Spartans’ Second-Half Surge Tops | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Late-Game Grit: Michigan State’s Second-Half Surge Over Northwestern

There’s something about the Breslin Center that stretches late leads into victories and tests freshmen nerves — and on January 8, 2026, Michigan State reminded everyone why. Trailing by seven at halftime, the No. 12 Spartans flipped the script, outscoring Northwestern 48-31 in the second half to walk away with a 76-66 win. It was a night of momentum swings, timely threes, and the kind of physical rebounding that turned opportunity into points.

Game flow and what mattered

  • Michigan State trailed 35-28 at the break but dominated after halftime, finishing with a 76-66 final.
  • The Spartans outhustled the Wildcats on the glass, winning the rebound battle 42-25 and producing 16 second-chance points.
  • Jaxon Kohler’s two big threes in the second half (one to take the lead) and Jeremy Fears Jr.’s 15 second-half points were the turning points.
  • Northwestern’s Nick Martinelli poured in 28 points, but he got little support — the Wildcats had just one other player in double figures.

Why the second half swung to MSU

  • Rebounding edge: Michigan State’s 42 rebounds (11 offensive) created extra possessions and pressure. When a team converts offensive boards into second-chance points, late deficits become manageable.
  • Clutch shooting from unexpected spots: Kohler — normally a paint presence — stepped out and drilled two threes that erased Northwestern’s halftime cushion and swung momentum.
  • Free-throw calm: After a sloppy first half at the line, MSU steadied itself in the second half (making 17 of 22) when the game tightened late.
  • Bench and role-player contributions: Carson Cooper’s efficient scoring (6-of-6 from the field) and Coen Carr’s highlight plays helped keep the Spartans’ attack balanced.

Northwestern’s deja vu problems

  • Overreliance on Martinelli: He was sensational with 28 points, but the Wildcats lacked complementary scoring. Depth and scoring balance continue to be weak links in early Big Ten play.
  • Defensive lapses on the perimeter: Leaving Kohler open for multiple threes was costly. In the modern game, forwards who can mark the arc punish teams that don’t adjust.
  • Second-half execution: Northwestern’s defense faded when it mattered most and the rebounding gap allowed Michigan State to control tempo.

Moments that mattered most

  • Kohler’s first go-ahead 3 midway through the second half — a possession that flipped the lead and the crowd’s vibe.
  • A late stretch where Fears converted a layup and Cooper hit clutch free throws to push MSU back ahead after Northwestern cut it to two with about two minutes left.
  • MSU’s ability to limit turnovers in the second half relative to the first, and to convert on free throws when pressure rose.

Game stat snapshot (highlights)

  • Final: Michigan State 76, Northwestern 66.
  • Rebounds: MSU 42 — NU 25.
  • Leading scorers: Nick Martinelli (NU) 28; Carson Cooper (MSU) 18; Jeremy Fears Jr. (MSU) 15 (all in 2nd half); Jaxon Kohler (MSU) 15.
  • Record impact: MSU improved to 14-2 (4-1 Big Ten); Northwestern fell to 8-7 (0-4 Big Ten).

Three quick takeaways

  • Momentum is a fragile thing in the Big Ten; MSU showed again that depth + rebounding can erase an early deficit.
  • Northwestern needs another reliable scoring option — relying on a single high-volume guard is a tough blueprint across league play.
  • Versatile bigs who can hit threes (like Kohler) change matchups and force defensive adjustments that many teams struggle to execute on the fly.

My take

This felt like a classic Tom Izzo game — physical, opportunistic, and with players stepping into roles when the moment demanded it. Michigan State didn’t overcomplicate things: they grabbed rebounds, attacked the paint when it opened, and trusted veteran instincts in the closing minutes. Northwestern showed fight and a future building block in Nick Martinelli, but the Wildcats’ early Big Ten record makes it clear they need better offensive balance and mental toughness late in games.

Looking ahead

  • Michigan State: The Spartans will want to build off this second-half blueprint — keep crashing the glass and keep role players ready to make plays beyond the arc.
  • Northwestern: The Wildcats must find consistent secondary scoring and tighten perimeter defense to survive the Big Ten gauntlet.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.