Can Michigan State’s Travis Trice Replace Keith Appling?
Posted by Brendan Brody on October 17th, 2014Michigan State lost a lot of talent from last year’s Elite Eight team. Gary Harris and Adreian Payne both heard their names called in the first round of the NBA Draft. Kenny Kaminski had one offcourt problem too many and therefore transferred to Ohio University. Keith Appling also left town, going undrafted after a senior year marred by injuries. As far as replacements, the Spartans ended up with only the 32nd best incoming recruiting class, per ESPN.com. But all is not lost in East Lansing, however, as returnees Branden Dawson and Denzel Valentine are much of the reason Sparty has been slotted into the preseason Top 25 polls. But the success of the season may hinge on Appling’s replacement, Travis Trice, who is expected to take over the majority of the minutes at the lead guard spot and appears that he’ll be a more than capable substitute.
Trice should not be unfamiliar to Big Ten fans, as he enters his senior year having played no fewer than 34.9 percent of the available minutes in his three-year career. He started eight games last season, ranking 16th in the league with an assist rate of 18.8 percent. He also held a dazzling assist-to-turnover ratio of 2.3 to 1 (slightly better than Appling’s mark of 2.1 to 1). The Spartans were 6-2 in the games where he started, made possible in no small part by his averages of 9.3 PPG and 3.6 APG on sizzling 18-for-35 shooting from behind the arc. By the end of the season, over the Spartans’ last five games, Michigan State used a lineup that featured Appling and Trice on the floor at the same time 18.3 percent of the time, per kenpom.com, showing that Tom Izzo had developed great trust in Trice’s presence on the floor. These facts are not meant to bash Appling for the solid four years he gave to Michigan State; it’s only to show that Trice can handle a greater share of the responsibility, even if he’s necessarily more of a focus on opposing scouting reports this time around. Appling understandably struggled playing through pain last year, and it seemed as though dwindling confidence in what his body could do played a significant role in his lack of production down the stretch. Trice has struggled with various maladies throughout his career as well, so the obvious caveat with his pending role in the spotlight is of course staying healthy.
Trice should be relieved from some of the pounding that a primary point guard takes with the corresponding playmaking abilities of teammates Denzel Valentine and freshman Lourawls “Tum Tum” Nairn. Valentine proved to be a nice facilitator to the tune of 3.8 APG last season, good for eighth in the conference, and Izzo can run his offense through him if needed, allowing Trice to slide off the ball and bomb away from deep. That 41.8 percent career mark that Trice has shot from beyond the arc shows that his strength lies more in jump shooting than in taking the ball to the rim anyway. Should he be ready to go as a freshman, Nairn is another possible option at the point. This year’s squad won’t be the most talented team Izzo has ever coached, but including Trice on the perimeter, there’s still plenty of veteran talent on board. The senior has quietly been one of the most consistent guards in the Big Ten as a complementary piece, and if he keeps producing with an increased workload, he’ll be front and center soon enough.