TULSA WORLD HOMEPAGE | WIRELESS

Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on RSS
Sports Extra! Sports Extra Tulsa World Follow us on ...


SPORTS EXTRA BLOGS
    Sports Editor
Mike Strain

Sports Columnist
Dave Sittler

The Picker
Entertaining & Infuriating

LOCAL PROS

ALL SPORTS

PHOTOS & VIDEOS

OUTDOORS

FIND A STORY

EMAIL ALERTS

SOCIAL MEDIA

RSS FEEDS

CONTACT US
BUY PHOTOS & PAGES

TULSA WORLD

ADVERTISE ON SPORTS EXTRA

National Basketball Association
BOXSCORE | RECAP
Michigan St 79, Kansas 73
When: 10:00 PM ET, Tuesday, November 17, 2015
Where: United Center, Chicago, Illinois
Officials: # Tom Eades, # Terry Oglesby, # Mark Whitehead
Attendance: 21461

CHICAGO -- Michigan State got the big November win it was looking for on Tuesday in the Champions Classic against Kansas, and all it took was an unbelievable night from Denzel Valentine.

The senior guard scored a career-high 29, grabbed 11 rebounds and handed out 12 assists to become the fourth Michigan State player to record a triple-double as he led the 13th-ranked Spartans to a 79-73 victory over the No. 4 Jayhawks.

"Oh my God," said Valentine, who also had a career-high in assists. "I didn't know when it was gonna come and I didn't think I was gonna get it on this stage this early (in the season), but credit my teammates. They played a hell of a game."

Valentine's triple-double was the 13th in Michigan State history. Magic Johnson had eight, Draymond Green had three and Charlie Bell recorded one. The most recent was Green's in the NCAA Tournament against LIU-Brooklyn on March 16, 2012. He finished with 24 points, 12 rebounds and 10 assists.

"That's great company to be with Draymond, Magic and Charlie Bell," Valentine said. "I'm blessed."

Valentine and Johnson are the only players to ever record a triple-double against Kansas. Johnson scored 12 points, had 20 rebounds and added 11 assists against the Jayhawks on Feb. 4, 1979.

"He sucked it up," Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said. "He gives me credit but I give him credit. He's a lot like Draymond. There's a million things he's not good enough at but winning is something he's good enough at. Work ethic is something he's good enough at and basketball IQ is something he's good enough at and those things just won us a big game.

"That is good company, only four at Michigan State. That's good company and thank God he's mine."

It appeared as though Valentine's effort wasn't going to be enough.

Kansas was pulling away from the Spartans and opened an 11-point lead at 61-50 with 9:43 to play. But Michigan State sliced the margin to 62-58 with 8:02 to play on a Valentine fast-break layup and eventually took its first lead since 6-4 when Valentine hit a 3-pointer to put the Spartans ahead, 65-64, with 4:48 to play.

The back-and-forth battle with the tension of a tournament game in March saw Michigan State continued before freshman Matt McQuaid nailed a 3-pointer from the corner to put the Spartans up 75-71 with 53.1 seconds left.

Kansas cut the deficit to 75-73 with a pair of free throws from Wayne Selden Jr. with 30.5 seconds left. But Valentine hit a pair of free throws and freshman Deyonta Davis put the game away scoring the final two points on free throws.

"Give us credit, and yet, I know Kansas made mistakes they're not gonna make, either," Izzo said. "They're a very, very good team and well coached. All in all it was a big win for our program."

It was Michigan State's second straight win over Kansas (1-1) in the Champions Classic.

Senior Perry Ellis scored 21 to lead Kansas while Frank Mason III had 14 and Selden added 12 points.

Senior Bryn Forbes scored 13 for Michigan State (2-0) while senior Matt Costello added 10 points and nine rebounds.

"We didn't finish down the stretch and didn't guard like I thought we did in the first 30 minutes of the game and then Valentine just took over," Kansas coach Bill Self said. "They made a ton of plays late.

"A disappointing loss, obviously."

The first half had plenty of whistles as the teams combined to pick up 25 fouls -- 15 for the Spartans and 10 for the Jayhawks -- but it was Kansas that was able to take the early advantage.

After Michigan State took a 6-2 lead, Kansas went on an 11-0 run to go up 13-6. The Jayhawks eventually pushed the lead to 28-15 as they hit several contested shots. Ellis scored 14 before the break on 6-for-11 shooting, presenting matchup problems for the Spartans.

The Spartans worked their way back into the game, however, as Forbes scored five straight followed by a pair of free throws from Costello to cut the margin to 28-22. Kansas extended its lead to 39-29 with less than two minutes to play to halftime, but Michigan State whittled the margin to 41-35 at the break behind eight points, six rebounds and seven assists from Valentine.

"This just gives us a little momentum," Costello said. "We're on our way. Zel and I have a goal of 33 wins and we got the first two to be the winningest class in Michigan State history. We got the win in the big game."

NOTES: Michigan State improved to 3-2 in the Champions Class with two wins over Kansas and one over Kentucky. Kansas fell to 1-4, with the lone victory over Duke. ... Michigan State had beaten Kansas three straight meetings until the Jayhawks beat the Spartans in the championship of last season's Orlando Classic, 61-56. ... Michigan State played without junior C Gavin Schilling (turf toe) and sophomore F Marvin Clark (foot), while Kansas was still without freshman F Cheick Diallo, who hasn't been cleared by the NCAA.
Top Game Performances
 
Kansas   Michigan St
Perry Ellis 21 Scoring Denzel Valentine 29
Devonte' Graham 4 Assists Denzel Valentine 12
Landen Lucas 7 Rebounds Denzel Valentine 12
Brannen Greene 6 Free Throws Made Denzel Valentine 6
Frank Mason 3 Steals Javon Bess 1
Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk 1 Blocks Javon Bess 2
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Points FG% 3PM-3PA FTM-FTA Assists Rebounds Blocks Steals Turnovers
Kansas 73 34.8 3-15 24-30 12 30 1 7 5
Michigan St 79 46.7 9-21 14-16 20 37 8 1 15