Williams-led Purdue rallies to beat No. 23 Michigan St 55-54
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Trevion Williams knew no one doubted he would get the ball when Purdue had a chance to score a go-ahead basket against No. 23 Michigan State.
The Spartans certainly thought the pivotal inbounds play would go to Williams. They just couldn't stop him from getting the ball — or the bucket.
Williams made
“Everybody knew the ball was going to me," the 6-foot-10, 265-pound power forward said. “I just wanted to take my time with it."
Aaron Henry, who scored 13 points, missed a runner from the left side of the lane just before the buzzer to seal the stinging setback for the Spartans.
“One of the more disappointing losses," coach Tom Izzo said. “Give Purdue credit."
Williams, in particular.
He made 9 of 14 shots and 8 of 12 free throws and grabbed nine rebounds for the Boilermakers (8-5, 3-3 Big Ten) to end a two-game losing streak.
“He was the difference in the game," Izzo said.
The Spartans (8-4, 2-4) missed 11 of their last 13 shots and connected on just 39% overall.
“We didn’t deserve to win," Izzo said. “They deserved to win. They made winning plays."
Williams did not connect on his last attempt at the line with a chance to pull Purdue into a 54-all tie with 9.8 seconds left, and later said it was a fortunate miss.
The Spartans and Boilermakers both got to the loose ball after the missed free throw, and the visitors had the alternate possession arrow pointing in their direction. Williams caught a lob pass on an inbounds play and took full advantage with a short, floating, go-ahead jumper.
“We all know we’re capable of competing against anybody in the country,” Williams said.
Early in the game, the Boilermakers looked rusty playing for the first time in nearly a week. Their game on Tuesday against Nebraska was postponed.
The Spartans went on a 13-0 run in the first half and were ahead 31-16 at halftime.
Michigan State's Joshua Langford scored seven of his 10 points in the first half.
“There's no need to hang our heads, it’s too early in the season," Langford said. “The loss does hurt, especially losing like that when we had the lead."
BIG PICTURE
Purdue: The comeback in the second half can help the team gain confidence in the future, knowing it can rally from a big deficit against a ranked team on the road — and win.
“A good road win for us," coach Matt Painter said. “We didn’t shoot the ball well. We didn’t play well in the first half. But anytime you can figure out a way to win, no matter how ugly it is, you’re just hoping it can build confidence with your team."
Michigan State: The offensive woes include turning the ball over and shooting the ball poorly, a combination that is holding the team back.
Michigan State finished with 14 turnovers, most of which were committed during the collapse.
“We had 10 of them in the second half and never got in a rhythm," Izzo said.
SOLIDARITY CIRCLE
Players and coaches for both teams along with officials stood in a circle, with arms linked, around the Spartans' logo in the middle of the court before the game. They wanted to send a message that
“I was so sickened by the ridiculous events in Washington D.C. and I made the decision," Izzo said. “Maybe a bunch of 20 year olds can teach a bunch adults."
Izzo approached Painter with the idea, and the Boilermakers were all on board.
“America needs to be able to see that — especially white America," Painter said. “We need to have great leaders, and great leadership in our country right now."
POLL IMPLICATIONS
The Spartans should stay in the poll when the next
UP NEXT
Purdue: Plays at Indiana on Thursday, playing four consecutive Big Ten road games for the first time since 1960.
Michigan State: Travels to play No. 5 Iowa on Thursday.
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