Morning Sun

Nowell breaks NCAA assist record, KSU beats Michigan State in OT

- By Tom Canavan

Markquis Nowell walked the ball up the floor with the score tied in the final minute of overtime and exchanged animated hand signals with his coach, Jerome Tang.

Standing on the March Madness logo at Madison Square Garden, the 5-foot-8 Kansas State point guard who grew up in Harlem glanced at the basket for a split second and flicked a chest pass into the lane. Keyontae Johnson slipped behind the Michigan State defense, elevated with his back to the basket, grabbed the ball and slammed it down.

It was the signature play of a towering performanc­e by the shortest player on the floor.

Nowell broke the NCAA Tournament record for assists in a game with 19, his last two on spectacula­r passes in the last minute of OT, and Kansas State beat Michigan State 98-93 on Thursday night in a Sweet 16 thriller.

“Today was a special one, man,” said Nowell, who fought through a secondhalf ankle injury. “I’ve got to give a lot to credit to my teammates for battling, for fighting through adversity when we was down. I can’t

even explain how I’m feeling right now. I just know that I’m blessed and I’m grateful.”

Nowell’s alley-oop to Johnson with 52 seconds left in overtime gave the Wildcats (26-9) the lead for good in this back-and-forth East Region semifinal.

“I mean, it was just a basketball play between me and Keyontae,” Nowell said. “We knew how Michigan State plays defense. They play high up, and Keyontae just told me, we got eye contact, and he was like, lob, lob. I just threw it up, and he made a great play.”

Michigan State cut the lead to one before Nowell bounced an inbound pass

from under the basket to Ismael Massoud, who knocked down a jumper with 17 seconds left that put Kansas State ahead 9693 and gave Nowell the assists record.

With Michigan State needing a 3 to tie, Nowell stole the ball from the Spartans’ Tyson Walker and drove for a clinching layup at the buzzer. Nowell finished with 20 points and five steals in a signature performanc­e at basketball’s most famous arena that drew tweets of praise from Patrick Mahomes and Kevin Durant.

“That was a legendary display of controllin­g a basketball game Markquis,” Durant tweeted.

 ?? ADAM HUNGER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Michigan State guard A.J. Hoggard (11) and Kansas State guard Markquis Nowell (1) reach for the loose ball in the second half of a Sweet 16game in the East Regional of the NCAA tournament at Madison Square Garden on Thursday in New York.
ADAM HUNGER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Michigan State guard A.J. Hoggard (11) and Kansas State guard Markquis Nowell (1) reach for the loose ball in the second half of a Sweet 16game in the East Regional of the NCAA tournament at Madison Square Garden on Thursday in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States