Texas Tech beats Michigan State in Final Four

Texas Tech guard Kyler Edwards celebrates during the second half of the Red Raiders' Final Four matchup with Michigan State on Saturday night in Minneapolis.
Texas Tech guard Kyler Edwards celebrates during the second half of the Red Raiders' Final Four matchup with Michigan State on Saturday night in Minneapolis.

MINNEAPOLIS - For those who thought the Texas Tech men's basketball team played only defense, it's time to meet Matt Mooney.

While the Red Raiders were locking down Michigan State on one end, the graduate transfer shooting guard was raining in 3s on the other, lifting Tech one win away from a title with a 61-51 victory over the Spartans on Saturday night in the Final Four.

Mooney matched his season-high with 22 points, including three 3-pointers over a span of three minutes to give Tech a 13-point lead midway through the second half.

With the kind of defense Texas Tech plays, it was too much to overcome, and now the Red Raiders are getting ready for another defensive battle, in a Monday final against Virginia and its vaunted pack line defense. The Cavaliers are a slight 1-point favorite, and the over/under was at 117 and falling late Saturday night.

Tech wins by doing just enough on the offensive end. On this night, Mooney did the major damage.

"He's obviously very, very talented, but the thing that impressed me tonight was just his courage, wanting to make those big plays in big moment," Tech coach Chris Beard said.

Mooney's first two shots in the stretch capped a 5-for-5 hot streak by Tech (31-6) that stood as the game's only true blast of offense. His third 3 gave Texas Tech a 48-35 lead with 9:38 left.

Before and after that, it was all about defense - a game filled with air balls, blocked shots and clogged-up passing lanes. At one point, over a two minute stretch late in the first half, eight shots went up. Six of them didn't touch the rim.

It was, to put it Tech's way, perfectly ugly.

"It's like they never make mistakes," Michigan State forward Kenny Goins said. "They got us kind of caught in that trap today."

Michigan State (32-7) leaves coach Tom Izzo's eighth Final Four with its seventh loss - the 2000 title is still the only time the Spartans have taken it all the way under their veteran coach.

They did not go away easily.

After Mooney put them down by a baker's dozen, the Spartans trimmed it to 3. Matt McQuaid had a wide-open look from the corner - one of the very few on this night - that would have tied it with 1:50 left, but the ball rimmed out and the Red Raiders pulled away.

Jarrett Culver (10 points, five boards) finished it off. He made one free throw on the next trip down, then Norense Odiase swiped the ball from Michigan State's Xavier Tillman - one of Tech's four steals on the night - and the Red Raiders worked the ball to Culver, who made his only 3 to push the lead to 58-51 and start the celebration.

Culver shot 0-for-6 in the first half, and he scored six of his 10 points over the last 2:30.

"When you've got a whole team that trusts you on the court, you keep shooting with confidence," he said.

Meanwhile, a defense that led the nation in efficiency and held teams to less than 37 percent shooting this season - second-best in the county - held Michigan State to 31.9 percent from the floor.

Most tellingly, it stymied Big Ten player of the year Cassius Winston. Yes, Winston led the Spartans with 16 points, but it came on 4-for-16 shooting, and the point guard was held scoreless in second half for more than 10 minutes - not perking up until after Mooney had given the Red Raiders their big cushion.

Mooney is the fifth-year senior who made his way to Tech after graduating from South Dakota - the school he transferred to after a rough year at Air Force.

Most of these Red Raiders have a story like that.

Beard is on his 12th stop in a travelogue of a career - and he's been recruiting grinders like him to help him take this most unexpected ride.

Culver wasn't in the top 300 among high school recruits, and chose his hometown college over a few other places. He kept battling despite the rough start, and Tech overcame his cold first half to head to the locker room leading by the not-so-scintillating score of 23-21. It was the lowest scoring first half at the Final Four since the Spartans took a 19-17 lead over Wisconsin in a 2000 slugfest.

"We threw a lot of punches tonight," Beard said. "We tried a lot of things on defense, and fortunately most of them worked."

Culver had one block and rim protector Tariq Owens, also a grad transfer, had three more before leaving late in the second half with a leg injury.

Owens came jogging back in toward the end to the cheers of the Tech crowd, which included alum Patrick Mahomes, the high-flying quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs.

"Pretty cool to have the MVP of the NFL on our side, cheering for us," Mooney said.

Turns out, the quarterback isn't the only Red Raider who can light up that scoreboard.

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