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MEN'S BASKETBALL Early Bracketology Thoughts

With the calendar telling me that it is December and MSU sitting up #1 in both polls with no ranked team on the schedule for 6 weeks, I have the sudden itch to start thinking about bracketology. It is never too early, it is? The selection committee is putting more emphasis than ever on keeping teams close to home and with the current trajectory of MSU’s season, it seems reasonable to assume that we will be in the hunt for a top seed come Selection Sunday. By looking at the game locations, you can already get a feel for how this is going to shake out, even here in December.

It seems safe to assume that MSU is going to stay in position to get a preferred location in the first 2 rounds. Looking at the possible options, there frankly aren’t a lot of good ones. Des Moines, IA and St. Louis look to be the closest, and the biggest competition for those locations will be Iowa State, Purdue, Kentucky, and maybe Xavier and Butler. The rest of the Big 12 will prefer Oklahoma City, Duke and UNC will prefer Raleigh, teams like Maryland and Virginia will most likely prefer up in Brooklyn, and most Big East teams will prefer Providence

As for the Regional locations, things get a bit more interesting. The West Regional is once again in Anaheim, and so the Pac 12 champ is almost certain to get a 1-seed or 2-seed in that Region along with Gonzaga, if they have a good season. The other Regional locations are Louisville, Chicago, and Philadelphia. The good news here is that while MSU would clear prefer to be in the Chicago Regional, Maryland would prefer Philadelphia, as would the winner of the ACC (likely Duke, UNC, or Virginia). With Kentucky playing in what is effectively a Mid-Major conference, they seem to be a heavy favorite to get the 1-seed in Louisville unless something catastrophic happens. So, the seeds most likely in play for MSU are the 1- and 2-seeds in Chicago and the 2-seed in Louisville. The competition for these seeds is most likely:

-The top 1-2 Big 12 teams (Kansas, Iowa State, and Oklahoma)
-Purdue
-The second place ACC team

It seems likely that MSU, Maryland, and Purdue will all get split up, and since MSU and Purdue both prefer the same region, it seems quite important to finish ahead of the Boilermakers in the standings in order to secure the 1-seed in Chicago and avoid playing in Kentucky's region, which still seems like a good team to avoid. MSU’s win over Kansas in November also certainly helps, but the fact that MSU only plays Purdue once and the game is in West Lafayette is a bit concerning. From an NCAA seeding point of view, this could be the most critical game left on the schedule.

Now, if MSU falls out of the Top 10, all of this is moot, but for now this is what it looks like to me.
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Saban vs. Dantonio II Set for Dallas

Saban vs Dantonio II Set for Dallas

Jim Comparoni
SpartanMag.com Publisher


EAST LANSING - When Michigan State trudged down the field for Saturday night's instantly-historic, 22-play touchdown drive to beat Iowa in the Big Ten Championship Game, there was a noteworthy, interested observer watching closely, on a television set, during transit somewhere between Atlanta and Tuscaloosa: Mr. Nick Saban.

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"I got to see that 22-play drive last night, and it was pretty awesome," Saban said, during Sunday night's Cotton Bowl teleconference, featuring the two head coaches who will square off in the College Football Playoff on Dec. 31 in Dallas.

"I was rooting for the Spartans after being there for 10 years myself and rooting for my former assistant Mark (Dantonio)," said Saban, Alabama's head coach. "And glad they came out on top."

Because of that victory, No. 3-ranked Michigan State (12-1) will face No. 2 Alabama (12-1) in the CFP semifinals on Dec. 31.

No. 1 Clemson (13-0) will play No. 4 Oklahoma (11-1) in the other semifinal.

Those match-ups were announced on Sunday.

The winners will face one another in the National Championship Game, on Monday, Jan. 11 in Glendale, Ariz.

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Saban, during his coaching debut at Michigan State in 1995.
Saban served as head coach at Michigan State from 1995-99, leaving prior to the Spartans' Citrus Bowl game in December of 1999 for the head coaching job at LSU.

Saban worked as defensive coordinator forGeorge Perles from 1983-87, constituting his first five years of experience in East Lansing.

When Saban became head coach at Michigan State in 1995, he hired Dantonio to be his defensive backs coach. Dantonio held that post until he left MSU following the 2000 season to become defensive coordinator at Ohio State.

Sunday's teleconference served as a reunion of sorts for the two men, who are similar personality types in terms of their laser-sharp organizational skills and dead seriousness about football. On a personal level, they are different. Dantonio is a calm, listening-ear type of hugger, a giver who motivates by showing players and subordinates he cares. The bombastic Saban motivates as a tyrant, telling players that he'll treat them like men if and when they act like men. Both have been wildly successful.

Saban has won four National Championships at tail-wags-dog Southeastern Conference football factories. Dantonio has won at previously-underachieving Michigan State, a program Saban said on his way out the door "would always be number two" to in-state rival Michigan.

Saban offered Dantonio and all of his MSU assistant coaches jobs at LSU in December of 1999, if they wanted to come with him. None of them did. LSU's charter plane that was scheduled to bring his MSU assistants to Baton Route left the Lansing airport with nothing but pilots and empty passenger seats.

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Saban during his last press briefing at MSU, after announcing his departure.

Saban came down with a case of cold feet and called MSU officials during a flight from Lansing to Baton Rouge, inquiring if he could get his MSU job back, shortly after accepting the LSU post. But the door had been closed. Saban landed in LSU and went on to win without his former staff members. But he left bruised feelings behind him in East Lansing.

Dantonio has done well, too. And Dantonio has remained respectful of Saban, restating during Sunday's teleconference that he wouldn't be where he is without Saban.

"The relationship between he and I is one to me as a mentor," Dantonio said. "He's a guy that I've called on occasion when I could help or when he could help me in any way. And I have great respect for him and his family and what he's been able to accomplish."

A Rising Tide

Dantonio is 87-32 in nine seasons at Michigan State. This year, Dantonio became the first coach in Big Ten history to win at least 11 games in five of six seasons. Dantonio is 38-4 in his last 42 games, including six straight post-season wins. He is 7-1 in his last eight games against Top 10 teams.
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Saban, during his introductory press conference at LSU, later that day.


Michigan State had failed to earn a bowl bid in five of the previous seven seasons prior to Dantonio's hiring. Dantonio has engineered one of the greatest turnarounds college football has seen in the past 30 years. A National Championship would cement his place in not only MSU history, but college football history.

This year's Cotton Bowl will mark the second time Saban has coached against Dantonio. The two met in the 2011 Capital One Bowl, with Saban's defending National Champions defeating MSU 49-7.

Saban has faced former assistants several times, including last weekends SEC Championship Game against former Alabama offensive coordinator Jim McElwain, who is now head coach at Florida. But Saban has never faced a former assistant who is as accomplished as Dantonio is now.

"It always makes me proud and happy for the guys that did a great job for us when they were part of our staff and they go on and move on and have success other places," Saban said.

Saban was 34-24-1 in five seasons at Michigan State. He was 0-3 in bowl games, losing by 19, 38 and 28 points in his three postseason appearances as MSU's head coach in the Independence Bowl, Sun Bowl and Aloha Bowl to LSU, Stanford and Washington.

Saban was asked on Sunday evening if Dantonio's level of success could have been attained in East Lansing when Saban was head coach.

"Well, when I was there, it was a difficult time for Michigan State," Saban said. "I took the job and we were on probation and didn't really have the number of scholarships until the last year we were there. And we certainly had a good team that year. Probably not as good as Mark's teams have been the last couple three years.

"But I think he's done a phenomenal job there, and I think as well as anybody could be expected to win the Big Ten championships that he's won. And to have the kind of consistency and performance they've had over the last few years is pretty phenomenal, but not surprising to me. So I think, you know, Mark has exceeded expectations of all of us in terms of what he's done at Michigan State and certainly done a better job than I ever did there. I can tell you that."

Brutally Effective

Saban's Alabama team was brutally effective against Michigan State in 2011. Saban even seemed to attempt to keep the score down with inside running plays in the fourth quarter.

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Saban, at bowl practice prior to the 2011 Capital One Bowl against Michigan State.
"I'm not the kind of guy that has to dislike my opponent to play well against him," Saban said. "Sometimes respect is a better word. And when you know somebody is a really good coach and has done a great job for you, it's really easy to respect them. And that's certainly the case in this game."

The two coaches heard each others' voices over the phone during Sunday's teleconference. Although they are friends, they aren't ones to reach out and touch each other with frequent phone calls.

Following the teleconference, Dantonio was asked by local media whether it's a bit of a trip to hear his old boss's grumpy voice on the other end of a telephone.

"Oh, yeah, it takes me back," Dantonio said with a laugh. "I was Nick's secondary coach for five years, so I learned a tremendous amount of football: Organization, preparation. So much of what we do in terms of preparation - in terms of technique and terminology and my mindset as a football coach - has been shaped by the people I've worked for. Certainly Jim Tressel I've talked about a lot, but Nick Saban is probably the guy from a defensive system, and then also from just an overall football system, that has been a mentor."

Saban demands that his players are physical, tough and knowledgeable. Dantonio has instilled the same commandments at modern day Michigan State.

"Those are the three things that he (Saban) constantly preached, the three things that took no ability, and those are the three characteristics that I constantly talk to our players," Dantonio said. "You want to be able to run the ball, power run, you want to be physical, you want to be tough. You need to have great knowledge of what you do."

And, as Saban says, there is often some ugly roadkill along the way.

"There are challenges," Dantonio said. "A lot of what I learned when I was here, and let's not be … it was difficult. It's difficult. You guys know that. But I think my relationship with Coach Saban, with Nick Saban, is excellent. He's truly a mentor of mine. I would not be in this position as a head coach had I not been afforded the opportunity to come to Michigan State by Nick."

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Precious few of Saban's former players at Michigan State have kept in touch with him during his coaching stops with LSU, the Miami Dolphins and the University of Alabama. He's not easily-approachable. But Saban is fond of his former assistant.

"I consider Mark a friend," Saban said. "But I think in this profession, we're all sort of bigamists in some degree in terms of we're married and we have children and we have grandchildren, but we're also married to our job. So I know Mark is (married to his job), and I think you have to be to really have success because you have a lot of young men that you've got to provide leadership for. And Mark has certainly done a great job of that.

"And we stay in contact and talk every now and then. But like I am with a lot of the guys, I have a tremendous amount of respect for him and consider them friends, but it's not like we talk on the phone every week because I don't think any of us really have time for that. But there's sort of a respect and admiration that you have for colleagues that have done a great job for you and you recognize by how their team plays what a great job they're doing now."

That includes his admiration for Saturday night's epic final drive.

"They certainly were on during that drive because Iowa, I know, has got a really good defensive team, and they're very well-coached," Saban said. "Coach Ferentz does an outstanding job as does Phil Parker, one of our former players (at MSU) as defensive coordinator.

"I think it showed a lot about the grit that Michigan State's team has and the resiliency that they played with on that drive to convert third downs, make plays when they needed to make them.

"They had a big physical back, and they got a physical offensive line. And that's the way we try to play, and that's the way they try to play. And that's the kind of football that a lot of people enjoy watching. So it's going to be a great matchup from that standpoint."
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Deep Read: How Desmond King Got Away From MSU

You've probably heard and read a lot about Desmond King this week.

Below is a bit of a deeper read into MSU's overall recruiting picture at the time they were keeping King on the back burner:

How Desmond King Got Away from MSU

Jim Comparoni
SpartanMag.com Publisher

EAST LANSING - So how did Iowa cornerback Desmond King get away from Michigan State?

The All-Big Ten cornerback from Detroit had interest in becoming a Spartan, camped at Michigan State and visited MSU for at least one home football game during his senior year.

But he signed with Iowa in February of 2013, became a starter as a true freshman, third-team All-Big Ten as a sophomore and leads the nation interceptions this season. He is the Big Ten's Defensive Back of the Year, and is a finalist for the Jim Thorpe Award and Walter Camp Award.

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King will lead a tough Iowa secondary when the No. 4 ranked Hawkeyes (12-0) face No. 5 Michigan State (11-1) in the Big Ten Championship Game, Saturday at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

"I would say for sure, looking at Iowa's defense, their secondary is their strong suit," said Spartan quarterback Connor Cook.


Spartan head coach Mark Dantoniohas a reputation for turning lightly-recruited prospects into All-Americans and bowl champions. But even Dantonio took a jab at himself during his weekly press conference on Tuesday about overlooking King, who starred at Detroit East English Village High School.


"(From) right here from Detroit, still can't believe he got away," Dantonio said. "But anyway, (he) is an outstanding player, eight interceptions, kick returner, punt returner, has been a very good player for them.

"Great cover guy, great tackler, great ball skills, very confident. You can tell he has football leadership skills on the field, and he's been a mainstay on the back end."

Michigan State's defensive backfield is recovering from a shaky first half of the season, caused in part by injuries. It's possible that MSU's main area of question - defending the deep ball - might not be an issue this season if King had become a Spartan in 2013.

King hasn't been available for teleconferences leading up to Saturday's Big Ten Championship Game, and is never available for Iowa's weekly media access on Tuesdays due to a class conflict. He is available for interviews only after games, often following another stellar performance.

King (5-11, 200) is most-often found as the right cornerback in Iowa's zone coverages. He excels in off coverage with smart feet and a keen ability to break on routes and make plays on the ball. And he plays with physicality.


As a right CB, he will match up with any Spartan receiver that comes to his sideline. He isn't likely to match up man-to-man, all over the field, on Big Ten Wide Receiver of the Year, Aaron Burbridge, the way Michigan's Jourdan Lewis did.

Burbridge had a memorable back-and-forth battle with Lewis during Michigan State's 27-23 victory over Michigan on Oct. 13. Burbridge won't see as much of King in this game, but they will cross paths.

Iowa will often come out of its zone and match up in man-to-man on third-down situations. King vs. Burbridge battles might become more common in those situations.

"He's a good player, I'm a good player, we'll go at it this weekend," said Burbridge, whom Iowa's Rivals.com site reports is cousins with King. "He's one of the best corners in this conference. I look forward to the match-up this weekend."

How Did MSU Miss?

What were Spartan recruiters missing when they scouted King? Pretty much the same thing every Big Ten recruiter missed that year, including Iowa, up until the final hour of the 2013 recruiting campaign.

"Every Big Ten team came into our building," Detroit East English Village coach Ron Oden told ESPN.com in October. "But no one wanted to take a chance on a midsize guy. I told them, 'Do you want a 6-foot corner who runs a 4.3, or do you want a football player? Because Desmond King is a football player.'"

King had 12 interceptions as a high school junior. He participated in the Sound Mind Sound Body Camp. He is the type of player who excels when the pads go on, and not necessarily in shorts and shirts camp environments.

"I can't remember whether we had him in camp or not," Dantonio said. "He was one of those guys we had to make a decision on as a junior, coming out of his junior year."


By the time he camped at MSU prior to his senior year, the Spartans had early-spring commitments from Ohio DBs Darian Hicks and Jalyn Powell.

Dantonio warned in those days that college coaches would increase their chances of getting burned by incomplete evaluations due to the increasingly early nature of scholarship offers and commitments. That prophecy is applicable to King's recruitment. His athleticism blossomed as a senior, when many Big Ten programs had already filled their scholarship slots.

Iowa decided not to offer King during the summer and fall. Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz admits he thought King was a safety prospect.

So King committed to Ball State in July prior to his senior year.

Then King rushed for 2,368 yards at tailback with 32 touchdowns, and had seven interceptions on defense. His 29 career INTs is a state high school record in Michigan.

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"At that time we were sort of filled up in the secondary, but he had an outstanding senior year, and he was right there," Dantonio said. "We were close to offering Desmond."

Michigan State held one scholarship for a pure corner, and had its eye on two CBs in Florida. MSU gained an October official visit from D'Cota Dixon, of New Smyna Beach. Dixon indicated he would wait until signing day to decide. MSU opted to offer another Florida CB in the meantime, Justin Williams. Williams boasted a verified 10.5 in the 100 meters.

MSU kept tabs with King. He took an unofficial visit to MSU for its Senior Day loss to Northwestern in 2012. But he was still committed to Ball State.

MSU offered Williams during his Jan. 17 official visit to MSU. He committed within hours of receiving the offer. That closed the MSU scholarship window for Dixon and King.

Dixon ended up committing to Wisconsin on signing day. He is a regular in the Badgers secondary at safety.

Williams never broke into the two-deep at Michigan State and transferred to Hampton in August.

In December of 2012, Iowa commitment Delano Hill, a defensive back from Detroit Cass Tech, de-committed from the Hawkeyes. He had committed to Iowa in April of his junior year. Prior to that, Hill was hoping for a Spartan offer, and attended several Michigan State junior day events and camps. But he bit on the Iowa offer as a spring commitment.

When Iowa abruptly fired its Detroit recruiter, Erik Campbell, in December of 2012, Hill reopened his recruitment. He soon changed his commitment to Michigan.

With Hill gone, Iowa had an opening. The Hawkeyes brought King in for an official visit during the last week of January, just days before signing day, and offered him a scholarship. He changed his commitment from Ball State to Iowa.

Stopping A Trend

Michigan State's incomplete courtship of King coincided with Michigan State's weakest point of recruiting in the Detroit area of the Dantonio era. In the spring of 2012, when MSU was evaluating King, it had been two years since MSU's primary recruiter in the Motor City, Dan Enos, had left to become head coach at Central Michigan. Enos had experienced more success recruiting Detroit than any Spartan assistant in the 85-scholarship era, dating back to 1993.

Dantonio sought to replace Enos with a committee of recruiters in Detroit. But MSU lost traction in Detroit. In the spring of 2011, Michigan State recruiting had become increasingly sleepy in Southeast Michigan, with former Spartan leans Devin Funchess and Mario Ojemudia surprising MSU coaches by committing to Michigan.

When King hit the recruiting circuit a year later, the Spartans found themselves trailing Michigan for the A-list in-state recruits that year as well, and missed out on offering King and Walled Lake Western DBJoshua Jones, who is on track to become a four-year starter at North Carolina State.

MSU's recruiting class of 2012 (the current true juniors and redshirt sophomores) is likely to yield the fewest starters and All-Big Ten players of any Dantonio recruiting class at Michigan State.

As for King, he followed the example of past MSU stars such as Le'Veon Bell, Kirk Cousins, Joel Foreman and Darqueze Dennard, in earning an 11th-hour scholarship from a Big Ten school and turning it into Cinderella success - but he's doing it for the Hawkeyes, not the Spartans.

King enrolled at Iowa in August of 2013. That same month, Dantonio hired Curtis Blackwell as the program's new director of college advancement, largely for the purpose of keeping a better ear to the ground on recruiting development in the Detroit area.

TURNING POINT: Analyzing how MSU set up Riley's pick-six

TURNING POINT: Blitz change-up keyed Bullough Pick-Six


Jim Comparoni
SpartanMag.com Publisher


EAST LANSING - A slight change of tendency yielded a major change in the direction of Michigan State's 24-7 victory over Maryland on Saturday.

Michigan State coaches changed the Spartans' blitz pattern on Maryland's 37th offensive snap of the game, Saturday, and it resulted in Riley Bullough's turning-point interception and 44-yard return for a touchdown.

The pick-six gave Michigan State a 14-7 lead on a day when both teams struggled mightily to move the ball on offense. Bullough's TD came with 2:07 left in the second quarter, altering a game that had been mired in a defensive tie for most of the first half.

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Bullough's touchdown changed the momentum of the game and served as one of only two touchdowns the Spartans would score through the first two-and-a-half quarters of the game. It also supplied all the points MSU would need on this day, breaking a 7-7 tie and putting Michigan State up for good.

So how did MSU make it happen?

Well, the Spartans set things up by blitzing its inside linebackers as part of a six-man rush far more frequently than Michigan State has all season, or at any point in the Mark Dantonio era.

Blitzing two inside linebackers through the A-gaps is one of MSU's favorite blitzes. But it was rare to see MSU run variations of this blitz on such a frequent basis. MSU sent Bullough and Jon Reschke on interior blitzes as part of a six-man rush on 15 of Maryland's first 36 offensive plays.

"We ran that blitz way more than usual," Reschke said.

And then on the 37th snap, Michigan State brought Reschke along with a cornerback, but didn't blitz Bullough. This was the 18th overall blitz of the day for MSU, but the first time MSU dropped Bullough into the flat in pass defense as part of an overall blitz scheme.

MSU played a three-deep (cover three) zone behind the ILB blitzes on all 15 occasions, prior to this play.

The weakness of the cover-three blitz is along the sidelines. An offense usually has a window to attack a three-deep zone with comeback routes at the sideline.

Maryland QB Perry Hills tried to attack the sideline on this play.

Hills saw MSU telegraph the corner blitz prior to the snap. Hills called an audible that he thought would beat the blitz. MSU left the blitz on, rather than check out of it.

Hills expected a void along the left sideline, with the corner blitzing. Hills likely assumed that Bullough and Reschke would be blitzing up the middle, as they had done 15 times up to that point in the game.

But Bullough didn't blitz on this play. He dropped to the sideline, right where Hills attempted to throw his hot route pass.

"I was the hot player on the short side of the field," Bullough said, meaning he was assigned to take away any short blitz-beating "hot" routes. "I didn't have much field to work it. I read the quarterback, made the catch down the sideline."

When SpartanMag.com asked Bullough if he felt the QB was confused by MSU's changing its tendency and dropping him into the flat for this play, Bullough agreed.

"Yeah, I think it might have," he said. "We were showing our blitz and the quarterback kind of checked it. I think we confused him a little bit, he thought we might have changed the blitz to the other side but we kept it on. I was able to read the quarterback and make the play.

"Darian Hicks made a great block for me, so I was pretty open. Just tried to get in the end zone."

SpartanMag.com unofficially charted MSU with running the two-ILB blitz in front of cover-three zone on 30 of Maryland's 73 offensive plays on the day. That's not counting at least five 5-man blitzes, and this one crucial CB/LB blitz with Bullough dropping into the flat for the turning-point interception.

"The (inside) linebacker blitzes were working well," Reschke said. "But they were exhausting.

"Those blitzes weren't something we talked about all week. They weren't a part of the game plan as far as we knew. I think we used it a couple of times early and the coaches like how it looked and kept calling it."

Could Cook Miss Practice Time For OSU? By Jim Comparoni

Dantonio says in this article that "he'll probably be able to go on Tuesday."

But that's all we have at this point.


Could Cook miss practice time for OSU?

Jim Comparoni
SpartanMag.com Publisher


EAST LANSING - One week prior to the most important regular-season game of his career, Connor Cook is dealing with the first injury of his career.

Cook, Michigan State's third-year starter and owner of the 2014 Rose Bowl MVP Trophy, missed the second half of Saturday's 24-7 victory over Maryland due to a forearm/shoulder injury.

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Cook says he is fine. But head coach Mark Dantoniofelt the senior QB lacked velocity after being driven to the turf by a Terrapins defensive end in the second quarter.

Cook played the remainder of the first half while hampered by the injury. Dantonio made the decision to seat Cook for the second half.

"I just landed on it funny and dinged it up a bit," Cook said. "Nothing too bad, it was just for precautionary reasons, wanted to get some of the younger guys involved like Damion (Terry) and Tyler (O'Connor).It was a coach's decision and we just wanted to play it safe."

Dantonio said Cook played a part in the decision, too.

"Coming out in the second half, he just didn't have the arm strength to be able to go full go," Dantonio said of Cook. "So, he was the one that said, `Hey, you've got to go with the other guy.' It was either, you can do the job or you can't do the job.

"That was my sense. Then coming out in the third quarter, I still didn't see that. You got to be able to throw the ball effectively. I think he was functional, but he wasn't what he usually is.

"I don't think it's anything long term or anything like that, but he couldn't throw the ball effectively, so we needed to make a change at that point."

Michigan State coaches and officials were not specific on the nature of the injury.

"There was no popping out of any sort," Cook said. "They looked at it a little bit. I'll be fine to go next week. I'll be good. There was a little pain here and there, but it was nothing where I couldn't deliver a pass."

Cook, of Hinckley, Ohio, is 1-1 in two career starts against his home-state Buckeyes. No. 15-ranked Michigan State (9-1) and No. 3 Ohio State (9-0) will play for supremacy in the Big Ten East and the inside track toward the Big Ten Championship Game, and possibly a berth in the College Football Playoff.

Dantonio didn't seem concerned about the possibility of Cook being hampered for the Ohio State game.

"On a scale of 1-10, I'm a 9.5," Dantonio said, when asked on a 10 scale how confident he is that Cook will be fine next Saturday. "I'm pretty confident in him. I think if we would have chosen to run the football, he could have hung in there. I just don't think he had the velocity on his ball that he usually has and I think that was bothering him. That's my personal opinion. I think he was frustrated with that. We went the other direction (with junior back-up QB Tyler O'Connor).

"We'll be all right," Dantonio added. "Connor [Cook] will be all right. I don't think there's any sense that there's long-term things there, he'll probably be able to go on Tuesday and I think he could have gone, but he felt like if he threw it hard, it would set him back a number of days more. I think that was more of an indication, at least, as he talked. So, got to go with that."
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Good story by Rico Cooney on what Brian Allen's been up against

Good story by Rico Cooney on what Brian Allen's been up against:


https://michiganstate.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1821973

Jack's back but younger brother held his own

Ricardo Cooney
SpartanMag.com Staff Writer


EAST LANSING - Senior center Jack Allen was in no danger of losing his starting job after sitting out two games - against Michigan and Indiana - to heal from an ankle injury.

But there was an interesting dynamic in play, literally, during his absence as he confirmed his return to the starting lineup Tuesday as No. 6 Michigan State prepares for its 7 p.m. contest against Nebraska on Saturday night in Lincoln, Neb.

And that was the fact that younger brother Brian Allen took over the reigns in the middle of the Spartans' offensive line during his brother's two-game absence.

Interesting because it was the first time the younger Allen had subbed for his brother with Jack Allen, confirming that the duo never even played together during their prep days at Hinsdale (Ill.) Central High School.

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Sophomore center Brian Allen stepped in for his brother Jack for two games and held his own.

And interesting because while you could sense a tinge of pride in the elder brother's voice, he admitted he had to handle the situation like he would with any of MSU's other linemen, who aren't one of his siblings.

"Yeah, I definitely cheer for him more but at the same time I'm cheering for all of the o-line guys out there,'' Jack Allen said. "It's not like I'm cheering for one guy more then the other. I want everybody to do well and for us to win.''

And his assessment of his brother's two-game performance at center?

"I think he did a great job,'' said Jack Allen, one of the Spartans' captains. "When you're a young guy, yeah, he did play a little last year, but he wasn't a full time starter like he is now so it's more responsibility on a younger kid like that. So I think he did a great job of jumping around from position to position."

Brian Allen is regularly the first-string left guard. He moved to center to replace his brother. And Brian also returned to left guard as junior Benny McGowan worked some snaps at center against Indiana. Brian has also seen time at right guard.

"There's guys that are o-linemen in this country that are true sophomores and they have trouble with just one position," Jack said. "But jumping through three of them, that really adds on to it. But I thought he did a great job fighting through adversity and things like that.''

While Jack Allen praised his younger brother's graduated role, one that required the younger Allen to assist in calling out the blocking assignments, along with Benny McGowan, Brian Allen was a little more critical of his substitute role.

"It's definitely a lot different,'' Brian Allen said. "For the Michigan game that was probably the most complex defense we would play so that was definitely tough, just all of the fronts they would bring us. They were in defenses we see over the span of a couple games, not one game. So coming into the Michigan game it was tough just to understand all of the points and just to account for everyone because the center obviously sets up all of the blocks. It was definitely a lot more responsibility going into that one but I've just got to get more consistent with stuff like that. You take steps so it's just knowing what I have to every play.''

No matter which assessment you are more inclined to believe, Jack Allen confirmed the most important aspect of his brother's stint at center.

"Yeah, it was frustrating (being out with the injury) but at the same time all I cared about was us is winning. As long as we won, I could care less. I could be sitting on the sideline in a wheelchair just as long as we win.''

Of course, Brian Allen's abbreviated run at the center spot brought up another question for next season.

Will he be the heir to his brother throne at center?

"I just did all right playing center but next year, if that's where I happen to move, hopefully I'll be playing a lot better then I did these last two games. I've played center here before, maybe 60, 70 snaps, but not like the last two games. Now I know what's it's like to start a game at center and finish it at center. So it just helps me understand the responsibility of playing that position.''

Been there, done that

The fortunes or misfortunes, if you will, of the Huskers' 2015 season had many of the Spartans feeling some compassion for Saturday's opponent.

Most of the team's seniors had no problem recalling the difficulty of 2012 when MSU lost five games by a combined total of 13 points - with three of those losses being especially painful.

The double overtime Homecoming loss to Iowa, a two-point defeat at the hands of rival Michigan and a one-point setback to Ohio State made 2012 the most difficult season of Mark Dantonio's tenure.

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Associated Press
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Although Darien Harris sympathizes with Nebraska's tough season, that won't stop him from doing his job.

MSU needed two road wins - an overtime win at Wisconsin and a regular season-ending victory at Minnesota - just to become bowl eligible.

The Spartans had just two wins in their last six games that season before squeezing out 17-16 victory over TCU in the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl.

"We kind of get that same vibe, which helps us a lot because we know what that feels like and we know the level of intensity they're going to have to have and we know that we're going to have to match and then exceed that intensity because we've got our own goals in front of us as well,'' said 5th-year senior linebacker and captain Darien Harris. "They're going to be at home and they're going to be hungry. They've got to win these last games to make a bowl game which is huge for them and huge for that program. So we understand all that and recognize all of that but we've got our own dreams and aspirations and it starts with Nebraska this week in November.''

Nebraska's situation with first-year coach Mike Riley is a bit more dire then MSU's was that season.

The Huskers already have six losses and would need to win out just to become bowl eligible.

Included in Nebraska's miseries this season is a three-point overtime loss to Miami-Florida, a one-point setback at Illinois, and two-point losses to Wisconsin and Northwestern.

"We definitely understand where they're at but we definitely want to come just as hard as they're going to come,'' said senior defensive tackle Joel Heath.

Inner strength

Self motivation has been the mood of the week for MSU, which still has tons to play for because the team's performance in these last four games will determine if the Spartans earn a bid to the four-team College Football Playoff.

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Calhoun

And much of that motivation comes from the fact that Nebraska's polite fanbase doesn't usually give their team's opponents any fodder for hate or dislike.

"It's tough, (because) you've got to kind of create your own energy and your own controlled rage, as Coach Bowman would call it for how we have to play football,'' Harris said. "You can't grasp motivation from the fans as you would at a Michigan or Ohio State away game where you know as the bus is rolling in you're going to have stuff thrown on you and things like that that will obviously get you heated. So, you've got to find motivation from your teammates, gather it from the older guys who understand what's really riding on the season in these and at the end of the day it's always going to be about us and creating our own intensity.''

With a fanbase that is more likely to cheer for their Huskers and pay respect to Dantonio and his team rather than boo any opponent visiting Memorial Stadium, many of MSU's upperclassmen admitted to still being spooked by the genuine kindness and respect Husker fans have become known for throughout the years.

"I just think we're not accustomed to people being polite to us when it comes to football, especially opponents fans,'' said 5th-year senior defensive end Shilique Calhoun. "But we'll play off each other so someone's going to have to take the lead. And at the end of the day, it's still a football game that we want to win so I think we'll be able to drive that energy and create that madness.''

Another one of MSU's 5th-year seniors went a step further.

"At the end of the day, it's all about us,'' Heath said. "Not the way fans boo at you but the way Coach D and all of the coaches motivates us. That's what gives us the most energy.''
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