Feb. 08--EAST LANSING, Mich. -- Even during the flow of the game, when players sometimes lose track of details in the thick of it, Illinois guard Malcolm Hill noticed something amiss with Michigan State's free throw shooting.
"There were times when it seems like even the Michigan State players were surprised (at the misses)," Hill said. "I was surprised too."
Yet Hill -- like almost everyone Saturday in the Breslin Center -- wasn't exactly shocked when the Spartans whiffed on an opportunity to take control of the game late in Illinois' 59-54 victory.
After a controversial technical dead-ball foul on Illinois' Jaylon Tate as he attempted to box out on a free throw and backed into Spartans shooter Travis Trice, the Illini kept their composure as Michigan State's shots rattled out. Trice missed his second foul shot and Bryn Forbes made only 1 of 2 on the technical to pull within 55-54 instead of giving the Spartans a lead with 33 seconds remaining.
Of more importance to coach John Groce, the Illini didn't let the call rattle them.
"I was proudest of the way we responded to things like that throughout the game, the adversity," he said. "We were able to make that next play."
Hill made the final four free throws of the game to seal the victory, a second straight for the Illini at Michigan State to follow up on last season's victory there.
"We didn't want to get hung up on the technical, whether it was the right call or not," said Hill, who scored a game-high 19 points. "We're road warriors. We did a good job of moving on. "
Illinois contested the last two Michigan State shots, including strong defense from center Austin Colbert off the bench on Denzel Valentine's shot.
For a team that has struggled to find consistency throughout Big Ten play, the Illini (16-8, 6-5) finally seem to be hitting their stride. They have won three straight and recorded just their second road victory of the season.
The winning streak has come without two starters as Rayvonte Rice and Aaron Cosby remain suspended indefinitely for violating undisclosed team rules.
It's not lost on Illinois that the clock is running out rapidly.
"Late in the year, we feel a desperation," Hill said. "Every game counts. We always say that in the beginning of the season, but now the season is coming to an end and it really kicks in. Every game now really means a lot."
Center Nnanna Egwu played one of his strongest games of the season with 12 points, nine rebounds, three blocks and only one foul. Guard Kendrick Nunn added 14 points.
The Spartans (15-8, 6-4) shot only 7 of 18 from the free throw line, frustrating coach Tom Izzo.
"It's the maddest I've been," he said. "I can't stomach that."
On the technical foul, referee crew chief Terry Wymer cited a rule that prohibits "unnecessary, unacceptable and excessive" contact, noting Tate backed into Trice in an "unnecessary manner and made contact" after the free throw had gone through the hoop.
Illinois claimed the victory as a point of pride.
"Michigan State is one of those teams that plays so hard and so physical, if you're soft they're going to showcase that," Egwu said. "To come in their building and play as hard as we did and as physical as we did was really good for us."
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