NCAA Tournament 2001 - Quiet night after Michigan State loss


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Quiet night after Michigan State loss

Associated Press

EAST LANSING, Mich. – Michigan State's loss to Arizona brought big but relatively calm crowds to a campus that had turned violent after Final Four appearances the previous two years.

"All went well, with the exception, of course – the loss of the basketball game," East Lansing police Sgt. Mark Van Dewouwer said.

Michigan State was beaten 81-60 in the NCAA semifinals Saturday night, ending the Spartans' bid for a second straight national championship.

The streets cleared Saturday night as a light rain fell, turning to snow before dawn. Campus and East Lansing police reported calm overnight.

Rioting followed Michigan State's loss to Duke in the tournament semifinal in 1999, causing extensive property damage. Police arrested 132 people on a variety of charges. Sixty-one were arrested after the team's Final Four and championship victories last year.

This year, police blocked off the Cedar Village apartment complex, where some of the worst violence occurred two years ago.

Officers arrested several people for throwing beer bottles and other objects, then took them in handcuffs to a police van near Cedar Village.

Two helicopters hovered overhead while mounted police made their way through the crowd of about 2,000, attracting boos and profane chants.

But the Cedar Village crowd dissipated, and police removed the barricades about 10 p.m., about two hours after the game ended.

At the Breslin Center, the Spartans' home court, about 5,000 people watched the game on video scoreboards.

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