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2004–05 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college basketball season

2004–05Michigan State Spartans men's basketball
NCAA tournament, Final Four
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 4
APNo. 15
Record26–7 (13–3 Big Ten)
Head coach
Assistant coaches
Captains
Home arenaBreslin Center
Seasons
2004–05 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 1Illinois151 .938372 .949
No. 15Michigan State133 .813266 .813
No. 20Wisconsin115 .688259 .735
Indiana106 .6251514 .517
Minnesota106 .6252111 .656
Ohio State88 .5002012 .625
Iowa79 .4382112 .636
Northwestern610 .3751516 .484
Michigan412 .2501318 .419
Purdue313 .188721 .250
Penn State115 .063723 .233
2005 Big Ten tournament winner
As of March 15, 2005
Rankings from AP Poll[1]

The2004–05 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team representedMichigan State University in the2004–05 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans, led by 10th-year head coachTom Izzo, played their home games at theBreslin Center inEast Lansing, Michigan and were members of theBig Ten Conference. MSU finished the season 26–7, 13–3 to finish in second place in the Big Ten. They received a bid to theNCAA tournament for the eighth consecutive year and advanced to the Final Four before losing to eventual National ChampionNorth Carolina.

Previous season

[edit]

TheSpartans finished the2003–04 season 18–12, 12–4 in Big Ten play to finish in third place. They lost in the semifinals of theBig Ten tournament toWisconsin. They received a No. 7 seed in theNCAA tournament, their seventh straight trip to the Tournament, and lost in the First Round toNevada

Season summary

[edit]

The Spartans were led by seniorAlan Anderson (13.2 points and 5.6 rebounds per game), juniorsMaurice Ager (14.1 points per game) andPaul Davis (12.3 points and 8.0 rebounds per game), and sophomoreShannon Brown (10.9 points per game).

They began the season ranked No. 13 in the country. The Spartans struggled early in the non-conference schedule, beginning 3–2 with losses to No. 10Duke in theACC-Big Ten Challenge[2] andGeorge Washington in theBB&T Classic.[2] MSU won their remaining non-conference games to finish the non-conference schedule with a record of 8–2 and ranked No. 20 in the country.

The Spartans cruised through the Big Ten, only losing three games, including a loss to No. 1Illinois[3] and finished second in conference to Illinois. MSU finished the regular season with a 13–3 conference record and 22–5 overall while being ranked No. 13 in the country. The Spartans lost in the quarterfinals in theBig Ten tournament toIowa.[4]

Michigan State received an at-large bid as a No. 5 seed in the Austin Regional of theNCAA tournament, their eighth straight appearance in the Tournament under Tom Izzo. After having exited in the First Round the prior year, the Spartans facedOld Dominion in the First Round in the dreaded 5 vs. 12 seed matchup. The Spartans trailed by five at half time, 42–37, but rallied to pull out the victory, 89–81.[5] In the Second Round, MSU faced No. 13 seedVermont. Led by Maurice Ager's 19 points, the Spartans won 72–61 to advance to the Sweet Sixteen for the sixth time in eight years.[5]

In the Sweet Sixteen, the Spartans beat No. 3-ranked and No. 1-seededDuke, which MSU had not defeated since 1958. After a first half which saw the score tied at 32, MSU pulled out a rugged victory to advance to the Elite Eight, winning 78–68 behind Paul Davis' 20 points and 12 rebounds.[6] The win marked Izzo's first and only win over Duke'sMike Krzyzewski[7] until the Elite Eight victory over #1 seeded Duke in 2019.

In the Elite Eight, MSU faced No. 7-ranked and No. 2-seededKentucky onEaster Sunday. The Spartans trailed 37–33 after the first half, but rallied to take the lead by eight with over five minutes remaining in regulation.[8] However, Kentucky rallied to within three with seconds remaining. After missing two attempts to tie the game, Patrick Sparks got a desperation shot off with less than second remaining. After bouncing four times on the rim, the ball went through the hoop for a basket, but officials had to review the replay to determine if his foot was on the three-point line.[8] After a five-minute review, Kentucky was given credit for the three to move the game to overtime.[8] Both teams only managed six points in the overtime period, scoring none in the final minute to force double overtime. On the strength of free throw shooting in the second overtime, the Spartans pulled out the win, 94–88.[9]

The win meant the Spartans advanced to their fourthFinal Four in seven years. With Illinois also advancing to the Final Four to faceLouisville, the Big Ten had two teams in the Final Four for the first time since2000 whenMichigan State defeatedWisconsin on the way to theNational Championship.

No. 2-ranked and No. 1-seededNorth Carolina loomed as the opponent for MSU in the Final Four. MSU took the halftime lead at 38–33, but North Carolina'sSean May scored 22 points and Spartans were outscored by 19 in the second half, losing 87–71.[10][11]

Roster

[edit]
2004–05 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team
PlayersCoaches
Pos.#NameHeightWeightYearPrevious schoolHometown
C0Idong Ibok6ft 10in(2.08 m)265lb(120 kg)FrMontverde AcademyMontverde, Florida
G3Shannon Brown6ft 3in(1.91 m)200lb(91 kg)SoProviso East H.S.Maywood, Illinois
G5Chris Hill6ft 3in(1.91 m)190lb(86 kg)SrLawrence North H.S.Indianapolis, Indiana
PG12Drew Neitzel6ft 0in(1.83 m)170lb(77 kg)FrWyoming Park H.S.Wyoming, Michigan
PG13Maurice Ager6ft 4in(1.93 m)180lb(82 kg)JrCrockett Vocational TechDetroit,Michigan
C14Goran Suton6ft 10in(2.08 m)246lb(112 kg)FrEverett H.S.Lansing, Michigan
F15Alan Anderson6ft 6in(1.98 m)220lb(100 kg)SrDe la Salle H.S.Minneapolis, Minnesota
G23Kelvin Torbert6ft 4in(1.93 m)215lb(98 kg)SrNorthwestern H.S.Flint, Michigan
G30Tim Bograkos6ft 2in(1.88 m)190lb(86 kg)RS SrCentral H.S.Flint, Michigan
C34Drew Naymick6ft 10in(2.08 m)235lb(107 kg)SoNorth Muskegon H.S.North Muskegon, Michigan
C40Paul Davis6ft 11in(2.11 m)240lb(109 kg)JrRochester H.S.Rochester Hills, Michigan
PF42Marquise Gray6ft 8in(2.03 m)220lb(100 kg)FrBeecher H.S.Flint, Michigan
F43Andy Harvey6ft 5in(1.96 m)200lb(91 kg)SrEscanaba Area Public H.S.Escanaba, Michigan
F50Delco Rowley6ft 8in(2.03 m)240lb(109 kg)RS SoArlington H.S.Indianapolis, Indiana
G35Joshua Dubbeld6ft 10in(2.08 m)190lb(86 kg)FrAlpena H.SFlint, Michigan
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • (W)Walk-on

Roster
Last update: 2010-11-07

Schedule and results

[edit]
Date
time, TV
Rank#Opponent#ResultRecordSite
city, state
Exhibition
Nov 19, 2004*
7:05 pm
No. 13Grand Valley StateW 77–62 
Breslin Center 
East Lansing, MI
Nov 10, 2004*
4:00 pm
No. 13Northern MichiganW 98–56 
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Regular season
Nov 19, 2004*
8:05 pm
No. 13Florida A&MW 104–72 1–0
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Nov 23, 2004*
8:05 pm
No. 10Green BayW 104–46 2–0
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Nov 27, 2004*
12:05 pm
No. 10Nicholls StateW 102–52 3–0
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Nov 30, 2004*
9:00 pm
No. 10at No. 9 Duke
Big Ten - ACC Challenge
L 74–81 3–1
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
Dec 4, 2004*
3:30 pm
No. 11George Washington
BB&T Classic semifinals
L 83–96 3–2
MCI Center (13,104)
Washington, DC
Dec 5, 2004*
12:30 pm
No. 11vs. George Mason
BB&T Classic third place game
W 66–60 4–2
MCI Center 
Washington, DC
Dec 11, 2004*
3:50 pm
No. 20vs. Stanford
Spartan Clash
W 78–53 5–2
The Palace of Auburn Hills (20,067)
Auburn Hills, MI
Dec 18, 2004*
No. 21Delaware StateW 63–45 6–2
Breslin Center 
East Lansing, MI
Dec 21, 2004*
9:00 pm
No. 23UCLAW 76–64 7–2
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Dec 29, 2004*
7:00 pm
No. 23North Carolina-AshevilleW 98–63 8–2
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Jan 5, 2005
7:00 pm
No. 20Penn StateW 84–58 9–2
(1–0)
Bryce Jordan Center (5,637)
State College, PA
Jan 8, 2005
2:07 pm
No. 20NorthwesternW 87–58 10–2
(2–0)
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Jan 16, 2005
12:30 pm
No. 15WisconsinL 59–62 10–3
(2–1)
Kohl Center (17,142)
Madison, WI
Jan 18, 2005
7:00 pm
No. 19PurdueW 71–64 11–3
(3–1)
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Jan 22, 2005
3:30 pm
No. 19MinnesotaW 69–55 12–3
(4–1)
Williams Arena (12,200)
Minneapolis, MN
Jan 28, 2005
7:00 pm
No. 15Michigan
Rivalry
W 64–53 13–3
(5–1)
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Jan 29, 2005*
8:00 pm
No. 15OaklandW 92–75 14–3
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Feb 1, 2005
7:00 pm
No. 12No. 1 IllinoisL 68–81 14–4
(5–2)
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Feb 5, 2005
1:32 pm
No. 12IowaW 75–64 15–4
(6–2)
Carver-Hawkeye Arena (15,500)
Iowa City, IA
Feb 9, 2005
8:00 pm
No. 13Ohio StateW 83–69 16–4
(7–2)
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Feb 12, 2005
4:00 pm
No. 13Michigan
Rivalry
W 64–59 17–4
(8–2)
Crisler Arena (13,751)
Ann Arbor, MI
Feb 16, 2005
7:00 pm
No. 13MinnesotaW 81–62 18–4
(9–2)
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Feb 19, 2005
12:00 pm
No. 11PurdueW 68–57 19–4
(10–2)
Mackey Arena (13,965)
West Lafayette, IN
Feb 24, 2005
7:00 pm
No. 10No. 20 WisconsinW 77–64 20–4
(11–2)
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Feb 27, 2005
12:05 pm
No. 10IndianaL 74–78 OT20–5
(11–3)
Assembly Hall (17,311)
Bloomington, IN
Mar 2, 2005
7:00 pm
No. 14NorthwesternW 69–58 21–5
(12–3)
Welsh-Ryan Arena (6,147)
Evanston, IL
Mar 5, 2005
8:00 pm
No. 14Penn StateW 90–64 22–5
(13–3)
Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Big Ten tournament
Mar 11, 2005
5:40 pm
(2)No. 15vs. (7) Iowa
quarterfinals
L 69–71 22–6
United Center 
Chicago, IL
NCAA tournament
Mar 18, 2005*
9:50 pm, CBS
(5 Austin)No. 15vs. (12 Austin) Old Dominion
First Round
W 89–81 23–6
DCU Center (13,009)
Worcester, MA
Mar 20, 2005*
2:45 pm, CBS
(5 Austin)No. 15vs. (13 Austin) Vermont
Second Round
W 72–61 24–6
DCU Center (13,008)
Worcester, MA
Mar 25, 2005*
6:10 pm, CBS
(5 Austin)No. 15vs. (1 Austin) No. 3 Duke
Sweet Sixteen
W 78–68 25–6
Frank Erwin Center 
Austin TX
Mar 27, 2005*
4:05 pm, CBS
(5 Austin)No. 15vs. (2 Austin) No. 7 Kentucky
Elite Eight
W 94–88 2OT26–6
Frank Erwin Center (16,239)
Austin, TX
Apr 2, 2005*
7:49 pm, CBS
(5 Austin)No. 15vs. (1 Syracuse) No. 2 North Carolina
Final Four
L 71–87 26–7
Edward Jones Dome (47,754)
St. Louis, MO
*Non-conference game.#Rankings fromAP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are inEastern Time[12].

Player statistics

[edit]
Individual player statistics (Final)
ScoringTotal FGs3-point FGsFree-ThrowsRebounds
PlayerGPPtsAvgFGFGAPct3FG3FAPctFTFTAPctTotAvgAStlBlk
Aerts, Jason870.9331.0000012.50091.1000
Ager, Maurice3346414.1150315.47653132.402111135.8221283.960228
Anderson, Alan3343713.5149268.5562565.385114130.8771845.656327
Bograkos, Tim33501.51939.487312.250914.643441.327192
Brown, Shannon3336110.9126282.4473194.3307898.8481043.257415
Davis, Paul3239212.3157290.54118.12577115.6702578.0503520
Hamo, Anthony1200.003.00001.00001.00010.1000
Harvey, Andy1340.317.14303.00023.66750.4001
Hill, Chris332918.899239.41461167.3653243.744601.8140441
Naymick, Drew29441.51730.567001016.625561.99616
Neitzel, Drew331153.543113.3811649.3271320.650240.797160
Rowley, Delco29521.81940.475001420.700652.2897
Tobert, Kelvin333149.5109214.5092984.3456781.827971.5502313
Trannon, Matt26592.32232.688001527.556873.311117
Legend
  GP Games played Avg Average per game
  FG Field-goals made FGA Field-goal attempts
 Blk Blocks Stl Steals  A Assists

Source[13]

Rankings

[edit]
See also:2004–05 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings
Ranking movement
Legend:██ Increase in ranking.██ Decrease in ranking. (RV) Received votes but unranked. (NR) Not ranked.
PollPreWk 2Wk 3Wk 4Wk 5Wk 6Wk 7Wk 8Wk 9Wk 10Wk 11Wk 12Wk 13Wk 14Wk 15Wk 16Wk 17Final
AP[14]1310112021232320151915121311101415N/A*
Coaches[15]10991618202019121613101210912105

*AP does not release post-NCAA tournament rankings

Awards and honors

[edit]
  • Alan Anderson – All Big Ten Second Team (Media), All Big Ten Third Team (Coaches)[16]
  • Alan Anderson – USBWA All-District Team[17]
  • Maurice Ager – All Big Ten Second Team (Coaches), All Big Ten Third Team (Media)[16]
  • Paul Davis – All Big Ten Third Team[16]
  • Shannon Brown – All Big Ten Honorable Mention (Coaches)[16]
  • Drew Neitzel – All Big Ten All-Freshman Team[16]

See also

[edit]

2004–05 Michigan State Spartans women's basketball team

References

[edit]
  1. ^"2005 Final AP Men's Basketball Poll". College Poll Archive. March 15, 2005.
  2. ^ab"No. 10 Duke Edges No. 11 Michigan St. 81–74 – Michigan State Official Athletic Site".www.msuspartans.com. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2016. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2016.
  3. ^"Spartans Fall to Top-Ranked Illini – Michigan State Official Athletic Site".www.msuspartans.com. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2016. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2016.
  4. ^"Michigan State Edged By Iowa, 71–69 – Michigan State Official Athletic Site".www.msuspartans.com. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2016. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2016.
  5. ^ab"Spartans avoid repeating '04 ouster, top ODU".ESPN.com. Archived fromthe original on July 20, 2017. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2016.
  6. ^"Michigan State takes down No. 1 seed Duke".ESPN.com. Archived fromthe original on October 1, 2017. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2016.
  7. ^"Matchup Finder | College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com".College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. RetrievedJanuary 19, 2017.
  8. ^abc"Michigan St. outlasts Kentucky in double-OT thriller".ESPN.com. Archived fromthe original on September 26, 2017. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2016.
  9. ^"Men's Basketball Makes Fourth Trip To Final Four In Last Seven Years – Michigan State Official Athletic Site".www.msuspartans.com. Archived fromthe original on February 16, 2016. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2016.
  10. ^"Michigan State Falls To North Carolina In Final Four Matchup – Michigan State Official Athletic Site".www.msuspartans.com. Archived fromthe original on February 16, 2016. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2016.
  11. ^"Oh Roy! North Carolina stops Michigan State".ESPN.com. Archived fromthe original on September 26, 2017. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2016.
  12. ^"2004-05 Michigan State Spartans Schedule and Results".
  13. ^"2004-05 Michigan State Spartans Roster and Stats".
  14. ^"2005 Michigan State Spartans".College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2016.
  15. ^"NCAA College Basketball Polls, College Basketball Rankings, NCAA Basketball Polls – ESPN".ESPN.com. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2016.
  16. ^abcde"Maurice Ager And Alan Anderson Named Second-Team All-Big Ten – Michigan State Official Athletic Site".www.msuspartans.com. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2016.
  17. ^"Alan Anderson Named To USBWA All-District Team – Michigan State Official Athletic Site".www.msuspartans.com. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2016.
Venues
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People
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NCAA national championships in bold; NCAA Final Four appearances in italics
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