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<UID>
0103170460
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
010317
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Saturday, March 17, 2001
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo  JULIAN H. GONZALEZ/Detroit Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


Michigan State's Mike Chappell, right, wrestles the ball from Alabama State's
Alvin Pettway in the first half.

Memphis may be the home of Elvis, but there's a new King in town this weekend.
The Michigan State Spartans will play in the second round about 4:45 p.m.
Sunday
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
MICHIGAN STATE 69, ALABAMA STATE 35
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 2001, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
UP ONLY FOUR POINTS AT THE HALF, SPARTANS EXPLODE INTO SECOND ROUND
GREEN DAY
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

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<CORRECTION>

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MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- The uniforms will not do it. No one is impressed. The Michigan State Spartans
may be defending national champions, but no opponent is going to fall over at
the sight of them.

The names will not do it. No one is impressed. Never mind that Charlie Bell,
Andre Hutson and Jason Richardson were part of a title run last year. No
opponent will quake in its boots, swallow air, go all goose-bumpy when they
take the floor.

The clippings will not do it. Nor will the team photos, the banner, the sight
of Tom Izzo or the gleam of a championship ring. No one is impressed. Last
year is last year, and nobody even remembers last week in this tournament, let
alone 12 months ago.

If Michigan State wants to go back-to-back, the Spartans will have to go
toe-to-toe. With everybody -- the elite teams, the great teams, even the
not-so-great teams, like the one they faced Friday night, the one they barely
held off in the first half, and had to dig down to dispose of in the second
half.

"They were not afraid of us, you gotta give them that," said coach Tom Izzo,
after his No. 1-seeded Spartans advanced to the second round of the NCAA
tournament with a 69-35 victory over 16th-seeded Alabama State. "I think
that's the way it's gonna be in college basketball. Everybody has good players
now. Nobody is scared."

And, at least at the start, nobody will roll over. Nobody will say, "Ohmigod,
these are the SPARTANS, they won it all last year, we can't play with THEM!"

If MSU doubted that before the jump ball Friday night, it realized it quickly
enough.

Who were these guys who were zoning them like shadows, ripping rebounds away,
pinning their lay-ups to the board, getting awkward shots to drop? The Alabama
State Hornets? A team from the -- gulp -- SWAC? A team that had never been in
the NCAA tournament before?

"I think they were watching TV and seeing all the upsets on Thursday," Bell
would later say. "I think they figured, 'If other teams can do it, why not
us?' "

Of course, a No. 16 seed has never beaten a No. 1 seed.

Yet.



Where's the crowd?

The Spartans may be holding the crown, but there was nothing regal about
Friday night. Truth is, it was more like a tomb, and I'm just talking
construction. The arena was called the Pyramid -- as in the Egyptian home for
the dead -- rising in the middle of Memphis because, if I am to believe my cab
driver, "Egypt is on the Nile and we're on the Mississippi."

Oooooo-kee-dokey.

Anyhow, here was a largely empty -- pyramid-shaped -- arena, where the bands
made far more noise than the crowd. If the Spartans were expecting a sellout
due to, if nothing else, curiosity ("Come see the defending champs!"), they
were mistaken.

It was, to quote John Lennon, just like starting over.

"I'm sure a lot of people were watching on TV," Bell said, giving new meaning
to the word "spin."

Of course, in the first half, the Spartans wished no one were watching. MSU
was listless and listing. Aloysius Anagonye had his first lay-up attempt
pinned to the board by a Hornet. Richardson dribbled off his foot on a fast
break. David Thomas missed a lay-up after a lob. Marcus Taylor alley-ooped to
Hutson but the ball smacked off the backboard.

Meanwhile, Alabama State, playing as if this were just another five-on-five
back at the gym, grabbed a few rebounds, blocked a few shots, stole a few
passes, and made just enough baskets to hang around.

A late, four point-play by the Hornets dropped the halftime score to MSU 29,
ASU 25.

Good-bye, sweet.

Hello, sweat.



What's ahead?

Fortunately, for MSU, a game is 40 minutes long. And the Spartans cranked up
the second half with the kind of speed and dominance they will need every
night. Credit Richardson, the sleek sophomore, for gunning the engine. He came
flying in to slam home a rebound. He made a pretty bounce feed to Hutson. He
hit several jumpers with photo form. And he sank so many reverse lay-ups, I
forgot which basket the Spartans were facing.

"Sometimes," he said, "I try to make 'energy plays,' plays that will get the
team up. But tonight it was more like the chances were just there for me."

And gradually they were there for his teammates, too. They tightened the
defense, and a four-point halftime lead quickly went beyond 10, then beyond
20, then beyond 30.

Alabama State cracked, going nearly 14 minutes without a point. The challenge
had been met. By the end, it was as easy as Hutson rebounding with one hand
and dropping the ball softly back in, as if returning a fallen bird to the
nest.

Final score: Michigan State 69, Alabama State 35.

Blowout? In the end, yes. But know this: The Spartans had to rev it up to win
it, and they might as well hide their uniforms, rings, news clippings and
scrapbooks the rest of the way. If a Southwestern Athletic Conference team
that has never been to the Big Dance before refuses to even blink at the
oncoming headlights of the national champs, then don't expect anyone else to
move over.

One victory, five to go. None will be pushovers. But then, the Spartans should
feel that in the air down here.

After all, this is the home of Elvis, and life is never easy for the king.



Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Catch "Albom in
the Afternoon" 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM (760) and simulcast on MSNBC 3-5
p.m.
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