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Katz: Why these four?

Badgers face familiar foe

Cleaves, Izzo have bond that runs deep

Coach's Edge: Wisconsin playbook

Coach's Edge: Michigan State playbook


Familiarity breeds upsets -- but not this time


The question came quickly because, well, who would know better?

Gene Keady, 63 and in his 20th season coaching Purdue basketball, had just been denied another chance at reaching his first Final Four. And all anyone at the West Regional final in Albuquerque last week wanted to know is this:

Mateen Cleaves
Mateen Cleaves is quite familiar with Wisconsin's slow-down style.

Can Wisconsin, the program that has encouraged every two-handed chest pass rom Milwaukee to Middleton and every contested shot from Madison to Monona, win the national championship?

"Of course," said Keady. "You have to understand how difficult they can make it on you. When it gets down to those four teams, there are no guarantees. It's very hard to crack that defense. You'd better be ready for them, or believe me, they'll beat anyone.

"If you're gonna face them for the first time, brother, you're gonna have your hands full."

Michigan State, of course, isn't naive to Wisconsin's ways.

Michigan State is a whole different animal.

Keady was speaking before it had been decided the Badgers would face the Spartans in one national semifinal on Saturday in Indianapolis. It will be the fourth time the teams have met this year. Michigan State is three-and-oh.

Who has the advantage? Opinions differ.

This is still a game that demands you make shots, however few in Wisconsin's case, to earn success. MSU won the three games (two in Big Ten Conference play and one in the league's post-season tournament) by an average of 10.3 points.

More telling is Wisconsin's point totals: 44, 46 and 54.

"A lot is made about our defense, but what gets overlooked is the fact Michigan State is one of the best defensive teams in the country," said Wisconsin coach Dick Bennett. "They're very hard to score against and we obviously haven't found many ways."

High praise this, considering the Badgers defensively are more committed than a group of Navy SEALS in search of a fallen comrade. Wisconsin is the team that held LSU to 14 first-half points. The Detroit Tigers score that many runs in an inning sometimes.

And yet the Spartans can match such intensity. Scary.

Wisconsin thrives on making more athletic teams (which means anyone from your son's pee-wee squad to the Lakers) adhere to its plodding ways, tricking them into a maze of deliberation. But the Spartans in handling Wisconsin this season avoided the self-destructive path of tournament teams like Fresno State, Arizona, LSU and Purdue.

  We know what Michigan State does and they know what we do. Any edge you had earlier in the tournament is gone.  ”
—  Wisconsin guard Jon Bryant

The cliché suggests it is harder to beat someone a second or third time in one season, so you figure a fourth might flirt with impossible. But the Spartans, unlike most who have stood across from the Badgers this month, know enough not to swallow the bait.

Tom Izzo's team won't rush shots. It won't force passes. It won't panic.

Probably.

"It's no different than playing Purdue in the Elite Eight," said Wisconsin guard Jon Bryant. "That was our fourth time playing them. There are no secrets. We know what Michigan State does and they know what we do. Any edge you had earlier in the tournament is gone.

But there has to be an edge. There always is.

Fact: Matchups don't favor Wisconsin at any turn. The Spartans can play slow and win, something they did in each of the previous three meetings. Michigan State shot just 34 percent in Madison and still won by 17.

The difference is Mateen Cleaves.

"A nightmare for us," said Bennett.

Both point guards rank among the Big Ten's all-time leaders in steals, but it is Michigan State's star (and not Wisconsin's Mike Kelley) who has been the driving force when these two meet. Cleaves in the three games averaged 11 points and six assists.

"We never really have been able to solve all that he does," said Bennett. "We haven't been able to stop him from controlling tempo."

Which isn't good for Wisconsin, because if its hand isn't planted firmly on a game's pace, what card can it really play to compete?

Keady is correct. Wisconsin, the team that lost to South Florida and Northern Illinois and finished sixth in its conference and is trying to culminate one of the best stories college ball has witnessed in years, can win the national championship. It can stand alone Monday evening in the RCA Dome, cut strands of twine hanging from their fingertips.

It would be much easier, though, if the guys in green didn't know the Badgers so well.

Ed Graney of the San Diego Union-Tribune is a regular contributor to ESPN.com.
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