SportsMonday - March 13, 2000 - The Michigan Daily - 5B Quote of the weekend "I got poked in the nose. I fooled around down there with their big guys and I got it broke." - Illinois shooting guard Cory Bradford, on suffering a nose injury during yesterday's game. His absence prompted a decisive Spartan run. Michigan State Illinois Player of the weekend Michigan State's Monis Peterson The senior was named Most Valuabl Player of the Big Ten Tournament after scoring 14 points and grabbing four rebounds in yesterdays championship game against filinois. - - - --- - - -- - - -- - - S tate taes BT N. 2000 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament ThLr Fd. m L10 sa.i man 11 .Su Mae 12 By ChsDupry DailySports Editor CHICAGO -Much like the Pistons in the late 1980s, Illinois would do well to keep its head up after its 76-61 loss to Michigan State in the Big Ten Tournament final yesterday. The Illini's problem is one of age and experience, not personnel, and within a year or two it will most likely own the Spartans. But for now it is the other way around. Try as it might, Illinois was unable to keep up with Michigan State yesterday, falling to the Spartans for the second straight year in the championship game. The Illini would get a basket; their coun- terparts would get fouled and convert a three-point play. Illinois would hit a 10- footer from the baseline; the Spartans would come back and nail a 3-pointer. And when Illinois would miss, it opened the door even more for the fast- break-loving Spartans. Michigan State gradually built itself a 20-point lead, all by bits and pieces, and the game was theirs. "We had opportunities early and good looks, we just couldn't connect," Illinois coach Lon Kruger said. "You line up sometimes and get whipped. That's what happened to us today." Illinois' case wasn't helped by a nose injury suffered by its offensive turnkey, Cory Bradford, who went down with 7:21 remaining in .the first half and didn't return until the start of the econd half. During that time, the fl-ini went from a one-point lead to a ightpoint deficit. They never got closr than seven points in the games final 20 minutes, as Michigan State would retur its well-rest- ed starters from the bench every time Illinois began to chew away at the lead. "In games that arc so physical, some- times that (injury) can make a difference," Michigan State coach Tom zo said. Every starter with the exception of Charlie Bell scored in doube figures for the Spartans, included a much-needed 14- point, five-rebound performance by Andre Hutson. Hutson and Morris Peterson did fine defensive jobs on Brian Cook and Sergio McClain, limiting their touches and hlding them to seven and five points, respectively. "They're a lot older, a lot stronger," Cook said of his defenders "I need to get stronger." Although the Big Ten and CBS could- n't have been too pleased with the blowout nature of the championship game, the toumament couldn't have run more smoothly for MhiMan State. For one, the Spans didn't lose games or momentum. Izzo was able to substitute the way he liked, since Michigan State (4) Ilinois a76 (4) Illinois (8) Mich (5a IendiSatn7. (8a Ilios 9)4,~oi Penn Statee7n (9)ate..4 (1(9) Oo*State (()2ichiganPennStg.e g. (9) PennM 7 (7) Iowa M~Oih State .()6 ~ hga t Paenn (e) enn sa (9) Pen s t+ . (>r M TgM achigan (7) Michigan St. ._ an State 76. - aC1, t61 (7) Iowa MJState 7e()Michigann. Ioa 81, (7) Iwa (t)MinneT$ acsge 2 g (3) Purdue (6) Wisonsin Wiscni 7,() Wiscon n ae. i ,,s ihgnSat Wisonsn 1. (6) Wiscon tys s . ian Stae (11) weo Most Outstm rg Mc t f:Mors Pet, rs n. c gaen State held comfortable double-digit leads over all three of its opponents over the week- end. And all details of the Spartans' game - the 3-point marksmanship of A.J. Granger, the decision-making of the guards, and the play of 'B' team members Adam Ballinger, Jason Richardson and Mike Chappell - proved themselves ready for full deployment in the NCAA Tournament. "I hope our bench will play an even bigger role" in the NCAA Tournament, Izzo said. If the Iini proved anything, it's that they are a tornament wildcard. They are a feisty young team capable of the Sweet Sixteen or better. At the same time, no one would be the least surprised if Illinois bowed out of the tournament inconspicu- ously in the first or second round. Potential is not the issue with the Illini - performance is. Maybe the Illini are sick of being called the young team, the inexperienced team. But it's a label they'll have to deal with until they prove otherwise. The Bad Boys could tell them all about that. AP PHOTO Michigan State senior Morris Peterson drives on Illinois' Sergio McClain yesterday In the championship game of the Big Ten Tournament. Shall, we ce. Michigan State steals No. 1 midwest seed Automatic baiing Schools that received automatic bids from winning their conference tourna- ments. Note: Mountain West and WAC have no automatic entry. Duke frosh Williams leads Blue Devils to ACC tourney victory Full NCAA bracket: Win free food in the Daily's Pizza House contest. Page 8B. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Duke and Michigan State, top seeds last season, and Stanford and Arizona were selected yesterday as the No. I seeds for the NCAA Tournament. Cincinnati, which had been ranked No. 1 in the AP poll for 12 weeks but lost center Kenyon Martin to a broken leg last week, was seeded second. Duke, seeded No. 1 for the third straight year and the national runner-up last season, was the top team in the East. The Blue Devils (27-4) will play 16th-seeded Lamar, the only team in the field with a .500 record, on Friday in Winston-Salem, N.C. Michigan State (26-7), which reached the Final Four last season, was No. 1 in the Midwest and will play No. 16 Valparaiso on Thursday in Cleveland. Arizona (26-6), the Pac-10 champi- on, was No. I in the West and will play No. 16 Jackson State on Thursday in Salt Lake City. Stanford (26-3), which lost twice to Arizona this season, was selected as a No. 1 seed for the first time and will play in the South, opening against No. 16 South Carolina State on Friday in Birmingham, Ala. Temple, a team considered by many as a possible No. I seed, was No. 2 in the East and will play Lafayette on Friday in Buffalo, N.Y. The other No. 2 seeds were Cincinnati in the South, Iowa State in the Midwest and St. John's in the West. Three conferences had six teams selected - Big 10, Big 12 and Southeastern - and the Big East had five. Conference USA and the Pac-10 had four teams each, while the Atlantic Coast Conference had only three teams selected for the second straight year. On March 23 and 25 the West Regional will be in Albuquerque and the Midwest will be in Auburn Hills, Mich. On March 24 and 26 the East Regional will be in Syracuse, N.Y., while the South will be in Austin, Texas. The Final Four is April 1 and 3 in Indianapolis. For the first time in many years North Carolina was a team on the bub- ble. The Tar Heels' selection extended their record of consecutive tournament appearances to 26 years. The second longest streak also continued, with Arizona making its 16 consecutive appearance. Three schools - Central Connecticut State, North Carolina- Wilmington and Southeast Missouri State - are making their first appear- ances in the tournament. . The longest wait that ended Sunday belonged to Hofstra,, which had not been in the field since 1977. The other waits of over 20 years that ended belonged to St. Bonaventure (1978) and Appalachian State and Indiana State, which made their last appear- ances in 1979. Fresno State is in for the first time since 1984, and coach Jerry Tarkanian hasn't been in the tournament since leading UNLV to the Final Four in 1991 as the Runnin' Rebels tried to repeat as national champions Hofstra. school Appalachian State Arizona Arkansas. Ball State Butler Central Conne. St. Creighton Duke Gonzaga Hofstra lona Iowa St. Jackson State Lafayette Lamar Louisiana-Lafayette Michigan State NC Wilmington Northern Arizona Pennsylvania Saint Louis Samford SE Missouri St. South Carolina.St. St. John's Temple Utah State Valparaiso Conference Southern Pac-10 SEC MAC Midwestern Northeastern Mississippi Valley ACC West Coast America East Metro Atlantic Big 12 Southwestern Patriot Southland Sun Belt Big Ten Colonial Athletic Big Sky Ivy League Conference USA Trans America Ohio Valley Mid-East. Big East Atlantic 10 Big West Mid-Continental CHARLOTTE (AP) - Duke's domination of the Atlantic Coast Conference has reached yet another level. The second-ranked Blue Devils became the first league member in 26 years to win the ACC's regular season and tournament titles in back-to-back seasons as freshman Jason Williams starred in an 81-68 victory' over No. 19 Maryland. Duke (27-4) captured its I11th ACC tournament championship and is the first team to complete the rare double- double in consecutive seasons since North Carolina State accomplished the feat in 1973-74. The Blue Devils likely will ascend to the nation's No. I ranking tonight and will be the first school to enter the NCAA Tournament holding that spot in two straight years since DePaul in 1980 and 1981. Duke avenged a February 9 setback to Maryland - its only ACC regular- season defeat in the last two years -- while denying the Terrapins their first league tournament crown since 1984. Maryland (24-9) was appearing in its first title game under coach Gary Williams. Jason Williams, a 6-2, 190-pound point guard, scored a season-high 23 points and drained perhaps the biggest basket of the game, a 3-pointer from the left wing that gave Duke a 61-52 lead with 3:46 to play. IOWA ST 70, OLAHOMA 58: Marcus Fizer set the tone and his teammates followed the lead as No. 9 Iowa State completed arguably the best season in school history with a This Detroit hero, a.k.a. Duke's Shane Battler, can smile at Duke's No. 1 seed. Bids by Conference Big Ten -6 Big 12--6 SEC -6 Big East -5 Conference USA -4 Pac4. -- 4 ACC -3,. Atlantic 10 -3 Four with two bids 19 others with one Bubble-teams that didn't make it Bowling Green - (22-7) Arizona State - (18-12) Virginia - (19-11) Notre Dame - (18-14) Vanderbilt - (19-10) Villanova -(19-12) 70-58 victory over 18th-ranked Oklahoma in the Big 12 Conference title game. Led by the Big 12 Player of the Year, the Cyclones also captured the league's regular-season title after being picked by some to finish last in the conference. They never have been seeded higher than sixth in the NCAA Tournament, something that will change tonight. The Cyclones (29-4) have won 26 of their last 28 games since a 3-2 start. ARKANSAs 75, AuBuRN 67: The postseason is about redemption. Just ask Arkansas. Turning the Georgia Dome into "Hog Heaven", the Razorbacks cap- tured their first Southeastern Conference tournament champi- onship since joining the league in 1992 with a 75-67 victory over No. 23 Auburn. Arkansas' success erased a disap- pointing regular season that saw the Razorbacks (19-14) finish just a game over .500. They gained an automatic berth in the NCAA Tournament by winning four games in as many days. NIT matchups Michigan will battle at Notre Dame in its first games of the National Invitation Tournament. The Fighting Irish have beat- en several top teams including Connecticut, Syracuse and Ohio State --in Columbus. All games are played at campus sites until the semifinals, March 28, and the final game, March 30, at Madison Square Garden in New York City. All Times EST FIRST ROUND: Tuesday, March 14 Tulane (20-10) at North Carolina State (17-12) 7:30 P.m. Illinois may have los ain but remains team o e future By Jacob Wheeler Daily Sports Editor CHICAGO - Brian Cook retreated off of the court yesterday after his Fighting Illini lost the Big Ten Tournament championship game to A year ago the Illii shocked the Midwest by casting off a regular season which saw them win only three of 16 Big Ten games, then tiptoeing through the tournament, knocking off Minnesota, Indiana and Ohio State before losing to the reigning Spartans in the finale. Johnson and Sergio McClain returns for the 2000-01 season. They are already quality players who have taken Kruger to two consecutive championship games. And they can only do more damage next season. Brian Cook, for instance, was named Team 1.Cindnnati 2 Stanfot 3. Duke 4. Ohio State 5. Michigan State 6. Temple 7 lowa State 8. Tennessee 9. Arizona 10. LSU vim., 28-3 26-3 27-4 22-6 26-7 26-5 29-4 24-6 26-6 26-5 4h 'ekend's resuks Beet AinaStat,65-57 Beat Maryand, 81-68 Beat lfinois, 76-61 Beat St. BonawntUr, 65-44 Beat Olahoma, 70-58 Beat Caifoma, 701 Idle