Michigan State president Samuel Stanley releases statement on college football postponement

Michigan State president and Athletic Director Bill Beekman have both released statements on the postponement of college football this fall.

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This week, the Big Ten voted to postpone the fall college football season to a later date, with hopes to renew the season in the spring. The decision was not easy whatsoever and has brought about extreme sadness from football fans all over the country.

Yesterday, Michigan State University president Samuel Stanley released a statement on the postponement of college football.

Read Stanley’s statements below, courtesy of Matt Charboneau of The Detroit News:

No one is happy about the postponement of college football despite what many opportunists may tell you. Instead, this is a decision that will impact many and creates a void for football fans in the fall. I, personally, am glad Stanley views health and safety as a priority.

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Locked On Spartans Podcast: Big Ten Football: Who the hell knows?

What to make of the latest surrounding the debate on playing college football in 2020.

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Big Ten football: Who the hell knows? Also, let’s make fun of Rutgers.

You can find the episode on iTunes, Spotify and Google Podcasts.

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Happy Valentine’s Day: 5 Reasons Why You Will Love The 2020 College Football Season

Happy Valentine’s Day. Here are 5 reasons why you’ll love the 2020 college football season.  

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Happy Valentine’s Day. Here are 5 reasons why you’ll love the 2020 college football season.  


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5. The most interesting college football in 2020 will be played in … Mississippi?

And you thought the end of the 2019 Egg Bowl was a whole lot of fun.

A wild finish with a player pretending to pee like a dog, a missed extra point to miss out on overtime, and one of the most intense games of the season – a 21-20 MSU win – was nothing compared to what’s coming on a weekly basis.

Ole Miss fired head coach Matt Luke, landed Lane Kiffin – an under-appreciated talent as a head man – and away we go.

All aboard the Lane Train.

No one knows how to poke the bear better than Kiffin. He’s going to rally up the base, he’s going to recruit at a high enough level to be a problem, and he’ll get under the skin of the rest of the SEC head coaches.

And he’s going to win a whole lot of games, too.

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Mississippi State had a good head coach in Joe Moorhead.

Even though it never got rolling in his two years in Starkville, Moorhead’s offenses are normally amazing, he was just getting his pieces in place, he went to two bowl games in two years, and … he wasn’t Lane Kiffin.

So Mississippi State got the one guy with the type of differentiating factor of an offense to annoy every SEC defensive coordinator.

Granted, LSU and Alabama haven’t had a whole lot of problems lately getting the O going, and it’s not like Leach’s teams have ever done anything all that amazing, but this is different.

Leach has never been a head coach with these resources and this ability to pull in the talent – his 2020 class, which he had almost nothing to do with, was his highest-ranked recruiting haul in 18 years as a head coach.

Leach is going to be Leach, and Mississippi State is going to be Washington State/Texas Tech.

Kiffin is going to be Kiffin, and Ole Miss is going to be a weekly problem to deal with.

And football in Mississippi is about to add even more spice to an already amazing SEC West.

Buuuuuuuut ….

NEXT: No. The most interesting college football in 2020 will be played in … the Big Ten?