Moneyball’s summer run hit pause Tuesday after floor conditions became too risky to ignore, a decision that came just days after Michigan State star Coen Carr nearly got hurt on the same court.
The alarm bell had already sounded last Thursday, when Carr slipped during play and came frighteningly close to a serious leg injury. Chris Solari of the Detroit Free Press posted the video, and the clip made the case on its own: the floor wasn’t safe enough to keep rolling without concern.
That’s why Tuesday’s suspension makes sense. A few summer highlights in a pro-am event are not worth gambling with Michigan State’s season, especially when the danger is this obvious. According to Nathaniel Bott, it’s still unclear whether Moneyball will return as planned on Thursday.
For Tom Izzo, the move had to be a relief. If Carr had gone down with something major - a torn ACL or another serious leg injury - the fallout would have been enormous for Michigan State’s title hopes.
It also would have changed the way Izzo views the event entirely. After watching that slip, he likely didn’t need much convincing that the safest move was to shut things down.
The conditions may be tied to the kind of heavy humidity that’s been hanging over Michigan in this heat wave, but if the floor still isn’t right by Thursday, there’s a real argument for shelving the rest of the event and sorting out next year later.
And for Michigan State fans, the concern is never just one scare. The program has dealt with a brutal run of leg and foot issues: Jaxon Kohler needed foot surgery and missed half a season, Jeremy Fears Jr. was shot in the leg and missed half of his true freshman year, Kaleb Glenn injured his leg before last season and missed the entire year, Divine Ugochukwu suffered a foot injury late in the season and missed the final month and the NCAA Tournament, and Kur Teng is currently in a walking boot, though he should be fine by the season.
If Carr had been seriously injured on that play, the reaction from the fan base would have been immediate and ugly, and Moneyball likely would have been done in their eyes. Instead, Carr was okay, and the event’s organizers made the smart call before things got worse.
In the end, the suspension says the right thing: player safety comes first.
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