Big Housed: Hapless Michigan State pummeled by Michigan

Michigan State loses to Michigan.

Paul Bunyan is staying in Ann Arbor.

Wins over Michigan built Mark Dantonio’s Michigan State football program. Perhaps it’s right that a thudding loss to Michigan will be the punctuation on Danonio’s final chapter.

After playing for their season for about seven minutes, Michigan State reverted to their previous form, the one that led to them entering today’s game with a 4-5 record. Michigan countered an early Max Rosenthal touchdown catch and the Wolverines were off and running.

A 98-yard touchdown drive followed.

Then a field goal drive.

Then another touchdown drive.

The refs could have ended the game right there. Unfortunately for the Spartans they didn’t.

Michigan State managed a field goal to draw closer at 24-10.  They needed six. On the ensuing drive the Spartans forced Michigan into a 3rd-and-20. It was a small crack opened in the door of hope. Michigan slammed it shut with a sweat-free conversion. A gain of 27 and the route was back on.

It doesn’t matter what the final score was. It’s irrelevant. (Michigan won by a S— ton). Statistics don’t matter. (Shea Patterson became the first Michigan quarterback to ever pass for 300 yards on MSU and Ronnie Bell turned the game into a track meet).

It’s not about the numbers. It’s about the message.

In many ways this game was a microcosm of what has happened at Michigan State the last few years. Too few playmakers. Too few fresh ideas. Not enough energy or enthusiasm. After a decade plus of domination, the bill was eventually going to come due. It had to. Programs with the prestige and pocketbooks of Michigan don’t stay down long. And when it comes to getting back at Michigan State, Michigan was absolutely dying to get back up.

At one point in the fourth quarter Michigan defensive back Lavert Hill intercepted a Brian Lewerke pass. Receiver Cody White went to tackle Hill and was stiff-armed into the Wolverine sideline. Then, instead of continuing to advance the ball upfield, Hill stepped out of bounds to literally flex on White. It was a statement.

“I don’t need these yards. I need you to know I own you.”

Hate to the point of stupidity. It used to drive MSU football. Now it’s on the other sideline.

The attitude Michigan State used to rise to their once-elite status was nowhere to be found. Former players felt it.

Those two were far from the only ones. Former defensive tackle Lawrence Thomas tweeted, “Where is the [EXPLETIVE] pride???”

It wasn’t on the Michigan State sideline that’s for sure. Michigan laid the big hits. Michigan made the big plays. Michigan got a taunting penalty up two touchdowns. Hell, Michigan even ran a trick play. In a rivalry that has been dominated by conversations of who the “little brother” is, there was no debate who was bigger and meaner in Ann Arbor this afternoon. The script has flipped in this rivalry, there’s no doubt about that.

Michigan State was its usually sloppy self on offense. With a chance to get back into the game to start the fourth quarter, AJ Arcuri false started on 4th and one. Dantonio elected to then punt. That punt would never truly leave Jake Hartbarger’s foot, because it was blocked by Khaleke Hudson. One play later Nico Collins was dancing in the end zone and on MSU’s grave.

A self-inflicted mistake quickly compounded by poor football. That’s the new identity of Michigan State football.

Tempers flared late, as they always do in this game. Instead of looking the part of the bully laughing off a rival’s frustration, Michigan State looked foolish and cheap. Taking dirty shots because they couldn’t win on the field. Jacob Panasiuk was ejected for one such hit in the fourth quarter. That used to be Michigan in this rivalry. Not anymore.

Up 37-7, with 2:33 left in the game, Michigan wasn’t ready for the game to end. With their starters still in, the Wolverines were throwing deep for another touchdown. In their eyes, the Spartans hadn’t been beaten down enough. Ten plus years of frustration, all coming out over the span of 60 minutes of football. The bullied had yet again become the bully.

Mark Dantonio has a lot of questions to answer after this game and season. He’ll have to come up with some pretty good responses if he wants to try and scrape back any of the fans’ good will his program has been hemorrhaging for years.

In 2007 when Michigan running back Mike Hart unwittingly flipped the rivalry on its head with two little words, Mark Dantonio’s response was simple and tough.

“Pride comes before the fall.”

It’s the attitude that built his Michigan State program on. And now, more than 12 years later, after years of stagnant offense and no changes, after refusing to fire any of his friends in lieu of hiring outside help, after mastering the college football defense and then refusing to acknowledge it had been figured out, after not cashing in on recruiting, after climbing to the top and assuming it would stay that way just because that’s the way it was, after all of that, it’s that very same attitude that has brought the program back to its knees.

Pride comes before the fall.

Pride came.

The fall is here.

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Halftime Thoughts: After quick start Michigan State getting beat up by Michigan

The Spartans don’t look game for a fight in this one.

Michigan State went into the Big House looking to salvage a disappointing season. The Spartans came out fast, picking up a 4th-down stop and converting the good field position into a 7-0 lead.

Then Michigan woke up. The Wolverines reeled off three consecutive scoring drives, with a 12 play 98-yard jaunt smashed in the middle. The refs may have well ended this game there, because that was more than a gut punch for MSU. It was a swift kick in the you-know-wheres.

Here are some thoughts on the first half and an outlook for the next two quarters.

  • MSU is using a new offensive line (L-R): Arcuri, Duplain, Samac, Campbell, Reid. I quite like most of this group and they got some good movement to start the game. That hasn’t been the case since and absolutely has to change.
  • MSU’s secondary has not played well and lost Josiah Scott on the second play of the game. He got kneed in the chin and was being evaluated for a concussion. Michigan has been able to find easy space in the secondary today. I’d venture to guess that will continue to be a problem.
  • The secondary is, flatly, terrible at tackling on the perimeter. Michigan is attacking the edges and the MSU defensive backs have been poor in response.
  • Lewereke likes so/so thus far. He’s making good decisions in the zone read game and threw a really nice ball to Cody White to get MSU down to the one yard line on their first TD drive.
  • I love that Michigan State plays this game with an edge, but their penalties have been absolutely killer. Two personal fouls cost MSU a prime scoring opportunity and another moved Michigan into the red zone on their first touchdown drive. That has to be corralled.
  • Michigan State had a bad drop by a receiver. Drink!
  • The Michigan offense is out-scheming the MSU defense. That’s incredibly embarrassing for the Spartan staff. Michigan killed MSU to the perimeter just like Indiana did. The Spartans took too long to adjust. Then UofM got rolling and started kicking MSU’s butt in the middle.
  • Michigan State has been lifeless once the emotion left and the teams settled in.
  • This game is super danger zone right now, if it isn’t already over. Michigan is making a statement today. Michigan State is rolling over.
  • MSU has to score on their first possession of the second half.
  • Michigan State needs to be less conservative on offense. They played completely on their heels in the second quarter. MSU needs to push the ball downfield on offense and be more aggressive on defense.
  • Michigan State has to win this game in the margins. Michigan is better than Michigan State. MSU can’t get dumb penalties. They can’t drop passes. They need to take advantage of advantageous situations. They haven’t done so at all this game and that’s why they’re down ten points.

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Claressa Shields-Ivana Habazin fight rescheduled for Jan. 10

Claressa Shields and Ivana Habazin will fight on Jan. 10, nearly three months after Habazin’s trainer was injured in a weigh-in altercation.

Claressa Shields and Ivana Habazin will fight on Jan. 10 in Atlantic City, nearly three months after their scheduled matchup was canceled following a violent altercation at the weigh-in.

The bout had been scheduled for Oct. 5 in Flint, Michigan, Shields’ hometown, but it was pulled off a Showtime-televised card after Habazin trainer James Ali Bashir was injured by punches on the day before opening bell.

Bashir was hospitalized with reported facial fractures. A few days after the incident, he returned to the hospital with a brain bleed, according to a Facebook post from Habazin.

Artis Mack, Shields’ brother, was arraigned on an assault charge in Michigan’s Genesee District Court on October 17 for allegedly throwing the punches. Mack, 28, pleaded not guilty.

Shields (9-0, 2 knockouts), a two-time Olympic gold medalist, hoped that the junior middleweight fight would be rescheduled. She and Habazin (20-3, 7 KOs), of Croatia, were initially scheduled to meet on August 17. That date was shelved when Shields suffered a knee injury.

James Ali Bashir was hospitalized as a result of punches he took at the Claressa Shields-Ivana Habizin weigh-in last month. Stephanie Trapp / Showtime

“My goal is to become three-division champ faster than any man or woman in history,” said Shields, who already has won middleweight and super-middleweight belts. “This is a very significant fight for both of us. We have both trained really hard twice and great opportunities await the winner, so hopefully three times is the charm.”

Habazin says she is motivated for the fight because of what happened in Flint.

“I’ve been thinking about this since October, and I have more of an incentive now, given what happened,” Habazin said. “I feel like I’m fighting for James Ali Bashir, as well as for my own pride and respect.’’

 

Is A Recently Fired Head Coach Bound for Michigan?

Well, it appears a certain, recently fired head college football coach may be headed to Ann Arbor for employment soon.

Notre Dame won’t be playing Michigan in football for the next dozen or so years assuming the stars don’t align the two don’t meet in a bowl game before the series resumes in the 2030’s.

But we tend to keep a watchful eye on what’s happening up north with a rival, whether they’re on the schedule or not.

Well, it appears a certain, recently fired head college football coach may be headed to Ann Arbor for employment soon.

It’s easy to piece this one together.

Willie Taggart was the starting quarterback at Western Kentucky long before soaring up the collegiate coaching ranks.

Jim Harbaugh and his father Jack helped recruit Taggart to WKU. Eventually Jim took the job at Stanford where Taggart would become an assistant coach before Taggart would go-on to South Florida, Oregon and eventually Florida State before being fired a couple short weeks ago.

Clearly nothing is official at this point but it’s college football which means if there is smoke, there is probably fire. If you’re into coaching changes and assistant coaching searches, keep an eye out for Taggart to find employment at Michigan before long.

Pick ‘Em: Our picks for MSU vs. Michigan and other college football games

Do we think MSU can bounce back in a big way this week?

Michigan State football needs a win in a big way.

After starting the season 4-1, the Spartans have dropped four straight games, each loss perhaps worse and more painful than the last. Now, the biggest game on the schedule awaits.

MSU travels to Ann Arbor to take on rival No. 14 Michigan (Noon, FOX). Do the Spartans have what it takes to bounce back and take down the Wolverines? Let’s see what our staff thinks.

Wil Hunter (40-18)

Michigan 24 – Michigan State 14

I’d love to be wrong here, but I have a tough time seeing Michigan State pull this one out. The Spartans are absolutely reeling right now. They can’t get off a losing streak. They’re really banged up. Questions are swirling about the future of the coach and program. It’s a mess.

I think the fact that it’s Michigan buys MSU something. The Spartans will come out fast and play well. At this point of the season though, Michigan is just a better football team.

No. 9 Penn State 31 @ Indiana 28

No. 23 Navy 24 @ No. 16 Notre Dame 28

No. 4 Georgia 24 @ No. 12 Auburn 17

No. 18 Memphis 52 @ Houston 35

No. 19 Texas 35 @ Iowa State 42

No. 8 Minnesota 10 @ No. 20 Iowa 21

No. 10 Oklahoma 38 @ No. 13 Baylor 31

Andrew Brewster (41-17)

Michigan State 14 @ Michigan 17

I hate to say it folks but this will probably be a bad weekend for Michigan State fans. There is just not enough evidence to support picking the Spartans over the Wolverines and that is so incredibly painful. Michigan State looked like they were on the right track during the beginning of the Illinois game. Boy, that faded away quickly. Now, it seems their season is pretty empty. Not a lot of hope over here.

No. 9 Penn State 24 @ Indiana 21

No. 23 Navy 12 @ No. 16 Notre Dame 27

No. 4 Georgia 42 @ No. 12 Auburn 30

No. 18 Memphis 7 @ Houston 10

No. 19 Texas 10 @ Iowa State 14

No. 8 Minnesota 17 @ No. 20 Iowa 4

No. 10 Oklahoma 49 @ No. 13 Baylor 14

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Locked On Spartans Podcast: Michigan vs. Michigan State preview

Previewing Michigan State vs. Michigan

Matt is back! Wil and Matt talk about MSU vs. Michigan of course. They talk about how MSU can possibly win this game and why Jim Harbaugh is the most reliable coach in college football.

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

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MSU vs. Michigan: Three Things To Watch

Michigan State faces off against interstate rival the Michigan Wolverines this weekend. Here are three things to watch in this game.

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The most intense week in the Michigan State football season is here. The Spartan Dawgs face off against interstate rival, the Michigan Wolverines at the Big House on Saturday, Nov. 16. Michigan is playing its best football so far and Michigan State is at an all-time low in the Mark Dantonio era.

Here are three things to watch in this game:

Gridiron Warfare

This game is going to be gritty and grimy. Both teams absolutely loathe one another. Mark Dantonio referred to Jim Harbaugh as “intense” earlier this week. Michigan DB Ambry Thomas said this game decides who is the big brother and who is the little sister. Personally, I’m not a fan of his rhetoric, but, it points to the intensity of this rivalry game.

Both the players and fans are heavily invested in this game’s outcome. Both teams are going to lay it all on the line. What else does MSU have to play for this year? The Michigan rivalry game is the last chance for the Spartans to salvage any positive sentiments for this season. On the other hand, the Wolverines want to make a statement against Michigan State.

The QB Battle

Shea Patterson and Brian Lewerke are the Spiderman meme in which two Spidermen point at one another. They are one in the same. Both are athletic QB’s that put their heads down and run while also having a pretty strong throwing arm. Note, both QB’s suffer from the same issue: inaccuracy.

Through nine games, Lewerke has thrown for 2,102 yards and 12 touchdowns with a 55.7 completion percentage. On the other hand, Patterson has thrown for 1,773 yards and 12 touchdowns with a 57.2 completion percentage. What’s the difference? Lewerke has thrown three more interceptions than Patterson. The QB matchup is pretty even. Whoever plays better will lead their team to victory.

Michigan State’s Receiver Core

Mark Dantonio recently revealed that TE Matt Dotson is out for the remainder of the season with a torn Achilles. Michigan State is still without WR Darrell Stewart as well. These are two huge holes in their receiver core. So far, Stewart has tallied up 694 yards on only 47 receptions along with four touchdowns to boot. He has been a quintessential part of the Spartan’s offense.

Note, Michigan State sees the return of sophomore WR CJ Hayes. Hayes is back after an injury kept him out for a few weeks. Luckily, I think Hayes can easily replace Stewart. All the while, Cody White has stepped up big time in the past few games. Look for both White & Hayes to have a big game if MSU has a chance to win.

Tune in at 12 P.M. this Saturday on Fox to catch this game. Cheer on the Spartans, they certainly need it.

Stay locked on SpartansWire for more coverage to come.

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Locked On Spartans Podcast: Mark Dantonio must hate Jim Harbaugh

Let’s start getting excited for a rivalry game!

Wil Hunter and Matt Sheehan talk about Michigan State vs. Michigan. Does Mark Dantonio secretly hate Jim Harbaugh? He must. Then, will we be seeing Joey Hauser this season?! Plus, the sharps are betting MSU early . . . again.

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

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Michigan coach suspended after player’s father burned opposing letter jacket

Greg Baur, the head coach at Macomb Dakota High School, was suspended from the team’s playoff game after a player’s parent lit a letter jacket from an opposing school on fire in the locker room.

Correction/clarification: The headline on this article has been revised to remove any implication that the coach allowed a parent to burn a jacket on school grounds. The article also has been updated to correct the location of the burning, which occurred outside the team’s locker room.

With his Macomb (Mich.) Dakota High School program kicking off against Chippewa Valley (Mich.) on Nov. 1, Dakota coach Greg Baur was looking for an upset playoff win. He got one, but then an unexpected celebration outside the team locker room left him suspended for the team’s second-round playoff game last Friday.

As reported by Detroit ABC affiliate WXYZ and the Macomb Daily, Baur was suspended after the father of one of his players burned a Chippewa Valley letter jacket outside the team’s locker room on school property. The scene was meant to celebrate the team’s victory, but also drew consternation from school officials and others who claimed it left the players at too great a risk.

“A Dakota parent chose to burn his letter jacket on Dakota property,” Chippewa Valley Schools Superintendent Ron Roberts told Macomb Daily. “He soaked and doused it with Tiki torch fuel and when the players got off the bus, he encouraged them to gather around and watch it burn. I consider that to be an unsafe situation.

“The district’s investigation determined that although the Dakota coaches did not have prior knowledge of the actions taken by the parent, once the coaches were aware, they did not take steps the district expects of its coaches to ensure student safety.”

Because the incident was deemed to expose an unsafe environment, Baur was handed a one-game suspension … which just happened to overlap with the team’s second-round playoff appearance. That game — a 38-35 loss to Sterling Heights (Mich.) Stevenson High on Nov. 8 —  left some wondering if the result might have been different had Baur been allowed to coach in the game. Meanwhile, the father who burned the jacket has since come forward to take full responsibility for the jacket burning and asked others, including Baur, to be released from responsibility.

That in turn led to a change.org petition calling for players and coaches who were blamed in the incident to be exonerated. While more than 1,100 signed the petition, school officials still insist they have no interest in releasing Baur and others from responsibility for the dangerous locker room moment. Here was Roberts’ response to those calls:

“It is our belief that the situation was not handled properly. The coaching staff had the responsibility to move the kids away from this. This is about a lack of adult leadership.”

Michigan State vs. Michigan: Five most important Spartan players

Michigan State and Michigan face off yet again this weekend. Here are the five most important Spartan players in this interstate game.

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Michigan week is here. The Spartans travel to Michigan Stadium this Saturday (Noon, FOX) to play against the No. 14 Wolverines. As always, there is so much riding on this game. Most importantly, Michigan State football fans’ pride. Michigan comes into this game on a hot streak. The Spartans need to execute perfectly to win.

Here are the five most important players for MSU in this game: