Locked On Spartans Podcast: Mel Tucker mailbag, Darien Harris joins the show

Fielding your questions and talking to a former MSU captain

Wil and Matt field some questions about Mel Tucker’s potential staff and expectations for 2020. Then former MSU linebacker Darien Harris joins the show to talk about Tucker and why he wants to get in on this MSU staff. The show finishes with some MSU vs. Maryland talk.

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

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Meet Kenny Willekes, Michigan State’s relentless pass-rushing prospect

Check out Draft Wire’s exclusive interview with Michigan State edge defender Kenny Willekes

During the predraft process, NFL teams are always looking for tough prospects who never take a play off, and play with a nonstop motor from snap to whistle.

If your favorite team is looking for a pass rusher who brings that kind of mentality to the table, their search should focus on Michigan State’s Kenny Willekes.

A physical edge defender with an incredible work ethic, Willekes recently spoke exclusively with Draft Wire about his experience at the Senior Bowl, which offensive tackles impressed him the most in college, and what he’s looking forward to about the NFL Scouting Combine.

JM: What was your experience like at the Senior Bowl?

KW: That was a great experience. I had the opportunity to work with the Detroit Lions coaching staff. I got to be around a bunch of excellent players. There were so many great players out there. My position group was especially fun to work with and be around. I played against a lot of those guys in college and it was great to learn from one other. It was such a great experience. I got to meet so many cool people.

JM: Do you feel like you achieved what you set out to accomplish out there?

KW: I’m a perfectionist, so there’s always going to be things I can improve on. For the most part, I felt like I did a pretty good job out there. I feel like I did exactly what I went out there to do. I wanted to show that I could play out of a two-point stance which I did throughout the week of practice. I also wanted to show that I could win with a variety of pass rushing moves and I believe that I proved that as well.

Mike Carter-USA TODAY Sports

JM: Speaking of, how would you describe your pass rush arsenal?

KW: I would say that I have a lot of tools on my tool belt. I have a lot of moves that I can consider my go-to at any given moment. I like to keep things simple. I love setting everything up with my speed-to-power move. I implement the bull rush into my plan quite a bit as well. Once I start bull rushing, I’m able to counter back inside or peel around the edge with a double sweep. Those are probably my main moves. I can swim inside or win with a double sweep around the edge. I love that speed-to-power move. If I need to counter, my swim inside usually pays off. I could use a spin move to counter as well.

JM: Playing at Michigan State afforded you the opportunity to play against some of the best competition college football has to offer. Who are some offensive tackles that stood out to you?

KW: Rashawn Slater from Northwestern immediately comes to mind. He wears No. 70 for them. He’s somebody that always gave me a good battle year in year out. He’s an excellent player. Penei Sewell from Oregon was a great match-up in our bowl game. He was just a freshmen then but he had all the athletic tools. I knew he was going to be a great player. I also thought that No. 75 on Ohio State, Thayler Munford, improved a lot from last year to this year. I noticed a significant difference with him.

JM: How much of being a successful pass rusher is accomplished pre-snap?

KW: I’d say a lot of it is accomplished post-snap to be honest. I think the get-off is the most important thing when it comes to rushing the passer. Knowing or recognizing a pre-snap indicator that it’s gonna be a pass and being able to jump that snap count plays a large role but how you react after the snap is the biggest thing. At times, pass rushing is simply reacting to how they set on you. You gotta get off the ball with a plan but you also have to react to how they set on you.

Mike Carter-USA TODAY Sports

JM: Is there a scheme that fits you best at the next level?

KW: I think playing in a 4-3 makes the most sense for me. As I said earlier, I went down there to the Senior Bowl to prove that I could play out of a two-point stance, but I prefer to play in a 4-3 with my hand in the dirt.

JM: You’ve played for so many great coaches throughout your time at Michigan State. What’s the biggest lesson any coach ever taught you?

KW: That’s a tough question. I learned a lot throughout my time at Michigan State. Defensive ends coach [Chuck] Bullough is always preaching hard work. I really appreciate him for that. It never mattered to him how far you’ve come or what you have or haven’t done. Whether you had a good day or bad day, maybe you’re feeling sore or whatever, he preached that we continue to come in every day and really apply ourselves. We worked harder because of him. It was all about doing the little things to make sure you’re as well prepared as can be on a weekly basis.

JM: Is there one NFL quarterback that you’d love to sack?

KW: I would probably say Lamar Jackson. He’s always breaking people’s ankles out there. You see how elusive he is and how difficult he is to bring down. Being able to bring him down would be pretty cool. He was the MVP for a reason.

JM: The NFL Scouting Combine will be here before we know it. Are you looking forward to any drills in particular? Any goals you care to share with us?

KW: A lot of my goals are still personal and they’re constantly changing as I continue to train and improve. I just wanna show that I’m athletic enough to play in the NFL. I know that there are some big question marks surrounding my athleticism. I’ve proven that I can produce at a high level so now I wanna go out there and show that I am an athletic player. Hopefully I’ll put those questions to bed throughout some of the drills.

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MSU Football ranked No. 45 in early preseason ESPN SP+ Rankings

Michigan State is projected to be a fringe bowl team in Mel Tucker’s first season as head coach according to Bill Connelly’s SP+ system.

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ESPN’s SP+ Ranking system, created by Bill Connelly, is a good barometer to project how a team will be performing, and each offseason Connelly, after recruiting season has concluded and the transfer portal has already gone through a major phase, publishes his preseason rankings as a way to predict team performance the next season. In his first rankings of the season, Connelly’s SP+ system has MSU Football ranked No. 45 overall.

Michigan State’s defense is still ranked highly at No. 21, but their offense is projected by the system to be fairly dismal. The Spartans’ offense is No. 106 in this first SP+ ranking. While fans will and should hope for more, it is the first season under a new, defensive-minded coach and the offense wasn’t exactly thriving under Dantonio these last two years either.

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For what it’s worth, the rankings are based on three main factors, weighted according to predictiveness:

  1. Returning production
  2. Recent recruiting
  3. Recent history

Here is the explanation of what SP+ is, according to Connelly:

“It’s a tempo- and opponent-adjusted measure of college football efficiency. I created the system at Football Outsiders in 2008, and as my experience with both college football and its stats has grown, I have made quite a few tweaks to the system. SP+ is intended to be predictive and forward-facing. That is important to remember. It is not a résumé ranking that gives credit for big wins or particularly brave scheduling — no good predictive system is. It is simply a measure of the most sustainable and predictable aspects of football. If you’re lucky or unimpressive in a win, your rating will probably fall. If you’re strong and unlucky in a loss, it will probably rise.”

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New Michigan State head coach Mel Tucker reportedly won’t retain any of Mark Dantonio’s staff

It’ll be a total fresh start for Michigan State football

It’s a clean sweep.

In a somewhat expected move new Michigan State head coach Mel Tucker will not be retaining any staff members from the Mark Dantonio regime. That is according to a report from Chris Solari of the Detroit Free Press.

Tucker reportedly met with the remaining staff members at some point Thursday. A few long-time Dantonio assistants had already moved on. Strength and conditioning Coach Ken Mannie announced his retirement on Twitter Thursday morning. Former defensive line coach Ron Burton agreed to join the Indiana staff on Wednesday. And former wide receivers/assistant defensive backs coach Terrance Samuel took the wide receivers and passing game coordinator job at UNLV. Former co-offensive coordinator and Jim Bollman seemingly casually retired on Twitter Thursday evening when his “bio” was changed to “former coach.”

That means, in addition to the names above, Brad Salem, Dave Warner, Mike Tressel, Chuck Bullough, Mark Staten, Paul Haynes, and Don Treadwell will no longer be part of the coaching staff at Michigan State.

Tucker’s contract with Michigan State stipulates a $6 million budget for hiring ten assistant coaches. The process of filling those spots starts now. Tucker currently has a reported offer of around $1 million to Kentucky associate head coach and tight end coach Vince Marrow.

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Former Ohio State assistant Mel Tucker named head coach at Michigan State

Michigan State football found its guy, and he has Ohio State ties. Former Buckeye assistant Mel Tucker is the new Spartans’ head man.

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It probably just appears this way but it seems like every big coaching hire has Ohio State ties. The latest one is the news that former Buckeye assistant Mel Tucker has been hired to be the head coach at Ohio State.

This comes after the Spartans made a run at another former Buckeye, Luke Fickell, but was turned down. Michigan State then quickly turned its focus on Tucker who has spent one year as the Colorado Buffaloes head coach.

Tucker spent time as the defensive backs coach under Jim Tressel from 2001-2003 and was promoted to the co-defensive coordinator in 2004 before moving on to the NFL. He spent ten years in the league as both defensive back and defensive coordinator positions between the Browns, Jaguars, and Bears before moving back to the college game.

He joined Nick Saban’s staff at Alabama in 2015 and left to join Kirby Smart at Georgia from 2016 through 2017.

So, in effect, Michigan State just had one Buckeye retire with Mark Dantonio making his announcement, then went after another Buckeye by trying to lure Luke Fickell from Cincinnati, and finally settled on a former Buckeye assistant coach with this move.

 

Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes and opinion.

We have a forum and message board now. Get in on the conversation about Ohio State athletics by joining the Buckeyes Wire Forum.

Locked On Spartans Podcast: The Mel Tucker era begins, Bennie Fowler joins the show

Discussing Mel Tucker’s first day on the job and former MSU receiver Bennie Fowler stops in to talk about his new book and MSU football.

Wil and Matt talk about Mel Tucker’s first day as MSU coach, including his introductory press conference and some salary/staff information. Then, former MSU receiver Bennie Fowler stops in to talk with Matt about his new book and his football career.

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

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Long-time MSU Football Strength and Conditioning Coach Ken Mannie retires

Long-time Michigan State Football Strength and Conditioning Coach Ken Mannie retired Thursday morning after 25 years.

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For the past 25 years, MSU Football’s weight room was led by one man: Ken Mannie. Early Thursday morning on Twitter, Mannie announced that he would be retiring from the position.

Here is Mannie’s announcement from Twitter:

“Spent the past several months informing family and close friends. Wanted to wait till things settled a bit on the current situation to make this public. So much gratitude to express over the ensuing months…but here’s a start. And players…let’s finish this week off strong!”

In the post, Mannie went into more detail on his decision:

“After 45 years in coaching, the last 25 spent here at Michigan State, I have decided to retire,” Mannie wrote. “It is a decision that my wife, Marianne, and I came to a little over a year ago. For the past several years, it has been ‘let’s go one more,’ as coaching, teaching, and mentoring have been my life’s passions. All of the mentors I truly respect and admire are coaches and teachers, and they inspired me to pursue this path – one that has blessed us with so many cherished moments and memories.”

The news comes just a day after Michigan State formally announced Mel Tucker as their new football head coach.

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Former Michigan State defensive line coach Ron Burton hired by Indiana

Burton is the second Dantonio assistant to find a new job this week.

It didn’t take long for former Michigan State defensive tackles coach Ron Burton to find a new home.

The veteran coach has been hired by Indiana as its new defensive line coach according to Taylor Lehman of thehoosier.com, Rivals’ Indiana site.

New coach Mel Tucker has yet to begin assembling his new staff, but it looks as if former members of Mark Dantonio’s staff are busy looking for new work. Former wide receivers coach–and for one year assistant defensive backs coach–Terrance Samuel was hired by UNLV earlier in the week to be their wide receivers coach and passing game coordinator.

Burton joined Dantonio’s MSU staff via Air Force for the 2013 season. After spending his first four seasons at MSU coaching the entire defensive line, Burton shifted his focus to the defensive tackles in 2017. Under Burton’s watch the Michigan State defensive line was very successful. Michigan State led the Big Ten in rushing defense in both 2017 and 2018. Burton had defensive linemen earn 13 All-Big Ten honors during his career at MSU, including 2013 Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year Shilique Calhoun. Four Spartan defensive lineman that Burton coaches have played in the NFL and Malik McDowell was drafted in 2017, but never played a game in the NFL due to an injury suffered after the draft.

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Michigan State agrees to six-year $33 million contract with Mel Tucker

Tucker gets a six-year contract worth a reported $5.5 million per season.

Mel Tucker is getting quite the raise.

One year after making $2.4 million in his first season with Colorado, new Michigan State head coach Mel Tucker is set to more than double his yearly salary. According to Associate Press Sports Writer Larry Page, Michigan State and Tucker have agreed to a six-year contract worth $5.5 million per season.

Michigan State has yet to make an official announcement regarding Tucker’s salary, but is expected to do so in the near future.

That salary would have made Tucker the 4th-highest paid coach in the Big Ten and 12th-highest paid coach nationally according to USA Today’s database of football coaching salaries. Notable within the conference is that Purdue’s Jeff Brohm was paid $6.6 million in 2019 as part of his seven-year extension with the school. His salary figure will be much lower in 2020 and the average annual value of his contract is lower than Tucker’s. For all intents and purposes, Tucker will be the third-highest paid coach in the conference in 2020 behind only Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh and Penn State’s James Franklin.

The deal is a significant step up from what Mark Dantonio was making at Michigan State. Dantonio only made more than $5.5 million in one season, 2013, after getting a large retention bonus as part of a contract extension. That year he made $5.6 million. Dantonio was paid just short of $4.4 million in 2017, 2018 and, 2019. He also received a $4.3 million retention bonus three weeks before announcing his retirement on February 4.

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Tom Izzo speaks at Mel Tucker Introductory Press Conference

Michigan State football held Mel Tuckers press conference today. MSU Basketball coach Tom Izzo spoke at this presser. Read more here.

Michigan State held an introductory press conference for new football coach Mel Tucker. This press conference featured comments from the one and only Tom Izzo. Izzo spoke to Mel Tucker’s background and welcomed him to the Spartan family.

Here are some of Izzo’s comments below:

As you may or may not know, Izzo said he would lend a helping hand to this coaching search. Now, Michigan State football has their guy. Tucker has been embraced by fans and players alike all over social media. Even Antjuan Simmons spoke at the press conference.

Mel Tucker has me super hyped for this upcoming football season. Stay with us on SpartansWire for more coverage of Mel Tucker and his new coaching staff.

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