No. 1 Michigan State gets beat up and beat by UNC

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EAST LANSING, Mich. — Michigan State got manhandled and outhustled by North Carolina.And, the
Spartans’ school-record, three-week run as the No. 1 team in The Associated Press college basketball
poll ended with a thud.The Tar Heels had five scorers in double figures and more players going after
loose balls and rebounds in a 79-65 win over Michigan State on its home court Wednesday night.“We looked
like a softer team,” Spartans coach Tom Izzo said. “That solely falls on me, nobody else.”Despite
playing in a highly anticipated game in front of fired-up fans, Michigan State (7-1) looked listless
early and couldn’t recover.The Tar Heels scored the first six points of the game and led 16-4 while
holding the Spartans to 1-for-7 shooting with four turnovers.“They came out and hit us in the mouth
first,” Michigan State guard Gary Harris said. “We never even got the lead. They came in with a lot of
energy and got the win.”The Spartans started the season ranked No. 2 and moved to the top spot by
beating then-No. 1 Kentucky, becoming just the third top-ranked team in program history. They had one
lackluster win over Columbia after beating the Wildcats, then were relatively impressive in the previous
five games.Behind the scenes, though, Izzo was worried that his team wouldn’t fare well against North
Carolina. Harris has been slowed by an ankle injury, Adreian Payne is playing with a foot ailment and
Matt Costello might have mononucleosis.“We played how we practiced,” Izzo said.The Tar Heels, meanwhile,
were forced to watch more film from their loss to UAB — which followed a win over then-No. 3 Louisville
— the night before they played at Michigan State because coach Roy Williams still had some teaching
points he wanted to make.“I told them at that point, the UAB game was over,” Williams said.North
Carolina (5-2) made the most of its opportunity to flash its potential, dominating a team that hadn’t
lost at home to an unranked, nonconference opponent for more than a decade.“They came off a loss and
they looked hungrier,” Izzo said. “We came off all the hype and we looked not as hungry.”Kennedy Meeks
scored 15 points, Brice Johnson had 14 off the bench, Marcus Paige and Nate Britt added 13 apiece while
J.P. Tokoto had 12 points and a career-high 10 rebounds for the Tar Heels.“I truly believe after the
Louisville win, our mentality after that was, ‘Birmingham is just going to be an automatic win. Just
because we’re North Carolina,”’ Tokoto said. “We can’t have that mentality — and kind of learned that
Sunday night.“We came here, were ready to play, intensity level was up, and we got results.”And, the
Spartans weren’t ready and didn’t respond later in the game when it was clear they had to play with more
energy and passion to compete.“One of the more disappointing performances of my career here,” Izzo said.
“From the jump ball, they kind of took it to us.”The Tar Heels took control from the start, never
trailed and used a 12-1 run to take a 65-52 lead with 6:02 left.“Michigan State did not want it that
much more than we did,” North Carolina coach Roy Williams said.Izzo agreed.“We looked soft,” he
lamented.North Carolina outrebounded the Spartans by 11, leading to 19 second-chance points. The Tar
Heels turned 14 of Michigan State’s turnovers into 19 points and held the Spartans to 36 percent
shooting.“We’re as happy as we can possibly be — 179 degrees away from where we were after the UAB
game,” Williams said.“You can’t tell in college basketball what’s going to happen,” Williams said. “At
one point, we had three freshmen, a sophomore and a junior on the court.”Harris had 17 points and Keith
Appling scored 13, but both Michigan State guards missed 10 of 15 shots. Payne had 16 points and eight
rebounds for the Spartans, whose last loss at home against an unranked nonconference team was Toledo on
Dec. 30, 2002.The Tar Heels beat a No. 1 team for the first time since March 4, 2006, at Duke, and they
have a nation-high 13 wins over top-ranked teams. They’ve won seven straight against the Spartans,
including in the 2009 NCAA final.“Honestly, I think this is going to be good for us,” Michigan State
center Matt Costello said. “We came in with high expectations of doing well. And we’ve got the guys to
do it.”

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