The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Big 10 set to invade Madison Square Garden

- By Genaro C. Armas

Far from its Midwest footprint, the Big 10Tourname­nt begins at Madison Square Garden on Wednesday, drawing national spotlight to Big 10 teams Nebraska, Wisconsin, and Michigan State.

MADISON, WIS. » What an odd year in the Big Ten.

Michigan State looks Final Four-worthy but faces off- court questions. Wisconsin looks better of late but still faces a losing record.

And Nebraska — Nebraska! — is up.

It’s time to take this Midwest hoops show back on the road again.

The Big Ten Tournament begins Wednesday, one week earlier than usual at a rather unusual venue: Madison Square Garden in New York. While well outside of the league’ s predominan­tly-Midwest footprint, the Garden can’t be beat as one of the traditiona­l hubs of college basketball.

No better place for a potential NCAA bubble team like Nebraska to make a stand. The Cornhusker­s had a school-record 13 conference wins to bust its reputation as a lower-division dweller.

“Personally I think so,” guard Anton Gill said when asked after a 7664 win Sunday over Penn State if Nebraska had done enough to make theNCAAs. “But we’re not going down to New York just to play around. We want to win that, too. We feel like we have the best team in the Big Ten.”

That title actually belongs to Michigan State.

Coach Tom Izzo’s team won the conference crown outright and the top seed in the Big Ten tourney by grinding out a 68-63 win at Wisconsin in a matchup of the last two teamconfer­ence teams to make the Final Four (2015).

Each school has had had challengin­g seasons for different reasons.

The young Badgers endured growing pains and an uncharacte­ristic losing season. But there are signs that the inexperien­ced players surroundin­g Ethan Happ are finally getting it after winning four of five games before ending the regular season with a close loss to Michigan State.

In the locker room, guard Brad Davison had a message for his fellow Badgers after the freshman scored a career-high 30 points.

“I just told them, ‘ I’d rather beat the next week anyway,”’ Davison said, referring to the Big Ten tourney. “It’s not college foot- ball. It’s college basketball, where the regular season is kind of washed away.”

Michigan State’s most pressing issues have come off the court.

Questions have swirled over how the school handled allegation­s against disgraced former sports doctor Larry Nassar, leading to broader questions about how Izzo and other coaches at the school have dealt with various allegation­s against players.

Following a Yahoo Sports report last week, Michigan State said its compliance office discovered that Bridges’ family had dinner with an agent last winter without his knowledge, committing an NCAA violation. The school said the finding Friday made Bridges ineligible, leading it to apply for reinstatem­ent, which was granted the next day by the NCAA.

Questions are likely to come up again in New York. On the court, the Spartans have pressed on and head into the postseason with a 28-3 record, the best start in school history.

“Handling the adversity that they’ve handled I think is going to make them better men for the next 60 years,” Izzo said.

Other story lines and things to watch at the Big Ten Tournament:

SPART Y’S STARS: Bridges draws the most attention from opposing defenses, while Nick Ward and Jaren Jackson Jr. provide heft up front. But in the backcourt, Cassius Winston offers balance with 3-point marksmansh­ip. He’s 16 of 20 from behind the arc over his last four games, including a 6-of-6 effort against Wisconsin.

BUCKEYES ARE BACK: Chris Holtmann’s first season coaching at Ohio State was a hit after the Buckeyes exceeded preseason expectatio­ns to finish 15-3 in the league to get the second seed in the tournament. Forward Keita Bates-Diop (19.2 points, 8.9 rebounds) won league player of the year honors.

BOILERS BACK UP: A three-game losing streak in mid-February ended Purdue’s chances to win the Big Ten. But the Boilermake­rs have steadied themselves with three straight wins headed into the conference tourney. They might have an ideal mix to do postseason damage with tested seniors and balanced scoring.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Maryland guard Kevin Huerter (4) goes to the basket against Michigan forward Moritz Wagner (13) and guard Duncan Robinson (22) during the second half.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Maryland guard Kevin Huerter (4) goes to the basket against Michigan forward Moritz Wagner (13) and guard Duncan Robinson (22) during the second half.

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