Everything is Still Not Over for Rick Pitino as He Takes Strong Stance Against Tom Izzo within 24 Hours of St. John’s Elimination

As this postseason kicked off, there were two matchups we were all hyped for. Rick Pitino vs. John Calipari and, obviously, Pitino vs. Tom Izzo. We got the first one early, with Pitino’s squad clashing with Calipari. But Michigan State and St. John’s? We just knew that battle was coming later. Both teams were legit contenders, after all—St. John’s with a 31-5 record, Michigan State at 28-6. Then, boom. Coach Cal’s squad ended Pitino’s storybook season. Just like that. And we all accepted it—no Pitino vs. Izzo this year.

Well… not so fast, people.

Da-n family’s ruining my life here.” That’s what Tom Izzo had to say after Michigan State barely survived Bryant. Izzo’s Spartans had cruised past No. 15 Bryant 87-62 in the first round, but what it also did was set up a second-round matchup against Richard’s No. 10-seeded Lobos, who were fresh off a 75-66 upset over No. 7 Marquette. So, it seems like for Izzo, the Pitino name was still pretty much a legitimate danger in this tournament.

We know that Rick’s encounter with Izzo has always been a talking point. Rick and Izzo have met three times in the NCAA Tournament, with Izzo holding a 2-1 edge. The most discussed ones being the 2009 Midwest Regional Final win that propelled the Spartans to the national championship game, a 64-52 victory over Pitino’s Louisville Cardinals, and a 2015 Elite Eight loss, where Louisville edged Michigan State 76-70 in overtime, being the tops. And now it was another Pitino vs. Izzo. Just with a little twist—it’s the son, not the father. But, obviously, St. John’s head coach had to be there.

He wasted no time showing up in Cleveland to cheer for his son. Just less than 24 hours after his own team’s season ended. He could be seen fully locked in, throwing up gestures and celebrating every move, embodying the intensity that defines his 884-310 career. “I revel every single day in all of it,” he’d said days earlier about his own journey. Now, that passion was directed at Richard’s Lobos.

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