Michigan State’s Jeremy Fears delivers shocking low blow after ‘dirty player’ accusations

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Jeremy Fears didn’t take long to prove Michigan coach Dusty May’s point.

Fears, the Michigan State star, got a pivotal technical foul in the Spartans’ 76-73 upset loss to Minnesota on Wednesday after delivering a low blow to the Gophers’ Langston Reynolds.

It came after May, Michigan’s coach, was critical of the rival program’s tactics during a 83-71 Wolverines win Friday night.

It even has Michigan State coach Tom Izzo questioning one of his most important players.

“You know what? If he plays that way, he deserves it,” Izzo said of labeling Fears a dirty player.

“He ain’t going to play that way if I bench him the next game.”

It is unclear if Fears will face any punishment from the Big Ten for the suspect play.

After Fears drained a pull-up jumper with 14:10 left to cut Minnesota’s lead to 45-40, he drew a foul as Reynolds knocked him off balance as he closely guarded the ball.

But Fears, with his back turned to his defender, reared his leg back and hit Reynolds in the groin area after the whistle. The officials missed it initially, but charged the technical after a replay review.

Jeremy Fears Jr (right) looks to pass as Minnesota forward Grayson Grove defends during the second half on Feb. 4, 2026. AP

Cade Tyson sank both free throws for the Gophers, who got in a groove after that and stretched their lead to 16 points before a late surge by the Spartans closed the gap.

“It’s his fault. And I make no bones about it. I sat him for a while. I don’t even know if I’m going to start him next game,” Izzo said. “I stood up for him, too. Because what happened in the last game was handled poorly, too, and that starts everything. But Jeremy’s got to grow up a little bit.”

Jeremy Fears delivers a low blow FoxSports/X

Izzo also made clear he remained upset by May’s public criticism of his player following the game Friday night.

Fears and Wolverines star Yaxel Lendeborg were in an intense matchup all night, and Fears appeared to intentionally trip Lendeborg in one sequence.

May went so far on Monday to accuse his team’s biggest rival of “several plays that are very dangerous.”

Minnesota head coach Niko Medved does interview on court as fans celebrate win. AP

Izzo responded by defending his team’s sportsmanship and insinuating Michigan got away with some rough stuff that went uncalled, too.

So after Fears became a storyline again in Minnesota — not for his offense this time, because he was quieted by Reynolds for 10 points on 4-for-11 shooting — Izzo spent much of his postgame news conference unpacking concerns about the way his sophomore point guard might be perceived by officials and baited by opponents moving forward.

“He’s a guy you’d love to have on our team, but also you can’t do what he did, and I guarantee you he knows that,” said Minnesota coach Niko Medved, who argued vehemently for the technical foul while the officials were sorting out the call.

The Gophers were also upset during the game by a handful of other actions by Fears toward Reynolds, including an apparent tripping attempt during a loose ball scramble in the paint and a forearm to his opponent’s neck while he was trying to set up the offense.

“He’s taken a lot of heat and all that. He’s a great player,” said Medved, vouching for Fears’ character through assistant coach Armon Gates, who coached his brother, Jeremiah, last season at Oklahoma.

“I know he’s a great kid. He’s a competitor. That’s who he is. Yeah, he gets a little carried away, and we saw that on film.”

Izzo, for the most part, felt Fears was just matching the physical tone set by Reynolds, a typical midseason clash in this rugged conference much like the game against Lendeborg and Michigan last week. But the 31-year coaching veteran and all-time Big Ten wins leader also seemed to be still stewing about the way May went to the media with his concern.

“Things got blown up in the last game. When that stuff goes public, then you’ve got to really deal with it,” Izzo said before pivoting to defend his program. “I’ve had it with that, too. That’s not what I teach. That’s not what I coach. I told him about it. He’s got to quit.”

— With AP

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