling added 19 points for the Spartans (29-7), who had to scrap their way past the ninth-seeded Billikens (26-8). Saint Louis controlled the tempo but never got a complete handle on Green, Michigan State’s superb senior, who added six assists.

Kwamain Mitchell scored 13 and Brian Conklin 11 for Saint Louis, back in the tournament for the first time since 2000.

This wasn’t easy for the Spartans, and really, nothing has been this season.

Saint Louis, executing coach Rick Majerus’ game plan to “muck it up” to perfection, was still within 55-51 when Green drove the left side and rifled a two-handed overhead pass to Appling in front of Michigan State’s bench. The Spartans guard took aim, fired and had his 3-pointer drop, but only after it hit both sides of the rim and backboard before falling.

Appling’s two free throws gave Michigan State a 63-55 lead, but the Billikens weren’t going to let their season end without a fight.

Cody Ellis and Mike McCall Jr. made 3-pointers in the final 30 seconds for Saint Louis and Michigan State’s victory wasn’t assured until Mitchell’s 3 with 3 seconds left was short.

As the horn sounded, Green, who had a triple-double Friday against LIU Brooklyn, raised his arms and hugged teammate Brandon Wood tightly as Majerus congratulated Michigan State coach Tom Izzo in front of the scorer’s table.

There was no excessive celebrating for the Spartans, who have much bigger goals in mind.

Michigan State became the fourth Big Ten team to reach the regional semifinals, joining Ohio State, Indiana and Wisconsin.

After Michigan State lost its first two games this season to North Carolina and Duke, there were some who wondered if this Spartans squad would recover and live up to its high standards.

There’s no debate anymore. Michigan State can win with any style you choose.

They beat the Billikens despite attempting fewer shots and being outscored at the free throw line.

Unwilling to let Michigan State’s season end, Green took it upon himself to make sure the Spartans would dance deeper in March.

He scored seven straight and picked up an assist on Derrick Nix’s bucket down low that gave the Spartans a 39-28 lead. Moments later, after officials had reviewed TV replays and determined Green had not hit Ellis in the face with an elbow, Green drove the right side and lofted a high shot that was blocked by Conklin.

Green grabbed the rebound, gathered himself and went up to convert the putback.

He wasn’t going to be denied, not in his last season.

During a timeout late in the first half, Izzo angrily slammed his dry-erase clipboard to the floor as he dropped onto a stool inside the Spartans’ huddle. The green and white pulled in tighter around their coach, who wasn’t happy with his team, the officiating or the score.

Clutching, grabbing, doing anything they could within the rules to stay close, the Billikens had the Spartans right where they wanted them.

Green was frustrated. After one play, the Spartans star complained to the officials that he was being undercut whenever he tried to post up down low.

The Billikens were in his head.

Still, despite nine turnovers and a slim rebounding advantage, Michigan State took a 26-21 lead into the locker room at halftime after holding the Billikens to one field goal over the final 9:11 and 24 percent shooting (5 of 21) in the first 20 minutes.

The Billikens knew they would have to control the tempo and make it an ugly game to have a chance at pulling off the upset.

The first few minutes were downright grotesque.

St. Louis missed its first seven shots and Michigan State wasn’t much more accurate, starting 4 of 13 as the Billkens’ defense pestered and frustrated the more talented Spartans.

Down 9-5, St. Louis went on a 10-2 run in which the Billikens did a little of everything. Cory Remekun outhustled all five Spartans for a loose ball in the lane got a putback; Rob Loe threw in a jumper as the shot clock expired; and Jordair Jett dropped a 3-pointer that sent St. Louis fans bouncing out of their seats and brought a smile from Majerus.

No. 7 Florida 84, No. 15 Norfolk St. 50

OMAHA — No big upset this time. Kenny Boynton and Florida were just too good for surprising Norfolk State.

Boynton scored 20 points as the balanced Gators routed the Spartans, making five 3-pointers during a 25-0 run that made it 29-6 midway through the first half.

The Gators (25-10) made it to the regional semifinals for the sixth time in 12 NCAA tournament appearances under coach Billy Donovan. They will play No. 3 seed Marquette on Thursday in Phoenix after their second straight runaway win.

Florida was 4 for 23 from beyond the arc in its tourney opener, but still managed to beat Virginia 71-45. It rediscovered its shooting touch early against Norfolk State (26-10), making five of its first eight 3-point attempts and 10 of 28 for the game.

Erving Walker finished with 15 points for the Gators. Bradley Beal scored 14, Mike Rosario had 12, and Erik Murphy 10.

The resounding loss put a damper on a fun couple of days for Norfolk State center Kyle O'Quinn, who got the celebrity treatment after collecting 26 points and 14 rebounds against Missouri.

O'Quinn was a walking quote machine in the 24 hours after the shocking win over Missouri. He talked about how the upset even blew up his own bracket, how he watched the cheerleaders during breaks in the action, and how he was more concerned with having fun than playing basketball in high school.

He wasn't nearly as entertaining on the court against Florida. He missed eight of nine shots and finished with four points — his lowest output since he scored two points in a 32-point December loss at Illinois State. His only field goal was a first-half dunk, and he played only 23 minutes after logging 37 against Missouri.

If Norfolk State's spirit was broken, the same couldn't be said about its fans. The Spartans received a standing ovation as they walked off the court.