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MSU's Breslin Center hosts varsity basketball games and other events. This is a list of Michigan State Spartans' varsity and club athletic team national championships and runner-up finishes. Michigan State University has 29 varsity sports teams that compete under the Spartan nickname.
Michigan State has won six Big Ten tournament championships since its inception in 1998, the most championships in the Big Ten. The Spartans have appeared in seven championship games, only losing the 2015 championship to Wisconsin. Michigan State had appeared in the quarterfinals of every Big Ten tournament until 2021.
Michigan State: 13–3 1999 Michigan State: 15–1 2000 Michigan State: 13–3 NCAA (Michigan State) Ohio State vacated its share of the title in 2000 due to NCAA sanctions. 2001 Illinois Michigan State: 13–3 2002 Illinois Indiana Wisconsin: 11–5 Ohio State vacated its share of the title in 2002 due to NCAA sanctions. 2003 Wisconsin: 12–4 ...
Updated through February 17, 2025 ^A. George Gauthier left after 29 games in 1919–20, posting a 15–14 record. Lyman Frimodig coached the final seven games of the season, finishing 6–1.
Michigan had won the Tournament championship in 1998 with a 3–0 record, and had a record of 1–1 in 1999. The NCAA has vacated most NCAA records for the Ohio State basketball team from the 1998–99 season through the 2001–02 season, [ 14 ] including the 1999, 2001, and 2002 Big Ten tournaments.
The 1999–2000 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team represented Michigan State University in the 1999–2000 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played their home games at Breslin Center in East Lansing, Michigan. They were coached by Tom Izzo, in his fifth year as head coach, and were members of the Big Ten Conference ...
Oregon won the inaugural tournament, defeating Ohio State 46–33 in the first championship game. Before the 1941 tournament, control of the event was given to the NCAA. [11] In the early years of the tournament, it was considered less important than the National Invitation Tournament (NIT), a New York City-based event.
There, the Spartans faced No. 1-ranked and undefeated Indiana State led by senior Larry Bird. In what was the most-watched college basketball game ever, Michigan State defeated Indiana State 75–64 to win the school's first ever basketball National Championship. [3] Magic Johnson was voted Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four.