Indiana’s NCAA tournament hopes hang by a thread: the Hoosiers are 0-3 in Quad 1 games and face No. 12 Michigan State on the road Tuesday. A win flips the narrative; a loss buries it.
Why Quad 1 Wins Are Currency in 2026
The selection committee no longer rewards “good” losses. Indiana’s 12-4 record looks glossy until you zoom in: three of those four defeats came against teams ranked in the top 25 of the NCAA’s NET—all classified as Quad 1 failures. With only four regular-season chances left against tier-one opposition, the math is brutal.
Indiana’s Identity Crisis in One Stat
First-year coach Darian DeVries built his Drake résumé on pace-and-space offense, and Indiana obliges by firing 25 threes a night. But the Hoosiers are misfiring at the worst time:
- Season: 36.3% on 10.6 made threes per game
- Last two games: 34.5% (19-of-55) in losses to Nebraska and Rutgers
The slump turned a 16-point second-half cushion against Nebraska into a 78-73 home loss—the first time Indiana has been beaten in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall all year.
Michigan State’s Hangover Is Real
Tom Izzo’s Spartans escaped Northwestern 76-66 on Thursday, but trailed by seven at halftime and looked every bit like a team playing its third game in seven days. Izzo gave his roster Friday off, admitting, “I’ve just got to do a better job of making sure my team is fresh.”
Freshness matters against an Indiana offense that ranks fifth nationally in three-point volume. The Spartans’ defensive blueprint will test whether their legs have returned after four days of rest.
The Matchup That Decides It
Lamar Wilkerson is the league’s most dangerous heat-check artist, averaging 20.3 ppg and burying 56 threes at a 40% clip. Michigan State will likely assign Jeremy Fears—the Big Ten’s leader in steal rate—to shadow him. If Wilkerson shakes free, Indiana’s offense flows; if Fears wins the duel, the Hoosiers stall.
Spartans’ Frontline Edge
MSU owns the glass. Jaxon Kohler (10.1 rpg) and Carson Cooper (7.3 rpg) combine for 17.4 boards, while Indiana’s rotation posts just 11.9 per game from its bigs. Second-chance points could swamp the Hoosiers if their cold shooting continues.
Historical Ghosts in Breslin
Indiana has won three of the last four meetings, including a 71-67 thriller last February that kept Izzo stuck on 662 Big Ten victories—one shy of Bob Knight’s record. Expect a juiced crowd eager to exorcise that demon and help Izzo finally etch his name atop the conference wins list.
Bracketology Snapshot
Joe Lunardi’s latest ESPN Bracketology slots Indiana as one of the “First Four Out.” A victory Tuesday would leapfrog the Hoosiers into the “Last Four In” tier, likely as a No. 11 seed. A loss keeps them on the outside looking in with only three Quad 1 chances left.
Prediction & Pressure Gauge
Indiana’s path is narrow but navigable. The Hoosiers are 4-1 in true road games this season and own the nation’s 14th-best offensive efficiency. If the threes fall at their normal 36% clip, they can out-score anyone. The problem: Michigan State is 11-1 at Breslin and fresh off a wake-up win. Expect a coin-flip final five minutes, with the team that makes the marginal hustle play—an offensive rebound, a 50-50 loose ball—surviving.
Final score call: Michigan State 74, Indiana 71. The Spartans’ frontline tips in the dagger put-back, and Izzo gets his record-breaking 663rd Big Ten victory—while IU’s Quad 1 ledger drops to a concerning 0-4.
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