Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

How sweet it is for Big Ten

Conference could monopolize Final Four

Larry Lage Associated Press

EAST LANSING, Mich. – The Big Ten has a nation-high four teams still in the men’s NCAA tournament, bolstering its season-long boast that its conference is the best in college basketball.

The Big Ten has combined to win 10 games, its best showing through the round of 32 – ever.

And it could get even better.

An All-Big Ten Final Four is possible because top-seeded Indiana, second-seeded Ohio State, third-seeded Michigan State and fourth-seeded Michigan will compete this week in different regions.

“The fact that there are four teams advancing shows that this conference prepares you for any type of team or game,” Hoosiers coach Tom Crean wrote in a text message Monday morning while preparing to play fourth-seeded Syracuse in the East Regional semifinals. “You develop possession by possession appreciation.”

Indiana played grind-it-out, low-scoring games during the Big Ten – going 0-3 when held to fewer than 60 points – and had to rally late in some other games to win. The experiences paid off when the Hoosiers, who won the Big Ten regular-season title, needed to close with a 10-0 run to beat ninth-seeded Temple 58-52 and get to the regional semifinals for the second straight year.

Being in closely contested games also seemed to help the Big Ten tournament champion Buckeyes, who advanced to a school-record fourth consecutive round of 16 by making enough stops and shots to outlast 10th-seeded Iowa State 78-75.

Ohio State will face the sixth-seeded Arizona Wildcats in the West Regional semifinals.

Michigan State is matched with second-seeded Duke in the Midwest, a highly anticipated game featuring coaches who have combined to appear in 25 regional semifinals since 1998.

Michigan, which has won two NCAA tournament games for the first time since 1994, will have to get past top-seeded Kansas in the South.

The Big Ten had seven teams start the NCAA tournament last week and only fifth-seeded Wisconsin failed to advance, losing by 11 points to 12th-seed Mississippi.

Minnesota routed UCLA by 20 – though that didn’t help Tubby Smith keep his job because he was fired Monday, a day after losing by 14 to Florida.

Illinois beat Colorado before losing a competitive game with second-seeded Miami.

The Golden Gophers and Fighting Illini helped the conference win 10 games, a total that trails the Big East’s record of 11 wins through the round of 32 in 2009 and 2012, according to STATS. The Big Ten had won nine games four times to this point of the NCAA tournament, including last season, when it also sent four teams to the regional semifinals.

Spartans coach Tom Izzo started saying the conference was the best in the country before the season opened and he felt even stronger about his opinion throughout the nonconference schedule when his team had one of the league’s marquee wins by beating Kansas.

Even though the Big Ten has one more team than the Big East still in the NCAA tournament – and twice as many as the ACC and Pac-12 – Izzo insisted he doesn’t feel as if his point has been proven.

“To some, it won’t be validated unless the Big Ten wins a championship,” Izzo said. “Perception becomes a little bit of reality and the more games you win, the farther you go.”