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Eleventh-year
head coach Tom Izzo has compiled an impressive list
of accomplishments, including one NCAA National
Championship, four regular-season Big Ten
Championships, two Big Ten Tournament titles, four
Final Four appearances, four National Coach of the
Year awards and a Big Ten-best eight straight NCAA
Tournament appearances.
These accomplishments, however, are not what make
Izzo one of the best in the game, but rather it is
his insatiable desire to accomplish more.
With a career record of 233-97, it's easy to see
that Izzo knows how to win, but he also knows how to
win the right way. In his 10 full years directing
the Spartan program, 77 percent of his players who
completed their eligibility also left with a degree.
In the last six years, 17 Spartans have received
their undergraduate degrees, including five each in
2001 and 2003.
In 10 seasons, Izzo has returned Michigan State to
national prominence, placed his name in the NCAA
record books and become a leader among college
basketball coaches.
Izzo's 233 wins are the seventh most by any coach in
his first 10 seasons in the history of college
basketball. In the NCAA Tournament, Izzo is at his
best, winning at a clip of .767 to rank second among
all active coaches with at least 10 tournament games
coached. This past season, Izzo led MSU to its
fourth Final Four in the last seven seasons,
becoming the only team to accomplish that feat in
the last seven seasons and just the eighth in
college basketball history. Izzo also became just
the second coach in NCAA history to reach four Final
Fours in his first 10 years of coaching, joining
Ohio State's Fred Taylor, and just the sixth coach
in NCAA history to appear in Four Final Fours in a
seven-year span.
Furthermore, Izzo brings stability to Michigan State
basketball. The 2005-06 season will be Izzo's 23rd
with the Spartans. Entering his 11th season as head
coach, he is the longest serving active Big Ten
men's basketball head coach. He is also a leader
among his peers, serving on the NABC Board of
Directors, the John R. Wooden Award Board of
Governors.and a select NCAA committee of five of the
top college basketball coaches in the game.
Over the past eight seasons, Izzo has compiled an
impressive 200-69 (.743) record. A quick look at
other stats further demonstrates the Spartans'
success over that stretch: 99-29 (.773) in the Big
Ten; 111-10 (.917) at the Breslin Center, including
a Big Ten record 53-game winning streak; 47-36
(.566) against Top 25 teams; 31-13 (.705) in
postseason play and 23-7 (.767) in the NCAA
Tournament.
Individually, players have excelled under Izzo. Five
Spartans (Charlie Bell, Mateen Cleaves, Paul Davis,
Morris Peterson and Jason Richardson) have earned
some form of All-America honors, while Chris Hill
was a three-time Academic All-American. Sixteen
different players have earned all-conference
recognition. One of the reasons for Izzo's success
is his ability to recruit some of the nation's most
talented high school players. During his time as
head coach, Izzo has recruited eight McDonald's
All-Americans, including seven in the last seven
years (Mateen Cleaves - 1996, Jason Richardson -
1999, Zach Randolph - 2000, Marcus Taylor - 2000,
Kelvin Torbert - 2001, Paul Davis - 2002 and Shannon
Brown and Brandon Cotton - 2003). In addition, five
of the last seven Michigan Mr. Basketball award
winners suited up for the Green and White (1999 -
Richardson, 2000 - Taylor, 2001 - Torbert, 2002 -
Davis, 2004 - Drew Neitzel), while Shannon Brown won
the 2003 Illinois Mr. Basketball Award.
But perhaps even more important to Izzo's success is
his ability to take young talent and develop a
player's skills, allowing him to grow as a player
and go on to play professionally. In the last five
years, Michigan State has had seven players selected
in the NBA Draft, including four first rounders (Mateen
Cleaves - 2000 first round, Morris Peterson - 2000
first round, Jason Richardson - 2001 first round,
Zach Randolph - 2001 first round, Andre Hutson -
2001 second round, Marcus Taylor - 2002 second
round, Erazem Lorbek - 2005 second round). Cleaves,
Richardson, Randolph and Taylor were all high school
All-Americans, but Izzo took Hutson and Peterson,
who were not ranked in the top 75 coming out of high
school, and turned them into NBA talent. In
addition, Izzo-recruit Charlie Bell played in the
NBA during the 2001-02 season after signing a free
agent contract. This past summer, Bell signed
another NBA free agent contract with the Milwaukee
Bucks, and Alan Anderson, a member of the 2005 Final
Four team, signed a free agent contract with the
Charlotte Bobcats.
Izzo has also emerged as a teacher, not only to his
players, but also his assistant coaches. Six current
Division I head coaches all served as assistants to
Izzo, including Stan Joplin (Toledo), Tom Crean
(Marquette), Stan Heath (Arkansas), Brian Gregory
(Dayton), Mike Garland (Cleveland State) and Doug
Wojcik (Tulsa).
Michigan State returned to the Final Four in 2005,
becoming the only team to appear in four of the last
seven Final Fours. The Spartans finished the season
with a 26-7 mark, equaling the 1979 team for the
fifth-highest win total in school history. Of the 14
20-win seasons in Michigan State history, Izzo has
been involved in 11 of them, six as a head coach and
five as an assistant. MSU finished the regular
season with a 22-5 record. Since Michigan State
joined the Big Ten, only three Spartan teams
finished the regular season with fewer losses. In
Big Ten play, MSU finished second with a 13-3 mark.
MSU opened the NCAA Tournament with victories over
Old Dominion and Vermont. The Spartans then defeated
No. 1 Duke and No. 2 Kentucky in the Austin Regional
semifinals and finals, becoming the first team in
tournament history to defeat the Blue Devils and the
Wildcats in the same year. Despite losing to North
Carolina in the Final Four, Izzo was named the 2005
Clair Bee Award winner, recognizing the Division I
men's basketball coach who has made the most
significant positive contribution to his sport.
Not only did the 2004-05 Spartans win, they were
also statistically impressive, ranking in the top 15
nationally in six statistical categories, including
free-throw percentage (3rd, .777), scoring margin
(7th, +13.1), assists per game (10th, 17.1 apg),
field-goal percentage (11th, .487), rebound margin
(11th, +6.8) and scoring offense (13th, 78.5 ppg).
MSU displayed one of its most potent scoring attacks
in years, leading the Big Ten in scoring for the
second straight year with 78.5 points per game. It
was MSU's highest scoring average since the 1985-86
team averaged 83.1 points.
During the season, Izzo reached another personal
milestone. With MSU's victory over Duke in the NCAA
Tournament, Izzo recorded his 232nd win at MSU,
moving past Benjamin Van Alstyne for the second most
number of career wins in Spartan coaching history.
Izzo also had a full summer of 2005. In July, he had
the opportunity to play golf with Tiger Woods at the
Buick Open Pro-Am. In mid-August, Izzo was one of a
select number of coaches at Michael Jordan's Senior
Flight School.
The summer closed with Izzo traveling to Kuwait to
take part in "Operation Hardwood - Hoops With The
Troops." Izzo was one of eight coaches and sports
personalities coaching 13-member military basketball
teams on Camp Arifjan, Kuwait, from Aug. 27-31. Camp
Arifjan defeated the other bases to win the
championship under the direction of Coach Izzo.
In 2003-04, MSU opened the season with a 5-7 mark
after taking on one of the most difficult
non-conference schedules in NCAA history. But rather
than give up, Izzo and the Spartans rallied to win
12 of the next 15 games to close the regular season,
finishing just one game out of first place in the
Big Ten. For the year, MSU posted an 18-12 mark,
12-4 in the Big Ten.
The 2003-04 season saw the Spartans find another way
to be successful as Michigan State became the first
team in Big Ten history to lead the conference in
scoring offense (71.3 ppg), field-goal percentage
(.522), 3-point field-goal percentage (.434) and
free-throw percentage (.777) in the same season.
Izzo also reached a couple of personal milestones
during the 2003-04 campaign. On Feb. 4, 2004, MSU
defeated Iowa, 89-72, as Izzo recorded the 200th
victory of his Spartan career, becoming just the
third coach in MSU history to accomplish that feat.
He also became the eighth head coach in NCAA history
to record 200 wins in his first nine seasons. Ten
days later, Izzo became the 17th coach in Big Ten
history to record 100 league wins as MSU defeated
Minnesota, 69-58, on Feb. 14. He is just the third
coach to reach win No. 100 in his first nine
seasons, joining Bob Knight and Gene Keady.
The 2002-03 season was a study in perseverance. A
variety of factors, including four members of the
playing group missing a significant number of games
due to injuries, meant the Spartans found themselves
with a 14-11 record in the last week of February.
Izzo rallied his team to win the final four
regular-season games and eight of the last 10
conference games to finish 10-6 in the Big Ten, good
for third place in the league. For the sixth
straight season, MSU led the Big Ten with +5.5
rebound margin, ranking 21st in the nation.
Michigan State made even bigger noise during the
NCAA Tournament. The No. 7 seed Spartans easily
dismissed Colorado in the first round, setting up a
matchup with the No. 2 seed Florida Gators. The
Spartans shocked many experts with a 68-46 victory
in the Gators' home state. In the Sweet Sixteen,
Michigan State defeated defending-national champion
Maryland in a thrilling two-point game, before
eventually falling to the No. 1 seed Texas Longhorns
in the Lone Star State.
The Elite Eight appearance was the fourth for MSU in
the last five years. During that time period, no
other school made more than two trips. In fact,
since the NCAA Tournament expanded to 64 teams in
1985, just three programs (Duke, Kentucky and
Michigan State) have advanced to four Elite Eights
in any five-year period.
The 2001-02 season may prove to be one of Izzo's
finest. Despite losing 81 percent of the scoring
load and 75 percent of the rebounds from 2000-01,
and having three of his key players miss several
games with injuries, Izzo led the Spartans to a 10-6
Big Ten record, finishing just one game out of first
place. MSU improved as the season progressed,
winning 10 of the last 13 regular-season games. It
finished the season with a 19-12 record and earned a
spot in the NCAA Tournament for the fifth-straight
season.
In 2000-01, Izzo earned NABC National Coach of the
Year and District 11 Coach of the Year honors for
leading Michigan State to its third straight Final
Four and fourth straight regular-season Big Ten
Championship. MSU became just the fourth school in
Big Ten history to win four straight league titles.
MSU opened the season by winning its first 12 games
to establish the best start in school history. On
Dec. 25, 2000, the Spartans earned the top spot in
The Associated Press Top 25, marking the first time
they held the No. 1 position in the AP Poll since
1979. In Big Ten action, Michigan State posted a
13-3 record to win a share of the league crown. The
Big Ten finale vs. Michigan marked Izzo's 100th Big
Ten game. Through his first 100 games, Izzo posted a
72-28 mark, the fifth-best record in Big Ten
history.
In the 2001 NCAA Tournament, Izzo guided the
Spartans to a third straight Final Four. For a third
consecutive season, Michigan State earned a No. 1
seed. MSU won the first three games by double
figures, establishing a record with nine straight
NCAA Tournament victories by double digits. When MSU
defeated Temple, 69-62, in the South Regional Final,
the Spartans became just the ninth school to reach
three-straight Final Fours and just the third since
the NCAA Tournament field expanded to 64 teams in
1985. On the season, MSU finished with a 28-5
record, marking a fourth straight 20-win season for
the first time in school history.
Michigan State led the nation in rebound margin for
the second straight season at +15.4 boards per game.
The +15.4 margin tied for the fifth largest in
Division I history and the greatest since 1980. The
Spartans also ranked 13th in the nation in scoring
defense, allowing 61.8 points per game.
In 1999-2000, Michigan State captured the second
NCAA Championship in school history and its third
straight regular-season Big Ten Championship,
marking the first time in school history, and only
the eighth time overall, that a school had won three
straight Big Ten regular-season titles. MSU also won
at least 30 games for the second straight season,
posting a 32-7 mark, becoming just the second Big
Ten school to accomplish that feat. The 65 wins over
the 1998-99 and 1999-2000 seasons is the greatest
two-year total in the history of the Big Ten. The
Spartans also repeated as Big Ten Tournament
champions.
Izzo also led MSU to consecutive Final Fours for the
first time in school history. For his efforts, Izzo
was named USBWA District V Coach of the Year and
NABC District 11 Coach of the Year. The season also
brought a personal milestone for Izzo, who recorded
his 100th career victory in a Jan. 11, 2000, 77-71
overtime win over Indiana in the Breslin Center.
The 1999-2000 season began with high expectations as
the Spartans opened the season among the top three
in the national polls. Throughout the season, the
Spartans were forced to overcome adversity. But
after Big Ten titles in both the regular season and
conference tournament, the Spartans were ranked No.
2 in the final Associated Press Poll of the season.
For the second consecutive season, Michigan State
earned a No. 1 seed in the Midwest Region of the
NCAA Tournament. After disposing of Valparaiso and
Utah in Cleveland, Ohio, the Spartans moved on to
the Sweet 16 at the Palace of Auburn Hills, Mich.,
where they recorded come-from-behind victories
versus Syracuse and Iowa State. In the Final Four,
MSU defeated Wisconsin for the fourth time that
season. The Spartans then captured their second NCAA
title in school history, defeating Florida, 89-76.
During the 1998-99 season, Izzo directed the
Spartans on a magical run to the program's first
appearance in the NCAA Final Four since 1979. Under
Izzo's guidance, Michigan State posted a record of
33-5, establishing a school record for most wins in
a season. For his efforts, Izzo was named the
Basketball Times National Coach of the Year and the
National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC)
District 11 Coach of the Year.
Throughout the 1998-99 Big Ten season, Michigan
State established itself as the class program of the
conference. Izzo directed the school to its second
straight Big Ten title. The Spartans followed up a
15-1 Big Ten regular season by capturing their first
Big Ten Tournament championship. The 15 league wins
tied a school record for most victories in
conference play, while the Spartans' 93.8 winning
percentage established a school record.
Izzo's Spartans were equally impressive at the
national level. By the end of the regular season,
Michigan State held a No. 2 ranking by both the
Associated Press and USA Today/ESPN. MSU would
finish the year ranked third, the highest showing by
a Spartan team since the 1978-79 squad earned a No.
1 ranking.
Whereas MSU's success in 1998-99 was expected, the
Spartans took the college basketball world by storm
in 1997-98. Izzo became the first Michigan State
coach to earn Associated Press National Coach of the
Year honors while leading MSU to a 22-8 record and a
share of the Big Ten title. The Spartans posted a
13-3 mark in conference, earning Izzo Big Ten
Conference Coach of the Year honors.
Over the course of the 1997-98 season, Izzo and his
team recorded six victories over teams ranked in the
top 25 and finished the year ranked No. 10
nationally by USA Today/ESPN, marking the first time
the Spartans had finished in the Top 10 since 1995.
In addition to his AP award, Izzo was named National
Coach of the Year by Basketball News and the United
States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA).
Basketball Times selected Izzo as its Mideast Coach
of the Year.
During Izzo's first season as head coach in 1995-96,
he directed the Green and White to an overall slate
of 16-16 including a 9-9 effort in the Big Ten. Izzo
recorded wins over Top 25 teams on four occasions
while leading the program to a berth in the NIT,
where the Spartans advanced to the second round.
In 1996-97, Izzo guided the Green and White cagers
to an overall mark of 17-12 including a Big Ten
ledger of 9-9, good for a sixth-place tie. With one
of the youngest starting lineups in the Big Ten,
Izzo led the Spartans to a second straight NIT
appearance, where they advanced to the second round.
Now in his 23rd season as a member of the MSU
coaching staff, Izzo has been with the Spartan
program since taking a part-time assistant coaching
position in 1983. An assistant coach with the
Spartans from 1983-86, Izzo left MSU in May of 1986
to become the top assistant and recruiting
coordinator at Tulsa. But, on June 10 of the same
year, Izzo returned to East Lansing when Spartan
assistant Mike Deane left to become head coach at
Siena College.
Since then, he has been the catalyst in the
resurgence of the MSU program. Regarded as one of
the country's top recruiters, he is known as a
tireless worker both on the recruiting trail and in
the office. His hard work and loyalty were rewarded
in July 1990, when Jud Heathcote appointed him
associate head coach.
His dutiful efforts were further recognized when, on
March 30, 1993, then-MSU Athletics Director Merrily
Dean Baker recommended both a one-year contract
extension for Heathcote through the 1994-95 season
and that Izzo be appointed head coach upon Jud's
retirement. The MSU Board of Trustees accepted both
recommendations on April 9, 1994.
Izzo originally came to MSU from Northern Michigan,
where he had been an assistant from 1979-83. He was
named a part-time assistant at MSU in September
1983. When former assistant Edgar Wilson left in
November 1983, Izzo became a full-time assistant.
Izzo played guard for NMU's basketball team from
1973-77, and was voted the team's MVP as a senior.
He was also a third-team Division II All-America
pick that year and established the Wildcat record
for most minutes played in a season. Following his
graduation from NMU in 1977, Izzo took over as head
coach at Ishpeming High School and served in that
position for the 1977-78 campaign.
A native of Iron Mountain, Mich., Izzo and current
Detroit Lions head coach Steve Mariucci were Iron
Mountain High School teammates in football,
basketball, baseball and track. As college roommates
at Northern Michigan, Izzo walked on to the
basketball team, while Mariucci did the same with
football. Both would go on to earn Division II
All-America honors. Despite their busy schedules,
they remain the closest of friends. Each year, they
co-host a golf tournament in Iron Mountain to raise
money for the community.
In October 1990, Izzo was inducted into the Northern
Michigan University Hall of Fame and was selected as
an inductee into the Upper Peninsula Hall of Fame
during the summer of 1998.
In 2001, Izzo received honorary degrees from both
Northern Michigan and Michigan State, delivering the
commencement address at both graduation ceremonies.
Izzo is also an active volunteer in the community.
Among his many efforts, he is very active with
Sparrow Hospital and the Catholic Social
Services/St. Vincent Home for Children in Lansing.
Izzo was born January 30, 1955. His family includes
his wife, Lupe, 11-year-old daughter, Raquel, and
5-year-old son, Steven. |