Rockford Register Star

Izzo’s not quitting. So now what?

- Shawn Windsor

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Tom Izzo isn't burned out. Let's start there.

He's also ready to change.

Not radically, he admits. But he knows if he wants to get his Michigan State basketball program back to where it was, he doesn't have a choice.

He could retire, I suppose. But that'd be like asking a shark to stop swimming. And Izzo can't stop swimming, which means he's got to adapt, and quickly. Or at least “die trying.”

Those were his words late Saturday night outside the Spartans' locker room at the Spectrum Center, after another season ended in the NCAA tournament's first weekend. That's the sixth first-weekend exit in eight seasons, if you're counting — and Izzo knows that you are, and should be. He knows, too, that he's the reason you're counting.

It should be noted that MSU made a Final Four in that span and won the Big Ten regular-season title – and then the tournament crown – in a single year (2019). The Spartans won a share of the league title the next season and were good enough for another deep run into March, or maybe April.

If not for the COVID-19-induced shutdown, who knows?

Before anyone dismisses what that means, ask Purdue ... or Illinois ... or Indiana:

New BetMGM customers can sign up today and get a First Bet Offer up to $1,500 using bonus code USATSPORTS. Just download the BetMGM app, deposit at least $10 and place your first wager on any game. If your first bet loses, you will receive bonus bets in the amount of your bet (up to $1,500). Just make sure you use bonus code USATSPORTS when you sign up. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER (Available in the US). Call 877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY). Call 1-800-327-5050 (MA). 21+ only. Please Gamble Responsibl­y. Call 1-800-NEXT-STEP (AZ), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), 1-800-981-0023 (PR). First Bet Offer for new customers only. Subject to eligibilit­y requiremen­ts. Rewards are non-withdrawab­le bonus bets that expire in 7 days. In partnershi­p with Kansas Crossing Casino and Hotel. See BetMGM.com for Terms. US promotiona­l offers not available in North Carolina, New York, Nevada, Ontario, or Puerto Rico.

Odds available as of print deadline.

EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division

Boston N.Y. Knicks Philadelph­ia Brooklyn Toronto

57 14 42 28 39 32 26 45 23 48 Southeast Division

Orlando Miami Atlanta Charlotte Washington

Milwaukee

WW42 29 39 32 31 39 17 53 13 58 Central Division

WLLL46 25

.803 — .600 14½ .549 18 .366 31 .324 34 .592 .549 .443 .243 .183

.648

— 3 10½ 24½ 29

Cleveland Indiana Chicago Detroit 43 28 .606 40 32 .556 34 37 .479 12 59 .169 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division

New Orleans 44 27 Dallas 41 29 Houston 35 35 Memphis 24 47 San Antonio 15 56

Northwest Division

Denver Oklahoma City Minnesota Utah Portland

Three Big Ten powers who've yet to make an Elite Eight since MSU made the national semifinals.

Not that MSU can rest on its laurels: In the four years since their last Big Ten title, the Spartans have finished eighth, seventh, fourth and sixth in the Big Ten, and made the NCAA tournament's second weekend once (last year). That's fine at Iowa.

Not at MSU. Not with the standard Izzo setup.

He has always been candid after losses — especially after season-ending losses. He rips open his soul and lets it flow. He can't help it.

After losing to North Carolina on Saturday, though ... after watching yet another, other team this season make the winning plays, the plays that matter, the shots — banked or not — that matter, after watching a team with more size and more skill on the block, after watching a team pull away on the strength of its transfers — yes, transfers — the MSU coach was even more philosophi­cal. His assessment?

His team underachie­ved. He underachie­ved. He didn't figure out his team until it was too late. He didn't connect with a few of his players as he wished he could.

“I've got to do a better job,” he said. “I'm really disappoint­ed with me.”

He is desperate for another deep tournament run. He has to change to make it happen. Either that or call it a

W50 21 49 21 49 22 29 42 19 52 Pacific Division

WLL3 6½ 12 34

.620 — .586 2½ .500 8½ .338 20 .211 29 .704 .700 .690 .408 .268

L.A. Clippers 44 26 Phoenix 42 29 Sacramento 41 29

L.A. Lakers 39 32 Golden State 36 34

Saturday, March 23

N.Y. Knicks 105, Brooklyn 93 Sacramento 109, Orlando 107 Atlanta 132, Charlotte 91 Washington 112, Toronto 109 Phoenix 131, San Antonio 106 Boston 124, Chicago 113 Houston 147, Utah 119

Denver 114, Portland 111

Sunday, March 24

New Orleans 114, Detroit 101 Philadelph­ia 121, L.A. Clippers 107 Miami 121, Cleveland 84 Minnesota 114, Golden State 110 Milwaukee 118, Oklahoma City 93 L.A. Lakers 150, Indiana 145

Monday, March 25 Charlotte at Cleveland Brooklyn at Toronto

Boston at Atlanta

Detroit at N.Y. Knicks

Phoenix at San Antonio Washington at Chicago Portland at Houston

Dallas at Utah

Memphis at Denver Philadelph­ia at Sacramento Indiana at L.A. Clippers

Tuesday, March 26 Golden State at Miami, 7:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at New Orleans, 8 p.m. Dallas at Sacramento, 10 p.m. .629 .592 .586 .549 .514

Eastern Conference Atlantic Division

W L OT 46 20 5 41 16 15 40 21 9 39 25 7 36 29 6 34 33 5 30 36 4 26 32 12 Metropolit­an Division

W L OT 47 20 4 45 20 7 36 27 9 35 26 9 30 26 15 35 33 4 30 30 10 23 36 12 Western Conference Central Division

W L

46 20

44 19

44 22

42 25

38 30

34 28

29 37

Florida Boston Toronto Tampa Bay Detroit Buffalo Ottawa Montreal

N.Y. Rangers Carolina Philadelph­ia Washington N.Y. Islanders New Jersey Pittsburgh Columbus

Colorado Dallas Winnipeg Nashville St. Louis Minnesota Arizona

OT 5 9 5 4 3 9 5

— ½ 1 21 31

— 2½ 3 5½ 8

Pts 97 97 89 85 78 73 64 64

Pts 98 97 81 79 75 74 70 58

Pts 97 97 93 88 79 77 63

Chicago 46

Pacific Division

5

W L

45 18

42 23

37 22

38 25

33 32

28 29

24 43

16 46 Saturday, March 23

N.Y. Islanders 6, Winnipeg 3 Philadelph­ia 3, Boston 2

St. Louis 5, Minnesota 4, OT Nashville 1, Detroit 0 Ottawa 5, New Jersey 2 Toronto 6, Edmonton 3

N.Y. Rangers 4, Florida 3, SO Vancouver 4, Calgary 2

L.A. Kings 4, Tampa Bay 3, OT Chicago 5, San Jose 4, OT Vegas 4, Columbus 2

Sunday, March 24 Washington 3, Winnipeg 0 Colorado 5, Pittsburgh 4, OT New Jersey 4, N.Y. Islanders 0 Carolina 2, Toronto 1

Ottawa 5, Edmonton 3 Florida 4, Philadelph­ia 1 Dallas 4, Arizona 2

Tampa Bay 3, Anaheim 2, OT Buffalo 4, Calgary 1 Montreal 5, Seattle 1

Monday, March 25 Vegas at St. Louis

L.A. Kings at Vancouver

Tuesday, March 26 Boston at Florida, 7 p.m. Philadelph­ia at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m. Carolina at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. Detroit at Washington, 7 p.m. New Jersey at Toronto, 7:30 p.m. Vegas at Nashville, 8 p.m. Edmonton at Winnipeg, 8 p.m. Calgary at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Montreal at Colorado, 9 p.m. Columbus at Arizona, 10 p.m. Anaheim at Seattle, 10 p.m. Dallas at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

Vancouver Edmonton L.A. Kings Vegas Calgary Seattle Anaheim San Jose 20

OT 8 4 11 7 5 13 4 8

Spring Training

Sunday Houston 9, St. Louis 4 Boston 5, Atlanta 5 Detroit 3, Tampa Bay 2 Baltimore 8, Minnesota 3 Philadelph­ia 2, Toronto 0 NY Yankees 1, Pittsburgh 0 Miami 5, NY Mets 1

NY Mets 10, Washington 1 Cleveland 10, Cincinnati 7 Colorado 7, Chicago White Sox 3 Milwaukee 14, Arizona 4 Seattle 9, Chicago Cubs 9 LA Dodgers 5, LA Angels 3 45

Pts 98 88 85 83 71 69 52 40

Valspar Championsh­ip Sunday

Palm Harbor, Fla. Innisbrook Resort (Copperhead) Purse: $8.4 million Yardage: 7,340; Par: 71

Final Round

Peter Malnati ......... 66-71-68-67—272 (-12) Cameron Young...69-69-68-68—274 (-10) Mackenzie Hughes68-68-69-70—275 (-9) Chandler Phillips ...68-68-70-69—275 (-9) Adam Hadwin ........ 68-71-68-69—276 (-8) Ryan Moore ............ 72-69-67-68—276 (-8) Xander Schauffele..68-72-71-65—276 (-8) Carl Yuan ................ 66-73-69-68—276 (-8) Christiaan Bezuidenho­ut ................................ 69-69-72-67—277 (-7) Kyoung-Hoon Lee ...71-67-70-69—277 (-7) Lucas Glover .......... 68-69-72-69—278 (-6) Billy Horschel .......... 69-72-71-67—279 (-5) career.

But, as he said late Saturday when asked if he felt the clock ticking, he's nowhere near ready to retire. “(Nick) Saban is 73, 74,” Izzo said. Actually, Saban is 72, but Izzo's point stands. The longtime Alabama football coach — and former MSU football coach — has at least three years on Izzo. That's enough time for another run.

“If somebody wants me out (before then), that's fine,” he said. “I'll go somewhere else.”

But?

He swears he has had as much fun the past couple of weeks as he has had in the last few years. Swears, too, that this group — perplexing as it was — energized him during this mini-run.

He'll need the energy to navigate the transfer portal, from whence help must come for next season. He plans to do this. He said he'll start by finding and leaning on “some people that I really respect in this profession.”

It won't be an overhaul — his word. He's going to tweak — also his word.

That's a step, though the most important step is realizing he's got to take one, no matter how much he despises the changes in the game.

Another big would help. A wing who can check and shoot seems necessary, too. Relying solely on another year from Mady Sissoko — it's possible — or enough developmen­t from Carson Cooper is risky. So is banking on Coen Carr developing a reliable jump shot and a high-level feel for the game.

Carr may get there in time. He needs another year or two, though, and giving the freshman six months to transform into something he has never been is a gamble. Too much of one.

Yet mastering the portal isn't the only thing Izzo has on his list. Part of this year's struggle was his failure to figure out his team. Sissoko is a primary example. Izzo lamented that Sissoko didn't develop the way he thought he could this season. That, if anything, he regressed. (Though as Izzo pointed out, Sissoko, who has a fifth year of eligibilit­y if he wants, dealt with some personal issues, including the death of his grandmothe­r.)

Still, Sissoko has always been private, and Izzo admitted he has struggled to open him up. He wants to get better at that. A.J. Hoggard is another example.

Like Sissoko, the guard has another year of eligibilit­y. Don't expect him back, though; Izzo said the plan before this season was that Hoggard would finish this year and move on.

Izzo brought up Hoggard because he couldn't reach him, either. Hoggard finally started leading the team the last couple of weeks. It wasn't a coincidenc­e the team began to compete more consistent­ly.

Yes, the senior had a rough night against the Tar Heels.

But Izzo's right: If he'd been able to unlock Hoggard and help his point guard lead sooner, the season might have been different.

“I told A.J. if he led like he did the last couple weeks throughout his career ...” he said, before interrupti­ng his thought with this: “It's the coach's job to help develop that.”

This is a surprising admission for a coach who has been a master at connecting with players and understand­ing them. One of his more underrated gifts has always been his sense of human nature.

Yet here he was Saturday evening, arguing that what he needs to change most is how he coaches. Not the games, or even practice, but his relationsh­ips.

“I got to figure out how to get into people's brains a little bit better,” he said.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States