INDIANAPOLIS
� Michael Flowers would have made a great cornerback. Flowers
intercepted a pass intended for Drew Neitzel with 30 seconds left, and his
driving layup was the difference in No. 8 Wisconsin’s 65-63 victory over
Michigan�State on Saturday that sent the Badgers to the Big Ten title
game. Well, Flowers’ strip and score and a whole bunch of fouls. The
Badgers were able to overcome a rough day offensively thanks in part to the
Spartans’ foul trouble. No. 19 Michigan�State was called for 30 fouls and
had four players foul out � three in one 56-second span alone. “I’m
very disappointed in the outcome,” said Michigan�State coach Tom
Izzo, who was so upset he had to stop several times to compose himself in his
postgame news conference. “I don’t plan on getting over this today. I
don’t plan on getting over this tomorrow. On Monday I’ll get over it.” The
Badgers, meanwhile, are just happy to keep playing after rallying from 12 down
in the second half. They reached the Big Ten tournament championship for a
second straight year, and the fourth time in five years. Wisconsin (28-4) will
play either Illinois or Minnesota, both of which need to win the title to get
an NCAA bid. Wisconsin
has now won nine straight, and 22 of 24. “I
don’t think words can really describe what the guys did in the comeback,”
Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan said. “Probably the best way to describe it is to
put a DVD on, watch it again and make your own observations.” The
Spartans (25-8) certainly have their thoughts about the outcome, but they’re
not fit for the public. They were in foul trouble from the start of the game,
averaging a foul a minute at one point in the first half. Leading scorer Raymar
Morgan, and big men Goran Suton, Drew Naymick and Idong Ibok all fouled out,
and Isaiah Dahlman was the only one of the 12 Spartans who played who didn’t
get at least one foul. Michigan�State
had more fouls (14) than field goals (11) in the first half, and Izzo was
forced to cobble together lineups that rarely are seen outside of practice. Despite
all that, Neitzel and freshman Kalin Lucas not only kept the Spartans in the
game, they almost pulled off the victory. Neitzel, who has had an up-and-down
year, had his second big game in a row, leading all scorers with 26. Lucas had
18. “For
(Neitzel) to play the way he did the last two days, I’ve always said good
things happen to people who work hard and stick to it,” Izzo said, choking
up. “I think he deserved what he got as far as his play. I don’t think he
deserved what he got as far as the game went.” Neitzel
converted a three-point play, and Lucas sandwiched two jumpers around a free
throw to give Michigan�State a 63-61 lead with two minutes to play. Marcus
Landry tied it with a pair of free throws with 1:41 left. After
a Wisconsin turnover, the Spartans were trying to get the ball in Neitzel’s
hands. But Flowers, a member of the Big Ten’s all-defensive team, read the
freshman point guard perfectly, stepping in and grabbing Lucas’ pass before it
got anywhere close to Neitzel. “I
knew they were probably looking for Drew Neitzel,” Flowers said. “If
he doesn’t have the ball, he can’t score, so I over-covered him.” Flowers
took the ball in for the easy layup, and Wisconsin had a 65-63 lead with 27
seconds left. The
Spartans were hoping to get the ball to Neitzel again, but Wisconsin’s stingy
defense wasn’t giving them anything. Lucas finally put up a layup, but it
rattled off the rim and Brian Butch grabbed the rebound. Michigan�State
got one more chance after Jason Bohannon missed a pair of free throws and
Travis Walton got the rebound, but Neitzel had the 6-foot-11 Butch in front of
him and his 3-pointer missed bounced off the rim. “We
were down (12), and we were saying, ‘It’s going to come on the defensive
end,’” Butch said. Butch
led the Badgers with 19 points, and Landry had 18. Joe Krabbenhoft had his
fourth double-double of the year with 11 points and 10 rebounds. Wisconsin is
now 11-3 against Michigan�State since Ryan arrived in 2001, including two
wins this year. “Right
now, we’re trying to be the most opportunistic team in the country,” Ryan
said. “We don’t care who gets (the ball) or where, but if we can get
within 15 feet in, you’ve got a better shot at getting to the free throw
line.” Wisconsin
wasn’t making its free throws early, and the frequent stops-and-starts seemed
to keep the Badgers from getting into any kind of rhythm. Despite Naymick and
Suton picking up their third fouls in the first three minutes of the second
half, the Spartans opened with a 10-2 run that put them up 39-29 with 15:26 to
play. They would later push the lead to 53-41 on 3-pointers by Neitzel and
Lucas and a pair of free throws from Morgan. But
things unraveled in the 56-second span from 6:06 to 5:10 when Ibok, Naymick and
Suton all fouled out. The Badgers made six of seven free throws, and Butch
added a 3-pointer to pull Wisconsin to 55-54 with 4:23 to play.




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