Bridges scores 21 as No. 3 Michigan State beats Rutgers

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Michigan State defeats Rutgers by 10

Miles Bridges and Jaren Jackson Jr. shine, dropping a combined 32 points, eight blocks and eight rebounds to lead the Spartans past the Scarlet Knights 62-52.


PISCATAWAY, N.J. -- After blowing out its last six opponents, including highly regarded North Carolina and Notre Dame, No. 3 Michigan State was due for one of those off nights.

It almost cost them against Rutgers.

Miles Bridges scored 21 points and the Spartans (8-1, 2-0 Big Ten) overcame their worst offensive performance of the season with a 62-52 victory over the surprising Scarlet Knights (6-3, 0-2) on Tuesday night.

"I don't know how to say this to anybody, but we're not perfect," Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said. "We're not as good as you guys write. We're a good basketball team that has a chance to be a great one."

Against Rutgers, the Spartans had 15 turnovers, gave up 20 offensive rebounds and they played like a team that was starting four sophomores and a freshman, Jaren Jackson Jr. who scored all 11 of his points in the second half and had eight of the Spartans' season-high 13 blocks. Joshua Langford added 15 points on 6-of-20 shooting from the field.

"Don't let it eat you alive," Izzo added. "Don't let it frustrate you and don't read into things. We have a long way to go."

Rutgers made Michigan State work for this one, holding the Spartans to season lows in points and shooting percentage (38.6). The previous low was 63 points and 40 percent shooting against North Carolina.

What Michigan State did well was play defense. It came into the game with the nation's best field goal defense (34.2) and it held the Scarlet Knights to 25.8 percent shooting from the field (17 of 66).

"They missed some shots, but boy you can build a lot on a good defense," Izzo said. "You know it can rescue you a lot of times. Pick a pro sport. Pick a different sport, from good pitching to good goaltending to good defense like the Warriors. We textbook their offense. It doesn't change. Championships are won by good defense 99 percent of the time."

Deshawn Freeman had 13 points and Geo Baker and Eugene Omoruyi added 11 apiece for Rutgers, which lost its third straight.

"I hate to lose and I think everyone here came here to beat teams like that," Baker said. "We were really close. Like Coach (Steve Pikiell) said, there's a bunch of little things that if we can improve, we can win that game."

Trailing 45-43 with roughly 8 minutes to play, Mike Williams missed a 3-point attempt that could have given the Scarlet Knights the lead.

Jackson then scored inside and added two free throws to ignite an 8-3 run. Bridges set up one of Cassius Winston's two late 3-pointers and Jackson hit a free-throw to push the advantage to 53-45 with 3:03 to play.

"We found a way to get it done," Jackson said. "It was plain and simple. We have to find a way when it's close like that in a dogfight."

The Spartans had taken the lead for good when Matt McQuaid hit a jumper for a 36-35 edge. Jackson followed with a layup and rebound dunk and Langford added a jumper for a 42-35 lead.

Playing a Michigan State team that had won its last six games by no fewer than 18 points, Rutgers stunned even its own home crowd by scoring the first eight points. A 19-4 spurt capped by eight straight points by Bridges allowed the Spartans to take a 21-14 lead with just over 7 minutes left in the half, but Rutgers responded with a 12-5 and went to the locker room tied at 26.

The 26 points were the fewest by the Spartans in an opening half this season, and half of them came from Bridges.

BIG PICTURE

Michigan State: Playing their third game in six days and their sixth in 13 may have caught up to the Spartans. They looked sluggish and they got very little from Winston, until his late 3-pointers and even less from power forward Nick Ward, who was 1 of 5 from the field. He played so bad, Izzo only played him 1 minute in the second half.

Rutgers: This is a step forward for the Scarlet Knights. They are relentless on the both ends of the court and this game would have been a lot closer had they not missed so many layups and open shots.

BRIDGES: The conference's preseason player of the year is finally getting over his sprained ankle. He was 7 of 17 from the field, including 5 of 11 from long range. He added five rebounds. "He can play the 2, the 3, and the 4. He causes problems," Pikiell said.

UP NEXT

Michigan State returns home to play Southern Utah on Saturday.

After losing to unbeaten Florida State, No. 14 Minnesota and the Spartans the past week, Rutgers takes a step down and plays host to NJIT on Thursday.

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