INDIANAPOLIS — Any other year, this would likely be the premier matchup of the Final Four.
On one bench sits top-seeded Duke and its record-setting coach, Mike Krzyzewski. On the other is upstart Michigan State and Tom Izzo, one of the finest coaches in the game come March.
But with overall No. 1 seed Kentucky chasing perfection against those loveable goofballs from Wisconsin, the opening game of tonight's national semifinals has taken on an undercard feel — two of the game's most tradition-rich programs kicking things off at Lucas Oil Stadium before a massive crowd and potentially record-setting TV audience.
"We've been that way all year: overlooked, doubted the whole time," said Spartans guard Travis Trice, who Krzyzewski called the biggest breakout star of the NCAA Tournament.
"But we don't really look like it like that," Trice added. "If we win, people are going to be talking about us. We win a national championship, everybody will be talking."
The seventh-seeded Spartans (27-11) have come a long way since November, when they were routed by the Blue Devils (33-4).
Freshman guard Tum Tum Nairn has replaced Bryn Forbes as a starter, providing a much-needed shot of speed. Trice and fellow senior Branden Dawson have learned to shoulder the leadership role. And just about everyone else has found their niche for a team that missed out on the Final Four a year ago, when everyone expected it to contend for the title.
"That was a devastating loss last year," Izzo recalled Friday. "That's what the beauty and the terror of the tournament is, you've got to play well six straight games to win."
They've already done that four times, beating Georgia and then knocking off in succession second-seeded Virginia, third-seeded Oklahoma and fourth-seeded Louisville.
Now, they a chance to topple a No. 1 seed.
Relying on stingy defense, the Blue Devils have run roughshod through the tournament. Even when shots weren't falling and All-American forward Jahlil Okafor was held in check by Utah and Gonzaga, Duke has been just fine.
That doesn't mean there haven't been potholes on the road to Indianapolis. In January, the Blue Devils lost to N.C. State and got pounded by Miami. Junior guard Rasheed Sulaimon was booted from the team. And there were times when Okafor, Tyus Jones and Justise Winslow looked like wide-eyed freshmen rather than superstar prospects.
All those growing pains? They turned Duke into a monster.
"It's just special. You can just feel it in the air now, how important it is, what it means to be here," Jones said. "Just look out and see how many seats are out there. (Tonight) those seats are all going to be filled. It's a special feeling."
Notable: When the teams met Nov. 18, the Blue Devils forced 13 turnovers that they turned into 24 points. Izzo has harped on ball security ever since. "That's definitely been the key since that game," Trice said. "We feel like we beat ourselves." … There might be no coach more dangerous as an underdog than Izzo, who has a record 13 tournament wins as the lower-seeded team. "They're going to be ready. They don't lack talent," Krzyzewski said.