INDIANAPOLIS -- Mateen Cleaves was quite a sight.
He needed crutches so he could stand and some help from his dad with the
championship trophy. One of the nets was wrapped around his neck and tears
rolled down his cheeks.
"This is what I came back here for," he said Monday night after leading
Michigan State to its second national championship with an 89-76 victory over
Florida.
Many thought Cleaves would be playing in the NBA this season. Instead, he
led the Spartans to their first title since 1979.
He was impressive in the first half, breaking Florida's press as Michigan
State built a 43-32 lead. In the second half, he was their limping leader after
rolling his right ankle.
"This is as storybook as it gets for Mateen," Michigan State coach Tom
Izzo said. "He gave up a lot of money, a lot of things to be back here."
Michigan State's first title was memorable because of Magic. Its second will
be remembered because of Mateen.
It was 21 years ago that the championship game between Michigan State and
Indiana State -- Magic vs. Bird -- changed the landscape of college basketball.
This one may not have had the magnitude, but it had the drama thanks to
Cleaves.
"He has the heart of a lion. He has done it for four years, not just one,"
Izzo said. "That's why you love him. He's what our program embodies."
Johnson watched the victory from the stands of the RCA Dome and was on the
court to celebrate with the current Spartans.
"I knew they were going to win, especially when Mateen came back this
year," he said. "It's been tough waiting these 21 years. But they've been
great the last couple of years, and I knew they were going to win it all."
Cleaves, the Final Four's most outstanding player, rolled his ankle early in
the second half and had to go to the locker room to have it taped. He had
helped the Spartans build the 11-point halftime lead by scoring 13 points,
including going 3-for-3 from 3-point range, and negated Florida's vaunted
full-court pressure with his ballhandling and passing.
"I told them, 'He'll be back. Let's not get our heads down,'" Izzo said. "I just knew."
He was right, of course.
"I told the trainer they'd have to amputate it to keep me out of this
one," Cleaves said.
When he left with 16:18 to play the Spartans led 50-44. His teammates got
the lead to 58-50 by the time he returned 4:29 later. But the senior guard who
missed the first 13 games of the season while recovering from a stress fracture
in his right foot, was again the team's emotional leader.
Cleaves' long pass to Morris Peterson for a layup made it 60-50. He was
leveled while setting a screen a few minutes later, but it was enough to spring
A.J. Granger for a 3-pointer that started a 16-6 run that made it 84-66 and put
the game away.
"Mateen Cleaves is a great point guard. He showed it tonight," Florida's
Mike Miller said. "Senior leader, been through a lot of things. I think he did
a good job of running his team and he knocked down shots."
Michigan State had been on a mission since losing to Duke in the Final Four
last season. Anything short of a national championship would have been a
disappointment.
"We made some promises. We answered the promises," Izzo said.
Cleaves certainly didn't beat Florida by himself.
Peterson finished with 21 points on 7-for-14 shooting and Granger had 19 and
was 7-for-11 from the field.
Cleaves was 7-for-11 from the field -- all the shots coming before he was
injured -- and had 18 points and four assists.
The Spartans (32-7), the only top-seeded team to reach the Final Four,
finished 33-for-59 from the field (56 percent), the best by far against Florida's
frantic pace in the tournament. The previous best was 43 percent by
top-ranked Duke in the regional semifinals.
Michigan State never seemed fazed by the pressure, beating it early with
long passes. The Spartans were their usual efficient selves when they did run
their halfcourt game, getting good looks and crashing the boards when they
missed.
"I think we attacked the press well and passed off very well," Izzo said.
Florida coach Billy Donovan said his team's style was a gamble against
Michigan State.
"We watched a lot of tape. I did not see one team press them all year
long," he said. "Probably, obviously, for a good reason teams didn't press
them."
The Michigan State bench was considered a key to the Spartans' chances. Florida's reserves had outscored it 175-45 in the tournament, but Jason
Richardson had nine points as the Spartans' backups came up big.
Udonis Haslem had a season-high 27 points for the fifth-seeded Gators
(29-9), while Brent Wright added 13 points and 10 rebounds.
"It's been a great season. You hate it to end like this," Haslem said.
"If we look back on all the good times we accomplished a lot. We came together
as a family and made this run to the championship."
The 1979 final is still the highest-rated telecast of an NCAA basketball
game -- the one that hooked the nation on the NCAA Tournament.
Michigan State, which beat Wisconsin 53-41 in an ugly all-Big Ten national
semifinal, won all six games on its title run by at least 11 points.
The Spartans closed the season with 11 consecutive wins and are the first Big
Ten team to win it all since Michigan in 1989.
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| Michigan State guard Charlie Bell (left) tries to pass around Florida's Udonis Haslem.(AP) | |
Florida, looking to become the fourth consecutive Southeastern Conference team
to win the national championship in an even-numbered year, was making its first
appearance in a championship game.
The Gators had seven freshmen and sophomores in their 10-man rotation and
this was the first game in the tournament that their lack of experience showed.
"Not too many freshmen get to play in a national championship game," said
Kenyan Weaks, Florida's only senior. "This is a great experience for them. I
hope they learn from it. Hopefully, they can be back here next year."
Cleaves had two 3-pointers in the 14-3 run that gave the Spartans a 33-20
lead with 6:51 to play in the first half, but a three-point play by Haslem and a basket by
Donnell Harvey got the Gators within 35-29 with 4:05 left.
Charlie Bell and Cleaves sandwiched 3s around a layup by Haslem and the
Spartans had a 43-32 halftime lead.
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