One night after silencing Mackey Arena, Michigan State’s sophomore duo flipped the script in Bloomington—combining for 42 points, 22 rebounds and 9 assists—to hand Indiana its fourth straight loss and stamp the Spartans as the Big Ten’s hottest March nightmare.
Instant Context: Why This Was More Than a Routine Road Win
Michigan State’s 77-64 conquest of Indiana was the rare regular-season victory that doubles as a March seeding swing and a psychological hammer. The Spartans erased a decade-long bugaboo—only their second win in Bloomington since 2018—while completing a 48-hour road sweep of the state’s two marquee programs.
Tom Izzo’s crew now sits at 24-5 overall, 14-4 in the Big Ten, within striking distance of the league crown and a protected NCAA tournament seed. The win also marked Izzo’s first trip back to Assembly Hall since he bypassed Bob Knight for the conference’s all-time wins record last February, a milestone that makes every subsequent victory here feel like a ceremonial lap.
The Numbers That Jump Off the Box Score
- Jaxon Kohler: 21 pts (season-high), 13 reb, 2 blk, 12th double-double of the year
- Jeremy Fears Jr.: 21 pts, 9 ast, 3 stl, zero turnovers in 33 minutes
- Kur Teng: career-best 18 pts, 6-8 from deep—half of MSU’s 12 threes
- Team shooting: 48% FG, 44% 3PT, 17 assists on 27 made baskets
- Indiana’s bench: 0 points—first time in Big Ten play this season
How the Game Flipped in Four Minutes
Indiana trimmed a 14-point deficit to six on Lamar Wilkerson’s contested three with 13:41 left. Assembly Hall shook. Izzo called a quick 30-second timeout. Out of the break, Fears immediately found Teng for a rhythm three, Kohler followed with a seal-and-score on the block, and MSU ripped off a 10-3 burst that ballooned the lead back to 12. The building went silent; the Hoosiers never threatened again.
Inside the Match-Ups: What IU Couldn’t Solve
Indiana entered with the Big Ten’s fourth-ranked defense inside the arc, holding foes to 45.2% on 2-pointers. Kohler shredded that number, shooting 9-of-12 on post-ups, slip screens and short rolls. When IU doubled, Fears sliced the weak side for floaters or dropped pocket passes to cutters. When IU stayed single, Kohler scored or drew fouls—MSU was in the bonus with 11:24 left in the second half.
Offensively, the Hoosiers relied on isolation heavy sets: 39 of 64 points came from Wilkerson and Tucker DeVries. That duo shot 14-of-29; the rest of the roster managed 9-of-27. Zero bench production meant Mike Woodson had no counter when MSU’s 2-3 zone briefly appeared late, forcing two rushed threes and a shot-clock violation.
Bracket Fallout: Where Both Teams Stand
Michigan State’s résumé now features four Quad 1 road victories and a NET hovering around top-10. Bracketologists bumped the Spartans to the 3-seed line in early Sunday evening updates. A win Thursday over Rutgers in the Breslin Center finale would clinch at least a share of the Big Ten title if Purdue stubs its toe once more.
Indiana, meanwhile, dropped to 17-12 overall, 8-10 in league play and squarely onto the NCAA bubble. The Hoosiers own three Quad 1 wins but also three Quad 3 losses. Their remaining slate—home vs. Minnesota, road at Michigan—will decide whether Selection Sunday brings relief or an NIT invite.
Scout’s Lens: Kohler’s March Transformation
Over his last eight games, Kohler is averaging 17.2 points and 11.1 rebounds while shooting 59%. More telling: he’s cut his turnover rate by 27% since early February, a direct result of quicker decision-making against double-teams. NBA scouts in Indianapolis noted his improved willingness to spray skip passes to weak-side shooters—exactly the swing skill that could elevate him from fringe draft pick to guaranteed two-way contract.
Fan Thread: Four Straight in March? Very Izzo
Michigan State has now won four consecutive games—three by double digits—entering the season’s final week. Under Izzo, MSU is 42-9 in games played March 1 or later, the best post-March 1 winning percentage among high-major programs dating back to 1998. The locker-room mantra this week: “Survive February, own March.” Sunday’s win suggests the Spartans are ahead of schedule.
What’s Next
- Michigan State hosts Rutgers (14-14, 6-12) on Thursday in East Lansing. A victory locks up no worse than the No. 2 seed in the Big Ten tournament and keeps pressure on Purdue for the outright crown.
- Indiana welcomes Minnesota (15-13, 7-11) on Wednesday in a must-win for fading tourney hopes. After that, a meat-grinder trip to Ann Arbor awaits, where the Hoosiers have lost six straight.
Keep tabs on fastest, most authoritative postgame analysis—only at onlytrustedinfo.com—as the Big Ten’s stretch run transforms into bracket-shaping chaos.