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RECRUITING Michigan State 2025 QB commit Leo Hannan talks 'amazing' official visit

Michigan State brought in seven class of 2025 official visitors this past weekend, including four current commits at the time. One of those currently committed players who returned to East Lansing was three-star quarterback Leo Hannan.

Hannan, who currently attends Servite High School in Anaheim, California, was the first prospect to commit to the Spartans' 2025 class. He announced his pledge to MSU on April 22.

Following this past weekend, Michigan State's 2025 group grew to seven current commitments, as three-star offensive lineman and fellow California native Drew Nichols became the most recent pledge to the Green and White.

Spartans Illustrated caught up with Hannan after his trip to mid-Michigan to get his thoughts on the experience.

"Their culture and attitude," Hannan said when asked what stands out the most about MSU's program. "They talk about an attitude of 'low ego, high output,' and that’s how you build a family attitude and eventually win championships."

More here:

RECRUITING Checking out Michigan State commits DiMari Malone and Justin Bell

I was at the Dakota High School game versus Anchor Bay tonight to watch Michigan State commits Justin Bell and DiMari Malone.

Malone is being recruited by Michigan State as a linebacker, but had a really strong touchdown run on offense tonight. Bell and the offensive line held up well against a solid team.

Bell and 2027 athlete Elijah Goins will be at Michigan State tomorrow. Malone said it’s very likely he goes as well.

Also, but Bell and Malone plan to enroll early.

I’ll have a story with quotes at some point in the coming days, but here are a few tweets. Please ignore the poor quality from my phone haha.

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FOOTBALL IU-MSU difference

I am still having trouble wrapping my head why Indiana went from 3-9 to 9-0 in one year. The players in both teams were not stellar thus the house cleaning that Smith and Cignetti did. The first question is whether or not Cignetti is a superior evaluator of talent. My other question is the coaching. Their OC has a lot of new talent and they executed so freaking well. It seemed that the receivers knew exactly where to be, and the play calling was right on target.
Their defense was awesome against our running game. Did we try to adjust at all or would it have not made any difference?
Going into the game I thought we had a chance to keep it close based on their soft schedule. I was wrong. IU is well coached and I hope they can demolish the Wolverines.
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UPDATE MSU Athletics weekly schedule 11/11-11/17

Monday, Nov. 11

Women's basketball: vs. Eastern Michigan
6:30 p.m. B1G+

Discussion Thread
W 95-49



Tuesday, Nov. 12

Men's basketball: vs. Kansas (Atlanta)
6:30 p.m. ESPN
Discussion Thread
L 69-77



Thursday, Nov. 14

Women's basketball: vs. Eastern Kentucky
6:30 p.m. B1G+

Discussion Thread
W 96-54



Friday, Nov. 15

Cross country: NCAA Great Lakes Regional (Norton, Ohio)
Discussion Thread

Volleyball: vs. Michigan
6 p.m.

Discussion Thread
W 3-1

Ice hockey: vs. Notre Dame
7 p.m. B1G+

Discussion Thread
W 8-3



Saturday, Nov. 16

Women's soccer: vs. Western Michigan (NCAA Tournament)
12 p.m.

Discussion Thread
W 3-1

Football: at Illinois
2:30 p.m. FS1
Discussion Thread
L 16-38

Men's basketball: vs. Bowling Green
6 p.m. BTN

Discussion Thread
W 86-72

Ice hockey: vs. Notre Dame
8 p.m. B1G+

Discussion Thread
W 4-3



Sunday, Nov. 17

Wrestling: at Ohio
1 p.m.
Discussion Thread
W 22-19

Volleyball: at Iowa
3 p.m.
Discussion Thread
W 3-0

Women's basketball: at Western Michigan
5 p.m. ESPN+
Discussion Thread
W 79-42



Bold = home games
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RECRUITING Reactions: Michigan State offers quintet of Tustin, California prospects

Michigan State cornerbacks coach Demetrice Martin was in his home state of California on Friday, and according to Adam Gorney, the national recruiting director for Rivals, the Spartans offered five prospects out of Tustin High School.

MSU sent out offers to three-star athlete/defensive back Lennie "Trey" Brown, 2027 four-star safety/linebacker Taven Epps, 2027 offensive lineman/defensive lineman Jon Ioane, 2027 safety Khalil Terry and 2027 defensive tackle Jeremiah Williams.

Martin — known as "Coach Meat" — is a Michigan State alumnus and has a strong reputation as a recruiter and coach throughout the country, but especially on the West Coast. The quintet of offered Tustin athletes look forward to building a relationship with Martin and the Spartans.

Here is a closer look at each of the five Tustin recruits and which other schools have gotten involved with the athletes.

Brown, Epps and Terry spoke to Spartans Illustrated and provided their reactions on being offered by Michigan State, along with their potential visit plans and their thoughts on what they are hoping to learn about the MSU program moving forward.

Terry plans to be on campus at the end of the month and the others could make it to East Lansing soon as well.

"I will be at MSU on the 30th (of November), I'm pretty sure," Terry noted.

Much more here:

HOCKEY Top 15 Matchup at Munn: MSU vs OSU

Big weekend at home for the hockey team as they begin conference play. Ohio State has been a hot team to start, including sweeping Wisconsin already this season. Series starts tonight at 7:00, game 2 tomorrow at 6:00.

RECRUITING Kory Amachree recaps his latest visit to Michigan State

2026 three-star running back Kory Amachree was on hand for Michigan State's matchup against then No. 13 Indiana.

@Seth Berry caught him with him to talk about the East Lansing visit:

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Balanced Attack Helps MSU Women Breeze Past Yale, 100-44

This is only the second meeting between the Spartans and the Bulldogs.​

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EAST LANSING, Mich. - Michigan State women's basketball continues its four-game, season-opening homestand against Yale on Friday, Nov. 8 at 7 p.m. Joe DesVergnes and Derrick Mitchell will be on the call for B1G+.

• MSU opened up the season with a dominating 107-42 win over Oakland to open the season. Tuesday's 107 points were MSU's most points scored in a season-opener since the 2008-09 opener when the Spartans routed Niagara, 116-50. The 107 points was the first time topping the century mark in a season-opener since Nov. 11, 1017 in a 100-58 rout of Robert Morris.

• Yale started the season with a 64-61 win over Monmouth at home. Mckenzie Egger led the way for the Bulldogs with 25 points.

• The Spartans return two All-Big Ten selections in first-team All-Big Ten guard/forward Julia Ayrault and Sixth Player of the Year guard Theryn Hallock. Ayrault was first on the team in scoring last season, averaging 15.4 ppg, while Hallock was fourth with 11.2 ppg. MSU returns three starters in Ayrault, junior guard Abbey Kimball and senior guard/forward Jocelyn Tate.

• Against Oakland, all 14 active Spartan players saw the court Tuesday with 13 of the 14 scoring points. Six different player reached double figures.

SCOUTING YALE
Yale started the season with a home win against Monmouth, 64-61 on Nov. 4. The Bulldogs trailed by 12 points with nine minutes left in the third period. Senior Mackenzie Egger led Yale with 25 points, one more than her previous career high. Both the Bulldogs and the Spartans did not allow a 3-pointer in their season openers. Monmouth went 0-for-11 from beyond the arc. MSU held Oakland to 0-for-17 from long range.

Egger will be returning to her home state. The guard hails from Mount Pleasant, Mich.

Head coach Dalila Eshe is in her third season at the helm of the Bulldogs. She holds an overall record of 22-33. Last season, Yale went 8-19 overall and 5-9 in the Ivy League.

SERIES HISTORY VS. THE BULLDOGS
This is only the second meeting between the Spartans and the Bulldogs. In 1995, MSU defeated Yale, 76-53 in East Lansing on Nov. 24.

DID YOU KNOW??
Tuesday's 107 points were MSU's most points scored in a season-opener since the 2008-09 opener when the Spartans routed Niagara, 116-50.

LAST TIME OUT
With six players reaching double figures, the Michigan State opened the 2024-25 season with a dominating wire-to-wire, 107-42, win over Oakland on Nov. 5 at the Breslin Center.

The Spartans were led by 15 points from junior forward Grace VanSlooten in her Spartan debut. In her first game since transferring from Oregon, VanSlooten added nine rebounds and two steals. Junior guard Theryn Hallock scored 14 points, while senior guard/forward Jocelyn Tate added 13 points and four steals. Graduate guard/forward Julia Ayrault scored 11 points with seven boards, three assists and two blocks. Junior guard Abbey Kimball and redshirt-freshman guard Kennedy Blair both added 10 points.

As a team, Michigan State's defense was dominating, forcing 22 steals just shy of the school record of 24 set in both 1980 and 1996. The Spartans would go on to score 44 points off of turnovers in the game.

SEASON OPENERS
Michigan State won its 11th-straight season-opener and second in a row under head coach Robyn Fralick. MSU's last season-opening loss was on Nov. 11, 2013 at #6/7 Notre Dame. The Spartans have won 15-consecutive home openers, as their last loss in the first home game of the season was on Nov. 19, 2009 vs. #5/6 Notre Dame.

STICKY FINGERS
Michigan State forced 33 Oakland turnovers, including swiping 22 steals, with 11 of the 14 Spartans posting at least one steal. Graduate guard Nyla Hampton led the way with a game-high five steals. Four Spartans swiped multiple steals as Hampton was followed by four from senior guard/forward Jocelyn Tate, three by graduate guard Jaddan Simmons and two each by junior forward Grace VanSlooten and junior guard Abbey Kimball. The 22 steals were just shy of the school record of 24 set in both 1980 and 1996.

BRINGING THE BOOM
For the 2024-25 season, Michigan State women's introduced its new student section - the Breslin Boom. First introduced by Coach Fralick at Michigan State Madness, Spartan students will be encouraged to yell "BOOM" on any big MSU plays.

WELCOME TO THE BRESLIN CENTER
All six of the Spartan freshmen saw action against Oakland on Nov. 5. Redshirt-freshman guard Kennedy Blair had her first double-digit scoring game with 10 points in just 14 minutes. Forward Juliann Woodard added eight points with two rebounds, while Inés Sotelo added three assists and three rebounds.

RISING TO THE CHALLENGE
Michigan State will play seven teams that are ranked in the preseason top 25 polls (AP/Coaches Poll), led by No. 3/3 USC (Feb. 16) and No. 5/6 UCLA (Feb. 19). At the West Palm Beach Classic, the Spartans will take on No. 24/25 Alabama. Big Ten teams Ohio State (No. 14/14), Maryland (No. 18/18), Nebraska (No. 23/23) and Indiana (No. 25/24) are all ranked in the preseason polls.

BRINGING THE EXPERIENCE
Michigan State adds four transfers with a wealth of experience. Graduate Nyla Hampton comes to MSU very familiar with Coach Fralick and the Spartan coaching staff. She was at Bowling Green for three seasons before playing last season at Ball State. Graduate guard Jaddan Simmons played four seasons at Arizona State. MSU also welcomes juniors Grace VanSlooten from Oregon and Emma Shumate from Ohio State.

O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!
Michigan State head coach Robyn Fralick has announced guard/forward Julia Ayrault and guard Nyla Hampton as team captains, as voted on by the players on the 2024-25 women's basketball team.

This is Ayrault's second season as a captain for the Spartans. She is the first Spartan to be a captain in back-to-back seasons since Jenna Allen during the 2016-17 and 2017-18 seasons.

Hampton is in her first season with the Spartans, but is familiar with head coach Robyn Fralick. She played three seasons with Bowling Green before transferring to Ball State last season.

GUESS WHO'S BACK
Despite losing two of its top three scorers, Michigan State still returns a quite potent offense. Graduate guard/forward Julia Ayrault led the team in scoring with 15.4 points and 7.3 rebounds per game. Off the bench, junior guard Theryn Hallock scored 12.3 ppg, which was fourth on the team. MSU lost second-leading scorer Moira Joiner (14.7 ppg) to graduation and third-leading scorer DeeDee Hagemann (12.3 ppg) to transfer.

VANSLOOTEN NAMED TO WATCH LIST
Michigan State Women's Basketball junior forward Grace VanSlooten was named to the Cheryl Miller Award preseason watch list, as announced by the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame and the Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA).

She is one of five Big Ten players on the list along with Indiana's Yarden Garzon, Maryland's Saylor Poffenbarger, Ohio State's Cotie McMahon and UCLA's Angela Dugalić. The award honors the nation's top small forwards.

VanSlooten is in her first season at Michigan State after transferring from Oregon. She averaged 14.1 points and 6.4 rebounds per game in two season with the Ducks. In the Spartans 101-40 exhibition win over Wayne State on Oct. 28, Van Slooten tied a team high with 16 points in just 18 minutes.

LOOKING AT THE SCHEDULE
For the fourth-straight season, the Big Ten Conference will play an 18-game schedule. MSU also played an 18-game schedule in both 2018-19 and 2019-20. The conference additionally had 18-game schedules in both 2015-16 and 2014-15. This season, the B1G adds four additional teams in Oregon, UCLA, USC and Washington.

Nine of the Spartans' 2024-25 regular-season opponents competed in the NCAA Tournament last season, as MSU will take on either Arizona or Vanderbilt in the Acrisure Classic. From the Big Ten portion of the schedule, Indiana, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan, Nebraska, Ohio State, UCLA and USC reached the NCAA Tournament.

COASTAL ADVENTURES
The Spartans will play in two tournaments this season. Over Thanksgiving, Michigan State will head to Palm Springs, California for the Acrisure Classic. The Spartans will take on California in their first game on Nov. 26 before facing either Arizona or Vanderbilt in their second game on Nov. 27. Before the Holiday break, MSU will play West Palm Beach Classic. MSU will take on Montana on Dec. 19 and Alabama on Dec. 20.

Preview courtesy of MSU Athletics.
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OTHER MSU SPORTS Strong Serving Pushes Volleyball Past Rutgers in Piscataway

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EAST LANSING, Mich. – Michigan State volleyball hits the road for a pair of B1G matches this week, first heading to College Park, Maryland for an 8:00 p.m. match at Maryland on Thursday, November 7 before meeting Rutgers at 7:00 p.m. in Piscataway, N.J. the next night on Friday, November 8. Both matches will stream live on B1G+.

ABOUT MARYLAND​

Led by seventh year head coach Adam Hughes, Maryland enters the week with a record of 10-13 (1-11 B1G) with a B1G victory over Rutgers. The Terrapins have lost eight straight.
Nationally, Maryland ranks No. 8 in aces per set (2.05) led by Samantha Schnitta who is the nation's leader with 0.74 aces/set and 61 total aces this season. The Terps also rank No. 128 in hitting percentage (.218), No. 168 in blocks/set (2.08), No. 227 in opponent hitting percentage (.219), No. 232 in kills/set (12.08), No. 259 in assists/set (10.93) and No. 288 in digs/set (12.99).
Schnitta also ranks tenth in the B1G with 4.30 points/set and is eighth with 353 total points this season on .220 hitting. Middle blocker's Eva Rohrbach and Anastasia Russ are hitting .305 and .337 respectively. Russ leads the team in blocking with 1.02 blocks/set. Libero Lilly Gunter is posting 3.25 digs/set this season. The offense runs through Sydney Dowler (5.59 assists/set) and Zoe Huang (5.02 assists/set).

SERIES HISTORY

Maryland
- Michigan State is 15-3 all-time against Maryland dating back to 1976. The Spartans are 7-2 when facing the Terps in College Park.
- MSU has won back-to-back matches over Maryland in each of the last two seasons, winning 3-0 on Nov. 3, 2023 at home and 3-2 on Sept. 30, 2022 on the road. The Spartans trailed 8-5 in set five before rattling off 10 straight points to win.
- Last season, Taylah Holdem led MSU with 10 kills, while Amani McArthur added eight with six blocks. Nalani Iosia posted a team-high 17 digs in the sweep.

ABOUT RUTGERS​

Led by fifth-year head coach Caitlin Schweihofer, Rutgers is 5-18 (0-12 B1G) this season. Nationally, the Scarlet Knights rank No. 98 in blocks/set (2.27), No. 179 in aces/set (1.50), No. 255 in hitting percentage (.180), No. 284 in assists/set (10.47), No. 293 in kills/set (11.14), No. 308 in opponent hitting percentage (.244) and No. 326 in digs/set (11.85).

Natalie Robinson is among the better blockers in the B1G with 1.31 blocks/set to rank fourth in the conference and No. 34 nationally. Rutgers is led offensively by Alissa Kinkela who averages 3.90 points/set and 3.28 kills/set on .222 hitting. Setter Aly Borellis averages 6.71 assists/set, and Lexi Visintine has a team-high 27 service aces. Libero Kenzie Dyrstad has posted 2.99 digs/set this season.

SERIES HISTORY

Rutgers
- Michigan State is 16-3 all-time against Rutgers dating back to 2000. The Spartans are 7-1 when facing the Scarlet Knights in Piscataway.
- MSU has won three consecutive matches against the Scarlet Knights, winning 3-2 and 3-1 in matches during the 2023 season.
- The Spartans completed a reverse sweep of Rutgers on Nov. 18, 2023 (20-25, 17-25, 25-17, 25-13, 15-10).

IN THE B1G RANKINGS

Nalani Iosia is #1 in digs/set in the B1G at 4.43 and ranks #1 in total digs with 372.

Iosia is #2 in B1G only matches with 4.43 digs/set on 195 total digs.

Last week Iosia ranked #1 in digs/set with 6.29 on 44 total digs.

Zuzanna Kulig ranks #3 in the B1G in blocks thus far at 1.43 blocks/set, only behind Purdue's Raven Colvin (1.52) and Minnesota Phoebe Awoleye (1.51).

Kulig's total blocks (114) rank third in the conference behind Colvin's 125 and Awoleye's 118, and her solo blocks (21) lead the league.

In B1G only matches Kulig ranks #3 in blocks/set with 1.36.

Kulig is #8 in the B1G in overall season hitting at .363 (110-19-251).

Last week, Akasha Anderson was #7 in the B1G in kills/set (4.43).

LAST ONE BEST ONE

Fifth-year libero Nalani Iosia saved her best for last, averaging a career-high 4.43 digs per set. Her previous career-high was 4.16 in 2023.

Iosia posted a career-best 34 digs against Ohio State on Nov. 3, the most digs by a B1G libero this season. It's the most digs by an MSU player ever in a four set match and the third-most digs in a match at MSU all time.

If the season ended today, Iosia's 4.43 digs/set would rank No. 6 in the program history book for a single season.

Iosia moved into No. 6 in career digs at MSU and now has 1,322 in a Spartan jersey. Allyson Karaba is No. 5 all-time with 1,335 career digs. Jamye Cox is No. 4 with 1,424.

Iosia ranks No. 26 in active career dig leaders among all DI players with 1,876.

Iosia is one the most experienced players in DI ranking No. 1 in matches played (143) and No. 14 in sets played (509).

Iosia leads the B1G in digs per set (4.43) and total digs (372).

Iosia entered the season ranked second in the B1G in career digs among active players with 1,504 (now 1,876).

Iosia ranked fifth in the B1G last season in digs/set at 4.16.

Iosia was an AVCA All-North Region honorable mention following the conclusion of the 2023 season, the first Spartan to earn a regional honor since 2017 and the first libero since 2014.

Iosia's 483 digs last season ranked No. 8 all-time for a single season at MSU.

KASH MONEY

Over her last five matches junior outside hitter Akasha Anderson leads MSU with 4.58 kills/set and 4.97 points/set on .250 hitting.
Anderson has posted 20 or more kills in two of her last five matches with a career-high tying 26 kills in a win over #16 USC and 24 kills in a four set match against Ohio State last weekend.
Anderson tallied a career-best 30.5 total points against USC.

KULIG AS A CUCUMBER

Sophomore middle blocker Zuzanna Kulig inserted herself into the conversation as one of the best in the country.

Kulig ranks No. 17 nationally and No. 3 in the B1G in blocks per set (1.43).

Kulig's 114 total blocks rank No. 26 nationally and No. 3 in the B1G.

Kulig posted a new career-high 12 blocks against Illinois on Oct. 12, 2024.

12 blocks in a match is the fourth-most single match blocks in program history and was last accomplished by Alexis Mathews on Nov. 24, 2010 against Michigan.

Kulig's 1.43 blocks/set would rank No. 7 in program history for a single season. No Spartan has posted 1.40 blocks/set since 2016 (Alyssa Garvelink, 1.40).

Kulig's current career 1.24 blocks/set would rank No. 5 in program history.

Kulig is No. 8 in the B1G in hitting % (.363).

Anderson tallied a career-best 30.5 total points against USC.

Preview courtesy of MSU Athletics.

OFF TOPIC: Kirk Herbstreit's dog, Ben, is in a severe health struggle...UPDATE: ESPN and Kirk do tribute to Ben. RIP Good Boy.

https://x.com/KirkHerbstreit
Kirk Herbstreit
@KirkHerbstreit

I’ve had so many people asking me about Ben that I wanted to let you know-Ben had a 2nd chemo injection on October 23rd and from that day has been getting worse and worse. He has lost use of his back legs-almost like they’re paralyzed. He can barely walk. He hasn’t eaten in 3 days. I’m currently in Pennsylvania with a holistic Dr who is administering a 3 day Vitamin C IV hoping it will flush the toxics from his body and give him a chance. The next 24-48 hours will tell us if he has a chance or not. I’m so thankful for ALL the love so many have shown him over the last couple years. One of the hardest things I’ve gone through in my life. Ben is my best friend and companion. I love him with all of my heart. If you’re a spiritual person I’d love for you to pray for my boy.
GblYPuSXAAA3Eyr
He’s currently in an ER hospital overnight and I’m picking him up tomorrow for another round of Vitamin C. Please pray for Ben and hope he pulls out of it.

HOCKEY No. 4 MSU Hockey opens Big Ten play with a 4-2 win over No. 13 Ohio State

No. 4 Michigan State opened Big Ten play with a 4-2 win over No. 13 Ohio State.

Defenseman Nicklas Andrews: "We came out strong. I thought our first two periods were really good."

Full game recap by @Caden Handwork:

OFF TOPIC: The Detroit Red Wings Pavel Datsyuk's induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame

Before tonight's game between the Red Wings and Maple Leafs in Toronto, the Hockey Hall of Fame's 2024 Class will be honored. Nearest and dearest to Detroit fans amongst that class is Red Wings legend Pavel Datsyuk, who won two Stanley Cups and three Selke Trophies while humiliating too many goaltenders and defensemen to keep track of with his nonpareil slight of hand. Datsyuk spent 14 seasons in Detroit, from 2001-2016.


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FOOTBALL Michigan State coaches on the road

Quick update, but I have gotten word on what a few of the Michigan State football assistant coaches have been up to during the bye week. As expected, many are on the road recruiting.

-Assistant head coach/co-special teams coordinator/running backs coach Keith Bhonapha traveled to Chicago yesterday

-Wide receivers coach Courtney Hawkins has been in New Jersey/out on the East Coast and offering some prospects out that way.

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-Cornerbacks coach Demetrice Martin is in his home state of California and offered a plethora of Tustin High School prospects.

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Earlier this week, tight ends coach Brian Wozniak was in North Carolina and offered 2026 tight end/athlete William Vaughn

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I believe some coaches stayed in state and will be checking out their commits/prospects of interest in the Michigan playoffs.

MEN'S BASKETBALL MSU's Jaxon Kohler showed everyone what he's capable of with double-double

Thursday night was a long time coming for junior forward/center Jaxon Kohler. A preseason foot injury derailed his sophomore campaign. He still played in 21 games during the 2023-2024 season, but Kohler did not live up to pre-injury expectations, through no fault of his own.

After an offseason full of putting on more mass and working on his game ahead of the 2024-2025 campaign, Kohler was the standout performer in Michigan State’s 96-60 win over Niagara on Thursday night.

Kohler recorded career-highs in both points, with 20, and rebounds, with 13, against the Purple Eagles. He shot 8-for-12 from the field and only played 18 minutes. It was his second career double-double.

“On the court, it felt great,” Kohler said after the win over Niagara. “On the court, it felt like I finally got to show people what I’m capable of. It’s been a weird, difficult road and (on Thursday night) I felt like I really showed people what I could do. Not only that, but I can do more in the future.”

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RECRUITING Michigan State latest to offer 2028 defensive back Phoenix Evans, a few programs standing out early

It's very early on in the recruiting process for 2028 cornerback/athlete, but he has already received 12 scholarship offers. Michigan State is the latest program to offer and he looks forward to taking a visit in the future.

Rutgers, Penn State and others are standing out in the early going for him.

"It felt great to get a Michigan State offer," Evans said. "I was excited to get another Big Ten offer."

More here:

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OTHER MSU SPORTS No. 5-Seeded Spartans Men's Soccer Stopped by No. 4-Seeded Washington on Penalty Kicks, 5-3

This is the second meeting of the season between the two teams.​

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EAST LANSING, Mich. - No. 5-seeded Michigan State men's soccer will take on No. 4-seeded Washington in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Tournament on Thursday, Nov. 7 at 6 p.m. ET. The quarterfinals and semifinals of the Big Ten Tournament will be held at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview, Illinois.

The Spartans ended the regular season with a 5-7-4 overall record and an even 4-4-2 mark in Big Ten action. Last time out, MSU fell to Rutgers, 1-0, in the home finale on Nov. 3.

Dean Linke and Patrick Doody will be on the call for the Big Ten Plus.

TOURNEY TIDBITS
Michigan State is the No. 5 seed in the tournament, facing No. 4-seeded Washington. This is the Huskies inaugural appearance in the B1G Tournament. Last season as the No. 3 seed, the Spartans fell to No. 6 Ohio State, 1-0 at DeMartin Stadium in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Tournament

After a scoreless first half, OSU netted the match's lone goal in the 54th minute and withstood a late MSU rally. Michigan State is seeking its first Big Ten Tournament win since 2016.

WINDY CITY MAGIC
The game against the No. 4-seeded Huskies is MSU's first in Illinois since winning the 2012 Big Ten Tournament in Evanston. In that game, the Spartans defeated Michigan, 2-1 in overtime. The 97th minutes golden goal from Sean Conerty gave the Spartans their third Big Ten Tournament title.

LOOKING AT THE HUSKIES
Washington heads into the Big Ten Tournament on a hot streak, winning four-straight games. UW has moved up to No. 19 in the most recent United Soccer Coaches poll. The Huskies earned the No. 4 seed on the last day of the season with a 1-0 road win over UCLA on Nov. 3.

Charlie Kosakoff and Peter Kingston are tied for seventh in the Big Ten in points scored with 14 points. Kosakoff is tied for eighth in the league with five goals scored. Jadon Bowton has played 17 games in goal for the Huskies. He has allowed only 17 goals for a 1.00 GAA.

SERIES HISTORY
Michigan State won its first-ever game against Washington on Sept. 13. Behind a goal from Jonathan Stout, the Spartans captured a 1-0 win at DeMartin Stadium. The Huskies still lead the overall series 2-1-1. The teams met in Seattle in 2022 when the Huskies came out on top 4-1. In 2019 in East Lansing, UW edged MSU, 1-0. In the 2014 NCAA Tournament in East Lansing, the teams tied 2-2 with MSU advancing on penalty kicks, 4-3.

DID YOU KNOW?
The Buckeyes were the first No. 1 team that MSU has faced since falling to No. 1 Creighton on Sept. 13, 2015.

LAST TIME OUT
Michigan State men's soccer was nipped by Rutgers, 1-0, on Spartan Senior Celebration Day, presented by HAP, on a Sunday afternoon at DeMartin Stadium.

Rutgers scored in the 83rd minute to take the lead, but Michigan State had several late chances including a penalty kick with 43 seconds left that went wide to deny the draw and spoil the Spartans' Senior Day festivities.

After the match, Michigan State men's soccer celebrated Zack Babiak, Efosa Emovon, Levin Gerhardt, Sean Kerrigan and Shion Soga in their final regular-season matches at DeMartin Stadium in the Green & White.

FINDING THE W
The Spartans are looking for their first win since a 2-0 win over Wisconsin on Oct. 11. Since that game, MSU has gone 0-2-2.

FINDING HIS GROOVE
Junior midfielder Jonathan Stout leads the team in scoring with four goals and two assist for 10 points. He now has points in four of the Spartans' last nine games. Stout has now reached double figures in scoring all three seasons that he has been at Michigan State with 12 as a freshman and 10 as a sophomore.

Sophomore forward Richie Ludwig, senior midfielder Sean Kerrigan, junior midfielder Jack Guggemos, sophomore defender Will Eby and freshman forward Mohamed Saad have also found the back of the net this season. Junior midfielder Cristiano Bruletti scored his first goal as a Spartan against Indiana on Oct. 18 on a penalty kick.

WRACKING UP THE CLEAN SHEETS
Redshirt-junior goalkeeper Zac Kelly has earned six shutouts this season, including five in Big Ten play. He now has 11 career shutouts in two complete seasons for the Spartans. He has a 1.14 GAA this season and a 1.04 career GAA. The six shutouts were the most since Jimmy Hague had nine in 2018.

PUTTING UP THE POINTS
Against No. 1 Ohio State, senior midfielder Seam Kerrigan added a goal and an assist in the tie against the Buckeyes. Kerrigan is second on the team in scoring behind Jonathan Stout with four goals and one assist for nine points. He is first on the team in shots on goal with 13. In his two seasons at MSU, he has scored 10 goals with one assist for 21 points. For his career, he has 35 goals with 12 assists for 82 points.

FRESHMAN FRENZY
Freshman defender Brandon Munson has made the most of his brief time as a Spartan. He has played in all 14 games, starting 12. Against Washington on Sept. 13, his bicycle kick back save prevented the Huskies from scoring and was the No. 1 play on ESPN SportsCenter. Fellow freshman forward Mohamed Saad has also played in all 13 games, starting five. He has scored one goal this season against Oregon State. Munson has missed the last two games with injury.

PACKING THE STANDS
Michigan State is 11h in the nation in attendance this season, averaging 1,805 fans per game this season. That stands third in the Big Ten behind Indiana (2,774), which is third and Maryland (2,237), which is sixth.

GETTING IN THE LINEUP
Through 16 games this season, MSU has used 10 different starting lineups. In the first 16 games, three Spartans have started every in Zac Kelly, Cristiano Bruletti and Josh Adam. Kelly and Adam are the only Spartans with over 1,400 minutes played. Cristiano Bruletti (1,266) and Will Eby (1,226)stand second and third, respectively in minutes played.

PLAY THE BEST TO BE THE BEST
Michigan State's tie against No. 1 Ohio State was the Spartans' sixth game against a ranked team. MSU is 2-2-2 against ranked teams this season with a wins against No. 15 UCLA and No. 25 Wisconsin. MSU has losses against No. 12/7 Maryland and No. 5 Oregon State. To open the season, the Spartans tied No. 25 SIUE, 1-1. Washington is currently ranked No. 19 in the United Soccer Coaches poll.

HERMANN TROPHY
Junior midfielder Jonathan Stout was named to the Missouri Athletic Club (MAC) Hermann Trophy Watch List. The MAC Hermann Trophy is the most prestigious individual award in college soccer and is presented annually to the most outstanding male and female players of the year. Stout is the first Spartan to make the list since Giuseppe Barone and Patrick Nielsen were named to the Hermann Watch List in 2019.

Preview courtesy of MSU Athletics.

OTHER MSU SPORTS Rachel Forsyth Named Big Ten Women’s Cross Country Freshman of the Year

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EAST LANSING, Mich. – After placing fourth at the Big Ten Championships, Michigan State's Rachel Forsyth was named the Big Ten Women's Cross Country Freshman of the Year, the conference office announced Thursday.

The Big Ten Conference also announced that MSU senior Taylor Ewert and sophomore Parker Lambers were the Spartan women's and men's recipients of the B1G Sportsmanship Awards, respectively.

Finishing fourth in the Big Ten Championship, Forsyth also garnered first-team All-Big Ten honors. Her time of 19:26.2 was a Michigan State Big Ten Championship record, just besting All-American Leah O'Connor who won the 2014 title with a time of 19:26.3. At the Big Ten Championship, Forsyth improved upon her 6k time of 20:16.0 set at the Wisconsin Pre-Nationals on Oct. 19.

The Ann Arbor native becomes the first Spartan to win the award since Kaitlyn Hynes in 2021 and Maggie Farrell in 2017. She is only the sixth Michigan State woman to be named the top Big Ten rookie in program history.

Ewert, a senior from Beavercreek, Ohio, had the fourth-best finish for the MSU women at the conference championships. The Arkansas transfer set an MSU personal-best time of 20:15.8 to finish 48th. She has been a solid performer all season for the MSU women competing in both the Wisconsin Pre-Nationals (20:39.5 - 6k) and the Joe Piane Notre Dame Invitational (17:04.4 - 5k).

Lambers has had a breakout season for the Spartans. A native of Holland, Michigan, Lambers scored in the Big Ten Championships with a time of 23:32.3 in the 8k race. Earlier this season, he set a personal best at the Joe Piane Notre Dame Invitational with a time of 23:20.0.

Michigan State continues postseason action on Friday, Nov. 15 at the NCAA Great Lakes Regionals in Norton, Ohio.

Release courtesy of MSU Athletics.

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MEN'S BASKETBALL MSU has a replicable formula for winning: Depth

Michigan State's rotation goes 10, 11 or 12 deep. Keeping guys fresh and wearing down opponents is a method that will be replicable for the Spartans throughout the season.

“We have guys coming off the bench, we have the starters — everyone can do a little bit of everything, and when we have our rotations and our next guys coming in, there’s no drop off."

Read here:

MEN'S BASKETBALL An early look at the rebuilding Kansas Men's Basketball team (Article) + Video Footage of Kansas vs. Arkansas Exhibition game

How Bill Self and Kansas rebuilt from their worst season​

Kansas Jayhawks head coach Bill Self is determined to put last season behind him and live up to the expectations of being the No. 1 team again in 2024-25. Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports
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    Jeff Borzello, ESPN Staff WriterNov 8, 2024, 08:00 AM ET



LAWRENCE, Kan. -- In retrospect, even Bill Self admits the timing wasn't ideal. Less than an hour after Kansas' 2023-24 season ended in an 89-68 second-round NCAA tournament defeat to Gonzaga, Self was asked how long the loss would stick with him.

"I think for the last month, I've been thinking about next season, to be honest," the Kansas coach said.

The wheels had long since fallen off for Kansas, which opened last season at No. 1 and still sat at No. 4 in early February. After opening the season with 13 wins in their first 14 games, the Jayhawks went 10-10, including 5-7 in their final 12 games. Their 23-11 overall record and 10-8 record in the Big 12 were the program's worst since Self took over in 2003.

Self looking ahead to more hopeful days wasn't a surprise. But saying it right after a 21-point tournament loss raised some eyebrows.

"If you sit in our meetings, 50 percent of the time what we're talking about isn't this year's team," Self told ESPN in late October. "It's who we're going to recruit. Portal, money, what can we afford? Salary cap, roster management. That's what we talk about all the time. Now, the timing of saying it right after the game ..." ... But what I said was actually 100 percent accurate."

Self's post-game comments set the tone for Kansas' off-season. After a hyper-aggressive portal push in which the Jayhawks signed five perimeter players, Kansas finds itself in a familiar position as the 2024-25 college basketball season begins: No. 1 in the Associated Press Top 25 poll.


After two exhibition games that included a loss at Arkansas and a win over Washburn, the regular season started off with an 87-57 win over Howard. Now, the difficult part: living up to the expectations, avoiding a repeat of last season's collapse. And it starts with Friday's blue-blood showdown against No. 9 North Carolina (7 p.m. EST, ESPN) -- the first heavyweight team on a schedule that also includes Michigan State, Duke and Creighton before Big 12 play begins.
"There's definitely a different mindset and a different kind of motivation," center Hunter Dickinson said. "We're going to need everybody we've got."


Lost in the analysis of Kansas' second-half struggles last season was that the Jayhawks were one of the best teams in the country through the first two months. At full strength, they beat UConn, Tennessee and Kentucky. The losses in February and March coincided with the health of All-American forward Kevin McCullar Jr., who sat out eight games because of a bone bruise and was hampered for the final two months of the season.

Without him, Self had to rely on a shortened rotation that included his starters routinely playing 35-plus minutes per game.
"I actually thought last year we played to that ranking early in the season," he said. "But when it counted the most, we didn't sniff playing to that ranking. There were reasons why, but you can't make excuses.

"If a pro goes down, if the wrong guy goes down, it's going to hurt your team regardless. But we didn't have a way to combat that with depth."

So by the round-of-32 loss to Gonzaga, Self already had a reloading plan in mind. In Dajuan Harris Jr., KJ Adams Jr. and Dickinson, he had three veteran anchors around whom to build. Five-star freshman Flory Bidunga, ranked No. 18 in the ESPN 100, was coming in to provide depth behind Dickinson.
What was left to add? Guards and wings. Shooters and athletes with length. Kansas ranked 11th in the Big 12 last season in 3-point shooting and the Jayhawks consistently had trouble creating their own shots and defending teams who could attack aggressively off the dribble.

"I told my staff, we got to get guys that are good enough -- eight starters that can play meaningful starter minutes at Kansas if something happens," Self said. "And I think that we did that for the most part."

South Dakota State transfer Zeke Mayo was the first one, picking the Jayhawks on April 2. Florida transfer Riley Kugel committed one day later, followed by AJ Storr (Wisconsin) and Rylan Griffen (Alabama) later in April. Mississippi State transfer Shakeel Moore arrived in June and Northern Illinois transfer David Coit in August.

All of these players bring plenty to Lawrence, but most importantly: They can shoot. Mayo and Griffen each shot better than 39% from 3 last season; Storr and Coit are both above 35% for their careers. Moore was above 36% last season, too.

Another newcomer is ESPN 100 freshman Rakease Passmore, who signed last fall and maintained his commitment despite the influx of talent.
"I think coming in they probably thought he would redshirt or were expecting him to, but I think he's one of our better perimeter defenders and he makes an impact when he is out there," Dickinson said of Passmore. "So I feel like it's going to be hard for him not to be on the floor sometimes."
Zeke Mayo was a 39% 3-point shooter last season at South Dakota State and should get heavy minutes on a deep roster at Kansas. Wesley Hitt/Getty Images
When the dust settled, the Jayhawks brought in six new perimeter players with whom to surround Harris, Adams and Dickinson.
"I feel like the athleticism is definitely different than last year," Dickinson said. "We got a lot more athletes on the team. Like last year, our best warmup dunker was a walk-on. The warmup lines will look way different this year."

As Kansas kept adding more players, from the outside it looked congested. But then Kugel and high school recruit Labaron Philon decommitted, and Elmarko Jackson, who started 16 games last season, sustained a season-ending injury. The bodies -- and competition for minutes -- now seemed necessary.
"At some point in our careers, everybody's going to face adversity for whatever reason," Storr said. "If that's playing time, fighting to get on a roster -- this is just preparation for that. I understand it's going to be somebody different every night."

And there are signs Kansas' offseason roster approach is working. Against Howard, the Jayhawks shot 50% from 3-point range and made 11 3s; they made more than 11 3s only once last season and hit the 50% mark only twice. They also played 10 players at least 14 minutes; only seven players averaged more than eight minutes last season.

"Everything is interchangeable," Self said. "How do we address length? How do we address perimeter shooting? Nobody's going to beat KJ out, but if we're going to play KJ, we need to put shooters around him. ...Our house looks crowded, but after you watch us practice, it's not near as crowded as what people think."

Despite most of the newcomers arriving in Lawrence with plenty of college experience, playing at Kansas -- and alongside so many proven producers -- requires a change in approach. Not only do most have to prepare for a diminished role on offense, but some have to alter their team vs. individual perspective.
"It's not been a change with my game, necessarily. I would say mindset," Storr said.

Dickinson went through a similar process when he arrived from Michigan, where he earned All-American honors, in the spring of 2023.
After the Wolverines earned a Big Ten title and 1-seed in 2021, they went a combined 37-31 in Dickinson's final two seasons at Michigan. As the losses piled up in his final season under coach Juwan Howard, Dickinson made headlines for the wrong reasons: calling Wisconsin "scumbags" on a podcast and wearing a ski mask while walking into a game against the Badgers.

Hunter Dickinson puts in the hook shot and lets the crowd hear it. Then Kobe Bufkin hits a three to end the half, and Dickinson eggs on the crowd more.
Upon arriving at Kansas, he shifted his motivation from his individual game to winning at the highest level -- and that hunger for titles brought a tweak in his personality.

"I probably have dialed it back a little bit in what I say and stuff. Just coming to Kansas, I was trying to mature a little bit," Dickinson said. "I know how much winning means and especially winning at a place like this, what it can do for your basketball career, for your life in general. ... Other people offered me more NIL money, but I knew if I didn't win, there was no point in going to those schools because it wasn't going to help me get to where I really wanted to go."
As a freshman at St. John's, Storr's team went 18-15 and missed the NCAA tournament. Last season at Wisconsin, the Badgers went 22-14 and lost to 12-seed James Madison in the first round of the NCAA tournament.

"UConn got four guys drafted and, statistically, some of those guys' numbers weren't as good as other players out there. But they're the ones that got drafted because they won a national championship," Storr said. "Winning is the main thing I'm focused on right now. I'm going to develop, regardless. When you're winning, you're developing."

On a couple of unseasonably warm October days that turn Allen Fieldhouse into a sauna, Self spends long stretches in practice trying to instill aggressiveness into his newcomers. Though Mayo and Storr were go-to guys at their previous schools, and Griffen might be the team's best pure scorer, all three have gone through bouts of uncertainty in the preseason.

In the days following Kansas' exhibition loss to Arkansas, Self told reporters Mayo played too cautiously, and that he has "AJ messed up at the moment because he doesn't know what aggressive looks like," but acknowledges "that's not on him as much as it is on us." He reiterated that Storr and Griffen need to play to their ceiling if Kansas is going to compete for a national championship.

At practice before the exhibition against Washburn, Self urges Storr to get open and cut harder off the ball. He implores Griffen to take a shot when he instead passes to a teammate.

When Storr finally drives to the rim off a screen and finishes with a dunk, Self is encouraged.
"That's much better!"






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