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1997–98 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team


1997–98 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball
Big Ten Conference
No. 10
No. 16
22–8 (13–3 Big Ten)
Tom Izzo (3rd season)
Tom Crean (3rd season)
Stan Heath (2nd season)
Mike Garland (2nd season)
Antonio Smith
Mateen Cleaves
Breslin Center

The 1997–98 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team represented Michigan State University in the 1997–98 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played their home games at Breslin Center in East Lansing, Michigan as members of the Big Ten Conference. They were coached by third-year head coach, Tom Izzo. The Spartans finished the season 22–8, 13–3 in Big Ten play to win a share the regular season regular season championship. As the No. 1 seed in the inaugural Big Ten tournament, they were upset by Minnesota in the quarterfinals. MSU received a bid to the NCAA tournament as the No. 4 seed in the East region, marking the school's first appearance in the Tournament since 1995 and first under Izzo. They defeated Eastern Michigan in the first round which marked their first tournament win since 1994. They then defeated Princeton to advance to the Sweet Sixteen for the first time since 1990. There they lost to No. 1-ranked North Carolina.

The Spartans finished the 1996–97 season 17–12, 9–9 in Big Ten play to finish in a three-way tie for sixth place. Michigan State received an invitation to the NIT and beat George Washington in the first round. In the second round, they lost to Florida State.

The Spartans lost Jon Garavaglia (10.4 points and 5.9 rebounds per game) and Ray Weathers (13.6 points per game) to graduation following the season.

The Spartans began the season looking for their first trip to the NCAA tournament since 1995. They were led by sophomore Mateen Cleaves (16.1 points and 7.2 assists per game) and junior Jason Klein (11.2 points per game). This season marked the first year for all four of MSU's "Flintstones", Cleaves (sophomore), Charlie Bell (freshman), Antonio Smith (junior), and Morris Peterson (sophomore), who would end their careers with a National Championship in 2000.

The Spartans played one ranked team in the non-conference portion of the season, No. 7 Temple, and lost 56–54. MSU also suffered surprising losses to UIC and Detroit in non-conference. MSU finished the non-conference schedule at 7–3.

The Spartans opened the Big Ten season with a win against No. 4 Purdue. Following a loss at No. 17 Michigan, the Spartans won their next eight conference games before losing at eventual Big Ten co-champion, Illinois. In January, MSU entered the AP and Coaches rankings for the first time since the end of the 1994–95 season. The Spartans finished in a tie for the conference championship, their first since 1990, with a record of 13–3 in conference play. The Spartans earned the No. 1 seed in the inaugural Big Ten tournament, but lost their first game in the quarterfinals to Minnesota.

The Spartans received an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament as a No. 4 seed in the East Region, their first trip to the Tournament since 1995. MSU advanced to their first Sweet Sixteen since 1990 by beating Eastern Michigan and No. 8 Princeton. The Spartans were eliminated from the tournament by No. 1 North Carolina in the Sweet Sixteen.

As of 2025, no MSU team has failed to make the NCAA tournament, a streak which began with the 1997–98 team.

1997–98 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team
14Charlie BellGFR6–39.24.41.3
20Steve CherryGFR6–60.20.40.0
12Mateen CleavesGSO6–216.12.57.2
30Doug DavisGFR6–32.10.80.7
43A. J. GrangerFSO6–92.61.80.5
34Andre HutsonFFR6–87.55.20.8
44Jason KleinG/FJR6–711.23.71.3
54Ken MillerCFR6–100.70.80.2
42Morris PetersonFSO6–68.03.50.9
13Antonio SmithFJR6–87.98.71.1
11David ThomasFSO6–73.53.80.8
55Dujuan WileyCSR6–96.33.40.3

Source

Datetime, TVRank#Opponent#ResultRecordSite city, state
November 11, 1997*7:30 pmRussia AquariusW 84–65Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
November 17, 1997*7:30 pmEast Tennessee StateW 82–591–0Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
November 21, 1997*9:00 pm, ESPN Plusat Illinois–ChicagoL 58–701–1UIC Pavilion Chicago, IL
November 28, 1997*6:00 pmCentral Michigan Coca Cola Spartan Classic semifinalsW 89–612–1Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
November 29, 1997*8:00 pmGonzaga Coca Cola Spartan Classic championshipW 70–683–1Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
December 4, 1997*7:30 pmNo. 20 TempleL 54–563–2Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
December 6, 1997*7:30 pmat Cleveland StateW 85–544–2Wolstein Center Cleveland, OH
December 13, 1997*7:00 pm, ESPN PlusDetroit MercyL 65–684–3Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
December 17, 1997*7:30 pmWright StateW 95–525–3Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
December 20, 1997*5:00 pm, ESPNat South FloridaW 68–536–3USF Sun Dome Tampa, FL
December 27, 1997*2:00 pmEastern IllinoisW 81–697–3Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
December 30, 19975:00 pm, ESPN Plusat No. 5 PurdueW 74–578–3(1–0)Mackey Arena West Lafayette, IN
January 8, 19987:30 pm, ESPNWisconsinW 63–409–3(2–0)Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
January 10, 19982:30 pm, ESPN Plus Regionalat No. 17 Michigan RivalryL 69–799–4(2–1)Crisler Center Ann Arbor, MI
January 14, 19988:00 pm, ESPN Plusat MinnesotaW 74–6010–4(3–1)Williams Arena Minneapolis, MN
January 17, 199812:15 pm, ESPN Plus RegionalIllinoisW 68–6411–4(4–1)Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
January 21, 19988:00 pm, ESPN Plusat No. 10 IowaW 78–5712–4(5–1)Carver–Hawkeye Arena Iowa City, IA
January 24, 199812:15 pm, ESPN Plus RegionalPenn StateW 71–5913–4(6–1)Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
Jan 28, 19988:00 pm, ESPN PlusNo. 22No. 25 IndianaW 84–6614–4(7–1)Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
January 31, 19988:00 pm, ESPN PlusNo. 22at NorthwesternW 72–66 OT14–4(8–1)Welsh-Ryan Arena Evanston, IL
February 4, 19988:00 pm, ESPN PlusNo. 16at Ohio StateW 84–5816–4(9–1)St. John Arena Columbus, OH
February 7, 199812:00 pm, ESPN Plus RegionalNo. 16No. 24 IowaW 75–6417–4(10–1)Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
February 12, 19988:00 pm, ESPN PlusNo. 13at IllinoisL 63–8417–5(10–2)Assembly Hall Champaign, IL
February 14, 19988:00 pm, ESPN PlusNo. 10MinnesotaW 71–5918–5(11–2)Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
February 17, 19987:30 pm, ESPNNo. 14No. 22 Michigan RivalryW 80-7519–5(12–2)Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
February 21, 19982:30 pm, ESPN Plus RegionalNo. 14at WisconsinW 56–4720–5(13–2)Kohl Center Madison, WI
March 1, 19982:00 pm, CBSNo. 10No. 11 PurdueL 96–99 OT20–6(13–3)Breslin Center East Lansing, MI
March 6, 1998(1) No. 12vs. (8) Minnesota quarterfinalsL 73–7620–7United Center Chicago, IL
March 12, 1998*CBS(4 E) No. 16vs. (13 E) Eastern Michigan First RoundW 83–7121–7Hartford Civic Center Hartford, CT
March 14, 1998*CBS(4 E) No. 16vs. (5 E) No. 8 Princeton Second RoundW 63–5622–7Hartford Civic Center Hartford, CT
March 19, 1998*CBS(4 E) No. 16vs. (1 E) No. 1 North Carolina Sweet SixteenL 58–7322–8Greensboro Coliseum Greensboro, NC
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll, (#) denotes seed within region. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. All times are in Eastern Time
Source.

Source.

  • Big Ten Player of the Year

  • All-American Second Team

  • All-Big Ten First Team

  • AP Basketball Coach of the Year

  • Henry Iba National Coach of the Year

  • Basketball News' National Coach of the Year

  • Big Ten Coach of the Year (Media and Coaches)

  • All-Big Ten Third Team

  • All-Big Ten Honorable Mention

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