Sports

Rutgers routs No. 13 Michigan State for resume-building win

PISCATAWAY, N.J. ā€” Michigan SšŸ’Žtate coach Tom Izzo told his Spartans that one of the keys to beating Rutgers was to not let the Scarlet Knights get going offensively.

Message not received.

Paul Mulcahy had his first-carešŸŒŠer double-double with 15 points and a career-high 12 assists, Ron Harper Jr. added 17 points and Rutgers routed No. 13 Michigan State 84-63 on Saturday.

Cliff Omoruyi also had 17 points on 6-of-6 shooting, while Dean Reiber added a career-high 12 points and Caleb McConnell hadšŸ‰ 11 points, nine rebounds and fourš’†™ steals for the Scarlet Knights (13-9, 7-5 Big Ten).

Rutgers shot 61.5 percent for the game.

ā€œWe were playing in rhythm. We were taking good shots, good quality shots. It wasnā€™t a lot of iso(lation),ā€ Mulcahy said. ā€œWe got reašŸ’¦lly talented guys.ā€

Michigan State (17-4, 8-3) was led by Gabe Brown šŸŽwith 20 points, five rebounds and a steašŸ’Ÿl. Marcus Bingham Jr. added 12 points and two blocks.

Rutgers center Clifford Omoruyi slams one home during their upset win over No. 13 Michigan State.
Rutgers center Clifford Omoruyi slams one home during their upset win over No. 13 Michigan State. USA TODAY Sports

Izzo received a technical foul early in the second half and tā™•he Rutgers crowd lit up. Harper went to the line to hit the technical free throws and give Rutgers its largest lead of the game at the point, 47-šŸ’ž38 with 17:41 left.

ā€œIt was a physical game. I probably deserved a technical and Iā€™d get another one,ā€ Izzo said, ź¦Æadding, ā€œI didnā€™t swear at them, as you know. I just kindšŸ€… of ran down the court. I guess these guys donā€™t like that, and rightfully so.ā€

Reiber hit a 3-pointer to put Rutgers up 58-47, prompting Izzo to call a timeout with 12:50 remaining. Rutgers led by as manyšŸØ as 23.

Rutgers led by as much as eight in the first half before Michigan State tied it at 28 on a Bingham layup with 4:26 to go. The SšŸ„‚carlet Knights regained the lead a minute later on a nice pass in transition from Mulcahy to Harper for a layup and went into the break up just 40-38.

ā€œI wasnā€™t loving the first halšŸ¦‹f as far as our defense was concerned,ā€ Rutgers coach Steve Pikiell said. ā€œI thought we played really good defense in the second half. We turned the ball over like we did in the past. But, rebounding is always what we try to emphasize and especially against this team rebounding- wise.ā€

Rutgers, which outrebounded the Spartans 31-20, scored the first seven pointšŸŒŗs of the second half and pulled away.

ā€œThat was an old-fashiā™›oned ą¼ŗbutt kicking,ā€ Izzo said.

Big picture

Michigan State: With a month to go in the regular season, the Spartans find themselves in a familiar position. Picked to finish sixth in the Big Ten, ā™›Hall of Fame coach Tom Izzo once again has the Spartans competing for a conference title and a high seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Rutgers: The Scarlet Knights have their work cut out to make it back to the NCAA Tournament after breaking a 30-year drought last season. Rutgers had been trending toward the NIT before Saturdayā€™s big win. With a gauntlet of a scšŸ»hedule that includes No. 16 Ohio Stā–Øate, No. 18 Illinois, a home-and-home with No. 11 Wisconsin, and at No. 4 Purdue, there are plenty of chances for resume-building wins.

ā€œThereā€™s not one team in the NCAA Tournament right now,” Mulcahy said. “Weā€™re going to compete. Weā€™re not going to worry about the past or the future.ā€