Michigan State Spartans
MSU edges Wichita State for third place in Battle 4 Atlantis
Michigan State Spartans

MSU edges Wichita State for third place in Battle 4 Atlantis

Published Nov. 25, 2016 3:56 p.m. ET

PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas (AP) -- Michigan State spent the first 30 minutes playing with energy and building a huge lead, then the last 10 nearly giving it all away.

Still, the 24th-ranked Spartans came away from the Battle 4 Atlantis with a win -- and the end of a brutally tough opening month of the schedule in sight.

Miles Bridges scored 21 points to help Michigan State hold off Wichita State 77-72 on Friday in the Battle 4 Atlantis third-place game.

ADVERTISEMENT

Eron Harris added 13 points for the Spartans (4-3), who bounced back from Thursday's loss to No. 20 Baylor in a game that left coach Tom Izzo saying his injury-hit team looked "awfully tired" and maybe a bit overwhelmed by the early schedule.

"There's no question that this team has been through a lot," Izzo said. "But that's what I challenged them with. I don't challenge them with effort, heart, I don't challenge them very often with character issues. But I did challenge their character a little bit."

Izzo said he sensed "great focus" from his players Friday morning.

"The most important thing is finding a way to get off the mat," he said. "That is the most important lesson I can teach these guys whether it be in life or in basketball."

Michigan State led by 18 midway through the half and held a 15-point lead with 8:05 left, only to see the Shockers (5-2) turn to fullcourt pressure to get back in it. Wichita State ran off a 14-0 run to get to 66-65 on Daishon Smith's layup over Bridges with 4:13 left.

"We got stops," Smith said. "We were able to put our athleticism into the game, and that's what we did."

But the Shockers couldn't quite push ahead. Bridges and fellow freshman Cassius Winston hit key 3-pointers. And when the Shockers had one more chance to tie it, Smith missed a long straightaway 3.

Bridges grabbed the rebound and hit two clinching free throws with 4.7 seconds left.

Darral Willis scored 16 points to lead Wichita State, which shot 36 percent.

BIG PICTURE

Wichita State: As bad as things looked midway through the second half, the Shockers showed a downright scary fullcourt press to get back in it. Coach Gregg Marshall has tried to talk more about defense than the team's offensive potential during three days in Atlantis; that finish might have reinforced it to his team, too.

Marshall also didn't rule out the possibility of using pressure defense more going forward.

"I'll just have to evaluate us and evaluate my coaching and evaluate our personnel and try to figure out a way to play more like the team in the second half than the team in the first half," he said.

Michigan State: The Spartans looked fresh and showed a balanced offense for about 30 minutes. From there, they did just enough to hang on.

"We didn't beat the Lakers, but we won a big game," Izzo said, "and we did it with old-style grit for 90 percent of that game."

POLL IMPLICATIONS

The Spartans will give voters an interesting decision for the next AP Top 25 . Yes, all of the Spartans' losses in this brutally tough opening month are to ranked teams. But will that be enough to keep a 4-3 team in the poll? Stay tuned.

Wichita State had a shot to play its way in, but two straight losses to ranked opponents ended that chance for now.

BRIDGES IN ATLANTIS

Bridges, a 6-foot-7 freshman from Flint, Michigan, went 6 for 11 from the field and made 4 of 8 3-pointers.

"Once I get going, the basket opens up a little bit more for me," said Bridges, who scored 22 in the opener against St. John's and had 15 against Baylor.

UP NEXT

Wichita State: The Shockers return home for a Tuesday game against Southern Nazarene, a Division II program from Bethany, Oklahoma.

Michigan State: Things don't get any easier for the Spartans. They travel to face No. 6 Duke in its famously hostile Cameron Indoor Stadium on Tuesday in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge.

share


Get more from Michigan State Spartans Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more