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Filling out your bracket? Here’s why picking Michigan State all the way isn’t really a reach article image from Spartans Illustrated
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Filling out your bracket? Here’s why picking Michigan State all the way isn’t really a reach

The Spartans’ margins are thin, but with Fears in control and enough help each night, there’s a clear, repeatable path to six wins

By Sam Tyler
Published on March 17, 2026

There is a version of this NCAA Tournament where everything breaks clean, the margins hold, and Michigan State is the last team standing. That version is not actually far-fetched - it just isn’t forgiving.

I think MSU’s trajectory is highly plausible. But the margins are thin. The team simply has to play well. If they play well in each game, they likely win each game. They need three players, beyond Jeremy Fears Jr., to land in the “good game” category every night. That’s the deal. That’s the bet.

And if you accept that premise, then picking Michigan State all the way to the end becomes reasonable.

The numbers say MSU belongs in the conversation

Start with the historical profile of a national champion.

The cleanest version of that model is well known – top-10 in adjusted offensive and defensive efficiency. That narrows the field quickly, and this year it points toward teams like Duke, Florida, Arizona, and Michigan as the most “complete” on paper.

But if you widen the lens slightly – which history supports – the field opens up.

A more flexible championship profile looks like this:


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