Rushed Reactions: #15 Middle Tennessee State 90, #2 Michigan State 81
Posted by Nate Kotisso on March 18th, 2016Rush the Court will be providing wall-to-wall coverage of each of the NCAA Tournament from each of the 13 sites this year. Follow our NCAA Tourney specific Twitter accounts at @RTCEastregion, @RTCMWregion,@RTCSouthregion and @RTCWestregion.
Three Key Takeaways:
- The Blue Raiders’ Hot First-Half Shooting: Middle Tennessee State came into today hitting 38 percent of their three-point attempts while making a little more than seven threes per contest. They must have decided those numbers weren’t adequate for The Big Dance. Four different Blue Raiders combined to hit 8-for-12 from outside which helped them to a six-point halftime lead from which they were able to carry momentum for the rest of the game.
- The Spartans Didn’t Lay Down: Propelled by Bryn Forbes and Matt Costello combining for 29 second-half points, the Spartans were never completely out of it until the bitter end. Together, they accounted for 10 of Michigan State’s 16 makes in the second half. As close as Michigan State was to taking this game a few times, they never led.
- MTSU Never Let Up: MTSU made 56 percent of their field goals in the first half so you figured they had to do that again to give themselves a chance to close the game out. The Blue Raiders went ahead and made 57 percent of their shots in the final 20 minutes. They needed most of it to hold off a tried-and-tested blue-blood program with a Hall of Fame coach.
Star of the Game: Let’s give it to Middle Tennessee State’s starting lineup. Darnell Harris, Perrin Buford, Jaquan Raymond, Giddy Potts and Reggie Upshaw accounted for 81 of MTSU’s 90 points, countering every punch Michigan State that offered up. Plus, the whole rarity of a #15 seed beating a #2 seed who legitimately could have been a #1 seed — that team will now board a plane to East Lansing empty-handed. March is cold like that.
Quotable:
- “I’m more disappointed than mad because of what this team could have accomplished.” – Michigan State All-American senior Denzel Valentine, on his final game as a collegian
- “I don’t care about next year. I don’t care about tomorrow. I care about the present. I’ve got 200 days to worry about next year.” – Michigan State coach Tom Izzo, on looking ahead.
- “Once we jumped out to a 15-2 lead, they knew we were here to play. You could tell by their faces, the way Coach Izzo looked on the sideline, they knew we were here.” – Middle Tennessee State junior Jaqawn Richmond, on getting their respect.
Sights and Sounds: There was a hyped contingent of MTSU fans right behind media row, but their numbers did not compare to the well-traveled Spartans’ fan base. Once everyone in the arena figured out the Blue Raiders had a realistic chance of winning the game, that contingent quickly grew to about three times its normal size.
What’s Next: The Blue Raiders have a date with Syracuse in an all-color battle Sunday here in St. Louis. Tip time has yet to be announced.