Connecticut Post

Michigan State coach Izzo joins three Final Four first-timers

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Tom Izzo drew up the perfect play at the perfect moment, sending Michigan State past mighty Duke for a spot in the Final Four.

The trip is always emotional, but Izzo has done it before. This will be his eighth Final Four and a chance for a second national championsh­ip.

The other three Final Four coaches all will be the new kids at the dance.

Chris Beard’s nomadic journey struck a vein of gold in his 12th coaching stop at Texas Tech, with a gritty pack of ball-hawking players grasping the program’s first Final Four. Their opponent next Saturday in Minneapoli­s: Izzo’s Spartans.

Virginia’s Tony Bennett finally got over the hump in his 10th season with the Cavaliers, putting them in position for a different kind of history after last year’s historic firstround flameout against No. 16 UMBC.

And Bruce Pearl found some gems at Auburn after an acrimoniou­s split with Tennessee, guiding the Tigers to Minneapoli­s where they’ll face Virginia despite the cloud of a federal investigat­ion hanging over the program.

“I’m so happy for the people at Auburn who have been waiting forever to get their first Final Four,” Pearl said.

Pearl was fired by Tennessee in 2011 and hit with a “show-cause” penalty by the NCAA for a string of violations and lying to investigat­ors.

He landed at Auburn 2014 and the dark clouds followed.

Tigers assistant Chuck Person pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery and two players, Austin Wiley and Danjel Purifoy, were ruled ineligible last season as a result of the federal investigat­ion. Just before this year’s SEC tournament, assistant coach Ira Bowman was suspended indefinite­ly amid bribery allegation­s during his time at Pennsylvan­ia.

Despite the off-court issues, The Tigers (30-9) shot their way into the Final Four for the first time by taking down blue bloods Kansas, North Carolina and Kentucky in succession.

“No matter how low we got this season, no matter how much adversity went through, we always believed this is where we could get to,” said Auburn’s Bryce Brown, who had 24 points in the Elite Eight win over Kentucky.

Beard was at Division II Angelo State just four years ago, the ABA’s South Carolina Warriors three years before that. He took over a middling Texas Tech program in 2016 and turned it around by getting non-five-star players to buy into his defensive philosophi­es.

Texas Tech reached the Elite Eight for the first time in Beard’s second season a year ago, but not much was expected from the Red Raiders this season after losing five of their top six scorers.

Picked to finish seventh in the preseason poll, Texas Tech was one of college basketball’s biggest surprises, sharing the Big 12 regularsea­son championsh­ip with Kansas State to end Kansas’ 14-year reign.

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