NCAA BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT

Izzo, No. 7 Spartans savor surprising rise

Michigan State's Lourawls Nairn Jr. (11) and Gavin Schilling (34) react during the second half of a regional final against Louisville in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament Sunday, March 29, 2015, in Syracuse, N.Y. (AP Photo/Nick Lisi)
Michigan State's Lourawls Nairn Jr. (11) and Gavin Schilling (34) react during the second half of a regional final against Louisville in the NCAA men's college basketball tournament Sunday, March 29, 2015, in Syracuse, N.Y. (AP Photo/Nick Lisi)

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Travis Trice vowed a day earlier that he wasn't going to cry should the Michigan State Spartans continue their improbable run to the Final Four.

The senior guard's vow lasted no more than 10 seconds once the final horn sounded following Michigan State's 76-70 overtime victory over Louisville in an NCAA Tournament East Regional final Sunday.

Amid the frenzied celebration, Trice crouched at center court and the tears flowed.

"I was actually trying to hold it in," Trice said. "I try to keep it even keeled. I'm mad that I even cried now."

Senior forward Branden Dawson said it was the first time he's seen Trice cry.

The seventh-seeded Spartans (27-11) let it all out on the court to oust the fourth-seeded Cardinals (27-9), then let their emotions slow afterward.

"I'd like to tell you that I thought five different times this year that we were good enough to get to a Final Four, but I'd be lying to you," said Coach Tom Izzo, who described this as the best of seven regional final victories he has enjoyed. "But I think the burning desire to be in this Final Four, and they didn't want to be a group that didn't make it. I think it was more of the battle cry all year long."

Trice led the Spartans with 17 points. Dawson had 11 rebounds, including a key putback of Bryn Forbes' missed three-point shot with 31.7 seconds left in overtime. And Denzel Valentine scored 15 points for a Michigan State team that won for the 12th time in 15 games. Michigan State opened the tournament with a victory over No. 10 seed Georgia, knocked off second-seeded Virginia last weekend and third-seeded Oklahoma in the regional semifinal on Friday.

Michigan State will play Duke, which beat Gonzaga 66-52 in the South Regional final, on Saturday in Indianapolis.

Wayne Blackshear had 28 points for the Cardinals in a game that featured 11 lead changes.

There could have been a 12th with 4.9 seconds left in regulation, when Cardinals forward Mangok Mathiang hit his first free throw to tie the game on a shot that hit off the heel of the rim and bounced high and in. But he wasn't so fortunate on his second one, which also hit the heel and bounced wide left.

"Sometimes it can be a cruel game. I was positive we were going to win it when the first free throw went in because it shouldn't have gone in," Cardinals coach Rick Pitino said. "It's very difficult for all the players. But real proud of our guys."

Louisville was denied a shot of making its third Final Four in four years, and 11th overall.

It's the ninth Final Four appearance for the Spartans, and first since 2010, when they lost 52-50 to Butler in the national semifinals. Izzo has led them to seven Final Fours including the 2000 national championship.

The Spartans did it with a roster that was regarded as having less talent than the team that lost in the regional final to Connecticut a year ago. Michigan State lost three of its top four scorers.

"Everybody doubted us. Everybody had us down and out," Valentine said. "They didn't have us making the tournament. We just kept strong. We believe in ourselves."

The Spartans trailed 40-32 at halftime but led 61-59 with 3:57 left after Trice hit two free throws.

Michigan State took control in overtime, starting with Forbes hitting a three-pointer 26 seconds in.

The Spartans sealed it in the final 31 seconds. Dawson did what Izzo's teams have done well over the years: He put back a three-point miss by Forbes to put Michigan State up 74-70.

Valentine batted away Quentin Snider's pass on the Cardinals' next possession, and Trice sealed the victory by hitting two free throws with 10.1 seconds left.

Michigan State's defense -- Izzo's other trademark -- played havoc with the Cardinals, who made 17 of 32 attempts in the first half. Louisville was 6 of 32 in the second half and overtime

It is the third consecutive year one conference has had two teams in the Final Four. The SEC did last year with Kentucky and Florida and the Big East had Louisville and Syracuse in 2013.

The last time the Big Ten did it was 2005 with Michigan State and Illinois.

Blackshear stepped up his performance in what became his final collegiate game, but Cardinals junior forward Montrezl Harrell struggled.

Harrell missed his last five shots and was off on 5 of 9 free throw attempts in what was also his final game. Harrell has already indicated his intention to enter the NBA draft.

"It hurts a lot," Harrell said.

"It's over," said Blackshear, a member of the Cardinals 2013 national championship team. "But I get to look back and say I had a great career."

Blackshear had his nose bloodied with 3:57 left, when he hit a driving layup and was fouled hard by Matt Costello. Dillon Avare came off the bench to hit the free throw while Blackshear missed a few possessions while being tended to on the bench.

Sports on 03/30/2015

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