2014 Michigan State Spring Football Prospectus

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2014 SPRING PROSPECTUS


2014 MICHIGAN STATE FOOTBALL SPRING PRACTICE SCHEDULE SUNDAY MARCH

MONDAY 24

TUESDAY

30

6

26

25

23

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY 27

APRIL 1

7

2

14

9

15

21

PRACTICE #13

11

17

18

24 SPRING GAME PLAYER DRAFT

12 PRACTICE #9

PRACTICE #12

23

5 PRACTICE #6

PRACTICE #8

16

22

4

10

PRACTICE #11

20

PRACTICE #3

PRACTICE #5

PRACTICE #7

13

29

28

3

PRACTICE #4

8

SATURDAY

PRACTICE #2

PRACTICE #1

31

FRIDAY

1913 PRACTICE #11 (PADS)

25 PRACTICE #14

PRACTICE #10

PRACTICE #12 (SCRIMMAGE)

26 PRACTICE #15 SPRING GAME SPARTAN STADIUM 2 P.M. (BTN)


MICHIGAN STATE ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS • 534 BIRCH ROAD • Z-22 BRESLIN CENTER • EAST LANSING, MICH. 48824 OFFICE PHONE: 517-355-2271 • WEBSITE: MSUSPARTANS.COM • TWITTER: @MSU_FOOTBALL • YOUTUBE: MSUSPARTANATHLETICS

2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL PREVIEW March 25-April 26 (Spring Game, April 26, 2 p.m.)

2014 SCHEDULE

Aug. 30 JACKSONVILLE STATE Sept. 6 at Oregon Sept. 20 EASTERN MICHIGAN Sept. 27 WYOMING (Homecoming) Oct. 4 NEBRASKA Oct. 11 at Purdue Oct. 18 at Indiana Oct. 25 MICHIGAN Nov. 8 OHIO STATE Nov. 15 at Maryland Nov. 22 RUTGERS Nov. 29 at Penn State Dec. 6 Big Ten Championship Game + + Big Ten Championship, Indianapolis, Ind.

FIRST-AND-10 – • Michigan State, which won a school-record 13 games in 2013 including a 24-20 victory over No. 5 Stanford in the 2014 Rose Bowl Game, begins its eighth spring practice under head coach Mark Dantonio on Tuesday, March 25. The Spartans will conclude their 15 spring practices with the annual Green-White Spring Game on Saturday, April 26 at 2 p.m. in Spartan Stadium. The spring game will be televised on BTN.

2013 RESULTS (13-1, 8-0 Big Ten) Aug. 30 WESTERN MICHIGAN (BTN) Sept. 7 SOUTH FLORIDA (ESPNU) Sept. 14 YOUNGSTOWN STATE (BTN) Sept. 21 at No. 22/21 Notre Dame (NBC) Oct. 5 at Iowa (ESPN2) Oct. 12 INDIANA (ESPN2) Oct. 19 PURDUE (BTN) Oct. 26 at Illinois (ABC) Nov. 2 No. 23/21 MICHIGAN (ABC) Nov. 16 at Nebraska (ABC) Nov. 23 at Northwestern (ESPN) Nov. 30 MINNESOTA (BTN) Dec. 7 No. 2/2 Ohio State + (FOX) Jan. 1 No. 5/7 Stanford # (ESPN) + Big Ten Championship, Indianapolis, Ind.; # Rose Bowl Game, Pasadena, Calif.

W, 26-13 W, 21-6 W, 55-17 L, 13-17 W, 26-14 W, 42-28 W, 14-0 W, 42-3 W, 29-6 W, 41-28 W, 30-6 W, 14-3 W, 34-24 W, 24-20

MSU ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS

Associate AD/Football Contact .... John Lewandowski Cell Phone ...................................... (517) 243-2354 E-Mail ......................................lewski@ath.msu.edu Assistant Director/Football Contact ....... Ben Phlegar Cell Phone ...................................... (517) 896-0031 E-Mail ................................. phlegarb@ath.msu.edu Office Phone .......................................... 517-355-2271 Website ............................................. msuspartans.com Twitter ....................................................@msu_football Facebook ................................................. MSUAthletics YouTube .......................................MSUSpartanAthletics

• MSU finished No. 3 in the final 2013 Associated Press and USA TODAY Polls, marking its highest placing in the national polls since 1966 when the Spartans ranked No. 2 in the AP and United Press International Polls with a 9-0-1 record. In addition, Michigan State (13-1) became just the third team in Big Ten history to win at least 13 games in a season (Minnesota, 1904; and Ohio State, 2002). The Spartans secured their first Rose Bowl berth in 26 years by winning their eighth Big Ten title in program history with a 34-24 victory over second-ranked Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game. • The Spartans finished their Big Ten regular-season schedule with a perfect 8-0 record for the first time in school history and claimed their second Legends Division title in three seasons. Michigan State became the 14th Big Ten team to post an 8-0 mark in league play. The Spartans were the first Big Ten team to win all eight of its conference games by double-digit points since the league went to an eight-game schedule in 1971. In addition, MSU became the first undefeated Big Ten team to win all of its league games by doublefigure points since Michigan in 1943 (6-0 record). • Michigan State returns 20 letterwinners and five starters from the Big Ten’s top-ranked defense in 2013. The Spartans led the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision in total defense for 13 straight weeks and finished the season ranked No. 2 in the FBS, allowing just 252.2 yards per game. MSU was the only school to rank in the top three in the four major defensive stat categories: No. 2 in total defense, No. 2 in rushing defense (86.6 ypg.), No. 3 in scoring defense (13.2 ppg.) and No. 3 in pass defense (165.6 ypg.). In addition, the Spartans led the FBS in pass efficiency defense (92.3 rating) and ranked No. 2 in opponent third-down conversions (.279) and No. 5 in first-downs defense (14.3 pg). MSU’s defense allowed just 4.04 yards per play, which also ranked No. 1 in the FBS. • The Spartans return seven starters and 16 players with starting experience on offense, including starting junior quarterback Connor Cook, who went 12-1 in his first season as the starter in 2013. MSU also welcomes back its top rusher in senior Jeremy Langford (292 carries for 1,422 yards and 18 TDs) and four of its top five receivers. Overall, the Spartans are returning 97 percent of their total offense from a year ago, 99 percent of their rushing yards and 79 percent of their receiving yards. • The Spartans have won 42 of their last 54 games (.778), dating back to the beginning of the 2010 season. The 42 wins are most in the Big Ten and tied for ninth most in the FBS during that same time period. In addition, MSU has recorded 35 Big Ten victories since 2008, the most of any team in the conference (Note: Ohio State has won 40 games, but had to vacate seven victories following the 2010 season.). Since 2010, the Spartans have won two Big Ten Championships (2010, 2013), two Big Ten Legends Division titles (2011, 2013), and a school-record three-straight bowl games (2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl Game). MSU has produced double-digit win totals three of the past four seasons (11 wins in 2010 and 2011; 13 in 2013). • The Spartans are ranked in the Top 10 in “way-too-early” preseason polls by Dennis Dodd of CBSSports. com (No. 3), Mark Schlabach of ESPN.com (No. 4) and Martin Rickman of SI.com (No. 8).

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2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL SPARTAN SPRING PROSPECTUS: TABLE OF CONTENTS

Notes .................................................................... 1-23 Depth Chart/Rosters/Schedule ........................... 24-31 Player Bios ......................................................... 32-49 2013 Statistics .................................................... 50-75 2013 Game Recaps............................................ 76-89 Spartan Coaching Staff .................................... 90-100

MICHIGAN STATE QUICK FACTS GENERAL INFORMATION

Location: East Lansing, Mich. Enrollment: 49,000 (fall 2013) President: Dr. Lou Anna K. Simon Conference: Big Ten Nickname: Spartans Colors: Green and White Stadium (Capacity): Spartan Stadium (75,005) Surface: Natural Grass Press Box Number: 517-353-0630 Athletics Director: Mark Hollis

COACHING STAFF

Head Coach: Mark Dantonio (South Carolina, 1979) Record at MSU: 64-29 (seven years) Career Record: 82-46 (10 years) Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Coordinator: Pat Narduzzi (Rhode Island, 1990) Co-Offensive Coordinator/Running Backs: Dave Warner (Syracuse, 1982) Co-Offensive Coordinator/Tight Ends: Jim Bollman (Ohio, 1977) Secondary: Harlon Barnett (Michigan State, 1990) Defensive Line: Ron Burton (North Carolina, 1987) Offensive Line: Mark Staten (Miami-Ohio, 2001) Quarterbacks/Recruiting Coordinator: Brad Salem (Augustana College, 1992) Wide Receivers: Terrence Samuel (Purdue, 1995) Linebackers/Special Teams: Mike Tressel (Cornell [Iowa] College, 1996) Director of Football Operations: Tim Allen (Bethel [Kansas] College, 1986)

FOOTBALL HISTORY

All-Time Record: 658-437-44 (.597) 2013 Record: 13-1 (8-0 Big Ten/1st Legends Division) First Season of Football: 1896 Bowl Games: 24 (10-14) National Championships: 6 (1951, 1952, 1955, 1957, 1965, 1966) Big Ten Championships: 8 (1953, 1965, 1966, 1978, 1987, 1990, 2010, 2013) Big Ten Legends Division Championships: 2 (2011, 2013)

2014 SPARTAN CAPSULE

Offense: Multiple Defense: Multiple 4-3 Lettermen Lost: 21 (9 offense, 11 defense, 1 specialist) Lettermen Returning: 47 (24 offense, 20 defense, 3 specialists) Starters Lost: 11 (4 offense, 6 defense, 1 specialist) Starters Returning: 15 (7 offense, 5 defense, 3 specialists) Offensive Starters Lost (4): RT Fou Fonoti, WR Bennie Fowler, RG Dan France, LG Blake Treadwell Offensive Starters Returning (7): C Jack Allen, LT Jack Conklin, QB Connor Cook, RB Jeremy Langford, WR Tony Lippett, FB Trevon Pendleton, TE Josiah Price Defensive Starters Lost (6): LB Denicos Allen, LB Max Bullough, CB Darqueze Dennard, DT Tyler Hoover, S Isaiah Lewis, NT Micajah Reynolds Defensive Starters Returning (5): DE Shilique Calhoun, S Kurtis Drummond, LB Taiwan Jones, DE Marcus Rush, CB Trae Waynes Starting Specialists Returning (3): PK Michael Geiger, SN Taybor Pepper, P Mike Sadler Starting Specialists Lost (1): KO Kevin Muma

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• Michigan State has appeared in a school-record seven consecutive bowl games (2007 Champs Sports, 2009 Capital One, 2010 Alamo, 2011 Capital One, 2012 Outback, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings, 2014 Rose). The seven-year bowl streak is currrently the second longest in the Big Ten and tied for 14th longest in the FBS. • Head coach Mark Dantonio has led Michigan State to Top 25 finishes in four of the last six seasons (2008: No. 24 in both polls; 2010: No. 14 in both polls; 2011: No. 10 USA TODAY/No. 11 AP; and 2013: No. 3 in both polls). • Seventh-year Michigan State head coach Mark Dantonio swept Big Ten Coach of the Year honors by winning both the Dave McClain Coach of the Year (media) and Hayes-Schembechler Coach of the Year (coaches). Six Spartans were named to the All-Big Ten First Team and a total of 16 players received allconference recognition. The six first-team selections were the most for Michigan State since 1990, and the 16 honorees overall equaled the second most under Dantonio (19 in 2011, 16 in 2010). Two Spartans took home individual awards, as senior Darqueze Dennard was named the Tatum-Woodson Big Ten Defensive Back of the Year, while sophomore Shilique Calhoun was named the Smith-Brown Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year. Dennard, Calhoun and senior linebacker Max Bullough were first-team selections by both the coaches and media. Junior safety Kurtis Drummond, senior safety Isaiah Lewis and junior punter Mike Sadler were named first-team All-Big Ten by the coaches. The five first-team selections on defense tied for the most in school history (1966). RETURNING STAT LEADERS – Rushing – Jeremy Langford (292 carries for 1,422 yards, 4.9 avg., 18 TDs) Passing – Connor Cook (223 of 380 for 2,755 yards, 22 TDs, 6 INTs) Receiving – Tony Lippett (44 catches for 613 yards, 13.9 avg., 2 TDs) Tackles – Kurtis Drummond (91 tackles, 49 solos, 42 assists, 3.5 TFLs, 4 INTs, 6 PBUs) PERSONNEL BRIEFING: OFFENSE – • Quarterbacks: Junior Connor Cook returns for his second season as the starting quarterback in 2014 after leading the Spartans to a Big Ten Championship and a victory in the Rose Bowl Game last season . . . Cook finished his first year as the starter with one of the best statistical seasons in school history, ranking second in the MSU single-season record book in touchdown passes (22), fourth in total offense (2,831 yards) and pass attempts (380), fifth in passing yards (2,755), and sixth in pass completions (223) . . . Cook was named the Most Outstanding Player in the Big Ten Championship Game after throwing for 304 yards and three touchdowns, and he topped that performance by racking up a career-high 332 passing yards and two touchdowns against the Cardinal while being named the Rose Bowl Game’s Offensive MVP . . . sophomore Tyler O’Connor and red-shirt freshman Damion Terry will compete for the back-up position. • Running Backs: A year after losing All-American Le’Veon Bell to the NFL Draft, the Spartans return 99 percent of their rushing yards from 2013, including leading rusher Jeremy Langford . . . Langford led the Big Ten with 18 rushing touchdowns and also ranked among the Big Ten leaders in total touchdowns (first with 19), scoring (third with 8.1 ppg.) and rushing (sixth with 101.6 ypg.) . . . Langford ranked among MSU’s single-season leaders in touchdowns (third with 19), rushing touchdowns (fourth with 18), rushing attempts (sixth with 292) and rushing yards (eighth with 1,422) . . . he established a school record by rushing for more than 100 yards in eight consecutive games . . . fifth-year senior Nick Hill (67 carries for 344 yards, 1 TD) and sophomore Delton Williams (38 carries for 238 yards, 1 TD) return as letterwinners. • Wide Receivers: Michigan State returns 79 percent of its receiving yards in 2014, losing only fifth-year senior Bennie Fowler. Although Fowler led the team in receiving yards (622) and touchdown receptions (6) and ranked third in receptions (36), MSU returns four receivers with multiple years of starting experience, including seniors Tony Lippett and Keith Mumphery and juniors Aaron Burbridge and Macgarrett Kings Jr. . . . Lippett led the Spartans with a career-high 44 catches for 613 yards and two TDs in 2013 . . . Kings also posted career numbers with 43 receptions for 513 yards and three TDs. • Offensive Line: Although the Spartans lost three starters (RT Fou Fonoti, RG Dan France, LG Blake Treadwell) from the strongest offensive line of the head coach Mark Dantonio era, MSU brings back five veterans that have played extensively up front . . . fifth-year senior Travis Jackson has 18 starts to his credit, including his first career start at right guard in the Rose Bowl Game in place of injured starter Dan France; Jackson will open spring practice as the No. 1 left guard . . . junior center Jack Allen earned second-team All-Big Ten honors from the media last season . . . sophomore left tackle Jack Conklin started 13 games in his first season, including the last 10 at left tackle, and was named a first-team Freshman All-American . . . junior Donavon Clark appeared in all 14 games last season, including four starts at left tackle; he will open spring practice as the No. 1 right tackle . . . senior Connor Kruse played all five positions on the offensive line last year and saw regular time in the playing rotation as a guard; he will open spring practice as the No. 1 right guard.

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2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL • Tight Ends: Four of the five tight ends that earned letters for the Spartans last season are back in 2014. The group combined for 28 catches for 317 yards and five TDs . . . sophomore Josiah Price led the unit with 17 receptions for 210 yards and four TDs in his first season . . . junior Andrew Gleichert had a career-best six catches for 49 yards and one score . . . red-shirt freshman Jamal Lyles, who moved over to offense after playing defensive end in 2012, caught five passes for 58 yards . . . junior Paul Lang also saw time at the position . . . Michael Dennis, who started six games and was primarily used as a blocking tight end, is graduating in May and has elected not to use his final year of eligibility. PERSONNEL BRIEFING: DEFENSE – • Defensive Line: The Spartans return the best defensive end duo in the Big Ten in 2014, according to ESPN.com, in fifth-year senior Marcus Rush and junior Shilique Calhoun . . . a three-year starter, Rush has started 40 of his 41 career games and has 11 sacks and 27 tackles for loss . . . a second-team All-American, Calhoun was named the 2013 Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year after racking up 7.5 sacks (45 yards) and 14 tackles for loss (75 yards); he also tied for the FBS lead with three defensive TDs and ranked tied for second with four fumble recoveries . . . two-year letterwinner Lawrence Thomas also will contribute at defensive end . . . MSU will have to fill holes in the middle of the line left by the departures of fifth-year starters Tyler Hoover and Micajah Reynolds . . . reserve Mark Scarpinato also retired to focus on medical school . . . juniors Damon Knox and Joel Heath enter spring practice listed as the starters on the interior of the line . . . Brandon Clemons and James Kittredge also will compete for playing time. • Linebackers: The Spartans must replace two of the most decorated linebackers in school history after losing three-year starters Denicos Allen and Max Bullough . . . Bullough, a middle linebacker, was a two-time first-team All-Big Ten selection and ranked among MSU’s all-time leaders in tackles for loss (30.5) and tackles (299) . . . at Sam (strong side) linebacker, Allen finished his career ranked third in MSU history in tackles for loss (46) and sixth in sacks (19.5) . . . senior Taiwan Jones started 13 games at Star (weak side) linebacker last season and is MSU’s second-leading returning tackler after posting a career-high 67 as a junior; he will open spring practice as the starter at Mike (middle) linebacker . . . junior Darien Harris shared middle linebacker duties with Kyler Elsworth in the Rose Bowl Game against Stanford due to Max Bullough’s suspension and collected a career-high four tackles; Harris will compete for the starting Star (weakside) position, along with fifth-year senior Mylan Hicks . . . junior Ed Davis recorded 17 tackles, including four sacks, as a sophomore in 2013 and is poised to take over Allen’s spot at Sam linebacker. • Secondary: Junior Trae Waynes appears to be next line as MSU’s lock-down cornerback, following in the footsteps of 2013 Jim Thorpe Award winner and unanimous All-American Darqueze Dennard . . . Waynes had three interceptions in the final three games of the season, including a pick in the Rose Bowl Game against Stanford . . . the other cornerback position is wide open heading into spring practice; sophomore Darian Hicks enters spring listed as the starter, but Jermaine Edmondson and Ezra Robinson will also compete for the position . . . junior Arjen Colquhoun, a two-year letterwinner, will also see time at cornerback . . . at safety, fifth-year senior Kurtis Drummond returns for his third year as a starter . . . Drummond earned first-team All-Big Ten honors as a junior in 2013 with a career-high 91 tackles, four interceptions and six pass break-ups . . . junior RJ Williamson, who started twice last season, will move into a full-time starting role in 2014; he recorded 44 tackles and two pass break-ups as a sophomore . . . sophomore Demetrious Cox and will also push for playing time.

AROUND THE BIG TEN 2013 BIG TEN STANDINGS Conf. Games All Games Legends Division Michigan State 8-0 1.000 13-1 .929 Iowa 5-3 .625 8-5 .615 Nebraska 5-3 .625 9-4 .692 Minnesota 4-4 .500 8-5 .615 Michigan 3-5 .375 7-6 .538 Northwestern 1-7 .125 5-7 .417 Leaders Division Ohio State 8-0 1.000 Wisconsin 6-2 .750 Penn State 4-4 .500 Indiana 3-5 .375 Illinois 1-7 .125 Purdue 0-8 .000

12-2 9-4 7-5 5-7 4-8 1-11

.857 .692 .583 .417 .333 .083

2013-14 BIG TEN BOWL SCOREBOARD Friday, Dec. 27 - Texas Bowl Houston, Texas (Reliant Stadium) Syracuse 21, Minnesota 17 Saturday, Dec. 28 - Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl Tempe, Ariz. (Sun Devil Stadium) Kansas State 31, Michigan 14 Wednesday, Jan. 1 - TaxSlayer.com Gator Bowl Jacksonville, Fla. (Everbank Field) Nebraska 24, Georgia 19 Wednesday, Jan. 1 - Capital One Bowl Orlando, Fla. (Florida Citrus Bowl) South Carolina 34, Wisconsin 24 Wednesday, Jan. 1 - Outback Bowl Tampa, Fla. (Raymond James Stadium) LSU 21, Iowa 14 Wednesday, Jan. 1 - Rose Bowl presented by VIZIO Pasadena, Calif. (Rose Bowl) Michigan State 24, Stanford 20 Friday, Jan. 3 - Discover Orange Bowl Miami, Fla. (Sun Life Stadium) Clemson 40, Ohio State 35

PERSONNEL BRIEFING: SPECIAL TEAMS – • Placekicker: Sophomore Michael Geiger set a MSU single-season record for field-goal percentage as a true freshman, making 93.8 percent of his attempts (15-of-16); that percentage also ranked first in the Big Ten and tied for fourth best in the FBS . . . Geiger, who was 8-of-8 from 40-plus yards, was named a first-team Freshman All-American by the Football Writers Association of America . . . he will likely take over the kickoff duties with the departure of fifth-year senior Kevin Muma. • Punter: Fifth-year senior Mike Sadler returns for his fourth and final season as the starting punter . . . a valuable weapon on special teams, Sadler ranked first in the FBS last season in punts inside the 10 (24) and tied for second in punts inside the 20 (33) . . . he ranked fourth in the Big Ten with a 42.5-yard punting average . . . Sadler was tabbed a first-team All-American by ESPN.com and CBSSports.com, and also was a first-team Academic All-American. • Long Snapper: Junior Taybor Pepper returns for his third season as the starting long snapper. • Kick Returner: Sophomore R.J. Shelton led the Spartans last season with nine kick returns for 199 yards (22.1 avg.). • Punt Returner: Junior Macgarrett Kings Jr. ranked third in the Big Ten in punt returns in 2013 (206 yards on 20 returns, 10.3 avg.).

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2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS GENERAL INFORMATION

Mailing Address Breslin Center, 534 Birch Road, Room Z-22 East Lansing, MI 48824 Office Phone ...................................... (517) 355-2271 Fax ...................................................... (517) 353-9636 Website ........................................... msuspartans.com

SOCIAL MEDIA

Facebook ...................... Facebook.com/MSUAthletics Twitter (Football).............................. @MSU_Football Twitter (Athletics) ........................... @MSU_Athletics YouTube Channel..................... MSUSpartanAthletics Mobile App .... Michigan State Spartans (CBS Sports) Pinterest ................................................ MSUAthletics Instagram ........................................... MSU_Spartans

STAFF

Associate AD/Football Contact ...... John Lewandowski Cell Phone ..................................... (517) 243-2354 Email ..................................... lewski@ath.msu.edu Assistant Director/Football Contact ..........Ben Phlegar Cell Phone ..................................... (517) 896-0031 Email ................................. phlegarb@ath.msu.edu New Media Director ......................................Matt Larson Email ..................................... larson@ath.msu.edu Athletic Communications Director ........ Jamie Baldwin Email ........................................jweir@ath.msu.edu Assistant Director .................................... Jim Donatelli Email .................................jdonatelli@ath.msu.edu Assistant Director ...................................... Jeff Barnes Email ................................... jbarnes@ath.msu.edu Video Producer .....................................Bob Armstrong Email .................................armstr84@ath.msu.edu Video Producer ........................................... Nick Baker Email .................................... nbaker@ath.msu.edu Video Producer ........................................ Jacob Huber Email ................................. huberjac@ath.msu.edu Video Producer ...................................... Ryan McPhail Email ...................................mcphail@ath.msu.edu Video Producer ....................................... Justin Garant Email .................................. garantju@ath.msu.edu Office Assistant .....................................Paulette Martis Email ..................................... martis@ath.msu.edu Intern ................................................. Aimee Dulebohn Email ............................. ardulebohn@ath.msu.edu

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SPRING PRACTICE SCHEDULE – No. 1 - Tuesday, March 25 No. 2 - Thursday, March 27 No. 3 - Saturday, March 29 No. 4 - Tuesday, April 1 No. 5 - Thursday, April 3 No. 6 - Friday, April 4 No. 7 - Tuesday, April 8 No. 8 - Thursday, April 10 No. 9 - Friday, April 11 No. 10 - Saturday, April 12 No. 11 - Tuesday, April 15 No. 12 - Thursday, April 17 No. 13 - Tuesday, April 22 No. 14 - Thursday, April 24 No. 15 - Saturday, April 26 (Spring Game, 2 p.m., Spartan Stadium) QUICK LOOK AT THE 2014 SCHEDULE – • Michigan State enters the 2014 season on a 10-game winning streak, which is tied for the fourth longest in school history. MSU opens the season at home Aug. 30 against FCS member Jacksonville State. The Gamecocks went 11-4 in 2013 and advanced to the FCS quarterfinals before bowing out to Eastern Washington. MSU is 4-0 all-time against FCS schools. • In a marquee non-conference matchup, the Spartans will travel to Eugene, Ore., to face Oregon on Sept. 6 in Autzen Stadium. MSU is 2-2 against Oregon, with the last matchup coming in 1999, a 27-20 win for the Spartans in East Lansing. In the “way-too-early” preseason polls that have released, the Ducks are ranked No. 3 by CBSSports.com’s Dennis Dodd, No. 5 by ESPN.com’s Mark Schlabach of ESPN.com, and No. 5 by SI.com’s Martin Rickman. • The Spartans will also face Eastern Michigan (Sept. 20) and Wyoming (Sept. 27) in non-conference action at Spartan Stadium. MSU will celebrate its 99th Homecoming game Sept. 27 against Wyoming. • MSU will open Big Ten play Oct. 4 at home against Nebraska before traveling to Purdue (Oct. 11) and Indiana (Oct. 18). • For the first time in series history, Michigan State will play host to Michigan in back-to-back seasons. The Spartans defeated the Wolverines in East Lansing in 2013, 29-6. The two rivals will meet again in Spartan Stadium in 2014 on Oct. 25. • In a rematch of the 2013 Big Ten Championship Game, MSU will play host to Ohio State on Nov. 8. • MSU will make its first trip to Maryland since 1944 and only the second in series history on Nov. 15. The Spartans are set to close the home season on Nov. 22 for its first-ever Big Ten game against Rutgers. • The 2013 regular-season finale will be Nov. 29 at Penn State, as the Spartans and Nittany Lions will renew their Land Grant Trophy series. Michigan State last played Penn State in the 2010 regular-season finale and defeated PSU, 28-22, to clinch a share of the Big Ten Championship. NEW BIG TEN DIVISIONS IN 2014 – • Beginning in 2014, the Big Ten football division alignments will feature Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Penn State and Rutgers in the East Division and Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, Northwestern, Purdue and Wisconsin in the West Division. • Each school will play the other six schools in its division plus two teams from the other division in 2014 and 2015, which will serve as transitional years in which the schools will still be playing eight-game schedules.

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• Beginning in 2016, each school will play three teams from the other division as part of its nine-game schedule. The cross-division games will include one protected matchup on an annual basis between Indiana and Purdue. • From Sept. 27 to Nov. 29, the 2014 Big Ten schedule will feature 10 consecutive weekends of Big Ten competition, boasting at least five conference games each week. All 14 teams will be in action during the final two weekends of Big Ten play, including six division games each weekend. The winners of each division will meet in the 2014 Big Ten Football Championship Game, scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 6 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

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2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL DANTONIO SIGNS AMENDED CONTRACT – • Michigan State head football coach Mark Dantonio, who has compiled a 64-29 record (.688) in his first seven seasons including a school-record seven consecutive postseason bowl appearances, has been rewarded with a revised contract, according to a joint announcement made Feb. 25 by MSU Athletics Director Mark Hollis and MSU President Lou Anna K. Simon. • During his tenure, Dantonio has led Michigan State to four Top 25 finishes (2008: No. 24 in both polls; 2010: No. 14 in both polls; 2011: No. 10 USA TODAY/No. 11 AP; and 2013: No. 3 in both polls). • From his first day on the job, Dantonio has pledged to support student-athletes as they pursue excellence, both in the classroom and on the playing field. In his first seven seasons, 80 percent (98 of 123) of his Michigan State players who have completed their eligibility have earned their undergraduate degrees. In addition, his players have earned Academic All-Big Ten honors 87 times, including six Academic All-Americans. • Under the amended terms, a year has been added to the length of Dantonio’s contract, making it a six-year rollover. In addition, increases have been made to his base salary (from $682,905 to $2 million), supplemental income (from $869,000 to $1 million) and contingent annual base (from $200,000 to $286,000). Under the new terms, Dantonio will have access to a private airplane for 25 hours of personal use. He also will continue to receive $100,000 from his shoe/apparel agreement and $50,000 guaranteed performance incentives. • The amended contract now provides Dantonio with an opportunity to work for the MSU Athletics Department for five years (previously two years) after he retires from coaching, and the buy-out provisions have been modified. • With the revisions, Dantonio’s annual compensation increases from $1.99 million to $3.64 million. Here are the annual compensation components of the amended contract: • $2,000,000 base salary • $1,000,000 supplemental income • $286,000 contingent annual bonus • $204,917 benefits • $100,000 shoe/apparel agreement • $50,000 guaranteed performance incentives Hollis also announced that nearly $785,000 has been allocated to enhance the salaries of the assistant coaches. Here are the updated salary figures (includes annual retention bonus) for the football coaching staff: • assistant head coach/defensive coordinator Pat Narduzzi - $904,583 • co-offensive coordinator/tight ends coach Jim Bollman - $368,333 • secondary coach Harlon Barnett - $260,000 • defensive line coach Ron Burton - $243,750 • quarterbacks coach/recruiting coordinator Brad Salem - $254,583 • wide receivers coach Terrence Samuel - $243,750 • offensive line coach Mark Staten - $254,583 • linebackers/special teams coach Mike Tressel - $260,000 • co-offensive coordinator/running backs coach Dave Warner - $379,167

2013 FINAL POLLS ASSOCIATED PRESS Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

School Florida State (60) Auburn Michigan State South Carolina Missouri Oklahoma Alabama Clemson Oregon UCF Stanford Ohio State Baylor LSU Louisville UCLA Oklahoma State Texas A&M USC Notre Dame Arizona State Wisconsin Duke Vanderbilt Washington

USA TODAY/COACHES Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. T10. T10. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

School Florida State (59) Auburn Michigan State South Carolina Missouri Oklahoma Clemson Alabama Oregon Ohio State Stanford UCF Baylor LSU Louisville UCLA Oklahoma State Texas A&M USC Arizona State Wisconsin Duke Vanderbilt Notre Dame Nebraska

Record 14-0 12-2 13-1 11-2 12-2 11-2 11-2 11-2 11-2 12-1 11-3 12-2 11-2 10-3 12-1 10-3 10-3 9-4 10-4 9-4 10-4 9-4 10-4 9-4 9-4

Record 14-0 12-2 13-1 11-2 12-2 11-2 11-2 11-2 11-2 12-2 11-3 12-1 11-2 10-3 12-1 10-3 10-3 9-4 10-4 10-4 9-4 10-4 9-4 9-4 9-4

(First-place votes) Bold indicates MSU opponent

5 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL 2013 HONOR ROLL JACK ALLEN (So., Center) • Media All-Big Ten (second team) • Coaches’ All-Big Ten (honorable mention) • Academic All-Big Ten • ESPN.com Big Ten All-Bowl Team SHILIQUE CALHOUN (So., Defensive End) • Associated Press All-American (second team) • Walter Camp All-American (second team) • USA TODAY All-American (second team) • SI.com All-American (second team) • Athlon Sports All-American (second team) • Lindy’s All-American (third team) • CollegeFootballNews.com All-Sophomore Team (first team) • Named Smith-Brown Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year • Coaches’ All-Big Ten (first team) • Media All-Big Ten (first team) • College Football Performance Awards National Defensive Performer of the Year • Ted Hendricks Award finalist (defensive end of the year) • CBSSports.com National Co-Defensive Player of the Week (Nov. 2 vs. Michigan) • Walter Camp FBS National Defensive Player of the Week (Sept. 7 vs. South Florida) • Chuck Bednarik Award National Defensive Player of the Week (Sept. 7 vs. South Florida) • FWAA/Bronko Nagurski National Defensive Player of the Week (Sept. 7 vs. South Florida) • CBSSports.com National Defensive Player of the Week (Sept. 7 vs. South Florida) • College Football Performance Awards National Defensive Performer of the Week (Sept. 7 vs. South Florida) • CFPA National Defensive Lineman of the Week (Sept. 7 vs. South Florida) • Paul Hornung Award Honor Roll for Week 2 (Sept. 7 vs. South Florida) • Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week (Sept. 7 vs. South Florida)

MSU President Lou Anna K. Simon: “Under Coach Dantonio’s leadership, the MSU football program not only has risen in national prominence but also continues to develop well-rounded student-athletes who have gone on to great careers in a variety of fields. Week in and week out, Coach Dantonio empowers our players to meet and exceed their goals. That laser focus, sense of family and value-based work ethic are what being a Spartan is all about.” MSU Athletics Director Mark Hollis: “Mark Dantonio and his assistants have done a remarkable job in putting Michigan State football back on the national map and positioning it to compete for Big Ten Championships on a consistent basis. The amended contract and enhanced compensation reflect his and his coaching staff’s value in the current marketplace. These updated figures position Mark and his staff in the upper tier of the Big Ten. We believe that we have not only one of the finest head coaches in the conference but in all of college football, and we feel the same about his assistant coaches. “Continuity has been and will continue to be an important ingredient for the sustained success of our football program. The increased compensation isn’t simply a reward for past performance but signifies our expectation for continued excellence. “Mark has demonstrated his outstanding leadership abilities in building the program for the long haul. He and his coaching staff have created a winning culture, based upon communication, leadership and counsel. Mark and his assistants have created a positive environment for current and future student-athletes to grow and develop as both students and athletes. “They’re committed to preparing our student-athletes for their professional careers, whether in professional football or other walks of life. It’s obvious that Mark and his staff strive to build relationships that will last well beyond the four- or five-year experience on our campus.” MSU head coach Mark Dantonio: “The University continues to make a commitment to provide all of the necessary tools to build and sustain a championship-caliber football program. I want to thank President Simon, Mark Hollis and the entire administration for their trust and loyalty. “Coaching staff stability is extremely important for the long-term success of a program. We have outstanding coaches and support personnel. We’re very excited about what our program has accomplished over the last seven years, and we believe the best is yet to come. “Our focus will be to continue winning championships. We have proven that we can consistently compete with the top teams in the country. As we move forward, we will continue to dream big.”

JACK CONKLIN (R-Fr., Offensive Tackle) • Football Writers Association of American Freshman All-American (first team) • Sporting News Freshman All-American (first team) • CollegeFootballNews.com Freshman All-American (first team) • ESPN.com Big Ten All-Freshman Team • Academic All-Big Ten CONNOR COOK (So., Quarterback) • Rose Bowl Game Offensive MVP • ESPN.com Big Ten All-Bowl Team • ESPN.com Big Ten Player of the Week (Dec. 7 vs. Ohio State) • Big Ten Championship Game MVP (Dec. 7 vs. Ohio State) • Coaches’ All-Big Ten (second team) • Media All-Big Ten (honorable mention) • Academic All-Big Ten • Named one of Manning Award Stars of the Week (Nov. 23 vs. Northwestern)

6

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL 2014 RECRUITING CLASS – Michigan State head coach Mark Dantonio introduced the Spartans’ 2014 recruiting class Feb. 5 at a press conference inside the Clara Bell Smith Center Auditorium. The class features 22 players representing nine states (California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin). For a complete look at MSU’s 2014 recruiting class, including bios, quotes, and highlights, please visit MSU’s Signing Day Central at msuspartans.com/signingday. Name Brian Allen David Beedle Robert Bowers Byron Bullough Vayante Copeland Deon Drake Craig Evans Chris Frey ^ Chase Gianacakos Jake Hartbarger T.J. Harrell Madre London Miguel Machado Matt Morrissey Montae Nicholson Gerald Owens Nick Padla Casey Schreiner * Enoch Smith Jr. Matt Sokol ^ Montez Sweat Jalen Watts-Jackson

Pos. C DT DE LB CB LB DT LB OL P ATH RB OL ATH DB RB OL OL DL TE DE DB

Ht. 6-2 6-4 6-5 6-2 6-0 6-1 6-3 6-1 6-5 6-4 6-1 6-1 6-6 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-5 6-4 6-2 6-5 6-6 5-11

* walk-on ^ early enrollee; will participate in spring practice

Wt. 285 290 215 220 186 215 305 215 280 195 210 210 280 195 202 252 280 280 275 226 220 185

Hometown (Previous School/High School) Hinsdale, Ill. (Hinsdale Central) Clarkston, Mich. (Clarkston) Columbus, Ohio (Walnut Ridge) Traverse City, Mich. (St. Francis) Dayton, Ohio (Thurgood Marshall) Detroit, Mich. (Cass Tech) Sun Prairie, Wis. (Sun Prairie) Upper Arlington, Ohio (Upper Arlington) St. Charles, Ill. (St. Charles North) Waterville, Ohio (Anthony Wayne) Tampa, Fla. (Tampa Catholic) Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (St. Thomas Aquinas) Miami, Fla. (Pasadena City College) Lincolnshire, Ill. (Adlai E. Stevenson) Monroeville, Pa. (Gateway) Thorofare, N.J. (West Deptford) Berrien Springs, Mich. (Berrien Springs) Bethel Park, Pa. (Bethel Park) Plainfield, Ill. (Mount Carmel) Rochester, Mich. (Adams) Stone Mountain, Ga. (Stephenson) Dearborn, Mich. (Orchard Lake St. Mary’s)

2013 HONOR ROLL KURTIS DRUMMOND (Jr., Safety) • SI.com All-American (honorable mention) • Coaches’ All-Big Ten (first team) • Media All-Big Ten (second team) MICHAEL GEIGER (Fr., Kicker) • Football Writers Association of American Freshman All-American (first team) • SI.com All-American (honorable mention) • Media All-Big Ten (honorable mention) • ESPN.com Big Ten All-Freshman Team • College Football Performance Awards National Placekicker of the Week (Dec. 7 vs. Ohio State) TY HAMILTON (Jr., Fullback) • Academic All-Big Ten TRAVIS JACKSON (Jr., Offensive Lineman) • Academic All-Big Ten PAUL LANG (So., Tight End) • Academic All-Big Ten JEREMY LANGFORD (Jr., Running Back) • Coaches’ All-Big Ten (honorable mention) • Media All-Big Ten (honorable mention) • Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week (Oct. 12 vs. Indiana) TONY LIPPETT (Jr., Wide Receiver) • ESPN.com Big Ten All-Bowl Team MATT MACKSOOD (R-Fr., Wide Receiver) • Academic All-Big Ten MARK MEYERS (R-Fr., Safety) • Academic All-Big Ten KEITH MUMPHERY (Jr., Wide Receiver) • Academic All-Big Ten TYLER O’CONNOR (R-Fr., Quarterback) • Academic All-Big Ten JOSIAH PRICE (R-Fr., Tight End) • Academic All-Big Ten MARCUS RUSH (Jr., Defensive End) • Coaches’ All-Big Ten (honorable mention) • Media All-Big Ten (honorable mention) MIKE SADLER (Jr., Punter) • ESPN All-American (first team) • CBSSports.com All-American (first team) • Athlon Sports All-American (second team) • Coaches’ All-Big Ten (first team) • Media All-Big Ten (second team) • Named Ray Guy Award semifinalist • Capital One Academic All-America (first team) • Academic All-Big Ten • Big Ten Special Teams Player of the Week (Oct. 12 vs. Indiana) • College Football Performance Awards National Punter of the Week (Oct. 12 vs. Indiana) TRAE WAYNES (So., Cornerback) • CollegeFootballNews.com All-Sophomore Team (second team) • Coaches’ All-Big Ten (honorable mention) • Media All-Big Ten (honorable mention)

2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS

7


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL PROGRAM NOTES – • Michigan State has won eight Big Ten Championships in school history (1953, 1965, 1966, 1978, 1987, 1999, 2010, 2013).

UPDATED MSU RECORD BOOK CAREER RECORDS PASS ATTEMPTS 1. Jeff Smoker (2000-03) 2. Kirk Cousins (2008-11) 3. Brian Hoyer (2005-08) 4. Drew Stanton (2003-06) 5. Ed Smith (1976-78) 6. Dave Yarema (1982-86) 7. Bill Burke (1996-99) 8. Jim Miller (1990-93) 9. John Leister (1979-82) 10. Todd Schultz (1994-97) 15. Connor Cook (2012-13) PASS COMPLETIONS 1. Kirk Cousins (2008-11) 2. Jeff Smoker (2000-03) 3. Drew Stanton (2003-06) 4. Brian Hoyer (2005-08) 5. Jim Miller (1990-93) 6. Dave Yarema (1982-86) 7. Ed Smith (1976-78) 8. Bill Burke (1996-99) 9. Todd Schultz (1994-97) 10. John Leister (1979-82) 11. Tony Banks (1994-95) 12. Dan Enos (1987-90) 13. Andrew Maxwell (2010-13) 14. Connor Cook (2012-13)

723 685 543 500 467 464 418 416 360 313 301 297 278 232

PASSING YARDS 1. Kirk Cousins (2008-11) 2. Jeff Smoker (2000-03) 3. Drew Stanton (2003-06) 4. Brian Hoyer (2005-08) 5. Dave Yarema (1982-86) 6. Ed Smith (1976-78) 7. Bill Burke (1996-99) 8. Jim Miller (1990-93) 9. Todd Schultz (1994-97) 10. Tony Banks (1994-95) 11. John Leister (1979-82) 12. Dan Enos (1987-90) 13. Bobby McAllister (1985-88) 14. Andrew Maxwell (2010-13) 15. Connor Cook (2012-13)

9,131 8,932 6,524 6,159 5,809 5,706 5,463 5,037 4,273 4,129 3,999 3,837 3,194 3,014 2,849

TOUCHDOWN PASSES 1. Kirk Cousins (2008-11) 2. Jeff Smoker (2000-03) 3. Bill Burke (1996-99) 4. Dave Yarema (1982-86) 5. Ed Smith (1976-78) 6. Drew Stanton (2003-06) 7. Brian Hoyer (2005-08) 8. Todd Schultz (1994-97) 9. Connor Cook (2012-13) PUNTING AVERAGE 1. Greg Montgomery (1985-87) 2. Brandon Fields (2003-06) 3. Ralf Mojsiejenko (1981-84) 4. Ray Stachowicz (1977-80) 5. Craig Jarrett (1998-2001) 6. Mike Sadler (2011-13) 7. John Pingel (1937-38) 8. Aaron Bates (2007-10) 9. Josh Butland (1988-91) 10. Jason Daily (2002)

8

1,150 1,128 896 846 789 767 766 746 686 593 397

66 61 46 44 43 42 35 27 23 45.2 45.0 43.8 43.3 42.9 42.4 42.1 42.0 40.7 40.4

• With a school-record 13 victories in 2013, it marked the fifth time MSU has recorded double-digit wins in a season (10 in 1966, 10 in 1999, 11 in 2010, 11 in 2011, 13 in 2013), including three under Dantonio. • MSU’s 42 wins since 2010 is ninth most among NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision teams (tied with South Carolina) and most in the Big Ten during that same period. The Spartans have posted four consecutive winning seasons, a first for the program since recording six in a row from 1985-90. MSU has won 42 of its last 54 games (.778), dating back to the beginning of the 2010 season. In addition, the Spartans have won 15 of their last 16 games, dating back to the 2012 regular-season finale. • Michigan State has appeared in a school-record seven consecutive bowl games (2007 Champs Sports, 2009 Capital One, 2010 Alamo, 2011 Capital One, 2012 Outback, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings, 2014 Rose). The seven-year bowl streak is currrently the second longest in the Big Ten and tied for 14th longest in the FBS. • Michigan State is one of only eight schools to have had at least one player chosen every year since the inception of the common NFL Draft in 1967. MSU joins Arizona State, Florida, Michigan, Nebraska, Tennessee, Texas and USC as the only programs with at least one draft choice for 47 consecutive years. • Michigan State and Florida are the only schools in the country to win multiple National Championships in football and men’s basketball. MSU has won six national titles in football (1951, 1952, 1955, 1957, 1965, 1966) and two in men’s basketball (1979, 2000). Michigan State is also the only school in the nation to win multiple National Championships in football, men’s basketball and hockey. • Since 2008, MSU has recorded 35 Big Ten regular-season victories, the most of any team in the conference (Note: Ohio State has won 40 games, but had to vacate seven victories following the 2010 season.). The Spartans produced back-to-back 11-win seasons in 2010-11 for the first time in program history, claimed a share of the Big Ten Championship in 2010, and won the inaugural Big Ten Legends Divisions title in 2011. • Since 2010, MSU has recorded 25 Big Ten victories, the most of any team in the conference (Note: Ohio State has won 26 games, but had to vacate seven victories following the 2010 season.) • Michigan State’s school-record three-game bowl winning streak (2012 Outback, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings, 2014 Rose Bowl) is also currently the longest active streak in the Big Ten. Winningest NCAA FBS Teams Since 2010 Rank Team Total Wins 1. Oregon 47 2. Alabama 46 Northern Illinois 46 Stanford 46 5. Florida State 45 6. LSU 44 7. Boise State 43 Oklahoma 43 9. Michigan State 42 South Carolina 42 11. Oklahoma State 41 12. Wisconsin 39 13. Clemson 38 Nebraska 38 UCF 38 Most Big Ten Wins Since 2008 Rank Team 1. Michigan State 2. Ohio State* 3. Wisconsin 4. Iowa 5. Northwestern 6. Michigan 7. Nebraska^ 8. Minnesota 9. Purdue 10. Illinois 11. Penn State* 12. Indiana

Total Wins 35 33 31 26 22 21 17 16 15 12 10 8

* Penn State vacated 23 conference wins from the 2008-11 seasons. Ohio State vacated seven conference wins from the 2010 season; ^ Nebraska joined the Big Ten in 2011.

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL DANTONIO NAMED COACH OF THE YEAR, SIX SPARTANS EARN FIRST-TEAM ALL-BIG TEN HONORS – • Seventh-year Michigan State head coach Mark Dantonio swept Big Ten Coach of the Year honors by winning both the Dave McClain Coach of the Year (media) and Hayes-Schembechler Coach of the Year (coaches). Since the award’s inception in 1972, Dantonio is the first Spartan coach to earn Dave McClain Coach of the Year honors twice. He also won the award in 2010 after leading MSU to an 11-1 regular-season record and a share of the Big Ten Championship. • Six Spartans were named to the All-Big Ten First Team and a total of 16 players received all-conference recognition. The six first-team selections are the most for Michigan State since 1990, and the 16 honorees overall equal the second most under Dantonio (19 in 2011, 16 in 2010). • Two Spartans took home individual awards, as senior Darqueze Dennard was named the Tatum-Woodson Big Ten Defensive Back of the Year, while sophomore Shilique Calhoun was selected the Smith-Brown Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year. • Dennard, Calhoun and senior linebacker Max Bullough were first-team selections by both the coaches and media. Junior safety Kurtis Drummond, senior safety Isaiah Lewis and junior punter Mike Sadler were named first-team All-Big Ten by the coaches. The five first-team selections on defense are tied for the most in school history (1966). • Senior linebacker Denicos Allen and senior offensive guard Blake Treadwell were second-team picks by both the coaches and media. Sophomore quarterback Connor Cook received second-team accolades from the coaches, while sophomore center Jack Allen garnered second-team honors from the media. Drummond and Sadler were also second-team choices by the media. • Senior offensive tackle Fou Fonoti, senior offensive tackle Dan France, junior running back Jeremy Langford, junior defensive end Marcus Rush and sophomore cornerback Trae Waynes were honorable mention selections by both the coaches and media. In addition, Jack Allen was named honorable mention by the coaches, while Cook, Lewis and placekicker Michael Geiger were honorable mention choices by the media. 2013 ALL-BIG TEN TEAMS - MICHIGAN STATE SELECTIONS COACHES First Team - Defense Shilique Calhoun, DL Max Bullough, LB Darqueze Dennard, DB Kurtis Drummond, DB Isaiah Lewis, DB Mike Sadler, P Second Team - Offense Connor Cook, QB Blake Treadwell, OL Second Team - Defense Denicos Allen, LB Honorable Mention - Offense Jack Allen, C Fou Fonoti, OT Dan France, OT Jeremy Langford, RB Honorable Mention - Defense Marcus Rush, DL Trae Waynes, DB

MEDIA First Team - Defense Shilique Calhoun, DL Max Bullough, LB Darqueze Dennard, DB

UPDATED MSU RECORD BOOK 2013 SEASON RECORDS RUSHING YARDS 1. Lorenzo White (1985) 2. Le’Veon Bell (2012) 3. Javon Ringer (2008) 4. Lorenzo White (1987) 5. Blake Ezor (1988) 6. Eric Allen (1971) 7. Javon Ringer (2007) 8. Jeremy Langford (2013)

2,066 1,793 1,637 1,572 1,496 1,494 1,447 1,422

RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS 1. Javon Ringer (2008) 2. Jehuu Caulcrick (2007) 3. Blake Ezor (1989) 4. Eric Allen (1971) 5. Jeremy Langford (2013)

22 21 19 18 18

PASSING YARDS 1. Jeff Smoker (2003) 2. Kirk Cousins (2011) 3. Drew Stanton (2005) 4. Kirk Cousins (2010) 5. Connor Cook (2013)

3,395 3,316 3,077 2,825 2,755

PASSING TOUCHDOWNS 1. Kirk Cousins (2011) 2. Drew Stanton (2005) Connor Cook (2013)

25 22 22

TOTAL TOUCHDOWNS 1. Javon Ringer (2008) 2. Jehuu Caulcrick (2007) 3. Jeremy Langford (2013) Blake Ezor (1989)

22 21 19 19

Second Team - Offense Jack Allen, C Blake Treadwell, OL Second Team - Defense Denicos Allen, LB Kurtis Drummond, DB Mike Sadler, P Honorable Mention - Offense Connor Cook, QB Fou Fonoti, OT Dan France, OT Michael Geiger, PK Jeremy Langford, RB Honorable Mention - Defense Isaiah Lewis, DB Marcus Rush, DL Trae Waynes, DB

9 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL TOP SINGLE-GAME PERFORMANCES Aaron Burbridge Receiving Yds. Opponent (Rec.) 134 Indiana (8) Connor Cook Passing Yds. Opponent (Comp.-Att.) 332 Stanford (22-36) 304 Ohio State (24-40) 293 Northwestern (16-23) 277 Iowa (25-44) 252 Michigan (18-33) 235 Indiana (22-31) 208 Illinois (15-16) 202 Youngstown State (15-22)

Date 10/6/12 Date 1/1/14 12/7/13 11/23/13 10/5/13 11/2/2013 10/12/13 10/26/13 9/14/13

Kurtis Drummond Tackles TM Opponent (S-A) 10 Minnesota (4-6) 10 Nebraska (4-6) 10 Nebraska (6-4)

Date 11/30/13 11/16/13 11/3/12

Taiwan Jones Tackles TM Opponent (S-A) 10 Iowa (4-6)

Date 10/13/12

Jeremy Langford Rushing Yds. Opponent (Carries) 151 Nebraska (32) 150 Northwestern (25) 134 Minnesota (21) 131 Purdue (24) 128 Ohio State (24) 120 Michigan (26) 109 Indiana (23) 104 Illinois (22)

Date 11/16/13 11/23/13 11/30/13 10/19/13 12/7/13 11/2/13 10/12/13 10/26/13

• MSU was the only school to rank in the top three in the four major defensive stat categories: No. 2 in total defense, No. 2 in rushing defense (86.6 ypg.), No. 3 in scoring defense (13.2 ppg.) and No. 3 in pass defense (165.6 ypg.).

Marcus Rush Tackles TM Opponent (S-A) 11 Nebraska (7-4)

Date 10/29/11

RJ Williamson Tackles TM Opponent (S-A) 10 Notre Dame (1-9)

• Michigan State led the Big Ten in nine defensive stat categories, including total defense and rushing defense for the third year in a row. Since the Big Ten awarded conference stat champions in 1985 for overall games, MSU is the first team to win three-straight titles in total defense and rushing defense.

Date 9/21/13

SPARTAN DEFENSE RANKED NO. 1 IN BIG TEN FOR THIRD YEAR IN A ROW – • Michigan State has led the Big Ten in total defense and rushing defense the past three seasons. • The Spartans led the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision in total defense for 13 straight weeks and finished the season ranked No. 2 in the FBS, allowing just 252.2 yards per game.

• In addition, the Spartans led the FBS in pass efficiency defense (92.3 rating) and ranked No. 2 in opponent third-down conversions (.279) and No. 5 in first-downs defense (14.3 pg). MSU’s defense allowed just 4.04 yards per play, which also ranked No. 1 in the FBS. • Michigan State held all 14 of its opponents in 2013 under their season average in points and total offense.

• The Spartans led the Big Ten and ranked second in the NCAA FBS in rushing defense, allowing just 86.6 yards per game, which also marked the seventh-best effort in school history. MSU has finished in the Top 25 nationally in rushing defense four of the past five seasons (24th in 2009; ninth in 2011; eighth in 2012; second in 2013). • MSU’s defense allowed just 4.04 yards per play and 2.85 yards per rushing attempt, which ranked No. 1 and No. 3 in the FBS, respectively. In addition, MSU tied for first in the FBS, along with Alabama, Memphis and Wisconsin, in fewest opponent rushes of 10-plus yards (35). The Spartans allowed 41 plays of 20-plus yards (2.9 pg.), tied for ninth fewest in the FBS. • The Spartans held 10 of their 14 opponents below 100 yards rushing. Michigan State was the last team in the FBS in 2013 to allow an opponent to rush for more than 100 yards in a game (Nebraska, 182 yards on Nov. 16). In 93 games under Mark Dantonio, MSU has held its opponents under 100 yards rushing 45 times (48 percent). • Michigan State’s defense featured five first-team All-Big Ten selections, tying for the most in school history (1966). Senior linebacker Max Bullough, sophomore defensive end Shilique Calhoun, senior cornerback Darqueze Dennard, junior safety Kurtis Drummond and senior safety Isaiah Lewis all garnered first-team accolades from the league’s coaches, while Bullough, Calhoun and Dennard were also on the media’s first team. Eight of MSU’s starters received All-Big Ten recognition (second team: senior linebacker Denicos Allen; honorable mention: junior defensive end Marcus Rush, sophomore cornerback Trae Waynes). Calhoun was named the Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year, while Dennard was named the Big Ten Defensive Back of the Year and recipient of the Jim Thorpe Award (nation’s best defensive back).

10

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL TOUGH TO SCORE ON SPARTAN DEFENSE – • Michigan State, which has ranked in the FBS Top 10 the past three seasons in scoring defense, ranked third in the FBS in 2013, allowing just 13.2 points per game. • MSU prevented six opponents from scoring a touchdown (South Florida, Purdue, Illinois, Michigan, Northwestern, Minnesota), and the Spartans shut out six of their eight Big Ten opponents in the second half. MSU went a span of 194 minutes and 33 seconds without allowing a touchdown, as the Spartans kept Purdue (Oct. 19), Illinois (Oct. 26) and Michigan (Nov. 2) out of the end zone. Indiana scored a touchdown in the fourth quarter against the Spartans on Oct. 12, and Nebraska snapped the streak with a TD in the first quarter on Nov. 16. • The Spartans allowed just 20 touchdowns on defense (eight rushing, 12 passing), which ranked second fewest in the FBS for the second year in a row. • In the 2014 Rose Bowl Game victory over No. 5 Stanford, the Cardinal were held to just one offensive touchdown and 11 first downs (season lows), 162 rushing yards (second-lowest total of the season) and 304 yards of total offense (third-lowest total of the season). • Michigan State only allowed its opponents to score on 19 percent of their possessions (33-of-173), including 12 percent (20-of-173) for touchdowns. • Michigan State allowed its opponents 30 trips into the red zone in 2013, tied for fourth fewest in the FBS. Among those 30 trips, the Spartans gave up 14 touchdowns (44.4 percent, sixth best in FBS). • MSU has shut out its opponent in the second half seven times in 2013 and nine times in the fourth quarter. • The Spartans blanked Purdue, 14-0, on Oct. 19 in Spartan Stadium, marking MSU’s first Big Ten shutout since 1999 against Northwestern. Under Dantonio, the Spartans have recorded three shutouts (2008 vs. Florida Atlantic, 2011 vs. Florida Atlantic, 2013 vs. Purdue). • MSU’s defense allowed more than 17 points just three times all season (28 vs. Indiana and Nebraska, 24 vs. Ohio State) and gave up just 72 points total in the second half of games (5.1 pg.). • Since the beginning of the 2010 season, Michigan State’s defense has held 16 opponents (30 percent) to less than 10 points, including six times in 2013 (South Florida, Purdue, Illinois, Michigan, Northwestern, Minnesota). Most games (since 2010) holding an opponent to less than 10 points Rank Team Games 1. Alabama 25 2. Florida State 19 3. Michigan State 16 TURNOVERS, SACKS THE DIFFERENCE IN 2013 FOR SPARTANS – • In 2012, the Spartans ranked 84th nationally in sacks (20) and 76th in takeaways (20). In 2013, the Spartans ranked tied for 31st in the FBS in sacks (32) and tied for 20th in takeaways (28). In addition, MSU ranked tied for third in the FBS with five defensive touchdowns after not recording any in 2012. • Michigan State ranked first in the Big Ten and tied for 10th in the FBS in turnover margin (+13, 0.93 per game). The Spartans forced a total of 28 turnovers (11 fumbles, 17 interceptions), including five for touchdowns (three fumble recoveries, two interception returns). MSU converted those 28 takeaways into 93 points. The Spartans forced the most turnovers in the Big Ten (28) and also turned the ball over the least amount of times (15) in the conference. MSU’s seven interceptions tied for a conference low and tied for 11th fewest in the FBS. • Michigan State has forced at least one turnover in 74 of 93 games over the last seven seasons (80 percent of the games played since 2007), including 12 games in 2013.

2014 “WAY-TOO-EARLY” POLLS ESPN (FEB. 7) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

School Florida State Alabama Oregon Michigan State Oklahoma Auburn Ohio State Georgia UCLA Baylor Stanford South Carolina LSU Wisconsin Texas A&M North Carolina Notre Dame USC Iowa Clemson Michigan Texas Florida UCF Washington

CBSSPORTS.COM (JAN. 8) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. T25. T25.

School Florida State Auburn Michigan State Ohio State Oregon Stanford Alabama Oklahoma UCLA Missouri USC Baylor Arizona State Kansas State Texas Wisconsin Notre Dame Texas A&M UCF South Carolina Georgia Clemson BYU Duke Minnesota Marshall

Bold indicates MSU opponent

• The Spartans ranked tied for second in the Big Ten and tied for 23rd in the FBS with 17 interceptions. • Michigan State forced five turnovers in the win over Nebraska on Nov. 16, the most caused by the Spartans in the Coach Mark Dantonio era. MSU converted those five turnovers into 24 points.

11 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL BY THE NUMBERS

1 2 3

MSU is one of two schools in the country, along with Florida, to win multiple National Championships in both football and men’s basketball.

MSU finished No. 3 in the final 2013 national polls, the highest ranking for the program since 1966.

3

MSU has won a school-record three bowl games in a row, the longest active streak in the Big Ten.

4.04

MSU allowed just 4.04 yards per offensive play, which ranked No. 1 in the NCAA FBS.

7

12

Michigan State’s ranking in the Big Ten in total defense and rushing defense the past three seasons.

Michigan State has appeared in a school-record seven consecutive bowl games; it’s also the 14thlongest active streak in the FBS and second longest in the Big Ten.

20

MSU only allowed 20 touchdowns on defense in 2013, second fewest in the FBS for the second year in a row.

35

MSU has won 35 Big Ten games since 2008, the most of any conference team.

42

MSU has won 42 games since the beginning of the 2010 season, most in the Big Ten and tied for ninth most in the FBS during that time period.

45

In the Dantonio era, Michigan State has held its opponent below 100 yards rushing in 45 of 93 games (48 percent).

SPARTAN OFFENSIVE NOTES FROM 2013 – • Quarterback Connor Cook was named the Most Outstanding Player in the Big Ten Championship Game after throwing for 304 yards and three touchdowns, and he topped that performance by racking up a careerhigh 332 passing yards and two touchdowns against the Cardinal while being named the Rose Bowl Game’s Offensive MVP. • Cook finished his first year as the starter with one of the best statistical seasons in school history, ranking second in the MSU single-season record book in touchdown passes (22), fourth in total offense (2,831 yards) and pass attempts (380), fifth in passing yards (2,755), and sixth in pass completions (223). • Jeremy Langford led the Big Ten with 18 rushing touchdowns. He also ranked among the Big Ten leaders in total touchdowns (first with 19), scoring (third with 8.1 ppg.) and rushing (sixth with 101.6 ypg.). • Langford ranked among MSU’s single-season leaders in touchdowns (third with 19), rushing touchdowns (fourth with 18), rushing attempts (sixth with 292) and rushing yards (eighth with 1,422). He established a school record by rushing for more than 100 yards in eight consecutive games. • The offensive line, which rotated in eight different players, was one of the top units in the country and a key reason why MSU ranked seventh in the FBS in time of possession (33:19). In addition to a strong running game, the Spartans only allowed 17 sacks, second fewest in the Big Ten and 15th fewest in the FBS. • Six starters earned All-Big Ten recognition on the offense, including Connor Cook (second team, coaches), senior offensive guard Blake Treadwell (second team, coaches and media), sophomore center Jack Allen (second team, media), senior offensive tackle Fou Fonoti (honorable mention), senior offensive guard Dan France (honorable mention) and Jeremy Langford (honorable mention). • Nine different Spartans caught touchdowns in 2013, led by fifth-year senior Bennie Fowler, who hauled in six. • Bennie Fowler led the Spartans with a career-high 622 receiving yards on 36 catches, while junior Tony Lippett (44 catches for 613 yards) and sophomore Macgarrett Kings Jr. (43 for 513 yards) both recorded career highs in receptions and receiving yards. • Tony Lippett was named to the ESPN.com Big Ten All-Bowl Team after collecting a career-high 94 receiving yards on five receptions in the Rose Bowl Game victory over No. 5 Stanford, including the game-winning 22-yard touchdown grab in the fourth quarter. Jack Allen and Blake Treadwell were also named to the ESPN.com Big Ten All-Bowl Team. • For the third-straight season, the Spartan offense featured a Freshman All-American, as Jack Conklin earned first-team honors from the Football Writers Association, Sporting News and CollegeFootballNews.com.

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL TRULY ELITE – • Since 2011, Michigan State’s defense has been one of the most consistent in the FBS. The Spartans are one of just four schools, along with Alabama, Florida and Florida State, to rank among the FBS Top 10 in total defense the past three seasons. • Michigan State and Alabama are the only teams to rank in the FBS Top 11 the past three years in total defense, scoring defense, rushing defense and passing defense. • The Spartans are one of just two NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Schools, along with Alabama, to rank in the Top 10 nationally in total defense, rushing defense and scoring defense the last three years. • Since the beginning of 2011, Michigan State has held 25 opponents under 100 rushing yards (seven in 2011; eight in 2012; 10 in 2013), which ranks tied for third most in the NCAA FBS (Alabama: 29; Stanford: 27; MSU/Florida State: 25). Most games (since 2011) holding an opponent to less than 100 yards rushing Rank Team Games 1. Alabama 29 2. Stanford 27 3. Michigan State 25 Florida State 25 Here’s a look at where MSU’s defense ranks among the nation’s elite the past three seasons: 2013 Category Rushing Defense Passing Defense Total Defense Scoring Defense Pass Efficiency Defense

Stat Avg. 86.6 165.6 252.2 13.2 92.3

Big Ten 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st

NCAA 2nd 3rd 2nd 3rd 1st

2012 Category Rushing Defense Passing Defense Total Defense Scoring Defense Pass Efficiency Defense

Stat Avg. 98.6 175.8 273.3 16.3 99.0

Big Ten 1st 3rd 1st 1st 2nd

NCAA 8th 9th 4th 10th 4th

2011 Category Rushing Defense Passing Defense Total Defense Scoring Defense Pass Efficiency Defense

Stat Avg. 100.5 176.9 277.4 18.4 113.3

Big Ten 1st 3rd 1st 3rd 2nd

NCAA 9th 11th 6th 10th 18th

2014 “WAY-TOO-EARLY” POLLS SI.COM (JAN. 10) Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.

School Florida State Alabama Oregon Ohio State Oklahoma Auburn Stanford Michigan State UCLA LSU Wisconsin South Carolina Notre Dame Georgia Baylor Clemson Missouri USC Ole Miss Texas Arizona State Texas A&M Oklahoma State Duke Utah State

Bold indicates MSU opponent

13 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL PRONUNCIATION GUIDE Shilique Calhoun: shuh-LEEK Arjen Colquhoun: AR-jen CUH-hoon Michael Geiger: GUY-gurr Andrew Gleichert: GLY-kert Mylan Hicks: MY-lin Taiwan Jones: TWON Tony Lippett: LIP-it Trevon Pendleton: TREV-en Taybor Pepper: TAY-burr

SPARTANS RANK TIED FOR THIRD IN FBS WITH FIVE DEFENSIVE TOUCHDOWNS – • After not scoring any defensive touchdowns in 2012, the Spartans recorded five in 2013, tied for third in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision (Kurtis Drummond 21-yard interception return vs. Western Michigan; Shilique Calhoun 16-yard fumble return vs. WMU; Calhoun 4-yard fumble return vs. South Florida; Calhoun 56-yard interception return vs. USF; Denicos Allen 45-yard fumble return vs. Purdue). • Michigan State has scored 19 defensive touchdowns under Dantonio, including five each in 2007, 2011 and 2013. Michigan State scored four defensive touchdowns in the first two games of the season, marking a school record (single-game records dating back to 1946). The five defensive touchdowns are tied for the second most in a single season in school history (school-record six in 1999; five in 2007 and 2011). Most Defensive Touchdowns - 2013 Rank Team 1. Florida State 2. Baylor 2. Michigan State Eight other teams with...

TDs 8 6 5 5

Most Defensive Touchdowns - MSU Single-Season History Rank Year TDs 1. 1999 6 2. 2013 5 2011 5 2007 5 PAT NARDUZZI WINS 2013 FRANK BROYLES AWARD – • Michigan State assistant head coach/defensive coordinator Pat Narduzzi was named the winner of the 2013 Frank Broyles Award, which is awarded annually to the nation’s top assistant coach. Narduzzi was honored, along with his fellow finalists, at a Dec. 10, 2013, luncheon at the Marriott Hotel in Little Rock. Narduzzi accepted the Broyles Award trophy, valued at more than $5,000. • The five finalists included Rhett Lashlee (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks, Auburn), Philip Montgomery (offensive coordinator, Baylor), Kurt Roper (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks, Duke), Jeremy Pruitt (defensive coordinator, Florida State) and Narduzzi. • Narduzzi is the first MSU coach to win the award, which started in 1996. • Narduzzi was also named the National Coordinator of the Year by Athlon Sports and the National Defensive Coordinator of the Year by 247Sports and FootballScoop.com. THREE-AND-OUT – • The Spartans forced their opponents to go three-and-out on 72 of 173 possessions (42 percent; 5.1 per game), which ranked 10th in the nation. The Spartans forced an average of 5.1 three-and-outs per game, which ranked 15th in the FBS. [Three-and-out: either holding opponent without a first down within its first three plays on a new series or forcing a turnover in the first three plays.] SPARTAN THREE-AND-OUT CHART – Opponent Possessions Western Michigan 17 South Florida 14 Youngstown State 12 Notre Dame 12 Iowa 14 Indiana 13 Purdue 10 Illinois 9 Michigan 12 Nebraska 13 Northwestern 12 Minnesota 11 Ohio State 13 Stanford 11 Totals 173

14

Three-and-Out 9 8 7 4 10 2 3 5 5 4 4 4 2 5 72

Percent .529 .571 .583 .333 .714 .154 .300 .556 .417 .308 .333 .364 .154 .455 .416

Punts 7 7 6 4 7 2 3 4 5 3 2 4 2 4 60

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

Turnovers 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 11


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL INSIDE THE NUMBERS – • Michigan State won its eight Big Ten regular-season games by an average margin of victory of 18.8 points per game. MSU won every Big Ten game by double digits (closest game: 14-3 victory vs. Minnesota). The Spartans were the first Big Ten team to win all eight of their conference games by double-digit points since the league went to an eight-game schedule in 1971. In addition, MSU became the first undefeated Big Ten team to win all of its league games by double-figure points since Michigan in 1943 (6-0 record). • Michigan State finished its Big Ten schedule with a perfect 8-0 record for the first time in school history. MSU became the 14th Big Ten team to post an 8-0 mark in league play (Ohio State 2013, Ohio State 2006, Ohio State 2002, Iowa 2002, Michigan 1997, Northwestern 1995, Penn State 1994, Michigan 1989, Illinois 1983 [9 games], Michigan 1980, Ohio State 1979, Ohio State 1975, Michigan 1971). • Dantonio has always stressed the importance of a balanced offense, and the 2013 Spartans couldn’t have been more balanced statistically. MSU had 23 rushing touchdowns and 23 passing touchdowns, and averaged 173.8 yards per game rushing and 211.7 yards per game passing. Thirteen different offensive players scored TDs for MSU in 2013. • Michigan State outscored its opponents, 212-72 (+140), in the second half in 2013, including 112-30 (+82 points) in the fourth quarter. • Under Mark Dantonio, Michigan State has compiled a 49-8 record (.860) when leading after three quarters, including a perfect 11-0 in 2013. • Michigan State is 19-9 (.679) in Big Ten road games under Dantonio, including a six-game winning streak and a 13-3 record (.813) since 2010. MSU went a perfect 4-0 in conference road games in 2013 (wins at Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska and Northwestern). Dantonio has won at least one road game at every Big Ten stadium. • A trademark of Mark Dantonio’s Michigan State teams has been their ability to produce wins late in the regular season. Under Dantonio, Michigan State has compiled an 18-5 record (.783) in November. His teams have won 12 of the last 14 games in November (3-0 in 2010; 4-0 in 2011; 1-2 in 2012, 4-0 in 2013). In 2012, MSU lost back-to-back games (Nebraska and Northwestern) in November for the first time since 2006 when the Spartans dropped three in a row. In the four seasons (2003-06) prior to Dantonio’s arrival, MSU went just 2-11 (.154) in November. • Michigan State’s offensive line allowed 17 sacks (1.21 per game), which ranked second fewest in the Big Ten and 15th in the NCAA FBS. The offensive line featured seven players with starting experience (152 combined starts). • The Spartans produced 50 plays of 20 yards or more on offense (15 rushing, 35 passing) in their last 10 games (5.6 per game), compared to just 11 (five rushing, six passing) during their four non-conference games (2.3 pg.). • Under Mark Dantonio, Michigan State is 47-8 (.855) when leading in time of possession, including a 34-5 record (.872) since 2010. The Spartans ranked second in the Big Ten and seventh in the NCAA FBS in time of possession (33:19 per game) in 2013. • Michigan State outrushed its opponents by 87.2 yards per game (173.8 to 86.6). Under Mark Dantonio, Michigan State is 50-11 (.820) when outrushing its opponent, including a 34-4 record (.895) since 2010. The Spartans are 20-3 (.870) in games when gaining 200 or more rushing yards under Dantonio. • Under Mark Dantonio, Michigan State has produced a 38-11 record (.776) in home games, including a 15game winning streak (7-0 in 2010, 7-0 in 2011, won first game in 2012). MSU completed its 19th undefeated home season in Spartan Stadium history with a 7-0 mark in 2013.

FUTURE SCHEDULES 2015

Sept. 12 OREGON Sept. 19 at Western Michigan Sept. 26 CENTRAL MICHIGAN Oct. 3 PURDUE Oct. 10 at Rutgers Oct. 17 at Michigan Oct. 24 INDIANA Nov. 7 at Nebraska Nov. 14 MARYLAND Nov. 21 at Ohio State Nov. 28 PENN STATE Note: Additional non-conference game to be scheduled.

2016 (BIG TEN ONLY) Oct. 1 Oct. 8 Oct. 15 Oct. 22 Oct. 29 Nov. 5 Nov. 12 Nov. 19 Nov. 26

2017 (BIG TEN ONLY) Sept. 30 Oct. 7 Oct. 14 Oct. 21 Oct. 28 Nov. 4 Nov. 11 Nov. 18 Nov. 25

2018 (BIG TEN ONLY) Sept. 22 Oct. 6 Oct. 13 Oct. 20 Oct. 27 Nov. 3 Nov. 10 Nov. 17 Nov. 24

2019 (BIG TEN ONLY)

Sept. 21 Sept. 28 Oct. 5 Oct. 12 Oct. 26 Nov. 9 Nov. 16 Nov. 23 Nov. 30

at Indiana WISCONSIN NORTHWESTERN at Maryland MICHIGAN at Illinois RUTGERS OHIO STATE at Penn State IOWA at Michigan at Minnesota INDIANA at Northwestern PENN STATE at Ohio State MARYLAND at Rutgers at Indiana NORTHWESTERN at Penn State MICHIGAN PURDUE at Maryland OHIO STATE at Nebraska RUTGERS at Northwestern INDIANA at Ohio State at Wisconsin PENN STATE ILLINOIS at Michigan at Rutgers MARYLAND

• Since the beginning of the 2010 season, Michigan State is 15-7 (.682) in games decided by 10 points or less. The losses have come against Wisconsin in the 2011 Big Ten Championship Game (42-39), Ohio State (17-16), Iowa (19-16 in 2OT), Michigan (12-10), Nebraska (28-24) and Northwestern (23-20) in 2012, and Notre Dame (17-13) in 2013.

15 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL FBS BOWL STREAKS Rk. 1. 2. 3. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10.

13. 14.

Teams ................................................ Streak Florida State .............................................. 32 Virginia Tech .............................................. 21 Georgia ...................................................... 17 Georgia Tech ............................................. 17 Oklahoma .................................................. 15 LSU............................................................ 14 Boise State ................................................ 12 Wisconsin .................................................. 12 Alabama .................................................... 10 BYU ............................................................. 9 Clemson ...................................................... 9 Oregon ........................................................ 9 Oklahoma State ........................................... 8 Michigan State ........................................... 7

ANALYSTS SPEAK HIGHLY OF SPARTAN FOOTBALL PROGRAM – While the focus of the NFL Scouting Combine is on the rookie class for the upcoming NFL Draft in May, msuspartans.com also had a chance to visit with several media members from around the country in Indianapolis about the state of the Spartan football program Bill Polian, ESPN analyst and former Indianapolis Colts president/general manager On the staff at Michigan State... “When you talk about the top coaches in America, Mark Dantonio is in that group. From the NFL standpoint, Michigan State is a place that you like to get kids from because: A) they’re disciplined; B) they’ve been in a program that is as demanding as the NFL; and C) their training is so good, particularly on the defensive side of the ball, that they’re ready to play when they come right in because they’re used to NFL techniques. They play press coverage; they play multiple coverages; they pattern match; and their techniques and fundamentals are so sound. There’s a reason why they’ve won as many games as they have, and there’s a reason why they turn out as many NFL players as they do because Mark and his staff do such a great job of running a program that’s about as close to the NFL as you can find at the college level.” On Michigan State’s ability to develop NFL talent... “It says two things. First, they’re tracking the right kids. They have good personnel judgment. It doesn’t matter what we say in the media. It’s what you see in the player, so they’re getting players who have the ability to play in the NFL. It’s just that they’re not recognized by the recruiting services. So good for them, that’s to their benefit. “And secondly, they get them ready to play in the NFL. They take the raw talent that they get - perhaps, not highly visible when they first come to Michigan State - and then they develop them into guys who are ready to play the minute they step into the National Football League. But the most important part is that they’re recognizing that talent. If you translated that to the NFL, they’ve got one of the best personnel departments in all of college football because that’s what causes you to win all of these games. Getting those collegiate free agents, getting those low draft choices that’s the equivalent of what they’re recruiting at the college level, and they’re hitting on virtually every one of them.” Mike Mayock, NFL Network On the Spartan football program... “(Michigan State is) a top-level team. They’re a top-level program, and the facilities are fantastic. Coach (Mark Dantonio) has done a great job. “One of my favorite games of the year was Michigan State-Stanford. That was two well-coached, tough teams that got after each other. It was a testament to Coach Dantonio and his staff how well they played and how tough they were. I always know when I put a Michigan State tape in I’m going to see a well-coached, disciplined group of kids. I like putting Michigan State tapes on to compare other Big Ten players when I’m getting ready for the draft. I purposely put Michigan State film in there because I want to see how they hang in there for 60 minutes after being grinded on by Michigan State.” Bruce Feldman, senior college football columnist for CBSSports.com On winning the last two games of the season against No. 2 Ohio State and No. 5 Stanford... “That was a big statement for (Michigan State). Everybody was watching Ohio State to see what they did and there was the Auburn dynamic playing into it. The way Michigan State closed out that (Big Ten Championship Game) was really impressive. Being at the Rose Bowl and the way they finished out (the Stanford game), I think it elevated the brand a lot. Michigan State was a very well respected Big Ten program, but after last year, I feel like it pushed the brand national to a large degree because of Ohio State game and the performance in the Rose Bowl.” On Michigan State’s defense... “People know the names change on defense, but they play great football. They shut people down; they shut the run down; and they’ve got a unique scheme. What’s a little different here now is the quarterback situation and I know Kirk Cousins was a terrific quarterback, but I felt like after Kirk it was like `hey, what’s going on here.’ Once Connor (Cook) got settled, the team took off. It’s going to be interesting to see what he’s going to do moving forward.” On if Michigan State become a regular contender for a Big Ten East Division title? “I think so. You know they’re going to be really good on defense, and they’re going to be really physical. You lose some starters on the offensive line, but there’s so much experience and depth back across the board. That’s a big key. Getting more of an identity at quarterback on offense helps. And if you play great defense, you’re going to be in a lot of games.”

16

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL On the player development at Michigan State... “What is helping now is kids are seeing that they can go to Michigan State and know they’re going to be developed. We’re here (at the NFL Scouting Combine) and Darqueze Dennard is a great story, not only for Michigan State fans, but he’s a great story for under-the-radar recruits. He was the 2-star guy and that 2-star guy was the best defensive back in college football (last season). There are other guys like that. “A few years ago, you lose a great middle linebacker and four or five of your top tacklers and somehow the defense gets better. The Shilique Calhoun story is another example kids see. It helps when people know your head coach is just a really good football guy. He’s not flashy. He’s not a slick-salesman type; he’s just a real football guy. That seems like the brand of Michigan State. We’ve seen it in other programs, like Stanford. Physical football is in their DNA physical football and kids eventually buy into. That’s now what’s going on with Michigan State.” Charles Davis, NFL Network and FOX Sports On Michigan State’s 2013 season... “It’s hard to believe anyone was (playing better football than Michigan State at the end of last season). You’d have to say Florida State because they won the National Championship and the way Auburn finished the year, but Michigan State would not have backed down from anyone. Michigan State would have gleefully accepted any challenge and it would have been fun. A Michigan State-Florida State match-up would have been a blast because the teams play similar styles in a lot of ways. You know both want to be physical and both run. “Michigan State runs better than what people give them credit for. Getting into that type of a game when you get into the fourth quarter and make the other team sweat, that would have been a fun one because Michigan State is very comfortable in that type of a situation.” On the state of the MSU program... “What Mark Dantonio and his staff have done with that program, they’re at the level now that it’s a surprise if they’re not contending (for a championship), as witnessed two seasons ago when the team finished 7-6. You’re like what happened to Michigan State? And then they came back this season and all of a sudden, it was pound Green pound again and off they went.

TRACKING EXPLOSIVE PLAYS (20-PLUS YARDS) Player No. Tony Lippett 11 Bennie Fowler 10 Macgarrett Kings 10 Jeremy Langford 9 R.J. Shelton 7 Keith Mumphery 6 Nick Hill 5 Aaron Burbridge 4 Andre Sims 4 Delton Williams 3 Josiah Price 2 Denicos Allen 1 Shilique Calhoun 1 Darqueze Dennard 1 Kurtis Drummond 1 Mike Sadler 1 Trevon Pendleton 1 Connor Cook 1 Totals 78

TD 2 4 2 6 1 3 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 22

R P KR PR IR FR 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 7 0 3 0 0 8 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 5 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 20 41 7 6 3 1

TOTAL: 78 (22 TDs) Rushing: 20 (9 TDs) Passing: 41 (11 TDs) Punt Returns: 6 Kickoff Returns: 7 Interception Returns: 3 (1 TD) Fumble Returns: 1 (1 TD)

“The beauty of it is Mark Dantonio had a vision. He has a formula for what he wants done. He believes in it and doesn’t deviate from it. A lot of guys after a 7-6 year go `oh, we’ve got to change everything. This has to go and this didn’t work.’ No, they took a step back and took a deep breath. Okay, this didn’t happen here, and this didn’t happen here. And by the way, out of our losses, most of them were pretty close. So we’re just missing a little bit of a piece. “Then the way he managed the quarterback situation last year where kids still felt valuable even though they weren’t getting the job. That was masterful because you know as well as I know when a quarterback doesn’t get a job now what does he do? I’m outta here. I’m going to transfer. I’m gone because I can’t play here. They’re all hanging around, trying to do their best. He’s built the program for the long haul by building it on his principles, on his character, and on his integrity. Phenomenal job.” Jim Miller, Sirius/XM NFL analyst On the Michigan State program... “No. 1, (I’m impressed with) how they go to work every week. Every week is a big challenge and Mark Dantonio and his staff do a great job getting the team focused. Early in the season, it looked like there was a lot of uncertainty. The team could have fractured and gone in a different direction, but they got close-knit, tightened it up. They focused on the task at hand, and they got it done. So I was extremely proud of the Michigan State Spartans last year.” On the end of the 2013 season... “Obviously when you knock off a team that’s undefeated (Ohio State), Michigan State showed a lot of backbone; a lot of grit. I think they were a tougher team, but the bottom line is they earned it. They knew what they were working for and it was something bigger. Ohio State was in the way, and they got it done. That was a big challenge but even after taking care of Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game, there was no let down. The team stayed focused; they stayed on a high and got their energies focused toward Stanford in the Rose Bowl. It was a goal that was accomplished, but make no mistake about it, Michigan State earned it every bit of the way.”

17 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL SPARTAN STREAKS

Consecutive Games Started Kurtis Drummond, FS Shilique Calhoun, DE Jeremy Langford, TB Trae Waynes, CB Connor Cook, QB

21 14 14 14 13

On MSU’s defense... “It says a lot about their coaching style. No. 1, they run a great scheme. Pat Narduzzi is one of the better defensive coordinators in all of college football and that’s why he’s been getting a lot interest whether it’s through pro teams or other college programs. It’s about being able to communicate to the players each week the game plan - what needs to be executed to win a game. And for 14 weeks of the season, Michigan State’s defense was ranked No. 1. That says it all about the job the coaches have done at Michigan State and for the players for going out and getting it done.” On MSU’s recruiting... “The coaches do a great job of recruiting players around the country. No. 1, they don’t look for stars. You always hear about these five-star and four-star recruits, but you recruit the individual. You recruit the kid that’s going to fit your program the best and represent Michigan State football the best. It’s hard to identify heart. It’s hard to identify toughness. Those are intangibles that are sometimes unscoutable. Michigan State does a great job identifying the type of player that they want to represent its program.” On MSU’s player development... “It says a lot about the coaching staff because they maximize the talent since Mark Dantonio has been there. I go back to Kellen Davis when he played both defensive end and tight end. Here’s Jeremy Langford: they’re trying to find him a position. Is he a receiver? Is he a cornerback? They have some depth issues at running back, and what does Jeremy Langford do, he takes off and has a great season. He had a couple of great 100-yard rushing games. He ran tough; he ran with grit and again he earned it. You have to give the kid a lot of credit because he’s a great athlete and he finally found a home as the starting running back. So again, you credit the coaches for identifying talent and you credit Jeremy Langford for not giving up, not quitting when he really didn’t have a position to settle in at.” WINNINGEST SENIOR CLASS IN MSU HISTORY – • The 2013 senior class helped Michigan State to a record of 42-12 (.778) since 2010, including four consecutive winning seasons. The 42 wins are the most by any senior class in the 117-year history of Michigan State football (previous record: 37 wins by 2011 class). The 2013 senior class became the winningest class at MSU with the 41-28 win over Nebraska on Nov. 16. Winningest Senior Classes in MSU Football History (based on total wins) Rank Senior Class (Years) Four-Year Record (Winning Pct.) 1. 2013 (2010-13) 42-12 (.778) 2. 2011 (2008-11) 37-16 (.698) 3. 2012 (2009-12) 35-18 (.660) 4. 2010 (2007-10) 33-19 (.635) 5. 1990 (1987-90) 31-14-3 (.677) The Class of 2013 included: Denicos Allen (Hamilton, Ohio), Max Bullough (Traverse City, Mich.), Henry Conway (Shaker Heights, Ohio), Darqueze Dennard (Dry Branch, Ga.), Denzel Drone (Plant City, Fla.), Kyler Elsworth (Goodrich, Mich.), Danny Folino (East Lansing, Mich.), Fou Fonoti (Lakewood, Calif.), Bennie Fowler (Bloomfield, Mich.), Dan France (North Royalton, Ohio), Derek Hoebing (Vermillion, Ohio), Tyler Hoover (Novi, Mich.), Jairus Jones (Tampa, Fla.), Isaiah Lewis (Indianapolis, Ind.), Andrew Maxwell (Midland, Mich.), Kevin Muma (Troy, Mich.), Micajah Reynolds (Lansing, Mich.) and Blake Treadwell (East Lansing, Mich.).

18

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL BIG TEN/NCAA STAT LEADERS – Here’s a glance at how Michigan State ranked among the Big Ten and NCAA stat leaders in 2013: Category Rushing Offense Passing Offense Total Offense Scoring Offense Rushing Defense Passing Defense Total Defense Scoring Defense Passing Efficiency Pass Efficiency Defense Turnover Margin Net Punting Punt Returns Kickoff Returns

Stat Avg. 173.8 211.7 385.5 29.4 86.6 165.6 252.2 13.2 130.0 92.3 +0.9 38.6 9.8 19.2

Big Ten 8th 7th 8th 7th 1st 1st 1st 1st 7th 1st 1st 3rd 5th 11th

NCAA 58th 82nd 80th 64th 2nd 3rd 2nd 3rd 63rd 1st 10th 26th 43rd 99th

NCAA STAT LEADERS – Here’s a glance at how Michigan State ranked among the NCAA individual stat leaders in 2013: Individual Statistics (Top 50) Rushing Yards: Jeremy Langford (16th with 1,422 rushing yards) Rushing Yards Per Game: Jeremy Langford (27th with 101.6 ypg.) Rushing Touchdowns: Jeremy Langford (8th with 18 rushing TDs) Touchdown Passes: Connor Cook (30th with 22 TD passes) Scoring: Jeremy Langford (36th at 8.1 points per game) Field-Goal Percentage: Michael Geiger (4th at .938) Field Goals: Michael Geiger (29th at 1.4 made per game) Punting: Mike Sadler (39th with 42.5 avg.) Punt Returns: Macgarrett Kings Jr. (25th at 10.3 yards per return) Fumbles Recovered: Shilique Calhoun (2nd with four) NOTABLE WINNING STREAK – • Michigan State’s current 10-game winning streak is the longest in the Mark Dantonio era and tied for fourth longest in school history (1965, 1978-79). The 10-game streak is also the second-longest active streak in the NCAA FBS (Florida State, 14).

SPARTANS IN THE POLLS ASSOCIATED PRESS | USA TODAY | BCS STANDINGS Week AP USA TODAY BCS Preseason RV RV Sept. 3 RV RV Sept. 8 RV RV Sept. 15 RV 24 Sept. 22 RV RV Sept. 29 RV RV Oct. 6 RV RV Oct. 13 RV RV Oct. 20 RV RV Oct. 27 24 24 22 Nov. 3 18 19 17 Nov. 10 14 16 16 Nov. 17 13 13 13 Nov. 24 11 11 11 Dec. 1 10 9 10 Dec. 8 4 4 4 Jan. 7 3 3 KEY: RV – Receiving Votes. NOTE: BCS Standings first released on Oct. 20. POLL NOTES: • The No. 3 final ranking for the Spartans was the highest for the program since 1966 (No. 2). • Michigan State did not enter the AP Poll until Week 10 (week of Oct. 27). • MSU ranked No. 4 in the final BCS Standings - its highest ranking ever. • The Spartans have appeared in the final Top 25 rankings four times in the last six years (2008: No. 24 both polls; 2010: No. 14 both polls; 2011: No. 10 USA TODAY/No. 11 AP; and 2013: No. 3 both polls).

• MSU’s nine-game conference winning streak, dating back to last year’s regular-season finale against Minnesota, is the second longest in school history (school record: 16 from 1965-67).

19 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL 2013 DEFENSIVE LEADERBOARD Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.

Player ................................ Production Points LB Denicos Allen ......................................... 335 DE Shilique Calhoun ................................... 238 FS Kurtis Drummond .................................. 225 LB Max Bullough ......................................... 218 CB Darqueze Dennard................................ 216 LB Taiwan Jones ......................................... 157 SS Isaiah Lewis .......................................... 153 CB Trae Waynes ......................................... 132 DE Marcus Rush ......................................... 129 DT Tyler Hoover ............................................ 95 SS RJ Williamson ......................................... 80 DE Denzel Drone .......................................... 61 DT Damon Knox ........................................... 55 LB Ed Davis .................................................. 51

DEFENSIVE TOUCHDOWNS SCORED DURING MARK DANTONIO ERA – Michigan State has scored 19 defensive touchdowns since Mark Dantonio took over as head coach prior to the 2007 season, including five each in 2007, 2011 and 2013. 2007 (5) Travis Key 31-yard interception return vs. Pittsburgh, second quarter Ervin Baldwin 12-yard fumble return vs. Indiana, third quarter Otis Wiley 54-yard interception return vs. Ohio State, third quarter Sir Darean Adams 25-yard fumble return vs. Ohio State, third quarter Travis Key 20-yard fumble recovery vs. Purdue, fourth quarter 2008 (2) Otis Wiley 31-yard interception return vs. California, second quarter Johnny Adams 40-yard interception return vs. Purdue, second quarter 2009 (2) Danny Fortener 45-yard interception return vs. Illinois, third quarter Chris L. Rucker 11-yard fumble return vs. Purdue, first quarter 2010 – None 2011 (5) Jeremy Langford 37-yard fumble return vs. Florida Atlantic, fourth quarter Isaiah Lewis 37-yard interception return vs. Central Michigan, second quarter Isaiah Lewis 39-yard interception return vs. Michigan, fourth quarter Johnny Adams 86-yard interception return vs. Indiana, third quarter Darqueze Dennard 38-yard interception return vs. Georgia, third quarter, 2012 Outback Bowl 2012 – None 2013 (5) Kurtis Drummond 21-yard interception return vs. Western Michigan, first quarter Shilique Calhoun 16-yard fumble return vs. Western Michigan, fourth quarter Shilique Calhoun 4-yard fumble return vs. South Florida, second quarter Shilique Calhoun 56-yard interception return vs. South Florida, third quarter Denicos Allen 45-yard fumble return vs. Purdue, second quarter

Shilique Calhoun set a MSU single-game record with two defensive touchdowns against South Florida last season.

20

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL DANTONIO SWEEPS BIG TEN COACH OF THE YEAR HONORS – • Seventh-year Michigan State head coach Mark Dantonio swept Big Ten Coach of the Year honors by winning both the Dave McClain Coach of the Year (media) and Hayes-Schembechler Coach of the Year (coaches). Since the award’s inception in 1972, Dantonio is the first Spartan coach to earn Dave McClain Coach of the Year honors twice. He also won the award in 2010 after leading MSU to an 11-1 regular-season record and a share of the Big Ten Championship. • Dantonio also was named a finalist for the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year, Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year, Bobby Bowden Coach of the Year and Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year. In addition, he was named one of 16 semifinalists for the Maxwell Football Club Coach of the Year and was tabbed Big Ten Coach of the Year by Sporting News and CollegeFootballNews.com. • Dantonio owns a 64-29 (.688) record at Michigan State. He already ranks among MSU’s all-time leaders in career wins (fourth) and winning percentage (fifth). • Among Spartan coaches who have coached at least 10 Big Ten games, Dantonio owns the best winning percentage (.679, 38-18 record). “Biggie” Munn went 5-1 in his only Big Ten season in 1953. • Dantonio has three double-digit win seasons (2010, 2011, 2013), which is the most in school history. He also has four nine-win seasons at MSU, the most by any coach in school history (9 in 2008, 11 in 2010, 11 in 2011, 11 in 2013); “Biggie” Munn (1951, 1952, 1953) and Duffy Daugherty (1955, 1965, 1966) each had three nine-win seasons at MSU. • Since 2007, Dantonio has helped produce 26 first-team All-Big Ten selections, five consensus First-Team All-Americans (2008: RB Javon Ringer; 2009-10: LB Greg Jones; 2011: DT Jerel Worthy; and 2013: CB Darqueze Dennard) and 16 NFL Draft picks, including six in 2012. It marked the most NFL Draft selections for the Spartans since seven players were taken in 2000. • From his first day on the job, Dantonio has pledged to support student-athletes as they pursue excellence, both in the classroom and on the playing field. In his first six seasons, more than 80 percent (98 of 123) of his Michigan State players who have completed their eligibility have earned their undergraduate degrees. In addition, 87 Spartans have earned Academic All-Big Ten honors, including six Academic All-Americans (Blair White, 2009 second team; Mike Sadler, 2013 first team, 2012 second team, 2011 second team; Max Bullough, 2013 first team, 2012 second team). • Under Mark Dantonio, Michigan State has produced a 38-11 record (.776) in home games, including a 15-game winning streak (7-0 in 2010, 7-0 in 2011, won first game in 2012). The Spartans have won 23 of their last 28 home games. • Dantonio has led Michigan State to Top 25 finishes in four of the last six seasons (2008: No. 24 in both polls; 2010: No. 14 in both polls; 2011: No. 10 USA TODAY/No. 11 AP; and 2013: No. 3 in both polls). • Dantonio was named the Big Ten Coach of the Year in 2010 after leading the Spartans to a share of the Big Ten Championship and a school-record 11 wins. He was also selected the National Coach of the Year by Rivals.com, Scout.com and CBSSports.com, and was named a finalist for the Paul “Bear” Bryant, Eddie Robinson and Liberty Mutual National Coach of the Year Awards. In 2008, Dantonio was named one of 15 finalists for the George Munger Coach of the Year Award after leading MSU to a 9-3 regular-season mark.

TRACKING TURNOVERS

Takeaways (28) Qtr. MSU Result INT-W. Mich. (J. Jones/Drummond) 1 TD* INT-W. Mich. (Drummond) 1 Punt INT-W. Mich. (J. Jones) 3 FG Fumble-W. Mich. (Recovered: Calhoun) 4 TD* Fumble-USF (Calhoun) 2 TD* INT-USF (Calhoun) 3 TD* Fumble-YSU (Calhoun) 2 TD Fumble-YSU (Robinson) 3 FG INT-Iowa (Dennard) 1 Missed FG INT-Iowa (Dennard) 4 Punt INT-Indiana (Williamson) 4 INT INT-Purdue (Lewis) 1 Punt Fumble-Purdue (D. Allen) 2 TD* Fumble-Illinois (Rush) 2 TD Interception-Illinois (Lewis) 2 End of Half Interception-Michigan (Dennard) 4 TD Fumble-Nebraska (Calhoun) 1 FG Interception-Nebraska (Drummond) 1 Punt Fumble-Nebraska (Pepper) 1 TD Fumble-Nebraska (Lewis) 2 TD Fumble-Nebraska (Waynes) 3 TD Interception-Northwestern (Dennard) 3 Punt Interception-Northwestern (Drummond) 4 TD Interception-Northwestern (Drummond) 4 End of Half Interception-Minnesota (Waynes) 1 Punt Interception-Minnesota (Waynes) 2 INT Fumble-Minnesota (Drone) 4 Punt Interception-Stanford (Waynes) 4 Punt TOTAL: 28 takeaways for 93 points (15-for-28 scoring) Turnovers (15) Qtr. Opp. Result Fumble-W. Mich. (Langford) 4 Fumble Fumble-USF (Cook) 1 Punt Fumble-USF (Sims) 2 FG Fumble-YSU (Sims) 2 TD Interception-ND (Shelton) 3 TD Interception-Iowa (Cook) 4 Missed FG Fumble-Indiana (Kings) 2 TD Interception-Indiana (Cook) 4 TD Fumble-Illinois (Cook) 2 Punt Interception-Michigan (Cook) 3 Punt Interception-Minnesota (Cook) 2 End of Half Fumble-Minnesota (Cook) 3 Punt Interception-Ohio State (Cook) 3 Punt Interception-Stanford (Cook) 2 TD* Fumble-Stanford (Langford) 3 Punt TOTAL: 15 turnovers for 38 points (6-for-15 scoring) MSU: +13 Turnovers, +55 Point off Turnovers * - denotes TD occured on same play as turnover.

ALWAYS A CROWD FAVORITE – • Michigan State has ranked among the NCAA’s Top 25 in attendance each of the last 58 seasons, including No. 20 in 2013, averaging 72,328 fans per game. The Spartans ranked No. 19 in the NCAA FBS in total attendance as 506,294 fans went through the turnstiles for seven home games.

21 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL ALL-TIME WINNINGEST COACHES MICHIGAN STATE HISTORY OVERALL Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Coach (Years).......................................Wins Duffy Daughery (1954-72) ....................... 109 Charles Bachman (1933-46) ..................... 70 George Perles (1983-94) ........................... 68 Mark Dantonio (2007-) ............................. 64 Chester Brewer (1903-10, ‘17, ‘19) ........... 58

Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Coach (Years)................................. Win Pct. John Macklin (1911-15) .......................... .853 Clarence “Biggie” Munn (1947-53) ......... .846 Jim Crowley (1929-32) ........................... .712 Chester Brewer (1903-10, ‘17, ‘19) ........ .699 Mark Dantonio (2007-) .......................... .688

BIG TEN

22

Rk. 1. 2. 3.

Coach (Years).......................................Wins Duffy Daughery (1954-72) ......................... 72 George Perles (1983-94) ........................... 53 Mark Dantonio (2007-) ............................. 38

Rk. 1. 2. 3.

Coach (Years) [Min. 10 games]..... Win Pct. Mark Dantonio (2007-) .......................... .679 Denny Stolz (1973-75)............................ .604 Nick Saban (1995-99)............................. .602

SPARTAN TRENDS UNDER DANTONIO – Here’s how Michigan State has fared during head coach Mark Dantonio’s tenure (2007-13: 93 games): Games played in Spartan Stadium: Games played on the road/neutral site:

2013 7-0 6-1

Overall 38-11 26-18

When leading at halftime: When trailing at halftime: When tied at halftime:

11-0 2-1 0-0

45-6 15-20 4-3

When scoring first: When opponent scores first:

8-0 5-1

44-8 20-21

When leading after first quarter: When trailing after first quarter: When tied after first quarter:

5-0 4-1 4-0

33-5 17-18 14-6

When leading after three quarters: When trailing after three quarters: When tied after three quarters:

11-0 1-0 1-1

49-8 12-18 3-3

Overtime games:

0-0

4-3

When gaining more first downs than opponent: When gaining fewer first downs than opponent: When gaining same number of first downs as opponent:

11-1 2-0 0-0

45-11 16-16 3-2

When gaining 200+ yards rushing: When opponent gains 200+ yards rushing:

3-0 1-0

20-3 4-8

When outrushing opponent: When being outrushed by opponent:

10-1 3-0

50-11 14-18

When gaining 200+ yards passing: When opponent gains 200+ yards passing:

8-0 5-0

40-18 28-16

When gaining more total yards than opponent: When gaining fewer total yards than opponent:

12-1 1-0

54-12 10-17

When leading in time of possession: When trailing in time of possession: When splitting in time of possession:

12-1 1-0 0-0

47-8 17-20 0-1

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL SPARTAN STADIUM NORTH END ZONE PROJECT INFORMATION – • The past two years, $34.5 million has been committed to upgrading Spartan Stadium to continually enhance the gameday atmosphere. • In June 2013, the Michigan State Board of Trustees approved a $24.5 million project to the north end of Spartan Stadium that will feature a two-story, 50,000-square-foot addition as well as an entrance plaza, renovated gates, and additional restrooms and concessions. • The building will include new locker rooms for teams, coaches and officials, including a 4,500-square-foot home locker room and a 700-square-foot home training room, in addition to a 3,600-square-foot media center and a 4,000-square-foot recruiting lounge for all varsity sports. The project is scheduled to be completed in July 2014. • Prior to the 2012 season, new high-def Panasonic video screens and scoreboards as well as a new sound system were installed in Spartan Stadium. The new scoreboard/video screen in the south end zone is 5,300-square feet, compared to its predecessor that measured just 567-square feet (installed in 1998). The top of the new south end zone structure reaches 130 feet. In addition, two new video boards as well as an LED ribbon board were added to the north end zone. The LED ribbon board covers 4,500 square feet (450feet long and 10-feet high). Combined, the south and north video screens/scoreboards total 13,300-square feet. The $10 million project replaced a 14-year-old scoreboard, message board and audio system.

ACTIVE CAREER LEADERS RUSHING YARDS 1. Jeremy Langford (301 att.) 2. Nick Hill (118 att.) RUSHING TOUCHDOWNS 1. Jeremy Langford 2. Nick Hill R.J. Shelton PASSING YARDS (C-A-I) 1. Connor Cook (232-397-7)

187 2 2 2,849

RECEPTIONS 1. Tony Lippett 2. Keith Mumphery 3. Aaron Burbridge 4. Macgarrett Kings Jr. 5. Jeremy Langford

84 62 51 47 28

RECEIVING YARDS 1. Tony Lippett 2. Keith Mumphery 3. Aaron Burbridge 4. Macgarrett Kings Jr.

1,049 853 558 538

TD RECEPTIONS 1. Keith Mumphery Josiah Price Tony Lippett 3. Macgarrett Kings Jr.

4 4 4 3

SCORING LEADERS 1. Jeremy Langford 2. Michael Geiger ALL-PURPOSE YARDS 1. Nick Hill 2. Jeremy Langford

Artist rendering of the north end zone addition to Spartan Stadium.

1,445 507

120 81 2,399 1,602

TACKLES 1. Kurtis Drummond 2. Marcus Rush 3. Taiwan Jones

161 126 123

TACKLES FOR LOSS 1. Marcus Rush 2. Shilique Calhoun 3. Taiwan Jones

27.0 16.5 13.0

SACKS 1. Marcus Rush 2. Shilique Calhoun

11.0 8.5

INTERCEPTIONS 1. Kurtis Drummond 2. Trae Waynes R.J. Williamson

8 3 3

23 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL MICHIGAN STATE SPRING DEPTH CHART (AS OF MARCH 24) SPARTAN OFFENSE X

LT LG

C RG RT

TE

Z

F

QB

FB TB

14 16 5 87 88 74 73 63 67 57 66 54 54 75 76 79 61 84 82 11 83 80 81 25 12 21 89 17 3 86 21 18 7 6 37 33 20 22 24 32

SPARTAN DEFENSE

TONY LIPPETT (6-3, 190, Sr.-5) Aaron Burbridge (6-1, 203, Jr.) DeAnthony Arnett (5-11, 189, Jr.) Tres Barksdale (6-2, 195, So.) Monty Madaris (6-1, 195, So.) JACK CONKLIN (6-6, 330, So.) Dennis Finley (6-6, 307, R-Fr.) TRAVIS JACKSON (6-3, 286, Sr.-5) Zach Higgins (6-4, 315, So.) Adam Brown (6-3, 288, Jr.) JACK ALLEN (6-1, 300, Jr.) Connor Kruse (6-4, 317, Sr.-5) CONNOR KRUSE (6-4, 317, Sr.-5) Benny McGowan (6-3, 319, So.) DONAVON CLARK (6-3, 310, Jr.) Kodi Kieler (6-5, 309, So.) James Bodanis (6-5, 300, Sr.-5) ANDREW GLEICHERT (6-5, 264, Sr.-5) Josiah Price (6-4, 244, So.) Jamal Lyles (6-3, 250, So.) Paul Lang (6-5, 252, Jr.) Dylan Chmura (6-4, 240, R-Fr.) Matt Sokol (6-5, 233, Fr.) KEITH MUMPHERY (6-0, 212, Sr.-5) R.J. Shelton (5-11, 200, So.) Andre Sims Jr. (5-9, 193, Jr.) John Jakubik (6-0, 194, Sr.-5) Trey Kilgore (6-1, 182, R-Fr.) MACGARRETT KINGS JR. (5-10, 186, Jr.) Matt Macksood (5-11, 197, So.) OR Andre Sims Jr. (5-9, 193, Jr.) CONNOR COOK (6-4, 219, Jr.) Tyler O’Connor (6-3, 219, So.) Damion Terry (6-3, 230, R-Fr.) TREVON PENDLETON (5-11, 250, Jr.) JEREMY LANGFORD (6-0, 205, Sr.-5) Nick Hill (5-8, 197, Sr.-5) Delton Williams (6-1, 232, So.) Gerald Holmes (6-0, 216, R-Fr.) Nick Tompkins (5-9, 187, So.)

DE

DT

NT

DE

STAR

MIKE

SAM

FC

FS

SS

BC

89 98 62 92 99 96 93 87 68 44 8 85 45 6 23 18 34 33 48 43 30 49 50 2 39 37 38 27 7 29 32 26 35 14 15 36 21

SHILIQUE CALHOUN (6-4, 257, Jr.) Demetrius Cooper (6-5, 239, R-Fr.) Tyler Topolinski (6-3, 242, R-Fr.) JOEL HEATH (6-6, 289, Jr.) James Kittredge (6-4, 295, Sr.-5) David Fennell (6-2, 272, So.) DAMON KNOX (6-4, 275, Jr.) Brandon Clemons (6-3, 295, Jr.) Noah Jones (6-3, 285, R-Fr.) MARCUS RUSH (6-2, 255, Sr.-5) Lawrence Thomas (6-3, 294, Jr.) Evan Jones (6-5, 248, So.) DARIEN HARRIS (6-0, 228, Jr.) Mylan Hicks (5-11, 199, Sr.-5) Chris Frey (6-1, 223, Fr.) Michael Topolinski (6-1, 190, Jr.) TAIWAN JONES (6-3, 252, Sr.) Jon Reschke (6-2, 234, R-Fr.) Pat Rhomberg (6-0, 238, Jr.) ED DAVIS (6-3, 230, Jr.) Riley Bullough (6-2, 233, So.) Shane Jones (6-1, 238, R-Fr.) Sean Harrington (6-3, 196, R-Fr.) DARIAN HICKS (5-10, 181, So.) Jermaine Edmondson (6-0, 178, So.) OR Ezra Robinson (6-0, 178, So.) Gabe Augustin (5-8, 186, So.) KURTIS DRUMMOND (6-1, 200, Sr.-5) Demetrious Cox (6-1, 200, So.) Mark Meyers (6-0, 180, So.) Zac Leimbach (5-11, 198, So.) RJ WILLIAMSON (6-0, 215, Jr.) Jalyn Powell (5-11, 206, R-Fr.) Chris Laneaux (5-11, 202, Jr.) TRAE WAYNES (6-1, 183, Jr.) Arjen Colquhoun (6-1, 193, Jr.) Justin Williams (6-1, 175, R-Fr.)

3 18 12 3 3 21

MIKE SADLER (6-0, 170, Sr.-5) Connor Cook (6-4, 219, Jr.) R.J. SHELTON (5-11, 200, So.) MACGARRETT KINGS JR. (5-10, 186, Jr.) MACGARRETT KINGS JR. (5-10, 186, Jr.) Andre Sims Jr. (5-9, 193, Jr.)

SPARTAN SPECIAL TEAMS KO PK P

SN

4 24 4 24 3 4 7 52 56

MICHAEL GEIGER (5-8, 186, So.) Kevin Cronin (6-1, 216, So.) MICHAEL GEIGER (5-8, 186, So.) Kevin Cronin (6-1, 216, So.) MIKE SADLER (6-0, 170, Sr.-5) Michael Geiger (5-8, 186, So.) OR Tyler O’Connor (6-3, 219, So.) TAYBOR PEPPER (6-4, 222, Jr.) Leland Ewing (6-1, 229, Sr.-5)

HLD KR PR

24 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL STARTING LINEUPS/CAREER STARTS Career Starts by Position FB

TB

37-Pendleton (11)

33-Langford (14) 20-Hill (1)

QB 10-Maxwell (14) 18-Cook (13)

Z

TE

RT

RG

C

LG

LT

X

25-Mumphery (15) 13-Fowler (15) 12-Shelton (4) 3-Kings (3)

94-Dennis (7) 82-Price (6) 92-Gleichert (5) 83-Lang (2)

51-Fonoti (24)

59-France (37)

66-J. Allen (24) 63-Jackson (18)

64-Treadwell (30^)

74-Conklin (13) 76-Clark (6)

14-Lippett (19#) 16-Burbridge (10)

FC

DE

DT

NT

DE

BC

15-Waynes (14)

89-Calhoun (15)

91-Hoover (23) 99-Kittredge (5) 8-Thomas (3*) 93-Knox (2)

60-Reynolds (19) 97-Scarpinato (2)

44-Rush (40) 42-Drone (7)

31-Dennard (40)

Bold - Returning; Italics - Lost # Includes games started at cornerback in 2011. ^ Includes six games started on defensive line, 2009-10. * Includes three games started at fullback in 2012. + Double tight end set. $ Three receiver set. % Started three offensive backs.

SAM

MIKE

STAR

28-D. Allen (40)

40-M. Bullough (40) 41-Elsworth (1)

34-T. Jones (17) 23-J. Jones (7)

FS

SS

27-Drummond (21)

9-Lewis (40) 26-Williamson (2)

2013 OFFENSIVE GAME-BY-GAME STARTERS Game Western Michigan South Florida Youngstown State at Notre Dame at Iowa Indiana Purdue at Illinois Michigan at Nebraska at Northwestern Minnesota Ohio State Stanford

X Fowler Burbridge Burbridge Burbridge Lippett Lippett Lippett Lippett Lippett Lippett Lippett Lippett Lippett Lippett

LT Clark Clark Clark Clark Conklin Conklin Conklin Conklin Conklin Conklin Conklin Conkllin Conkllin Conklin

LG Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell Treadwell

C Jackson Jackson J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen J. Allen

RG France France France France France France France France France France France France France Jackson

RT Conklin Conklin Conklin Fonoti Fonoti Fonoti Fonoti Fonoti Fonoti Fonoti Fonoti Fonoti Fonoti Fonoti

TE Dennis Dennis Price Price Price Price Dennis Price Dennis Gleichert Dennis Price Dennis Gleichert

Z Mumphery Hill% Mumphery Mumphery Fowler Fowler Shelton Shelton Fowler Shelton Shelton Fowler Fowler Fowler

QB Maxwell Cook Cook Cook Cook Cook Cook Cook Cook Cook Cook Cook Cook Cook

FB Pendleton Pendleton Pendleton Pendleton Kings$ Kings$ Pendleton Gleichert+ Pendleton Pendleton Pendleton Kings$ Pendleton Pendleton

TB Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford Langford

2013 DEFENSIVE GAME-BY-GAME STARTERS Game Western Michigan South Florida Youngstown State at Notre Dame at Iowa Indiana Purdue at Illinois Michigan at Nebraska at Northwestern Minnesota Ohio State Stanford

DE Calhoun Calhoun Calhoun Calhoun Calhoun Calhoun Callhoun Calhoun Calhoun Calhoun Calhoun Calhoun Calhoun Calhoun

DT Hoover Hoover Hoover Hoover Hoover Hoover Hoover Scarpinato Knox Knox Hoover Hoover Hoover Hoover

NT Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Reynolds Scarpinato Reynolds

DE Rush Rush Rush Rush Drone Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush

STAR T. Jones T. Jones T. Jones J. Jones T. Jones T. Jones T. Jones T. Jones T. Jones T. Jones T. Jones T. Jones T. Jones T. Jones

MIKE M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough M. Bullough Elsworth

SAM D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen D. Allen

FC Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes Waynes

FS Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Drummond Durmmond

SS Lewis Lewis Williamson Williamson Lewis Lewis Lewis Lewis Lewis Lewis Lewis Lewis Lewis Lewis

BC Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard Dennard

25 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


SPRING NUMERICAL ROSTER No. 2 3 3 4 5 6 6 7 7 8 9 11 11 12 14 14 15 16 16 17 18 18 19 20 21 21 22 22 23 24 24 25 26 26 27 29 30 32 32 33 33 34 34 35 36 36 37 37 38 39 43

26

Name Darian Hicks Mike Sadler Macgarrett Kings Jr. Michael Geiger DeAnthony Arnett Mylan Hicks Damion Terry Demetrious Cox Tyler O’Connor Lawrence Thomas Evan Fischer Jamal Lyles Robert Aiello R.J. Shelton Tony Lippett Chris Laneaux Trae Waynes Aaron Burbridge Tommy Vento Trey Kilgore Connor Cook Michael Topolinski AJ Troup Nick Hill Andre Sims Jr. Justin Williams Delton Williams Paul Andrie Chris Frey Gerald Holmes Kevin Cronin Keith Mumphery RJ Williamson Austin Wolfe Kurtis Drummond Mark Meyers Riley Bullough Nick Tompkins Zac Leimbach Jeremy Langford Jon Reschke Taiwan Jones Brock Makaric Jalyn Powell Arjen Colquhoun Phillip-Michael Williams Ezra Robinson Trevon Pendleton Gabe Augustin Jermaine Edmondson Ed Davis

Pos. CB P WR K WR LB QB S QB DL K TE WR WR WR S CB WR QB WR QB LB WR RB WR CB RB QB LB RB K WR S WR S S LB RB S RB LB LB WR S CB RB CB FB CB CB LB

Ht. 5-10 6-0 5-10 5-8 5-11 5-11 6-3 6-1 6-3 6-3 5-10 6-3 6-2 5-11 6-3 5-11 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-4 6-1 6-2 5-8 5-9 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-1 6-0 6-1 6-0 6-0 6-0 6-1 6-0 6-2 5-9 5-11 6-0 6-2 6-3 6-1 5-11 6-1 5-9 6-0 5-11 5-8 6-0 6-3

Wt. 181 170 186 186 189 199 230 200 219 294 177 250 185 200 190 202 183 203 196 182 219 190 220 197 193 175 232 185 223 216 216 212 215 176 200 180 233 187 198 205 234 252 192 206 193 185 178 250 186 178 230

Elig. So. Sr. Jr. So. Jr. Sr. Fr. So. So. Jr. So. So. Fr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Fr. So. So. Fr. Fr. So. Sr. Jr. Fr. Sr. So. So. So. So. Sr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. So. So. Jr.

Cl. So. Sr.-5 Jr. So. Sr. Sr.-5 So. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. So. Sr.-5 Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr.-5 Sr. So. So. Jr. Fr. So. Jr. Sr.-5 Sr. So. Sr.-5 Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr.-5 So. Sr. So. So. Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr.

Exp. 1L 3L 2L 1L 1L 2L RS 1L 1L 2L SQ 1L RS 1L 3L 1L 2L 2L SQ RS 2L SQ SQ 3L 2L RS 1L SQ HS RS SQ 3L 2L RS 3L 1L 1L SQ SQ 3L RS 3L RS RS 2L HS 1L 2L SQ 1L 2L

Hometown (Previous School) Solon, Ohio (Solon) Grand Rapids, Mich. (Forest Hills Northern) Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (University School) Toledo, Ohio (Ottawa Hills) Saginaw, Mich. (Tennessee) Detroit, Mich. (Renaissance) Erie, Pa. (Cathedral Prep) Jeannette, Pa. (Jeannette) Lima, Ohio (Lima Central Catholic) Detroit, Mich. (Renaissance) Holt, Mich. (Holt) Southfield, Mich. (Southfield-Lathrup) Lake Orion, Mich. (Lake Orion) Beaver Dam, Wis. (Beaver Dam) Detroit, Mich. (Crockett) Kalamazoo, Mich. (Portage Northern) Kenosha, Wis. (Bradford) Farmington Hills, Mich. (Harrison) Farmington Hills, Mich. (Harrison) Cincinnati, Ohio (St. Xavier) Hinckley, Ohio (Walsh Jesuit) Richmond Hill, Ontario (New Mexico Military Institute) Minneapolis, Minn. (Wayzata) Chelsea, Mich. (Chelsea) Snellville, Ga. (Brookwood) Port St. Lucie, Fla. (Treasure Coast) Erie, Pa. (Cathedral Prep) Valparaiso, Ind. (Valparaiso) Upper Arlington, Ohio (Upper Arlington) Flint, Mich. (Carman-Ainsworth) Traverse City, Mich. (Traverse City West) Vienna, Ga. (Dooly County) Dayton, Ohio (Dunbar) Springfield, Va. (Lake Braddock Secondary) Masury, Ohio (Hubbard) Toledo, Ohio (Whitmer) Traverse City, Mich. (St. Francis) Snellville, Ga. (Brookwood) Walled Lake, Mich. (Walled Lake Central) Wayne, Mich. (John Glenn) Sterling Heights, Mich. (Brother Rice) New Baltimore, Mich. (Anchor Bay) Saginaw, Mich. (Heritage) Warren, Ohio (Warren G. Harding) Windsor, Ontario (W.F. Herman Secondary School) Ballston Spa, N.Y. (Ballston Spa) Sarasota, Fla. (Booker) Lucasville, Ohio (Portsmouth West) Freeland, Mich. (Nouvel Catholic Central) Canton, Ohio (McKinley Senior) Detroit, Mich. (Southeastern)

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


SPRING NUMERICAL ROSTER No. 44 45 47 48 49 50 52 53 54 55 56 57 61 62 63 64 66 67 68 73 74 75 76 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 87 88 89 89 92 93 96 98 99

Name Marcus Rush Darien Harris Matt Rea Pat Rhomberg Shane Jones Sean Harrington Taybor Pepper Peter DePorre Connor Kruse Devyn Salmon Leland Ewing Adam Brown James Bodanis Tyler Topolinski Travis Jackson Spencer O’Hara Jack Allen Zach Higgins Noah Jones Dennis Finley Jack Conklin Benny McGowan Donavon Clark Kodi Kieler Dylan Chmura Matt Sokol Josiah Price Paul Lang Andrew Gleichert Evan Jones Matt Macksood Brandon Clemons Tres Barksdale Monty Madaris Shilique Calhoun John Jakubik Joel Heath Damon Knox David Fennell Demetrius Cooper James Kittredge

Pos. DE LB FB LB LB LB SN LB OG DT SN OG OT DE OL DL OL OG DL OL OT OG OL OL TE TE TE TE TE DE WR DL WR WR DE WR DL DL DL DE DL

Ht. 6-2 6-0 6-1 6-0 6-1 6-3 6-4 6-2 6-4 6-1 6-1 6-3 6-5 6-3 6-3 6-4 6-1 6-4 6-3 6-6 6-6 6-3 6-3 6-5 6-4 6-5 6-4 6-5 6-5 6-5 5-11 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-4 6-0 6-6 6-4 6-2 6-5 6-4

Wt. 255 228 241 238 238 196 222 216 317 308 229 288 300 242 286 236 300 315 285 307 330 319 310 309 240 233 244 252 264 248 197 295 195 195 257 194 289 275 272 239 295

Elig. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Sr. Sr. Jr. So. Fr. Fr. So. So. Jr. So. Fr. Fr. So. Jr. Sr. So. So. Jr. So. So. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Fr. Sr.

Cl. Sr.-5 Sr. Sr.-5 Sr. So. So. Jr. Fr. Sr.-5 So. Sr.-5 Sr. Sr.-5 So. Sr.-5 Sr.-5 Sr. Jr. So. So. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. So. Fr. Jr. Sr. Sr.-5 Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Sr.-5 Sr. Sr. Jr. So. Sr.-5

Exp. 3L 2L SQ SQ RS RS 2L HS 2L RS SQ SQ SQ RS 3L HS 2L SQ RS RS 1L SQ 2L 1L RS HS 1L 2L 2L SQ 1L 1L SQ SQ 2L SQ 1L 1L SQ RS 1L

Hometown (Previous School) Cincinnati, Ohio (Archbishop Moeller) Silver Spring, Md. (DeMatha Catholic) Rochester, Mich. (University of Pennsylvania) Columbus, Ohio (Bishop Watterson) Cincinnati, Ohio (Archbishop Moeller) Commerce Township, Mich. (Orchard Lake St. Mary’s) Saline, Mich. (Saline) Troy, Mich. (Brother Rice) Lowell, Mich. (Lowell) Plant City, Fla. (Plant City) Jackson, Mich. (Lumen Christi Catholic) Columbia, Md. (Atholton) Toronto, Ontario (University of Toronto) Richmond Hill, Ontario (St. Andrew’s College) New Albany, Ohio (St. Francis DeSales) East Lansing, Mich. (East Lansing) Hinsdale, Ill. (Hinsdale Central) Alliance, Ohio (Marlington) Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (Dillard) Detroit, Mich. (Cass Tech) Plainwell, Mich. (Plainwell) Centerville,Ohio (Centerville) Cincinnati, Ohio (Finneytown) Rockwood, Mich. (Carlson) Waukesha, Wis. (Waukesha West) Rochester, Mich. (Adams) Greentown, Ind. (Eastern) Pittsburgh, Pa. (Mount Lebanon) Ann Arbor, Mich. (Huron) West Lafayette, Ohio (Ridgewood) Lansing, Mich. (Lansing Catholic Central) Milford, Pa. (Delaware Valley) Solon, Ohio (Solon) Cincinnati, Ohio (Archbishop Moeller) Middletown, N.J. (Middletown North) Plymouth, Mich. (Kalamazoo College) Cincinnati, Ohio (Mount Healthy) Muskegon, Mich. (Muskegon) Portland, Ore. (Sunset) Chicago, Ill. (Percy L. Julian) Ramsey, N.J. (Vanderbilt)

EXP. KEY – HS: High School; RS: Red-shirted; JC: Junior College; TR: Transfer; SQ: Squad Member; L: Letters Earned; +: Injured.

27 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


SPRING ALPHABETICAL ROSTER No. 11 66 22 5 38 87 61 57 30 16 89 80 76 87 36 74 18 98 7 24 43 53 27 39 56 96 73 9 23 4 84 50 45 92 2 6 67 20 24 63 89 85 68 49 34 79 17 3 99 93 54

28

Name Robert Aiello Jack Allen Paul Andrie DeAnthony Arnett Gabe Augustin Tres Barksdale James Bodanis Adam Brown Riley Bullough Aaron Burbridge Shilique Calhoun Dylan Chmura Donavon Clark Brandon Clemons Arjen Colquhoun Jack Conklin Connor Cook Demetrius Cooper Demetrious Cox Kevin Cronin Ed Davis Peter DePorre Kurtis Drummond Jermaine Edmondson Leland Ewing David Fennell Dennis Finley Evan Fischer Chris Frey Michael Geiger Andrew Gleichert Sean Harrington Darien Harris Joel Heath Darian Hicks Mylan Hicks Zach Higgins Nick Hill Gerald Holmes Travis Jackson John Jakubik Evan Jones Noah Jones Shane Jones Taiwan Jones Kodi Kieler Trey Kilgore Macgarrett Kings Jr. James Kittredge Damon Knox Connor Kruse

Pos. WR OL QB WR CB WR OT OG LB WR DE TE OL DL CB OT QB DE S K LB LB S CB SN DL OL K LB K TE LB LB DL LB S OG RB RB OL WR DE DL LB LB OL WR WR DL DL OG

Ht. 6-2 6-1 6-2 5-11 5-8 6-2 6-5 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-4 6-4 6-3 6-3 6-1 6-6 6-4 6-5 6-1 6-1 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-0 6-1 6-2 6-6 5-10 6-1 5-8 6-5 6-3 6-0 6-6 5-10 5-11 6-4 5-8 6-0 6-3 6-0 6-5 6-3 6-1 6-3 6-5 6-1 5-10 6-4 6-4 6-4

Wt. 185 300 185 189 186 195 300 288 233 203 257 240 310 295 193 330 219 239 200 216 230 216 200 178 229 272 307 177 223 186 264 196 228 289 181 199 315 197 216 286 194 248 285 238 252 309 182 186 295 275 317

Elig. Fr. Jr. So. Jr. So. So. Sr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. Fr. So. So. Jr. Fr. Sr. So. Sr. So. Fr. So. Fr. So. Sr. Fr. Jr. Jr. So. Sr. So. Sr. Fr. Sr. Sr. So. Fr. Fr. Sr. So. Fr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Sr.

Cl. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr.-5 Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Sr.-5 Jr. Sr.-5 Jr. So. Jr. Fr. So. Sr.-5 So. Sr. Sr. So. Sr.-5 Jr. Sr.-5 So. Sr.-5 Sr.-5 Jr. So. So. Sr. Jr. So. Jr. Sr.-5 Sr. Sr.-5

Exp. RS 2L SQ 1L SQ SQ SQ SQ 1L 2L 2L RS 2L 1L 2L 1L 2L RS 1L SQ 2L HS 3L 1L SQ SQ RS SQ HS 1L 2L RS 2L 1L 1L 2L SQ 3L RS 3L SQ SQ RS RS 3L 1L RS 2L 1L 1L 2L

Hometown (Previous School) Lake Orion, Mich. (Lake Orion) Hinsdale, Ill. (Hinsdale Central) Valparaiso, Ind. (Valparaiso) Saginaw, Mich. (Tennessee) Freeland, Mich. (Nouvel Catholic Central) Solon, Ohio (Solon) Toronto, Ontario (University of Toronto) Columbia, Md. (Atholton) Traverse City, Mich. (St. Francis) Farmington Hills, Mich. (Harrison) Middletown, N.J. (Middletown North) Waukesha, Wis. (Waukesha West) Cincinnati, Ohio (Finneytown) Milford, Pa. (Delaware Valley) Windsor, Ontario (W.F. Herman Secondary School) Plainwell, Mich. (Plainwell) Hinckley, Ohio (Walsh Jesuit) Chicago, Ill. (Percy L. Julian) Jeannette, Pa. (Jeannette) Traverse City, Mich. (Traverse City West) Detroit, Mich. (Southeastern) Troy, Mich. (Brother Rice) Masury, Ohio (Hubbard) Canton, Ohio (McKinley Senior) Jackson, Mich. (Lumen Christi Catholic) Portland, Ore. (Sunset) Detroit, Mich. (Cass Tech) Holt, Mich. (Holt) Upper Arlington, Ohio (Upper Arlington) Toledo, Ohio (Ottawa Hills) Ann Arbor, Mich. (Huron) Commerce Township, Mich. (Orchard Lake St. Mary’s) Silver Spring, Md. (DeMatha Catholic) Cincinnati, Ohio (Mount Healthy) Solon, Ohio (Solon) Detroit, Mich. (Renaissance) Alliance, Ohio (Marlington) Chelsea, Mich. (Chelsea) Flint, Mich. (Carman-Ainsworth) New Albany, Ohio (St. Francis DeSales) Plymouth, Mich. (Kalamazoo College) West Lafayette, Ohio (Ridgewood) Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (Dillard) Cincinnati, Ohio (Archbishop Moeller) New Baltimore, Mich. (Anchor Bay) Rockwood, Mich. (Carlson) Cincinnati, Ohio (St. Xavier) Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (University School) Ramsey, N.J. (Vanderbilt) Muskegon, Mich. (Muskegon) Lowell, Mich. (Lowell)

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


SPRING ALPHABETICAL ROSTER No. 14 83 33 32 14 11 86 88 34 75 29 25 7 64 37 52 35 82 47 33 48 37 44 3 55 12 21 81 6 8 32 18 62 19 16 15 22 21 36 26 26

Name Chris Laneaux Paul Lang Jeremy Langford Zac Leimbach Tony Lippett Jamal Lyles Matt Macksood Monty Madaris Brock Makaric Benny McGowan Mark Meyers Keith Mumphery Tyler O’Connor Spencer O’Hara Trevon Pendleton Taybor Pepper Jalyn Powell Josiah Price Matt Rea Jon Reschke Pat Rhomberg Ezra Robinson Marcus Rush Mike Sadler Devyn Salmon R.J. Shelton Andre Sims Jr. Matt Sokol Damion Terry Lawrence Thomas Nick Tompkins Michael Topolinski Tyler Topolinski AJ Troup Tommy Vento Trae Waynes Delton Williams Justin Williams Phillip-Michael Williams RJ Williamson Austin Wolfe

Pos. S TE RB S WR TE WR WR WR OG S WR QB DL FB SN S TE FB LB LB CB DE P DT WR WR TE QB DL RB LB DE WR QB CB RB CB RB S WR

Ht. 5-11 6-5 6-0 5-11 6-3 6-3 5-11 6-1 6-1 6-3 6-0 6-0 6-3 6-4 5-11 6-4 5-11 6-4 6-1 6-2 6-0 6-0 6-2 6-0 6-1 5-11 5-9 6-5 6-3 6-3 5-9 6-1 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-1 5-9 6-0 6-0

Wt. 202 252 205 198 190 250 197 195 192 319 180 212 219 236 250 222 206 244 241 234 238 178 255 170 308 200 193 233 230 294 187 190 242 220 196 183 232 175 185 215 176

Elig. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Sr. So. So. So. Fr. So. So. Sr. So. Sr. Jr. Jr. Fr. So. Sr. Fr. Jr. So. Sr. Sr. Fr. So. Jr. Fr. Fr. Jr. So. Jr. Fr. Jr. Jr. Jr. So. Fr. Jr. Jr. Fr.

Cl. Sr. Sr. Sr.-5 Jr. Sr.-5 Jr. Jr. Jr. So. Jr. Jr. Sr.-5 Jr. Sr.-5 Sr. Jr. So. Jr. Sr.-5 So. Sr. Jr. Sr.-5 Sr.-5 So. So. Sr. Fr. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. Sr. So. So. Sr. Sr. So.

Exp. 1L 2L 3L SQ 3L 1L 1L SQ RS SQ 1L 3L 1L HS 2L 2L RS 1L SQ RS SQ 1L 3L 3L RS 1L 2L HS RS 2L SQ SQ RS SQ SQ 2L 1L RS HS 2L RS

Hometown (Previous School) Kalamazoo, Mich. (Portage Northern) Pittsburgh, Pa. (Mount Lebanon) Wayne, Mich. (John Glenn) Walled Lake, Mich. (Walled Lake Central) Detroit, Mich. (Crockett) Southfield, Mich. (Southfield-Lathrup) Lansing, Mich. (Lansing Catholic Central) Cincinnati, Ohio (Archbishop Moeller) Saginaw, Mich. (Heritage) Centerville,Ohio (Centerville) Toledo, Ohio (Whitmer) Vienna, Ga. (Dooly County) Lima, Ohio (Lima Central Catholic) East Lansing, Mich. (East Lansing) Lucasville, Ohio (Portsmouth West) Saline, Mich. (Saline) Warren, Ohio (Warren G. Harding) Greentown, Ind. (Eastern) Rochester, Mich. (University of Pennsylvania) Sterling Heights, Mich. (Brother Rice) Columbus, Ohio (Bishop Watterson) Sarasota, Fla. (Booker) Cincinnati, Ohio (Archbishop Moeller) Grand Rapids, Mich. (Forest Hills Northern) Plant City, Fla. (Plant City) Beaver Dam, Wis. (Beaver Dam) Snellville, Ga. (Brookwood) Rochester, Mich. (Adams) Erie, Pa. (Cathedral Prep) Detroit, Mich. (Renaissance) Snellville, Ga. (Brookwood) Richmond Hill, Ontario (New Mexico Military Institute) Richmond Hill, Ontario (St. Andrew’s College) Minneapolis, Minn. (Wayzata) Farmington Hills, Mich. (Harrison) Kenosha, Wis. (Bradford) Erie, Pa. (Cathedral Prep) Port St. Lucie, Fla. (Treasure Coast) Ballston Spa, N.Y. (Ballston Spa) Dayton, Ohio (Dunbar) Springfield, Va. (Lake Braddock Secondary)

EXP. KEY – HS: High School; RS: Red-shirted; JC: Junior College; TR: Transfer; SQ: Squad Member; L: Letters Earned; +: Injured.

29 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL 2014 PERSONNEL BREAKDOWN Offense: Multiple Defense: Multiple 4-3 Lettermen Lost: 21 (9 offense, 11 defense, 1 specialist) Lettermen Returning: 47 (24 offense, 20 defense, 3 specialists) Starters Lost: 11 (4 offense, 6 defense, 1 specialist) Starters Returning: 15 (7 offense, 5 defense, 3 specialists) Offensive Starters Lost (4): RT Fou Fonoti, WR Bennie Fowler, RG Dan France, LG Blake Treadwell Offensive Starters Returning (7): C Jack Allen, LT Jack Conklin, QB Connor Cook, RB Jeremy Langford, WR Tony Lippett, FB Trevon Pendleton, TE Josiah Price

Defensive Starters Lost (6): LB Denicos Allen, LB Max Bullough, CB Darqueze Dennard, DT Tyler Hoover, S Isaiah Lewis, NT Micajah Reynolds Defensive Starters Returning (5): DE Shilique Calhoun, S Kurtis Drummond, LB Taiwan Jones, DE Marcus Rush, CB Trae Waynes Starting Specialists Lost (1): KO Kevin Muma Starting Specialists Returning (3): PK Michael Geiger, SN Taybor Pepper, P Mike Sadler

OFFENSE (9 LOST, 24 RETURNING)

DEFENSE (11 LOST, 20 RETURNING)

LOST ................................................POSITION ........................................RETURNING

LOST ................................................POSITION .........................................RETURNING

................................................................. X ..................................... TONY LIPPETT (3)

Denzel Drone (4) ....................................DE ...........................SHILIQUE CALHOUN (2)

..........................................................................................................Aaron Burbridge (2)

....................................................................................................... Lawrence Thomas (2)

Derek Hoebing (4) .................................. LT....................................JACK CONKLIN (1)

TYLER HOOVER (4) .............................. DT .......................................... Damon Knox (1)

............................................................................................................Donavon Clark (2)

MICAJAH REYNOLDS (4) ..................... NT .................................. Brandon Clemons (1)

BLAKE TREADWELL (5) ......................LG ............................................ Kodi Kieler (1)

Mark Scarpinato (1) ..........................................................................................................

Kyle Lints (1)............................................ C ........................................ JACK ALLEN (2)

................................................................DE ....................................MARCUS RUSH (3)

............................................................................................................Travis Jackson (3)

....................................................................................................................Joel Heath (1)

DAN FRANCE (4) ..................................RG ........................................Connor Kruse (2)

Jairus Jones (4) ....................................STAR ..................................TAIWAN JONES (3)

Shawn Kamm (1) .............................................................................................................

Danny Folino (3) .....................................................................................Darien Harris (2)

FOU FONOTI (3) .................................... RT ...................................................................

................................................................................................................. Mylan Hicks (2)

Michael Dennis (2).................................. TE .................................... JOSIAH PRICE (1)

MAX BULLOUGH (4) ...........................MIKE ..................................................................

........................................................................................................ Andrew Gleichert (2)

Kyler Elsworth (4) .............................................................................................................

....................................................................................................................Paul Lang (2)

DENICOS ALLEN (4) ........................... SAM............................................... Ed Davis (2)

.................................................................................................................Jamal Lyles (1)

................................................................ FC .....................................TRAE WAYNES (2)

BENNIE FOWLER (4) ............................. Z......................................Keith Mumphery (3)

................................................................................................................ Darian Hicks (1)

................................................................................................................ R.J. Shelton (1)

............................................................................................................. Ezra Robinson (1)

................................................................. F.................................Macgarett Kings Jr. (2)

................................................................ FS ...........................KURTIS DRUMMOND (3)

............................................................................................................ Andre Sims Jr. (2)

........................................................................................................... Demetrious Cox (1)

Andrew Maxwell (4) ................................QB ..................................CONNOR COOK (2)

................................................................................................................ Mark Meyers (1)

............................................................................................................Tyler O’Connor (1)

ISAIAH LEWIS (4).................................. SS ........................................ RJ Williamson (2)

................................................................ FB ........................TREVON PENDLETON (2)

..............................................................................................................Chris Laneaux (1)

.............................................................................................................Riley Bullough (1)

DARQUEZE DENNARD (4) ...................BC .................................... Arjen Colquhoun (2)

.................................................................................................................Ty Hamilton (1)

..................................................................................................Jermaine Edmondson (1)

................................................................ TB ..........................JEREMY LANGFORD (3) .......................................................................................................................Nick Hill (3) ...........................................................................................................Delton Williams (1)

SPECIALISTS (1 LOST, 3 RETURNING)

2013 Starters in CAPS (#) Indicates letters earned Note: Positions listed according to final 2013 depth chart.

................................................................PK .............................. MICHAEL GEIGER (1) KEVIN MUMA (4) ...................................KO ................................................................... ................................................................. P ......................................MIKE SADLER (3) ................................................................SN ................................TAYBOR PEPPER (2)

30

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2014 SPARTAN SPRING FOOTBALL 2014 SCHEDULE Date Aug. 30 Sept. 6 Sept. 20 Sept. 27 Oct. 4 Oct. 11 Oct. 18 Oct. 25 Nov. 8 Nov. 15 Nov. 22 Nov. 29

Opponent (2013 record) JACKSONVILLE STATE (11-4) at Oregon (11-2) EASTERN MICHIGAN (2-10) WYOMING (5-7) NEBRASKA (9-4) at Purdue (1-11) at Indiana (5-7) MICHIGAN (7-6) OHIO STATE (12-2) at Maryland (7-6) RUTGERS (6-7) at Penn State (7-5)

2013-14 Bowl Alamo (W) Gator (W) Buffalo Wild Wings (L) Orange (L) Military (L) Pinstripe (L)

Series Record First meeting Tied, 2-2 MSU leads, 9-0 MSU leads, 1-0 Nebraska leads, 7-1 MSU leads, 33-28-3 MSU leads, 43-15-2 Michigan leads, 68-33-5 Ohio State leads, 28-14 MSU leads, 4-1 Rutgers leads, 3-2 Penn State leads, 14-13-1

Last Meeting 1999: MSU 27, Oregon 20 2012: MSU 23, Eastern Michigan 7 1976: MSU 21, Wyoming 10 2013: MSU 41, Nebraska 28 2013: MSU 14, Purdue 0 2013: MSU 42, Indiana 28 2013: MSU 29, Michigan 6 2013: MSU 34, Ohio State 24 1950: Maryland 34, MSU 7 2004: Rutgers 19, MSU 14 2010: MSU 28, Penn State 22

2013 RESULTS (13-1, 8-0 BIG TEN) Date Aug. 30 Sept. 7 Sept. 14 Sept. 21 Oct. 5 Oct. 12 Oct. 19 Oct. 26 Nov. 2 Nov. 16 Nov. 23 Nov. 30 Dec. 7 Jan. 1

Opponent WESTERN MICHIGAN SOUTH FLORIDA YOUNGSTOWN STATE at No. 22/21 Notre Dame at Iowa INDIANA PURDUE at Illinois No. 23/21 MICHIGAN at Nebraska at Northwestern MINNESOTA vs. No. 2/2 Ohio State (Big Ten Championship) vs. No. 5/7 Stanford (100th Rose Bowl Game)

Result W, 26-13 W, 21-6 W, 55-17 L, 13-17 W, 26-14 W, 42-28 W, 14-0 W, 42-3 W, 29-6 W, 41-28 W, 30-6 W, 14-3 W, 34-24 W, 24-20

Attendance 71,214 70,401 71,626 80,795 69,025 73,185 71,514 45,895 76,306 90,872 40,013 71,418 66,002 95,173

Site Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, Mich. Notre Dame Stadium, Notre Dame, Ind. Kinnick Stadium, Iowa City, Iowa Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, Mich. Champaign, Ill., Memorial Stadium Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, Mich. Memorial Stadium, Lincoln, Neb. Ryan Field, Evanston, Ill. Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, Mich. Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, Ind. Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif.

31 MICHIGAN STATE FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

Jack ALLEN

30 Riley BULLOUGH

66

LB | 6-2 | 233 | SO. | 1L TRAVERSE CITY, MICH. ST. FRANCIS

OL | 6-1 | 300 | JR. | 2L HINSDALE, ILL. HINSDALE CENTRAL CAREER NOTES: Fourth-year player and two-year letterwinner enters his third season as a starter on the offensive line in 2014 . . . has played in 25 career games, including 24 starts (19 at center, five at left guard) . . . versatile lineman can play either center or guard . . . named Freshman All-American in 2012. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Started the last 12 games at center . . . named second-team All-Big Ten by the media . . . named honorable mention All-Big Ten by the coaches . . . Academic All-Big Ten selection for the second-straight year . . . ranked third on the team with 68 knockdowns in the regular season . . . his 17.5 dominators in the regular season ranked second on the team . . . named to the ESPN.com Big Ten All-Bowl Team for his performance in the victory over No. 5 Stanford in the 100th Rose Bowl Game . . . produced a team-best seven knockdowns vs. No. 2 Ohio State in Big Ten Championship Game . . . had 9.5 knockdowns, including two dominators, at Northwestern . . . produced nine knockdowns in win over No. 23 Michigan . . . named Spartan Lineman of the Week after posting six knockdowns, including two dominators, vs. Purdue . . . recorded a career-best 10 knockdowns at Iowa, including 5.5 dominators, while playing 78 snaps . . . returned to the starting lineup at center in Week 3 vs. Youngstown State with Travis Jackson sidelined with an injury . . . recorded six knockdowns in 41 snaps vs. Youngstown State . . . missed the first two games of the 2013 season (vs. Western Michigan and South Florida) with turf toe.

CAREER NOTES: Third-year player will return to the defensive side of the ball at linebacker in spring practice after spending the 2013 season at running back and fullback . . . heads into spring practice listed No. 2 on the depth chart at middle linebacker. 2013 SEASON (RED-SHIRT FRESHMAN): Second-year player made the transition from linebacker to running back during the last half of spring practice . . . moved into the role of fullback at the beginning of the Big Ten season . . . primarily saw action on special teams . . . saw action at linebacker during bowl practices . . . ranked fifth on the team in rushing (83 yards) and carries (22) . . . also had three receptions for 11 yards . . . had 34 rushing yards on 10 carries (3.4 avg.) vs. Youngstown State . . . rushed for 36 yards on six attempts (6.0 avg.), including a 19-yard gain, in win over South Florida . . . collected 12 yards on five carries in his collegiate debut vs. Western Michigan . . . his brother Max started three years at middle linebacker for the Spartans. BULLOUGH’S CAREER HIGHS Carries: 10 vs. Youngstown State (9/14/13) Rushing Yards: 36 vs. South Florida (9/7/13) BULLOUGH’S STATISTICS RUSHING G/GS ATT 2013 14/0 22

YDS. 83

AVG. 3.8

TD 0

RECEIVING 2013

AVG. 3.7

TD 0

LG 7

REC. 3

YDS. 11

LG 19

YPG 5.9

16 Aaron BURBRIDGE WR | 6-1 | 203 | JR. | 2L FARMINGTON HILLS, MICH. HARRISON CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has 51 catches for 558 yards (10.9 avg.) and two touchdowns in 24 career games, including 10 starts . . . opens spring practice listed No. 2 on the depth chart at split end. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Ranked fifth on the team with 22 receptions for 194 yards (8.8 avg.) . . . also had 62 rushing yards on four attempts (15.5 avg.) . . . also saw action on special teams . . . was slowed by a hamstring injury in the middle of the season . . . compiled 47 all-purpose yards vs. Minnesota (two catches for 12 yards; 35yard rush) . . . had two catches for 22 yards at Northwestern in his first extended action since Oct. 5 at Iowa . . . saw limited action against Nebraska and Michigan . . . did not play at Illinois (injury) . . . saw limited action against Purdue (injury) . . . had four receptions for 20 yards at No. 22 Notre Dame . . . caught three passes for 44 yards, including a 26-yard reception, vs. Youngstown State . . . had four catches for 16 yards in season opener against Western Michigan. BURBRIDGE’S CAREER HIGHS Receiving Yards: 134, vs. Indiana (10/6/12) Receptions: 8, vs. Indiana (10/6/12) TD Catches: 1, twice (last vs. TCU, 12/29/12)

32 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES BURBRIDGE’S STATISTICS RECEIVING G/GS REC. 2012 11/7 29 2013 13/3 22 Career 24/10 51

YDS. 364 194 558

AVG. 12.6 8.6 10.9

TD 2 0 2

LG 38 26 38

RUSHING 2012 2013 Career

AVG. 4.0 15.5 13.2

TD 0 0 0

LG 4 35 35

YPG 0.4 4.8 2.8

ATT 1 4 5

YDS. 4 62 66

2013 GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS - RECEIVING RECEIVING NO. YDS TD LG Western Michigan 4 16 0 10 South Florida 1 20 0 20 Youngstown State 3 44 0 26 Notre Dame 4 20 0 7 Iowa 3 22 0 10 Indiana 2 24 0 14 Purdue 0 0 0 0 Illinois -DNP-INJUREDMichigan 0 0 0 0 Nebraska 0 0 0 0 Northwestern 2 22 0 17 Minnesota 2 12 0 7 Ohio State 1 14 0 14 Stanford 0 0 0 0 Totals 22 194 0 26

Shilique CALHOUN

YPG 33.1 14.9 23.2

89

DE | 6-4 | 257 | JR. | 2L MIDDLETOWN, N.J. MIDDLETOWN NORTH • 2013 BIG TEN DEFENSIVE LINEMAN OF THE YEAR • 2013 SECOND-TEAM ALL-AMERICAN (WALTER CAMP, ASSOCIATED PRESS, ATHLON SPORTS, SI.COM, USA TODAY) • 2013 FIRST-TEAM ALL-BIG TEN (COACHES AND MEDIA) CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner had a breakout season in his first year as a starting defensive end in 2013 . . . in 26 career games, has 43 tackles, including 16.5 for losses (77 yards) with 8.5 sacks (46 yards). 2013 SEASON (RED-SHIRT FRESHMAN): Named the Smith-Brown Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year (named for Michigan State’s Bubba Smith and Penn State’s Courtney Brown) . . . earned All-America honors from Walter Camp (second team), Associated Press (second team), SI.com (second team), USA TODAY (second team), Athlon Sports (second team) and Lindy’s (third team) . . . first-team All-Big Ten selection by both the coaches and media . . . also earned first-team All-Big Ten accolades from ESPN.com, Sporting News, CollegeFootballNews.com and Athlon Sports . . . named recipient of the 2013 National Defensive Performer of the Year by the College Football Performance Awards . . . was one of six finalists for the Ted Hendricks Award (nation’s best defensive end) . . . named to the CollegeFootballNews. com All-Sophomore Team (first team) . . . ranked one of the top 30 players (No. 12) in the Big Ten by CollegeFootballNews.com . . . ranked tied for second in NCAA FBS with four fumble recoveries, including two returns for touchdowns (16 yards vs. Western Michigan; 4 yards vs. South Florida) . . . tied for the FBS lead with three defensive TDs, as he also had a 56-yard interception return vs. South Florida . . . his three defensive TDs tied a modern-day Michigan State single-season record (games dating back to 1946), and he was the first Spartan to accomplish the feat in the first two games of the season . . . became the first Spartan defensive player to score three TDs in one season since linebacker T.J. Turner accounted for three in 12 games in 1999 . . . his four fumble recoveries tied for fifth most in an MSU single-season . . . led team and ranked tied for second in the Big Ten with 7.5 sacks (45 yards) . . . ranked second on the team and tied for sixth in the Big Ten with 14 tackles for loss (75 yards) . . . led team with 18 quarterback hurries . . . also led the team with 34 QB hits, including a career-best seven against Michigan . . . ranked second on the defense with 238 production points . . . led Spartan defensive linemen with 37 tackles . . . registered four tackles, including a half sack (3 yards), and had a QB hurry in Big Ten Championship Game against No. 2 Ohio State . . . recorded a career-high seven tackles, including 2.5 for loss (12 yards) and a half sack (1 yard), against Minnesota . . . forced a fumble and also recovered a fumble to go along with two tackles at Nebraska . . . named CBSSports.com National Co-Defensive Player of the Week after producing career bests in tackles for loss (3.0 for 19 yards) and sacks (2.0 for 17 yards) in win over No. 23 Michigan; totaled six tackles and a team-best 33 production points against the Wolverines . . . collected three stops, including 1.5 for losses (8 yards), at Illinois; forced a fumble in the second quarter that eventually led to MSU’s first TD of the game against the Fighting Illini . . . had two tackles, including a 3-yard sack, and was credited with three QB hits vs. Purdue . . . tallied a 9-yard sack vs. Indiana . . . had four QB hurries and three tackles, including a half tackle for loss, in road win at Iowa; also had six QB hits against the Hawkeyes . . . credited with two tackles, including a 5-yard loss, at No. 22 Notre Dame . . . collected four QB hurries, recovered a fumble in the third consecutive game, and had two tackles, including a 3-yard sack, against Youngstown State . . . collected several weekly honors after scoring a school-record two defensive touchdowns and recording two tackles for loss, including a 9-yard sack, in Michigan State’s 21-6 win over South Florida on Sept. 7 at Spartan Stadium . . . was named the Walter Camp Football Foundation National Defensive Player of the Week, FWAA/Bronko Nagurski National Defensive Player of the Week, CBSSports.com National Defensive Player of the Week and College Football Performance Awards National Defensive Performer of the Week . . . also was selected CFPA National Defensive Lineman of the Week and Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week; in addition, he was listed on the Paul Hornung Award Honor Roll for Week 2 . . . scored two touchdowns against USF, returning a fumble 4 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter and his first career interception 56 yards for another score in the third quarter . . . was credited with three solo tackles against the Bulls, with two resulting

2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS

33


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

Donavon CLARK

76

OL | 6-3 | 310 | JR. | 2L CINCINNATI, OHIO FINNEYTOWN CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has seen action in 20 career games, including six starts . . . enters spring practice listed No. 1 on the depth chart at right tackle. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Appeared in all 14 games, including four starts at left tackle (Western Michigan, South Florida, Youngstown State, Notre Dame) . . . saw regular action in the offensive line rotation throughout the season . . . recorded a careerbest five knockdowns vs. South Florida . . . played a season-high 66 snaps in the 2013 season opener vs. Western Michigan.

in losses (12 yards) including a 9-yard sack, and two QB hurries; totaled 44 production points in the game . . . returned a fumble 16 yards for a touchdown in the season opener vs. Western Michigan and was credited with three QB hits. CALHOUN IN THE BIG TEN STATS Fumbles Recovered: 1st (4) Sacks: T-2nd (7.5) Tackles for loss: T-6th (14)

TM 6 37 43

TFL 2.5-2 14-75 16.5-77

74

OT | 6-6 | 320 | SO. | 1L PLAINWELL, MICH. PLAINWELL

CALHOUN’S CAREER HIGHS Tackles: 7, vs. Minnesota (11/30/13) Tackles for loss: 3.0, vs. Michigan (11/2/13) Sacks: 2.5, vs. Michigan (11/2/13) CALHOUN’S STATISTICS G/GS UT AT 2012 13/1 4 2 2013 14/14 20 17 Career 27/15 24 19

Jack CONKLIN

• 2013 FIRST-TEAM FRESHMAN ALL-AMERICAN

SACKS 1-1 7.5-45 8.5-46

CALHOUN’S GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 DEFENSE UT AT TM TFL SACKS Western Michigan 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 South Florida 3 0 3 2-12 1-9 Youngstown State 2 0 2 1-3 1-3 Notre Dame 1 1 2 1-5 0-0 Iowa 1 2 3 0.5-1 0-0 Indiana 1 0 1 1-9 1-9 Purdue 1 1 2 1-3 1-3 Illinois 2 1 3 1.5-8 0-0 Michigan 3 3 6 3-19 2.5-17 Nebraska 2 0 2 0-0 0-0 Northwestern 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 Minnesota 2 5 7 2.5-12 0.5-1 Ohio State 1 3 4 0.5-3 0.5-3 Stanford 0 1 1 0-0 0-0 Totals 20 17 37 14-75 7.5-45

INT 0-0 1-56 1-56

INT 0-0 1-56 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-56

PBU 2 0 2

PBU 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

FR 0 4-20 4-20

FR 1-16 1-4 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 4-20

FF 0 2 2

FF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1

2013 SEASON (RED-SHIRT FRESHMAN): Started 13 games (10 at left tackle; three at right tackle) and saw action in all 14 games in his first season . . . named first-team Freshman All-American by Sporting News, CollegeFootballNews.com and the Football Writers Association of America . . . named to ESPN.com Big Ten All-Freshman Team . . . Academic All-Big Ten selection . . . was credited with 55 knockdowns during the regular season . . . recorded a team-high five knockdowns against Minnesota . . . had a career-high eight knockdowns against Illinois . . . collected six knockdowns at Nebraska . . . recorded six knockdowns vs. Purdue . . . had seven knockdowns against Indiana . . . started his first game at left tackle at Iowa . . . started at right tackle the first three games of the season (vs. Western Michigan, South Florida and Youngstown State) . . . also saw action at left tackle in the first four games . . . started in his collegiate debut vs. Western Michigan; played 74 snaps against the Broncos and recorded 5.5 knockdowns . . . was a preferred walk-on for the 2012 season and earned a scholarship in the spring of 2013.

34 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

Connor COOK

18

QB | 6-4 | 219 | JR. | 2L HINCKLEY, OHIO WALSH JESUIT CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has started the last 13 games at quarterback for the Spartans (12-1 record, 8-0 Big Ten games) . . . in 17 career games, has completed 58 percent of his passes (232-of-397) for 2,849 yards, 23 touchdowns and seven interceptions . . . enters his junior season ranked among MSU’s all-time leaders in passing touchdowns (ninth with 23), passing efficiency (ninth with 134.3 rating), pass completion percentage (ninth at .584), pass attempts (14th with 232) and passing yards (15th with 2,849). 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Posted a 12-1 record as the starting quarterback . . . named second-team All-Big Ten by the coaches . . . honorable mention All-Big Ten selection by the media . . . also earned All-Big Ten accolades from ESPN.com (second team) and Athlon Sports (second team) . . . Academic All-Big Ten selection . . . completed 59 percent of his passes (223-of-380) for 2,755 yards, 22 touchdowns and six interceptions . . . ranked among MSU’s single-season leaders in touchdown passes (tied for second with 22), total offense (fourth with 2,831 yards), pass attempts (fourth with 380), passing yards (fifth with 2,755), pass completions (tied for sixth with 223) and passing yards per game (14th with 196.8 ypg.) . . . ranked among the Big Ten leaders in touchdown passes (tied for second with 22), pass completions (third with 223), passing yards (fourth with 2,755), passing (fifth with 196.8 ypg.), total offense (sixth with 202.2 ypg.) and passing efficiency (eighth with 135.5 rating) . . . tied for the fewest interceptions (6) among starting Big Ten quarterbacks . . . finished No. 20 in the Big Ten postseason player rankings by ESPN.com . . . was presented the 2013 Collegiate Athlete of the Year Award at the Greater Cleveland Sports Awards . . . ranked fourth in conference play in passing (213.5 ypg.) and sixth with 12 TD passes . . . produced eight 200-yard passing games and two 300-yard passing games . . . named Offensive MVP of the 100th Rose Bowl Game after completing 22-of-36 passes for a career-high 322 yards, two touchdowns and an interception as MSU defeated No. 5 Stanford . . . also named to ESPN.com Big Ten All-Bowl Team . . . his 25-yard pass to Tony Lippett at the 13:22 mark in the fourth quarter put MSU on top 24-17 and proved to be the game-winner in the 24-20 victory . . . also tossed a 2-yard TD to Trevon Pendleton in the closing seconds of the second quarter . . . connected on seven passes of at least 20-plus yards against the Cardinal, including a game-long 60-yarder to Bennie Fowler in the third quarter . . . named Most Valuable Player of the Big Ten Championship Game after throwing for 304 yards on 24-of-40 passing with three touchdowns and one interception in leading the Spartans past No. 2 Ohio State . . . delivered touchdown passes of 72 yards to Keith Mumphery, 33 yards to Tony Lippett, and 9 yards to Josiah Price . . . named ESPN.com Big Ten Player of the Week (Dec. 7 vs. Ohio State) . . . his showing against the Buckeyes in the Big Ten Championship Game was listed as the No. 2 individual performance in the Big Ten during the 2013 season by ESPN.com . . . completed 10-of-20 passes for 143 yards, one touchdown and one interception against Minnesota . . . threw for 293 yards and two touchdowns on 16-of-23 passing in win at Northwestern that clinched the Big Ten Legends Division title; his 87-yard TD completion to Bennie Fowler in the second quarter tied for the fourth-longest reception in school history . . . was 15-of-31 passing for 193 yards and a touchdown in win at Nebraska; was 8-of-14 for 133 yards on third down against the Huskers . . . completed 18-of-33 throws for 252 yards, one touchdown and one interception against Michigan; his 14-yard TD strike to Fowler in the back, right corner of the end zone with 23 seconds left in the first half gave Michigan State the lead for good at 13-6; also rushed for a 1-yard score against the Wolverines . . . went 15-of-16 passing for 208 yards and three TDs at Illinois; his .938 completion percentage established a school single-game record (min. 10 comp) and is the seventh best in Big Ten history . . . finished the Illinois game with 11 straight completions for 185 yards . . . threw a 47-yard TD pass to Mumphery in the fourth quarter; also connected on a 29-yard TD pass to Fowler and a 13-yard pass to Price . . . completed 13-of-25 passes for 107 yards in win over Purdue . . . hit 22-of-31 throws for 235 yards, two touchdowns and an interception, against Indiana; threw TD passes of 11 yards to Jeremy Langford and 34 yards to Fowler in the second quarter; completed passes to 11 different receivers total against the Hoosiers . . . registered career highs in pass completions (25) and pass attempts (44) while throwing for 293 yards in road win at Iowa in his first Big Ten start; threw two touchdown passes (46 yards to Macgarrett Kings Jr., 37 yards to Fowler) against the Hawkeyes . . . the 277 passing yards were the second most by a Spartan QB against Iowa . . . completed 16-of-32 passes for 135 yards and one touchdown at No. 22 Notre Dame . . . recorded his first career 200-yard passing game in the win over Youngstown State, throwing for 202 yards and a career-best four touchdown passes; became the first Spartan QB to

throw four TD passes in a game since Brian Hoyer against Penn State in 2007 . . . tied a Michigan State record by throwing four TDs in the first half (Drew Stanton vs. Illinois in 2005; Bill Burke vs. Iowa in 1999) . . . threw TD passes of 13 yards to Andre Sims Jr., 12 to Pendleton, 24 to Kings and 17 to Fowler . . . also finished with 227 total yards (202 passing and 25 rushing) against the Penguins . . . was 6-of-11 passing for 32 yards in leading MSU to a win over South Florida in his first career start at quarterback. COOK’S CAREER HIGHS Pass attempts: 44, vs. Iowa (10/5/13) Pass completions: 25, vs. Iowa (10/5/13) Passing yards: 332, vs. Stanford (1/1/14) Passing TDs: 4, vs. Youngstown State (9/14/13) COOK IN THE MSU SEASON RECORD BOOK Touchdown passes: T-2nd (22) Total offense: 4th (2,831) Pass attempts: 4th (380) Passing yards: 5th (2,755) Pass completions: T-6th (223) Passing yards per game: 14th (196.8 ypg.) Pass completion percentage: 20th (.587) COOK IN THE BIG TEN STATS Fewest interceptions thrown: T-1st (6) Touchdown passes: T-2nd (22) Pass completions: 3rd (223) Passing yards: 4th (2,755) Passing: 5th (196.8 ypg.) Total offense: 6th (202.2 ypg.)) Passing efficiency: 8th (135.5 rating) COOK’S STATISTICS PASSING G/GS COMP 2012 3/0 9 2013 14/13 223 Career 17/13 232 RUSHING 2012 2013 Career

NO. 4 69 73

ATT 17 380 397

YDS. -3 76 73

INT 1 6 7 AVG. -0.8 1.1 1.0

COOK’S GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 Opponent COMP ATT INT Western Michigan 6 16 0 South Florida 6 11 0 Youngstown State 15 22 0 Notre Dame 16 32 0 Iowa 25 44 1 Indiana 22 31 1 Purdue 13 25 0 Illinois 15 16 0 Michigan 18 33 1 Nebraska 15 31 0 Northwestern 16 23 0 Minnesota 10 20 1 Ohio State 24 40 1 Stanford 22 36 1 Totals 223 380 6

2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS

PCT .529 .587 .584

TD 0 1 1

PCT .375 .545 .682 .500 .568 .710 .520 .938 .545 .484 .696 .500 .600 .611 .587

YDS 94 2,755 2,849

LG 11 20 20

YDS 42 32 202 135 277 235 107 208 252 193 293 143 304 322 2755

YPG 31.3 196.8 167.6

TD 1 22 23

LG 15 87 87

YPG -1.0 5.4 4.3

TD 0 0 4 1 2 2 0 3 1 1 2 1 3 2 22

LG 14 20 26 19 46 39 26 47 49 34 87 24 72 60 87

35


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

43

Ed DAVIS

27 Kurtis DRUMMOND

LB | 6-3 | 230 | JR. | 2L DETROIT, MICH. SOUTHEASTERN

S | 6-1 | 200 | SR.-5 | 3L MASURY, OHIO HUBBARD

CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has 22 tackles, including 4.5 for losses and four sacks, in 27 career games . . . ranks as the top candidate to replace three-year starter Denicos Allen at Sam linebacker. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Recorded 17 tackles, including four sacks (20 yards), in 14 games of action . . . saw action primarily in third-down situations and special teams . . . recorded three tackles in the Big Ten Championship Game against No. 2 Ohio State, including a 5-yard sack . . . compiled 12.5 production points against No. 23 Michigan, collecting career highs in tackles (4), tackles for loss (2.5 for 14 yards) and sacks (2.5) . . . collected two tackles each against Purdue and Western Michigan. DAVIS’ CAREER HIGHS Tackles: 4, vs. Michigan (11/2/2013) Tackles for loss: 2.5, vs. Michigan (11/2/2013) Sacks: 2.5, vs. Michigan (11/2/2013) DAVIS’ STATISTICS G/GS UT 2012 13/0 0 2013 14/0 8 Career 27/0 8

AT 5 9 14

TM 5 17 22

TFL 0.5-4 4-18 4.5-22

SACKS 0-0 4-18 4-158

INT 0-0 0-0 0-0

PBU 0 0 0

FR 0 0 0

FF 0 0 0

• 2013 FIRST-TEAM ALL-BIG TEN (COACHES) CAREER NOTES: Three-year letterwinner has started a team-high 21 consecutive games at safety . . . has 161 tackles and 18 passes defended (eight interceptions and 10 pass break-ups) in 39 career games . . . also has 9.0 tackles for loss (45 yards). 2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): SI.com All-American (honorable mention) . . . first-team AllBig Ten selection by the coaches . . . second-team all-conference pick by the media . . . also earned All-Big Ten honors from ESPN.com (first team), Sporting News (first team), CollegeFootballNews.com (first team) and Athlon Sports (first team) . . . ranked one of the top 30 players (No. 25) in the Big Ten by CollegeFootballNews.com . . . ranked second on the team with a career-high 91 tackles, including 3.5 for losses (18 yards) . . . tied for team lead and ranked tied for third in the Big Ten with four interceptions . . . ranked tied for 10th in the Big Ten with 10 passes defended (four interceptions, six pass break-ups) . . . ranked third on the team with 225 production points . . . posted five stops, including a half tackle for loss (1 yard), in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford . . . collected five tackles and a pass break-up against No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game . . . tied his career high with 10 tackles against Minnesota . . . recorded a career-high two interceptions (34 yards) and had six tackles and a pass break-up in win at Northwestern; led team with 28 production points against the Wildcats . . . had a productive game in win at Nebraska, leading the team with 10 tackles while recording an interception and forcing a fumble to lead defense with 21 production pionts . . . led the secondary with 21 production points in win over No. 23 Michigan, collecting eight tackles and a pass break-up . . . recorded four tackles at Illinois, including a 10-yard loss . . . registered nine stops vs. Purdue . . . tallied six tackles and a pass break-up at Iowa . . . had a team-best two tackles for loss (7 yards) and seven stops overall at No. 22 Notre Dame . . . collected a team-high nine stops vs. South Florida . . . had a solid all-around game vs. Western Michigan with four tackles, a leaping one-handed interception, a pass break-up, and a 21-yard touchdown run off a lateral from Jairus Jones on an interception to total 27 production points. DRUMMOND’S CAREER HIGHS Tackles: 10, three (last vs. Minnesota, 11/30/13) Tackles for loss: 2.5, vs. Nebraska (11/3/12) Pass Break-ups: 2, vs. Northwestern (11/17/12) Interceptions: 2, vs. Northwestern (11/23/13) Sacks: 1, vs. Michigan (10/15/11) DRUMMOND’S STATISTICS G/GS UT AT 2011 12/0 9 8 2012 13/7 29 24 2013 14/14 49 42 Totals 39/21 87 74

TM 17 53 91 161

TFL 1-10 4.5-17 3.5-18 9-45

SACKS 1-10 0-0 0-0 1-10

36 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

INT 2-34 2-7 4-55 8-96

PBU 0 4 6 10

FR 0 1 0 1

FF 1 1 1 3


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES DRUMMOND’S GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 DEFENSE UT AT TM TFL SACKS Western Michigan 3 1 4 0-0 0-0 South Florida 4 5 9 0-0 0-0 Youngstown State 2 2 4 0-0 0-0 Notre Dame 4 3 7 2-7 0-0 Iowa 3 3 6 0-0 0-0 Indiana 2 2 4 0-0 0-0 Purdue 4 5 9 0-0 0-0 Illinois 3 1 4 1-10 0-0 Michigan 5 3 8 0-0 0-0 Nebraska 4 6 10 0-0 0-0 Northwestern 5 1 6 0-0 0-0 Minnesota 4 6 10 0-0 0-0 Ohio State 3 2 5 0-0 0-0 Stanford 3 2 5 0.5-1 0-0 Totals 49 42 91 3.5-18 0-0

INT 1-21 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 2-34 0-0 0-0 0-0 4-55

PBU 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 6

FR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

FF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1

the first quarter and a 44-yarder in the third quarter . . . kicked a 37-yard field goal and made three PATs at Northwestern . . . scored 11 points at Nebraska, including two field goals (45 and 25 yards) and five PATs . . . collected 11 points in win over No. 23 Michigan, including three field goals (40, 44 and 35 yards) and two PATs . . . made all six of his PATs vs. Illinois and Indiana . . . scored 14 points at Iowa and was 4-of-5 on field-goal attempts (made from 27, 35, 49 and 40 yards) against the Hawkeyes . . . made his collegiate debut at No. 22 Notre Dame; connected on 25 and 42-yard field goals and also made his only PAT against the Irish . . . ranked the nation’s top kicker in the Class of 2013 by Rivals.com (No. 1) and 247Sports.com (No. 1). CAREER HIGHS Extra Points Made ......... 6, twice (last vs. Illinois, 10/26/13) Extra Points Att. ............. 6, twice (last vs. Illinois, 10/26/13) Field Goals Made .......... 4, vs. Iowa (10/5/13) Field Goals Att ............... 5, vs. Iowa (10/5/13) Points............................. 14, vs. Iowa (10/5/13) Field Goal ...................... 49, vs. Iowa (10/5/13) GEIGER’S STATISTICS SCORING PAT (Pct.) 2013 36-38 (.947)

FG (Pct.) 15-16 (.938)

FG BREAKDOWN -20 2013 0-0

30-39 4-5

20-29 3-3

2013 GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS OPPONENT PATs FGs Western Michigan -DNPSouth Florida -DNPYoungstown State -DNPNotre Dame 1-1 2-2 Iowa 2-2 4-5 Indiana 6-6 0-0 Purdue 2-2 0-0 Illinois 6-6 0-0 Michigan 2-3 3-3 Nebraska 5-5 2-2 Northwestern 3-4 1-1 Minnesota 2-2 0-0 Ohio State 4-4 2-2 Stanford 3-3 1-1 Totals 36-38 15-16

Michael GEIGER

PTS 81

40-49 8-8

50+ 0-0

LG

PTS

42 49 44 45 37 44 31 49

7 14 6 2 6 11 11 6 2 10 6 75

LG 49 Total 15-16

4

PK | 5-8 | 186 | SO. | 1L TOLEDO, OHIO OTTAWA HILLS 2013 SEASON (FRESHMAN): True freshman set a MSU single-season record by making 93.8 percent of his field-goal attempts (15-of-16), which ranked first in the Big Ten and tied for fourth in the NCAA FBS . . . ranked second on the team in scoring with 81 points . . . ranked tied for third in the Big Ten with 15 field goals made . . . closed the season by making 13 consecutive field goals (school record: 15 by Brett Swenson in 2008) . . . ranked tied for fifth in the Big Ten in scoring (7.4 ppg.) and tied for second in kick scoring . . . was 8-of-8 from 40-plus yards . . . was 36-for-38 in point-after attempts (.947) . . . named first-team Freshman All-American by the Football Writers Association of America . . . garnered honorable mention All-America recognition from SI.com . . . honorable mention All-Big Ten pick by the media . . . named to ESPN.com Big Ten AllFreshman Team . . . connected on a 31-yard field goal in the third quarter of the Rose Bowl Game against Stanford that tied the game at 17; also made all three of his PATs in the win over the Cardinal . . . named College Football Performance Awards National Placekicker of the Week after scoring 10 points (two field goals, four PATs) in win over No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game; connected on a 40-yarder in

2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS

37


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

84 Andrew GLEICHERT

Nick HILL

TE | 6-5 | 264 | SR.-5 | 2L ANN ARBOR, MICH. HURON

RB | 5-8 | 197 | SR.-5 | 3L CHELSEA, MICH. CHELSEA

CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has seven career receptions for 57 yards (8.1 avg.) in 24 games. 2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Had a career-high six catches for 49 yards (8.2 avg.) in 13 games, including three starting assignments (Illinois, Nebraska, Stanford) . . . had a 17-yard reception in the Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford . . . scored his first career touchdown with a 5-yard catch in the fourth quarter against Purdue.

YDS. 0 8 49 57

AVG. 0.0 8.0 8.2 8.1

TD 0 0 1 1

LG 0 0 18 18

YPG 0.0 1.0 3.8 2.4

45

Darien HARRIS

LB | 6-0 | 228 | JR. | 2L SILVER SPRING, MD. DEMATHA CATHOLIC CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has 16 tackles in 27 career games . . . enters spring practice listed No. 1 on the depth chart at Star linebacker. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Played in all 14 games, primarily on special teams . . . recorded 12 tackles . . . saw extensive action at middle linebacker in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against fifth-ranked Stanford; collected a career-high five tackles, including a half tackle for loss, in the win over the Cardinal . . . recorded two tackles each against Northwestern and Youngstown State . . . had a tackle and a quarterback hurry in the Big Ten opener at Iowa. HARRIS’ CAREER HIGHS Tackles: 5, vs. Stanford (1/1/14) Tackles for loss: 0.5, vs. Stanford (1/1/14) HARRIS’ STATISTICS G/GS UT 2012 13/0 1 2013 14/0 4 Totals 27/0 5

AT 3 8 11

TM 4 12 16

TFL 0-0 0.5-0 0.5-0

SACKS 0-0 0-0 0-0

INT 0-0 0-0 0-0

PBU 0 0 0

CAREER NOTES: Fifth-year senior will compete for playing time at running back . . . three-year letterwinner has rushed for 507 yards and two touchdowns on 118 carries (4.3 avg.) in 40 career games. . . . was the team’s primary kick returner in 2011 and 2012 . . . ranks third in MSU history in kickoff return yards (1,764) . . . his 999 kickoff return yards in 2011 rank second most in MSU single-season history and eighth most in Big Ten history. 2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Ranked second on the team in rushing with 344 yards on 67 carries (5.1 avg.; 28.7 ypg.) . . . ranked fifth on the team in all-purpose yards (479; 39.9 ypg.) . . . also had 95 kick return yards (19.0 avg.) . . . rushed for 23 yards on four attempts (5.8 avg.) against Minnesota . . . had 34 yards rushing on six carries (5.7 avg.) at Northwestern . . . collected 70 rushing yards on 13 carries (5.4 avg.) at Illinois . . . rushed for 34 yards on 13 carries at No. 22 Notre Dame . . . recorded a careerhigh 83 yards rushing on nine attempts (9.2 avg.), including a 35-yard TD run, against Youngstown State . . . led team with 63 yards rushing on nine carries vs. South Florida, including a 23-yard run; earned the start while lining up as a wide receiver and carried the ball 12 yards on MSU’s first play from scrimmage . . . collected 33 yards rushing on seven attempts vs. Western Michigan.

GLEICHERT’S CAREER HIGHS Catches: 1, seven times (last vs. Stanford, 1/1/14) Receiving Yards: 18, vs. Michigan (11/3/13) TD Catches: 1, vs. Purdue (10/19/13) GLEICHERT’S STATISTICS RECEIVING G/GS NO. 2011 3/0 0 2012 8/2 1 2013 13/3 6 Career 24/3 7

20

FR 0-0 0-0 0-0

HILL’S CAREER HIGHS Carries: 14, vs. Florida Atlantic (9/2/11) Rushing Yards: 83, vs. Youngstown State (9/14/13) Rushing Touchdowns: 1, twice (vs. Youngstown State, 9/14/13) Kick Return Yards: 129, vs. Notre Dame (9/17/11) Kickoff Return: 67, vs. Indiana (11/19/11) Punt Return Yards: 31, vs. Central Michigan (9/8/12) Punt Return: 31, vs. Central Michigan (9/8/12) HILL’S STATISTICS RUSHING G/GS 2010 1/0 2011 14/0 2012 13/0 2013 12/1 Career 40/1

ATT 1 29 21 67 118

YDS. 2 113 48 344 507

AVG. 2.0 3.9 2.3 5.1 4.3

TD 0 0 1 1 2

LG 2 18 21 35 35

KICKOFF RETURNS 2011 2012 2013 Totals

ATT 38 31 5 74

YDS. 999 670 95 1764

AVG. 26.3 21.6 19.0 23.8

TD 0 0 0 0

LG 67 34 27 67

PUNT RETURNS 2011 2012 2013 Totals

ATT 5 8 1 14

YDS. 17 71 18 106

AVG. 3.4 8.9 18.0 7.6

TD 0 0 0 0

LG 8 31 18 31

FF 0 0 0

38 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

YPG 2.0 8.1 3.7 28.7 12.7


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES HILL’S GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 RUSHING ATT YDS Western Michigan 7 33 South Florida 9 63 Youngstown State 9 83 Notre Dame 13 34 Iowa 4 6 Indiana 0 0 Purdue -DNPIllinois 13 70 Michigan 1 2 Nebraska 0 0 Northwestern 6 34 Minnesota 4 23 Ohio State 1 -4 Stanford -DNPTotals 67 344

TD 0 0 1 0 0 0

LG 8 23 35 7 3 0

0 0 0 0 0 0

11 2 0 13 11 -

1

35

Travis JACKSON

34

Taiwan JONES

LB | 6-3 | 252 | SR. | 3L NEW BALTIMORE, MICH. ANCHOR BAY CAREER NOTES: Three-year letterwinner has 123 tackles, including 13 for losses (46 yards), in 41 career games . . . has started 17 games at Star (weakside) linebacker . . . opens spring practice listed No. 1 on the depth chart at Mike (middle) linebacker.

63

OL | 6-3 | 286 | SR.-5 | 3L NEW ALBANY, OHIO ST. FRANCIS DESALES CAREER NOTES: Three-year letterwinner has played in 28 career games, including 18 starting assignments (17 at center, one at right guard) . . . opens spring practice listed No. 1 on the depth chart at left guard. 2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Appeared in 13 games, including three starts (two at center; one at right guard) . . . saw extensive time in the playing rotation all season long . . . started his first career game at right guard in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford, filling in for injured starter Dan France . . . started the first two games at center before being sidelined by an injury for the Youngstown State game . . . returned to action at No. 22 Notre Dame . . . registered two takedowns vs. South Florida . . . played 82 snaps in the 2013 season opener vs. Western Michigan . . . Academic All-Big Ten selection.

2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Started 13 of 14 games at Star linebacker . . . ranked fourth on the team with a career-high 67 tackles, including seven for losses (16 yards) . . . ranked seventh on the defense with 157 production points . . . led the Spartans with eight tackles, including a 1-yard loss, in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford . . . collected five tackles against No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game . . . recorded six stops, including one for a 2-yard loss, against Minnesota . . . tallied five tackles, including a 1-yard loss, in win at Nebraska . . . had two tackles, including a 2-yard loss, against No. 23 Michigan . . . led MSU with six stops at Illinois . . . tallied five tackles, including a 6-yard loss, vs. Purdue . . . had five stops vs. Indiana, including a 2-yard loss . . . tied a season high with six tackles at Iowa . . . did not start, but played a majority of the game at No. 22 Notre Dame, recording five tackles against the Irish . . . left the Youngstown State game in the first half (injury) and did not return . . . registered two stops, including a 1-yard loss, against South Florida . . . produced six tackles in the season opener against Western Michigan. TAIWAN JONES’ CAREER HIGHS Tackles: 10, vs. Iowa (10/13/12) Tackles for loss: 1.5, vs. Wisconsin (10/27/12) Sacks: 1.0, vs. Wisconsin (10/27/12) Pass Break-ups: 1, four times TAIWAN JONES’ STATISTICS G/GS UT AT 2011 14/0 3 15 2012 13/4 19 19 2013 14/13 38 29 Totals 41/17 60 63

TM 18 38 67 123

TFL 0.5-4 5.5-26 7-16 13-46

SACKS 0.5-4 1-8 0-0 1.5-12

TAIWAN JONES’ GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 DEFENSE UT AT TM TFL SACKS Western Michigan 1 5 6 0-0 0-0 South Florida 2 0 2 1-1 0-0 Youngstown State 0 1 1 0-0 0-0 Notre Dame 2 3 5 0-0 0-0 Iowa 5 1 6 0-0 0-0 Indiana 3 2 5 1-2 0-0 Purdue 2 3 5 1-6 0-0 Illinois 2 4 6 0-0 0-0 Michigan 2 0 2 1-2 0-0 Nebraska 3 2 5 1-1 0-0 Northwestern 5 0 5 0-0 0-0 Minnesota 2 4 6 1-2 0-0 Ohio State 3 2 5 0-0 0-0 Stanford 6 2 8 1-2 0-0 Totals 38 29 67 7-16 0-0

INT 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

INT 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

PBU 1 3 0 4

PBU 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

FR 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

FR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

FF 0 0 0 0

FF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

39 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES KINGS’ CAREER HIGHS Catches: 5, four times (last vs. Ohio State, 12/7/13) Receiving Yards: 94, vs. Iowa (10/5/13) TD Catches: 1, three times (last vs. Iowa, 10/5/13) Punt Return Yards: 53, vs. Iowa (10/5/13)

Macgarrett KINGS JR.

3

KINGS’ STATISTICS RECEIVING G/GS 2012 8/0 2013 14/3 Totals 22/3

NO. 4 43 47

YDS. 25 513 538

AVG. 6.2 11.9 11.4

TD 0 3 3

LG 10 46 46

PUNT RETURNS 2013

ATT 20

YDS. 206

AVG. 10.3

TD 0

LG 30

KINGS’ GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 RECEIVING NO. YDS TD Western Michigan 1 14 0 South Florida 3 24 0 Youngstown State 4 61 1 Notre Dame 5 37 1 Iowa 5 94 1 Indiana 5 28 0 Purdue 2 29 0 Illinois 1 16 0 Michigan 2 14 0 Nebraska 3 37 0 Northwestern 2 16 0 Minnesota 1 24 0 Ohio State 5 67 0 Stanford 4 52 0 Totals 43 513 3

LG 14 13 24 12 46 11 25 16 10 17 14 24 48 22 48

WR | 5-10 | 186 | JR. | 2L FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. UNIVERSITY SCHOOL CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has 47 catches for 538 yards (11.4 avg.) in 22 career games, including three starts. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Ranked second on the team in receptions (43), third in receiving yards (513) and tied for third in TD receptions (3) . . . ranked tied for second on the team in explosive plays of 20-plus yards with 10 (seven receptions, three punt return) . . . 25 of his 43 receptions (58 percent) resulted in either a touchdown or first down . . . ranked third in the Big Ten in punt returns (206 yards on 20 returns; 10.3 avg.) . . . totaled 80 all-purpose yards against No. 5 Stanford in the 100th Rose Bowl Game, including four receptions for 52 yards and 21 punt return yards; had a 19-yard punt return to the Cardinal 27-yard line on the first play of the fourth quarter that helped set up MSU’s game-winning touchdown . . . collected 83 all-purpose yards in the Big Ten Championship Game against second-ranked Ohio State (67 receiving, 16 punt return); tied his career high with five catches for 67 yards again the Buckeyes, including a career-long 48-yard reception in the fourth quarter . . . totaled 53 all-purpose yards against Minnesota (one catch for 24 yards; 29-yard punt return) . . . collected 62 all-purpose yards at Nebraska (three catches for 37 yards; 26-yard punt return) . . . had two catches for 14 yards and three punt returns for 21 yards against No. 23 Michigan . . . had five receptions for the third consecutive game for 28 yards vs. Indiana . . . tied his career high with five catches and had a career-high 94 receiving yards at Iowa, including a career-long 46-yard touchdown reception from Connor Cook . . . also compiled a career-high 147 all-purpose yards against the Hawkeyes, including 53 punt return yards; his 30-yard punt return in the third quarter set up MSU’s third field goal of the game and put the Spartans on top, 20-14, in the eventual 26-14 win . . . had five receptions for 37 yards, including a 12-yard TD catch, at No. 22 Notre Dame . . . led the Spartans with four catches for 61 yards, including a 24-yard touchdown reception, the first TD of his career, against Youngstown State . . . had three receptions for 24 yards vs. South Florida.

40 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

YPG 3.1 36.6 24.5


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

93

Damon KNOX

RB | 6-0 | 205 | SR.-5 | 3L WAYNE, MICH. JOHN GLENN

DL | 6-4 | 275 | JR. | 1L MUSKEGON, MICH. MUSKEGON CAREER NOTES: Third-year player has 24 tackles in 16 career games . . . listed No. 2 on the depth chart at nose tackle. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Collected 22 tackles, including 2.5 for losses (15 yards), in 14 games of action to earn his first letter . . . started in two games (Michigan, Nebraska) . . . credited with two stops against No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game . . . tallied a career-high four tackles against Minnesota . . . collected three tackles, including a 6-yard loss, in victory at Nebraska . . . started his first career game against No. 23 Michigan and made one tackle . . . posted two stops at Illinois . . . delivered a 7-yard sack in the victory over Purdue . . . collected two tackles at Notre Dame . . . recorded three tackles, including a half tackle for loss (2 yards), in the season opener vs. Western Michigan. KNOX’S CAREER HIGHS Tackles: 4, vs. Minnesota (11/30/13) Tackles for loss: 1, twice (last vs. Nebraska, 11/16/13) Sacks: 1, vs. Purdue (10/19/13) Pass Break-ups: 1, vs. Youngstown State (9/14/13) KNOX’S CAREER STATISTICS G/GS UT AT TM 2012 2/0 0 2 2 2013 14/2 9 13 22 Career 16/2 9 15 24

TFL 0-0 2.5-15 2.5-15

SACKS 0-0 1-7 1-7

INT 0-0 0-0 0-0

Connor KRUSE

PBU 0 1 1

FR 0 0 0

33 Jeremy LANGFORD

FF 0 0 0

54

OG | 6-4 | 317 | SR.-5 | 2L LOWELL, MICH. LOWELL CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has seen action in 28 career games . . . enters spring practice listed No. 1 on the depth chart at right guard . . . former walk-on was awarded a scholarship prior to the start of the 2012 season. 2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Appeared in 13 games to earn his second letter . . . saw regular playing time in the rotation at offensive line . . . played all five offensive line positions as well as tight end in 2013.

CAREER NOTES: Three-year letterwinner has rushed for 1,445 yards on 301 carries (4.8 avg.) with 18 touchdowns . . . has appeared in 37 career games . . . has collected 12 tackles, primarily on special teams . . . entered the program as a running back, but also spent time at cornerback and wide receiver during his career. 2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Started all 14 games at tailback during a breakout season in 2013 . . . led the team in rushing yards (1,422), carries (292), total touchdowns (19), rushing touchdowns (18), scoring (114 points) and all-purpose yards (1,579) . . . rushed for more than 100 yards in a school-record eight-straight games (Indiana, Purdue, Illinois, Michigan, Nebraska, Northwestern, Minnesota, Ohio State) . . . led Big Ten and ranked tied for eighth in the NCAA FBS with 18 rushing touchdowns . . . also led Big Ten in total touchdowns (19) and carries (292) . . . ranked among the FBS leaders in rushing yards (16th with 1,422) and rushing (27th with 101.6 ypg.) . . . also ranked among the Big Ten leaders in scoring (third with 8.1 ppg.), rushing yards (fifth with 1,422), rushing (sixth with 101.6 ypg.) and all-purpose yards (eighth with 112.8 ypg.) . . . gained 725 of his 1,338 rushing yards (54 percent) after contact during the regular season, which ranked second among NCAA FBS running backs, trailing only Arizona’s Ka’Deem Carey, according to STATS . . . ranked ninth in the FBS in fourth-quarter rushing yards with 384 (5.7 avg.) . . . ranked among MSU’s single-season leaders in total touchdowns (tied for third with 19), scoring (tied for third with 114 points), rushing touchdowns (tied for fourth with 18), carries (sixth with 292), rushing yards (eighth with 1,422), rushing yards per game (15th with 101.6 ypg.) and all-purpose yards (16th with 1,579) . . . named 2013 Touchdown Club of Columbus Big Ten Player of the Year . . . honorable mention All-Big Ten selection by the coaches and media . . . also named All-Big Ten by Athlon Sports (first team) and ESPN.com (second team) . . . ranked one of the top 30 players (No. 26) in the Big Ten by CollegeFootballNews.com . . . ranked third in rushing in conference games (117.8 ypg.) . . . also ranked fourth on the team with 28 catches for 157 yards (5.6 avg.), including one TD reception . . . became the 14th Spartan to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a season; it also marked the 22nd time a Spartan had rushed for more than 1,000 yards in a season . . . recorded four touchdown runs (26 yards or longer) in the fourth quarter in the last six games of the season (40 yards vs. Michigan; 37 yards vs. Nebraska, 37 yards vs. Northwestern, 26 yards vs. Ohio State) . . . led MSU with 101 all-purpose yards against No. 5 Stanford in the 100th Rose Bowl Game; rushed for 84 yards on 23 carries, including a 2-yard TD run, and had five receptions for 17 yards in the win over the Cardinal . . . established a school record by recording his eighth 100-yard rushing game in a row with 128 yards on 24 carries against No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game; 106 of those yards came in the second half . . . his 26-yard TD run with 2:16 left in the game sealed MSU’s 34-24 victory over the Buckeyes . . . collected 134 rushing yards on 21 carries (6.4 avg.) against Minnesota; ran for a 15-yard TD in the first quarter and had a career-long 44-yard run in the fourth quarter. . . crossed the 1,000-yard rushing mark for the season with 150 yards on 25 carries at Northwestern; had two rushing TDs (20 and 37 yards) against the Wildcats . . . also had a career-high 185 all-purpose yards against Northwestern (150 rushing, 35 receiving) . . . produced career highs in carries (32) and rushing yards (151) in win at Nebraska; tied a career high with three rushing touchdowns, including a 37-yarder in the fourth quarter . . . also had 174 all-purpose yards at Nebraska, as he had four catches for 23 yards . . . his 151 rushing yards marked the second most by a Spartan against Nebraska . . . on 26 carries, rushed for 120 yards in win over No. 23 Michigan, including a 40-yard TD run in the fourth quarter . . . rushed 22 times for 104 yards and two TDs (1 and 7 yards) at Illinois . . . recorded a 131 rushing yards on 24 carries vs. Purdue . . . named Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week after recording his first career 100-yard rushing game with 109 yards on 23 carries vs. Indiana; scored a career-high three rushing touchdowns against the Hoosiers (5, 2 and 32 yards) and accounted for a career-best four TDs, including his first career TD reception on an 11-yard screen pass from Connor Cook early in the second quarter . . . led MSU with 43 rushing yards on 14 carries (3.1 avg.) at Iowa . . . rushed for a game-high 68 yards on 14 carries (4.9 avg.) at No. 22 Notre Dame . . . rushed for 68 yards on 15 carries (4.5 avg.) and two touchdowns vs. Youngstown State . . . had a 2-yard touchdown run and collected 38 rushing yards on nine attempts against South Florida . . . recorded 94 yards on the ground on 20 carries (4.7 avg.), including a 2-yard TD, in season opener vs. Western Michigan.

41 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

14

Tony LIPPETT

WR | 6-3 | 190 | SR.-5 | 3L DETROIT, MICH. CROCKETT CAREER NOTES: Three-year letterwinner has 84 catches for 1,049 yards (12.5 avg.) and four touchdowns in 41 career games, including 15 starts . . . moved to wide receiver full-time in 2012 after playing both receiver and cornerback in 2011. 2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Led team with a career-high 44 receptions . . . ranked second on the team in receiving yards (613) and tied for fourth in touchdown receptions (2) . . . saw action in all 14 games, including 10 starts at split end . . . ranked first on the team in explosive plays (20-plus yards) with 11 (all receptions) . . . led team in Big Ten games with 31 receptions for 413 yards . . . 31 of his 44 receptions (.705) resulted in either a first down or touchdown . . . tied for team lead with five receptions for a career-high 94 yards in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford; had the game-winning TD catch on a 25-yard pass from Connor Cook at the 13:22 mark in the fourth quarter, putting MSU on top 24-17 in the eventual 24-20 victory over the Cardinal . . . named to ESPN.com Big Ten All-Bowl Team . . . had four receptions for 65 yards, including a 33-yard TD grab from Cook, to help Spartans defeat No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game . . . led MSU in receiving for the third consecutive game with four catches for 71 yards against Minnesota . . . had three catches for 64 yards, including a career-long 48-yard grab, in the win at Northwestern . . . totaled 67 receiving yards on four catches at Nebraska, the most receiving yards ever by a Spartan against the Huskers . . . had five receptions for 62 yards in win over No. 23 Michigan . . . caught five passes for 49 yards and threw his first career TD pass, a 5-yard strike to Andrew Gleichert in the fourth quarter, in MSU’s 14-0 win over Purdue . . . recorded a careerhigh six receptions for 64 yards against Indiana . . . caught two passes for 29 yards in a start at Iowa, including a 20-yard reception . . . hauled in four receptions for 41 yards vs. Youngstown State.

LANGFORD’S CAREER HIGHS Carries: 32, vs. Nebraska (11/16/13) Rushing Yards: 151, vs. Nebraska (11/16/13) Rushing Touchdowns: 3, twice (last vs. Nebraska, 11/16/13) Total Touchdowns: 4, vs. Indiana (10/12/13) LANGFORD IN THE MSU SEASON RECORD BOOK Total touchdowns: T-3rd (19) Points: T-3rd (114) Rushing touchdowns: T-4th (18) Carries: 6th (292) Rushing yards: 8th (1,422) Rushing yards per game: 15th (101.6 ypg.) All-purpose yards: 16th (1,579) LANGFORD IN THE BIG TEN STATS Total touchdowns: 1st (19) Rushing touchdowns: 1st (18) Carries: 1st (292) Scroing: 3rd (8.1 ppg.) Rushing yards: 5th (1,422) Rushing: 6th (101.6 ypg.) All-purpose yards: 8th (112.8 ypg.)

42

LIPPETT’S CAREER HIGHS Catches: 6, vs. Indiana (10/12/13) Receiving Yards: 94, vs. Stanford (1/1/14) Tackles: 5, vs. Northwestern (11/26/11) Pass Break-ups: 3, vs. Northwestern (11/26/11)

LANGFORD’S STATISTICS RUSHING G/GS ATT 2011 14/0 0 2012 9/0 9 2013 14/14 292 Career 37/14 301

YDS. 0 23 1,422 1,445

AVG. 0.0 2.6 4.9 4.8

TD 0 0 18 18

LG 0 5 44 44

RECEIVING 2013

AVG. 5.6

TD 1

LG 24

YPG 11.2

NO. 28

YDS. 157

LANGFORD’S GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 RUSHING ATT YDS TD Western Michigan 20 94 1 South Florida 9 38 1 Youngstown State 15 68 2 Notre Dame 14 68 0 Iowa 14 43 0 Indiana 23 109 3 Purdue 24 131 0 Illinois 22 104 2 Michigan 26 120 1 Nebraska 32 151 3 Northwestern 25 150 2 Minnesota 21 134 1 Ohio State 24 128 1 Stanford 23 84 1 Totals 292 1422 18

LG 18 8 17 11 7 32 18 16 40 37 37 44 34 11 44

YPG 0.0 2.6 101.6 39.1

LIPPETT’S STATISTICS RECEIVING G/GS REC. 2011 14/0 4 2012 13/5 36 2013 14/10 44 Career 41/15 84

YDS. 44 392 613 1049

DEFENSE G/GS 2011 14/5

TM 18

UT 9

AT 9

AVG. 11.0 10.9 13.9 12.5 TFL 0.5-1

TD 0 2 2 4

LG 15 46 48 48

YPG 3.1 30.2 43.8 25.6

SACKS 0-0

INT 0-0

PBU 5

2013 GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS - RECEIVING RECEIVING NO. YDS TD LG Western Michigan 0 0 0 0 South Florida 0 0 0 0 Youngstown State 4 41 0 18 Notre Dame 0 0 0 0 Iowa 2 29 0 20 Indiana 6 64 0 17 Purdue 5 49 0 18 Illinois 2 7 0 4 Michigan 5 62 0 21 Nebraska 4 67 0 34 Northwestern 3 64 0 48 Minnesota 4 71 0 24 Ohio State 4 65 1 33 Stanford 5 94 1 25 Totals 44 613 2 48

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

FR FF 1-15 0


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

25 Keith MUMPHERY WR | 6-0 | 212 | SR.-5 | 3L VIENNA, GA. DOOLY COUNTY CAREER NOTES: Three-year letterwinner has 62 catches for 853 yards (13.8 avg.) and four touchdowns in 41 career games, including 15 starts . . . two-time Academic All-Big Ten selection. 2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Had 18 catches for 299 yards (16.6 avg.) and a career-best three touchdowns . . . Academic All-Big Ten honoree . . . had a 20-yard catch in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford . . . caught two passes for a career-high 84 yards, including a career-long 72-yard reception for a touchdown, in MSU’s win over No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game . . . his only reception in the victory at Nebraska was a 27-yard TD pass from Connor Cook on third down in the fourth quarter to give MSU a 34-21 lead in the eventual 41-28 win . . . had 77 receiving yards on three catches, including a 47-yard TD reception, at Illinois . . . tied for team lead with four receptions for 24 yards in season opener vs. Western Michigan. MUMPHERY’S CAREER HIGHS Catches: 6, twice (last vs. Northwestern, 11/17/12) Receiving Yards: 84, vs. Ohio State (12/7/13) TD Catches: 1, four times (last vs. Ohio State, 12/7/13)

11

Jamal LYLES

TE | 6-3 | 250 | SO. | 1L SOUTHFIELD, MICH. SOUTHFIELD-LATHRUP 2013 SEASON (RED-SHIRT FRESHMAN): Appeared in all 14 games to earn his first letter . . . made the switch from defensive end to tight end during Week 2 . . . had five catches for 58 yards (11.6 avg.) . . . primarily saw action on special teams . . . had a 5-yard reception in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford . . . hauled in an 18-yard reception at Illinois . . . had two catches for 19 yards vs. Youngstown State. LYLES’ CAREER HIGHS Catches: 2, vs. Youngstown State (9/14/13) Receiving Yards: 19, vs. Youngstown State (9/14/13) LYLES’ STATISTICS RECEIVING G/GS 2013 14/0

REC. 5

YDS. 58

AVG. 11.6

TD 0

LG 18

YPG 4.1

MUMPHERY’S STATISTICS RECEIVING G/GS REC. 2011 14/0 2 2012 13/12 42 2013 14/3 18 Career 41/15 62

YDS. 39 515 299 853

AVG. 19.5 12.3 16.6 13.8

TD 0 1 3 4

LG 31 37 72 72

YPG 2.8 39.6 21.4 20.8

MUMPHERY’S GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS - RECEIVING 2013 RECEIVING NO. YDS TD LG Western Michigan 4 24 0 9 South Florida 1 18 0 18 Youngstown State 1 5 0 5 Notre Dame 1 7 0 7 Iowa 0 0 0 0 Indiana 1 3 0 3 Purdue 1 5 0 5 Illinois 3 77 1 47 Michigan 1 9 0 9 Nebraska 1 27 1 27 Northwestern 1 20 0 20 Minnesota 0 0 0 0 Ohio State 2 84 1 72 Stanford 1 20 0 20 Totals 18 299 3 72

43 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

Tyler O’CONNOR

7

QB | 6-3 | 219 | SO. | 1L LIMA, OHIO LIMA CENTRAL CATHOLIC

SN | 6-4 | 222 | JR. | 2L SALINE, MICH. SALINE

2013 SEASON (RED-SHIRT FRESHMAN): Saw action in three games (South Florida, Youngstown State, Illinois) to earn his first letter . . . Academic All-Big Ten selection . . . completed 9-of-14 passes (.643) for 90 yards . . . was 7-of-10 passing for 68 yards in the win over Youngstown State . . . in his collegiate debut vs. South Florida, completed 2-of-4 passes for 22 yards.

CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner is on scholarship and has served as the team’s starting long snapper the past two seasons. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Saw action in all 14 games as the starting long snapper . . . recorded a solo tackle in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford . . . recovered a fumbled punt that led to a touchdown in the first quarter at Nebraska.

O’CONNOR’S CAREER HIGHS Pass Attempts: 10, vs. Youngstown State (9/14/13) Pass Completions: 7, vs. Youngstown State (9/14/13) Passing Yards: 68, vs. Youngstown State (9/14/13) O’CONNOR’S STATISTICS PASSING G/GS COMP ATT 2013 3/0 9 14 RUSHING 2013

NO. 8

YDS. 24

INT 0 AVG. 3.0

TD 0

PCT .643 LG 10

YDS 90

YPG 30.0

TD 0

CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has appeared in 23 games, including 11 starts at fullback. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Appeared in all 14 games, including 10 starts at fullback, to earn his second letter . . . had eight catches for 127 yards (15.9 avg.) and two touchdowns . . . impressive all-around effort vs. No. 5 Stanford in the 100th Rose Bowl Game, recording two catches for 21 yards, including a 2-yard touchdown from Connor Cook in the second quarter, in addition to delivering several key blocks against the Cardinal . . . had two catches for a career-high 62 yards in win over No. 23 Michigan; had a 49-yard reception on MSU’s first offensive play of the game . . . had a 13-yard reception at Illinois . . . caught his first career pass for a 12-yard touchdown against Youngstown State. YDS. 127

AVG. 15.9

TD 2

TE | 6-4 | 244 | SO. | 1L GREENTOWN, IND. EASTERN

YPG 8.0

FB | 5-11 | 250 | JR. | 2L LUCASVILLE, OHIO PORTSMOUTH WEST

LG 49

82

Josiah PRICE

LG 18

Trevon 37 PENDLETON

PENDLETON’S STATISTICS RECEIVING G/GS REC. 2013 14/10 8

52

Taybor PEPPER

2013 SEASON (RED-SHIRT FRESHMAN): Played in all 14 games, including six starts, to earn his first letter . . . led Spartan tight ends with 17 receptions for 210 yards (12.4 avg.) . . . ranked second on the team with four touchdown receptions . . . Academic All-Big Ten selection . . . had a 9-yard catch in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against fifthranked Stanford . . . tied a career best with three catches for 24 yards, including a 9-yard TD grab, against No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship . . . hauled in a 12-yard touchdown reception vs. Minnesota . . . tied his career high with three receptions for 35 yards, including a 15-yard TD grab, at Northwestern . . . had two catches for 21 yards at Illinois, including his first career TD reception on a 13-yard grab in the third quarter . . . his 26-yard catch in the fourth quarter set up MSU’s only offensive TD of the game in the win against Purdue . . . had a career-long 39-yard reception vs. Indiana . . . caught three passes for 28 yards vs. Youngstown State. PRICE’S CAREER HIGHS Catches: 3, three times (last vs. Ohio State, 12/7/13) Receiving Yards: 39, vs. Indiana (10/12/13) TD Catches: 1, four times (last vs. Ohio State, 12/7/13) PRICE’S STATISTICS RECEIVING G/GS REC. 2013 14/6 17

YDS. 210

AVG. 12.4

TD 4

YPG 9.1

44 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

LG 39

YPG 15.0


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

44

Marcus RUSH

DE | 6-2 | 255 | SR.-5 | 3L CINCINNATI, OHIO ARCHBISHOP MOELLER CAREER NOTES: Three-year letterwinner has started in 40 of his 41 career games . . . has 126 tackles, including 27 for losses (117 yards) and 11 sacks (71 yards) . . . ranks among MSU’s all-time leaders in sacks (tied for 17th with 11) and tackles for loss (tied for 17th with 27) . . . also has 13 career pass break-ups. 2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Recorded 30 tackles, including 7.5 for losses (38 yards) and a career-high 5.0 sacks (27 yards) . . . ranked third on the team in sacks and fourth in tackles for loss . . . honorable mention All-Big Ten pick by the coaches and media . . . ranked ninth on the defense with 129 production points . . . had three tackles in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against fifth-ranked Stanford . . . tied career highs with 2.5 tackles for loss (13 yards) and two sacks (12 yards) and had four tackles overall against Minnesota . . . collected four stops, including a 7-yard loss, in victory over No. 23 Michigan . . . compiled a team-high 22 production points at Illinois with three tackles, including two for losses with a 4-yard sack, while also recovering a fumble and breaking up a pass . . . . . . had his streak of 31 consecutive starts snapped at Iowa . . . tied a career high with two sacks (11 yards) in the season opener vs. Western Michigan; had four tackles total and recorded 37 production points, including four quarterback hits, against the Broncos. RUSH’S CAREER HIGHS Tackles: 11, vs. Nebraska (10/29/11) Tackles for loss: 2.5, twice (last vs. Minnesota, 11/30/13) Sacks: 2.0, three times (last vs. Minnesota, 11/30/13) Pass Break-ups: 1, 13 times (last vs. Illinois, 10/26/13) RUSH’S STATISTICS G/GS UT 2011 14/14 31 2012 13/13 19 2013 14/13 13 Career 41/40 63

AT 27 19 17 63

TM 58 38 30 126

TFL 12-45 7.5-34 7.5-38 27-117

RUSH’S GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 DEFENSE UT AT TM TFL Western Michigan 2 2 4 2-11 South Florida 0 1 1 0-0 Youngstown State 1 1 2 0-0 Notre Dame 0 3 3 0-0 Iowa 1 0 1 0-0 Indiana 0 0 0 0-0 Purdue 0 2 2 0-0 Illinois 2 1 3 2-7 Michigan 2 2 4 1-7 Nebraska 0 1 1 0-0 Northwestern 0 0 0 0-0 Minnesota 2 2 4 2.5-13 Ohio State 0 2 2 0-0 Stanford 3 0 3 0-0 Totals 13 17 30 7.5-38

SACKS 4-23 2-21 5-27 11-71

SACKS 2-11 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-12 0-0 0-0 5-27

INT 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

INT 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

PBU 5 5 3 13

PBU 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

FR 0 0 1 1

FR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

FF 1 1 0 2

FF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

45 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

Mike SADLER

3

P | 6-0 | 170 | SR.-5 | 3L GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. FOREST HILLS NORTHERN • 2013 FIRST-TEAM ALL-AMERICAN (ESPN.COM, CBSSPORTS.COM) • 2013 FIRST-TEAM ALL-BIG TEN (COACHES) • 2013 FIRST-TEAM ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN CAREER NOTES: Three-year letterwinner enters his fourth season as Michigan State’s starting punter in 2014 . . . has a career average of 42.4 yards per punt, which is currently sixth best in MSU history . . . also ranks among MSU’s all-time punters in punting yards (sixth with 9,164) and attempts (seventh with 216) . . . a valuable weapon on special teams, he has placed 41 percent of his career punts inside the 20 (89-of-216) and 24 percent inside the 10 (52-of-216) . . . two-time first-team All-Big Ten pick (2012, 2013) . . . three-time Academic All-America selection achieved near perfection in the academic arena, maintaining a 3.97 GPA while graduating with a major in applied engineering sciences in May 2013; currently pursuing his master’s in public policy . . . is the first Spartan in program history to earn Academic All-America honors three times.

SADLER’S STATISTICS PUNTING G NO. 2011 14 61 2012 13 79 2013 14 76 Career 41 216

YDS. 2509 3422 3233 9164

AVG. 41.1 43.3 42.5 42.4

SADLER’S GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 PUNTING NO. YDS AVG Western Michigan 11 423 38.5 South Florida 7 319 45.6 Youngstown State 2 81 40.5 Notre Dame 5 207 41.4 Iowa 5 222 44.4 Indiana 4 237 59.2 Purdue 7 266 38.0 Illinois 1 54 54.0 Michigan 5 204 40.8 Nebraska 7 284 40.6 Northwestern 5 206 41.2 Minnesota 6 251 41.8 Ohio State 5 206 41.2 Stanford 6 273 45.5 Totals 76 3233 42.5

LG 57 70 69 70

LG 48 54 42 54 51 69 53 54 51 56 53 47 52 55 69

I20 25 31 33 89

I20 6 4 1 1 2 1 3 1 3 4 1 2 1 3 33

2013 SEASON (JUNIOR): Earned All-America honors from ESPN.com (first team), CBSSports.com (first team) and Athlon Sports (second team) . . . first-team All-Big Ten selection by the coaches . . . second-team all-conference pick by the media . . . Ray Guy Award semifinalist . . . also tabbed All-Big Ten by Athlon Sports (first team) . . . ranked fourth in the Big Ten in punting with his 42.5-yard average . . . ranked seventh in MSU single-season history with 3,233 punting yards . . . placed 43 percent of his punts (33-of-76) inside the 20 and 32 percent inside the 10 (24-of-76) . . . led the NCAA FBS with 24 punts downed inside the 10 and ranked tied for second with 33 inside the 20 . . . also had eight punts downed inside the 5, including three at the 1-yard line . . . had 16 punts of 50-plus yards . . . averaged 45.5 yards per punt, including a 55-yarder, while also placing three of his six punts inside the 20 in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford . . . placed two of his six punts inside the 10 against Minnesota . . . pinned four of his seven punts inside the 10 in victory at Nebraska, including one that was fumbled at the 8-yard line and another that was downed at the 1; also gained 3 yards on a fake field goal that helped propel Michigan State to a touchdown scoring drive midway through the fourth quarter, giving MSU a 34-21 lead . . . placed three of his five punts inside the 20 in the win over No. 23 Michigan, including two inside the 10 . . . placed his only punt of the game at Illinois, a 54-yarder, on the Illini 8-yard line . . . dropped three of his seven punts inside the 10 against Purdue . . . named Big Ten Special Teams Player of the Week for the third time in his career and also named College Football Performance Awards National Punter of the Week after averaging a career-best 59.2 yards on four punts in the win over Indiana, including a season-long 69-yarder in the fourth quarter; also placed one kick on the IU 4-yard line . . . averaged 44.4 yards on five punts at Iowa, including two inside the 20 and a 51-yarder . . . averaged 41.4 yards per punt at No. 22 Notre Dame, including a 54-yarder and one downed inside the 20 . . . downed four of his seven punts inside the 20 against South Florida; totaled seven punts for 319 yards (45.6 avg.) . . . placed a career-high six punts inside the 20 in the season opener vs. Western Michigan and tied his career high with 11 punts (38.5 avg; 423 yards). SADLER’S CAREER HIGHS Punts: 11, twice (last vs. Western Michigan, 8/30/13) Punting Yards: 481, vs. TCU (12/29/12) Punting Avg. (Min. 4): 59.2, vs. Indiana (10/12/13) Punts Inside 20: 6, vs. Western Michigan, 8/30/13 Longest Punt: 70, vs. Ohio State (9/29/12) SADLER IN THE NCAA FBS Punts Inside the 10: 1st (24) Punts Inside the 20: T-2nd (33)

46 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

I10 11 17 24 52

I10 2 4 1 0 1 1 3 1 2 4 1 2 0 2 24

I5 1 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 8

+50 6 19 16 41


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

12

R.J. SHELTON

WR | 5-11 | 200 | SO. | 1L BEAVER DAM, WIS. BEAVER DAM 2013 SEASON (FRESHMAN): True freshman made the position change from running back to wide receiver during preseason camp . . . saw action in 13 games, including four starts (Purdue, Illinois, Nebraska, Northwestern) . . . led team with nine kick returns for 199 yards (22.1 avg.) . . . ranked fourth on the team in rushing with 153 yards on 21 carries (7.3 avg.) . . . also had four catches for 6 yards . . . . . . compiled 77 all-purpose yards (69 kick return, 8 rushing) against No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game . . . rushed three times for 6 yards at Nebraska, including a 5-yard touchdown run in the first quarter . . . collected 96 all-purpose yards in MSU’s victory over No. 23 Michigan; rushed twice for 38 yards, including a 35-yarder in the fourth quarter, and had 58 kick return yards on two returns (29.0 avg.) . . . had 7 yards rushing on two carries and had a 6-yard reception at Illinois . . . earned his first career start vs. Purdue; had 24 yards rushing on five carries (4.8 avg.) against the Boilermakers . . . collected 47 allpurpose yards vs. Indiana (40 rush, 7 receiving), including a 34-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter . . . registered an 18-yard rush in his only attempt against Youngstown State . . . had two carries for 7 yards in his collegiate debut vs. South Florida. SHELTON’S CAREER HIGHS Carries: 4, vs. Purdue (10/19/13) Rushing Yards: 40, vs. Indiana (10/12/13) Rushing Touchdowns: 1, twice (last vs. Nebraska, 11/16/13) Receptions: 2, vs. Purdue (10/19/13) Receiving Yards: 7, vs. Indiana (10/12/13) Kick Return Yards: 69, vs. Ohio State (12/7/13) Kick Return: 36, vs. Michigan (11/3/13) SHELTON’S STATISTICS RUSHING G/GS ATT 2013 13/4 21

YDS. 153

AVG. 7.3

TD 2

LG 35

RECEIVING 2013

YDS. 6

AVG. 1.5

TD 0

LG 7

YPG 0.5

ATT 9

YDS. 199

AVG. 22.1

TD 0

LG 36

REC. 4

KICKOFF RETURNS 2013

YPG 11.8

21

Andre SIMS JR.

WR | 5-9 | 193 | JR. | 2L SNELLVILLE, GA. BROOKWOOD CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has seen time at flanker and punt returner . . . has 10 catches for 78 yards (7.8 avg.) and one touchdown in 23 career games . . . has collected 221 punt return yards on 26 returns (8.5 avg.). 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Appeared in 10 games to earn his second letter . . . ranked second on the team in punt returns (129 yards on 15 returns; 8.6 avg.) . . . had seven receptions for 55 yards (7.9 avg.) . . . had two catches for 5 yards against Purdue . . . caught two passes for 11 yards vs. Indiana . . . had a 20-yard reception at Iowa . . . recorded his first career touchdown on a 13-yard pass from Connor Cook in the first quarter vs. Youngstown State. SIMS’ CAREER HIGHS Receptions: 2, twice (last vs. Purdue, 10/19/13) Receiving Yards: 20, vs. Iowa (10/5/13) Punt Return Yards: 66, vs. Minnesota (11/24/12) Punt Return: 44, vs. Minnesota (11/24/13) SIMS’ STATISTICS RECEIVING G/GS 2012 13/0 2013 10/0 Career 23/0

REC. 3 7 10

YDS. 23 55 78

AVG. 7.7 7.9 7.8

TD 0 1 1

LG 15 20 20

PUNT RETURNS 2012 2013 Career

ATT 11 15 26

YDS. 92 129 221

AVG. 8.4 8.6 8.5

TD 0 0 0

LG 44 33 44

YPG 1.8 5.5 3.4

47 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

15

Trae WAYNES

CB | 6-1 | 183 | JR. | 2L KENOSHA, WIS. BRADFORD CAREER NOTES: Two-year letterwinner has 55 tackles and three interceptions in 23 career games . . . enters his second season as a starter at cornerback. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Started all 14 games at field cornerback . . . honorable mention All-Big Ten pick by the coaches and media . . . named to the CollegeFootballNews.com All-Sophomore Team (second team) . . . collected 50 tackles, including 1.5 for losses . . . had eight passes defended (three interceptions, five pass break-ups) . . . ranked eighth on the team with 132 production points . . . recorded his third interception of the season and tallied three tackles against No. 5 Stanford in the 100th Rose Bowl Game . . . credited with four stops in the Big Ten Championship Game against No. 2 Ohio State . . . recorded the first two interceptions of his career and had two tackles against Minnesota . . . collected five tackles, including a 3-yard loss, at Northwestern . . . posted five tackles, recovered a fumble and broke up a pass in victory at Nebraska . . . collected three tackles and a pass break-up against No. 23 Michigan . . . had five stops and a pass break-up at Illinois . . . recorded three tackles, including a half tackle for loss (1 yard), against Purdue . . . registered five tackles vs. Indiana . . . tallied a career-high six tackles at Iowa and totaled 26 production points . . . posted four stops and tallied 26 production points at No. 22 Notre Dame. WAYNES’ CAREER HIGHS Tackles: 6, vs. Iowa (10/5/13) Tackles for loss: 0.5, twice (last vs. Purdue, 10/19/13) Sacks: 0.5, vs. TCU (12/28/12) Interceptions: 2, vs. Minnesota (11/30/13) Pass Break-ups: 1, five times (last vs. Nebraska, 11/16/13) WAYNES’ STATISTICS G/GS UT 2012 9/0 2 2013 14/14 35 Career 23/14 37

AT 3 15 18

TM 5 50 55

TFL 0.5-1 1.5-4 2-5

WAYNES’ GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 DEFENSE UT AT TM TFL Western Michigan 0 0 0 0-0 South Florida 2 1 3 0-0 Youngstown State 1 1 2 0-0 Notre Dame 4 0 4 0-0 Iowa 4 2 6 0-0 Indiana 4 1 5 0-0 Purdue 0 3 3 0.5-1 Illinois 2 3 5 0-0 Michigan 3 0 3 0-0 Nebraska 4 1 5 0-0 Northwestern 4 1 5 1-3 Minnesota 1 1 2 0-0 Ohio State 3 1 4 0-0 Stanford 3 0 3 0-0 Totals 35 15 50 1.5-4

SACKS 0.5-1 0-0 0.5-1

SACKS 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

INT 0 3-11 3-11

INT 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-11 0-0 1-0 3-11

PBU 0 5 5

PBU 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 5

FR 0 1 1

FR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1

FF 0 0 0

FF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

48 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


SPARTAN PLAYER UPDATES

Delton WILLIAMS

22

26 RJ WILLIAMSON

RB | 6-1 | 232 | SO. | 1L ERIE, PA. CATHEDRAL PREP 2013 SEASON (FRESHMAN): True freshman appeared in nine games to earn his first letter . . . made his collegiate debut at Iowa . . . ranked third on the team in rushing with 238 yards on 38 carries (26.4 ypg.) . . . averaged 6.3 yards per rush . . . also had two receptions for 13 yards (6.5 avg.) . . . rushed for 78 yards on just five carries (15.6 avg.), including a 42-yard touchdown run, the first of his career, in road win at Illinois . . . collected a career-high 92 rushing yards on 12 carries (7.7 avg.), including a long of 37 yards, against Indiana . . . rushed for 32 yards on nine carries, all in the second half, against the Hawkeyes . . . accounted for nearly 2,000 all-purpose yards and 29 touchdowns as a senior at Erie Cathedral Prep in helping lead the Ramblers to a perfect 15-0 season and a No. 17 national ranking . . . rushed 88 times for 697 yards (7.9 avg.) and 13 TDs in 2012 . . . also had a school-record 59 receptions for 838 yards and 11 scores. WILLIAMS’ CAREER HIGHS Carries: 12, vs. Indiana (10/12/13) Rushing Yards: 92, vs. Indiana (10/12/13) Rushing Touchdowns: 1, vs. Illinois (10/26/13) WILLIAMS’ STATISTICS RUSHING G/GS ATT 2013 9/0 38

YDS. 238

AVG. 6.3

TD 1

LG 42

RECEIVING 2013

AVG. 6.5

TD 0

LG 9

YPG 2.6

REC. 2

YDS. 13

WILLIAMS’ GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 RUSHING ATT YDS TD Western Michigan -DNPSouth Florida -DNPYoungstown State -DNPNotre Dame -DNPIowa 9 32 0 Indiana 12 92 0 Purdue 3 8 0 Illinois 5 78 1 Michigan 2 5 0 Nebraska 3 8 0 Northwestern 2 6 0 Minnesota 1 6 0 Ohio State 1 3 0 Stanford -DNPTotals 38 238 1

LG

11 37 8 42 4 8 4 6 3 42

YPG 26.4

S | 6-0 | 215 | JR. | 2L DAYTON, OHIO DUNBAR CAREER NOTES: Three-year letterwinner has 71 tackles and nine passes defended (three interceptions, six pass break-ups) in 25 career games . . . ranks as the top candidate to replace three-year starter Isaiah Lewis at strong safety. 2013 SEASON (SOPHOMORE): Ranked eighth on the team with a career-best 44 tackles, including three for losses (6 yards) . . . also had three passes defended (one interception, two pass break-ups) . . . ranked eighth on the team with 80 production points . . . started two games (Youngstown State, Notre Dame) . . . recorded four tackles against fifth-ranked Stanford in the 100th Rose Bowl Game . . . played a majority of the game at Northwestern following Isaiah Lewis’ ejection for targeting in the first quarter, producing seven tackles and a pass break-up . . . collected three tackles, including a 1-yard loss, at Illinois . . . had three stops, including a 2-yard loss, vs. Purdue . . . registered his third career interception and posted two tackles vs. Indiana . . . tallied a career-high 10 tackles at No. 22 Notre Dame . . . collected six tackles and a pass breakup in his first career start against Youngstown State . . . posted three stops, including a 3-yard loss, in the season opener vs. Western Michigan. WILLIAMSON’S CAREER HIGHS Tackles: 10, vs. Notre Dame (9/21/13) Tackles for loss: 1.0, four times (last vs. Illinois, 10/26/13) Interceptions: 1, three times (last vs. Indiana, 10/12/13) Pass Break-ups: 1, five times (last vs. Youngstown State, 9/14/13) WILLIAMSON’S STATISTICS G/GS UT AT 2012 11/0 19 8 2013 14/2 17 27 Career 25/2 36 35

TM 27 44 71

TFL 1-1 3-6 4-7

SACKS 0-0 0-0 0-0

WILLIAMSON’S GAME-BY-GAME STATISTICS 2013 DEFENSE UT AT TM TFL SACKS Western Michigan 2 2 4 1-3 0-0 South Florida 0 1 1 0-0 0-0 Youngstown State 2 4 6 0-0 0-0 Notre Dame 1 9 10 0-0 0-0 Iowa 0 1 1 0-0 0-0 Indiana 1 1 2 0-0 0-0 Purdue 1 2 3 1-2 0-0 Illinois 1 2 3 1-1 0-0 Michigan 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 Nebraska 0 0 0 0-0 0-0 Northwestern 3 4 7 0-0 0-0 Minnesota 1 1 2 0-0 0-0 Ohio State 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 Stanford 4 0 4 0-0 0-0 Totals 17 27 44 3-6 0-0

INT 2-21 1-0 3-21

INT 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0

PBU 4 2 6

PBU 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1

FR 1-0 0 1-0

FR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

FF 1 0 0

FF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

49 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Combined Team Statistics (FINAL) All games

* * * * * * * *

Date Aug 30, 2013 Sep 07, 2013 Sep 14, 2013 Sep 21, 2013 Oct. 5, 2013 Oct 12, 2013 Oct 19, 2013 Oct 26, 2013 Nov 02, 2013 Nov 16, 2013 Nov 23, 2013 Nov 30, 2013 Dec 07, 2013 Jan 01, 2014

Rushing

Langford, Jeremy Hill, Nick Williams, Delton Shelton, R.J. Bullough, Riley Cook, Connor Burbridge, Aaron Sadler, Mike O'Connor, Tyler Fowler, Bennie Tompkins, Nick Maxwell, Andrew Kings, Macgarrett Lippett, Tony Mumphery, Keith TEAM Total Opponents Passing

Cook, Connor Maxwell, Andrew O'Connor, Tyler Lippett, Tony Shelton, R.J. Total Opponents Receiving

Lippett, Tony Kings, Macgarrett Fowler, Bennie Langford, Jeremy Burbridge, Aaron Mumphery, Keith Price, Josiah Pendleton, Trevon Sims, Andre Gleichert, Andrew Lyles, Jamal Shelton, R.J. Hill, Nick Bullough, Riley Williams, Delton Macksood, Matt Arnett, DeAnthony Total Opponents Field Goals

Muma, Kevin Geiger, Michael Scoring

50

Langford, Jeremy Geiger, Michael Fowler, Bennie Price, Josiah Muma, Kevin Mumphery, Keith Kings, Macgarrett

Opponent WESTERN MICHIGAN SOUTH FLORIDA YOUNGSTOWN STATE at #22 Notre Dame at Iowa Hawkeyes INDIANA PURDUE at Illinois #23 MICHIGAN at Nebraska at Northwestern MINNESOTA vs #2 Ohio State vs #5 Stanford gp-gs

att

Score 26-13 21-6 55-17 13-17 26-14 42-28 14-0 42-3 29-6 41-28 30-6 14-3 34-24 24-20

W W W L W W W W W W W W W W

gain loss

Att. 71214 70401 71626 80795 69025 73815 71514 45895 76306 90872 40013 71418 66002 95173

net avg

td

lg avg/g

14-14 292 1482 60 1422 4.9 18 12-1 67 357 13 344 5.1 1 9-0 38 240 2 238 6.3 1 13-4 21 159 6 153 7.3 2 14-0 22 91 8 83 3.8 0 14-13 69 221 145 76 1.1 1 13-3 4 67 5 62 15.5 0 14-0 2 28 0 28 14.0 0 3-0 8 29 5 24 3.0 0 13-7 5 27 7 20 4.0 0 1-0 6 18 2 16 2.7 0 6-1 3 15 2 13 4.3 0 14-3 3 7 1 6 2.0 0 14-10 1 3 0 3 3.0 0 14-3 2 3 1 2 1.0 0 12-0 26 0 57 -57 -2.2 0 14 569 2747 314 2433 4.3 23 14 425 1632 420 1212 2.9 8 gp-gs

14-13 6-1 3-0 14-10 13-4 14 14

effic comp-att-int

135.53 223-380-6 74.47 15-33-0 118.29 9-14-0 236.00 1-2-0 -200.00 0-1-1 129.97 248-430-7 92.28 213-448-17

gp-gs

no.

yds

14-10 44 613 14-3 43 513 13-7 36 622 14-14 28 157 13-3 22 194 14-3 18 299 14-6 17 210 14-10 8 127 10-0 7 55 13-3 6 49 14-0 5 58 13-4 4 6 12-1 3 22 14-0 3 11 9-0 2 13 12-0 1 8 1-0 1 7 14 248 2964 14 213 2319 fg

pct. 01-19

4-6 66.7 0-0 15-16 93.8 0-0 td

fg

19 - 15-16 6 4 - 4-6 3 3 -

kick

36-38 12-13 -

avg

13.9 11.9 17.3 5.6 8.8 16.6 12.4 15.9 7.9 8.2 11.6 1.5 7.3 3.7 6.5 8.0 7.0 12.0 10.9 20-29

3-4 3-3

pct

44 101.6 35 28.7 42 26.4 35 11.8 19 5.9 20 5.4 35 4.8 25 2.0 10 8.0 17 1.5 4 16.0 8 2.2 7 0.4 3 0.2 3 0.1 0 -4.8 44 173.8 64 86.6

yds

td

lg avg/g

58.7 2755 22 45.5 114 0 64.3 90 0 50.0 5 1 0.0 0 0 57.7 2964 23 47.5 2319 12 td

2 3 6 1 0 3 4 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 12 30-39

1-2 4-5

87 196.8 26 19.0 18 30.0 5 0.4 0 0.0 87 211.7 58 165.6

lg avg/g

48 43.8 48 36.6 87 47.8 24 11.2 26 14.9 72 21.4 39 15.0 49 9.1 20 5.5 18 3.8 18 4.1 7 0.5 10 1.8 7 0.8 9 1.4 8 0.7 7 7.0 87 211.7 58 165.6 40-49

0-0 8-8

lg blk

50-99

0-0 0-0

30 49

PAT rush rcv pass dxp saf

-

-

Record: All games Conference Non-Conference

-

-

0 0

Overall 13-1 8-0 5-1

Home 7-0 4-0 3-0

Team Statistics FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty RUSHING YARDAGE Rushing Attempts Average Per Rush Average Per Game TDs Rushing PASSING YARDAGE Comp-Att-Int Average Per Pass Average Per Catch Average Per Game TDs Passing TOTAL OFFENSE Average Per Play Average Per Game KICK RETURNS: #-Yards PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards INT RETURNS: #-Yards FUMBLES-LOST PENALTIES-Yards PUNTS-AVG TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 3RD-DOWN Conversions 4TH-DOWN Conversions Interceptions

Drummond, Kurtis Dennard, Darqueze Waynes, Trae Jones, Jairus Lewis, Isaiah Calhoun, Shilique Williamson, RJ

no.

4 4 3 2 2 1 1

Away 4-1 4-0 0-1

MSU 293 132 141 20 2433 569 4.3 173.8 23 2964 248-430-7 6.9 12.0 211.7 23 5397 5.4 385.5 18-345 36-353 17-166 10-8 76-706 76-42.5 33:19 94/213 9/14 yds avg

55 38 11 6 0 56 0

13.8 9.5 3.7 3.0 0.0 56.0 0.0

Punting

no. yds avg

Sadler, Mike

76 3233 42.5 69

lg

OPP 200 64 110 26 1212 425 2.9 86.6 8 2319 213-448-17 5.2 10.9 165.6 12 3531 4.0 252.2 45-953 18-120 7-99 22-11 72-646 95-43.3 26:37 57/204 6/19

td

lg

1 0 0 0 0 1 0

31 29 11 3 0 56 0

tb

fc i20 50+ blk

9 19 33 16

Punt Returns

no.

yds avg

td

lg

Kings, Macgarrett Sims, Andre Hill, Nick Total Opponents

20 15 1 36 18

206 129 18 353 120

10.3 8.6 18.0 9.8 6.7

0 0 0 0 0

30 33 18 33 40

Kick Returns

no.

yds avg

td

lg

Shelton, R.J. Hill, Nick Kings, Macgarrett Drone, Denzel Elsworth, Kyler Harris, Darien Total Opponents

9 5 1 1 1 1 18 45

199 95 16 3 18 14 345 953

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

36 27 16 3 18 14 36 54

22.1 19.0 16.0 3.0 18.0 14.0 19.2 21.2

Neutral 2-0 0-0 2-0

pts

- 114 - 81 - 36 - 24 - 24 - 18 - 18

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

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2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Overall Team Statistics (FINAL) All games Team Statistics SCORING Points Per Game FIRST DOWNS R us hing P as s ing Penalty RUSHING YARDAGE Yards gained rushing Yards lost rushing Rushing Attempts Average Per Rush Average Per Game TDs Rushing PASSING YARDAGE Comp-Att-Int Average Per Pass Average Per Catch Average Per Game TDs Passing TOTAL OFFENSE Total Plays Average Per Play Average Per Game KICK RETURNS: #-Yards PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards INT RETURNS: #-Yards KICK RETURN AVERAGE PUNT RETURN AVERAGE INT RETURN AVERAGE FUMBLES-LOST PENALTIES-Yards Average Per Game PUNTS-Yards Average Per Punt Net punt average KICKOFFS-Yards Average Per Kick Net kick average TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 3RD-DOWN Conversions 3rd-Down Pct 4TH-DOWN Conversions 4th-Down Pct SACKS BY-Yards MISC YARDS TOUCHDOWNS SCORED FIELD GOALS-ATTEMPTS ON-SIDE KICKS RED-ZONE SCORES RED-ZONE TOUCHDOWNS PAT-ATTEMPTS ATTENDANCE Games/Avg Per Game Neutral Site Games Score by Quarters Michigan State Opponents

1st

4th

OT

51 148 100 112 39 74 42 30

2nd

3rd

0 0

MSU

OPP

411 29.4 293 132 141 20 2433 2747 314 569 4.3 173.8 23 2964 248-430-7 6.9 12.0 211.7 23 5397 999 5.4 385.5 18-345 36-353 17-166 19.2 9.8 9.8 10-8 76-706 50.4 76-3233 42.5 38.6 83-5170 62.3 49.7 33:19 94/213 44% 9/14 64% 32-207 0 51 19-22 0-1 (40-50) 80% (28-50) 56% (48-51) 94% 506294 7/72328

185 13.2 200 64 110 26 1212 1632 420 425 2.9 86.6 8 2319 213-448-17 5.2 10.9 165.6 12 3531 873 4.0 252.2 45-953 18-120 7-99 21.2 6.7 14.1 22-11 72-646 46.1 95-4115 43.3 38.3 46-2813 61.2 39.5 26: 37 57/204 28% 6/19 32% 17-127 0 21 13-18 0-1 (24-30) 80% (14-30) 47% (20-20) 100% 326600 5/65320 2/80588

Total 411 185

51 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Overall Individual Statistics (FINAL) All games

52

Rushing

gp-gs

Langford, Jeremy Hill, Nick Williams, Delton Shelton, R.J. Bullough, Riley Cook, Connor Burbridge, Aaron Sadler, Mike O'Connor, Tyler Fowler, Bennie Tompkins, Nick Maxwell, Andrew Kings, Macgarrett Lippett, Tony Mumphery, Keith TEAM Total Opponents

14-14 292 1482 60 1422 4.9 18 12-1 67 357 13 344 5.1 1 9-0 38 240 2 238 6.3 1 13-4 21 159 6 153 7.3 2 14-0 22 91 8 83 3.8 0 14-13 69 221 145 76 1.1 1 13-3 4 67 5 62 15.5 0 14-0 2 28 0 28 14.0 0 3- 0 8 29 5 24 3.0 0 13-7 5 27 7 20 4.0 0 1- 0 6 18 2 16 2.7 0 6- 1 3 15 2 13 4.3 0 14-3 3 7 1 6 2.0 0 14-10 1 3 0 3 3.0 0 14-3 2 3 1 2 1.0 0 12-0 26 0 57 -57 -2.2 0 14 569 2747 314 2433 4.3 23 14 425 1632 420 1212 2.9 8

att

gain loss

net avg td

Passing

gp-gs

effic comp-att-int

Cook, Connor Maxwell, Andrew O'Connor, Tyler Lippett, Tony Shelton, R.J. Total Opponents

14-13 6- 1 3- 0 14-10 13-4 14 14

135.53 223-380-6 74.47 15-33-0 118.29 9-14-0 236.00 1-2-0 -200.00 0-1-1 129.97 248-430-7 92.28 213-448-17

Receiving

gp-gs

yds

avg

td

lg avg/g

Lippett, Tony Kings, Macgarrett Fowler, Bennie Langford, Jeremy Burbridge, Aaron Mumphery, Keith Price, Josiah Pendleton, Trevon Sims, Andre Gleichert, Andrew Lyles, Jamal Shelton, R.J. Hill, Nick Bullough, Riley Williams, Delton Macksood, Matt Arnett, DeAnthony Total Opponents

14-10 44 613 14-3 43 513 13-7 36 622 14-14 28 157 13-3 22 194 14-3 18 299 14-6 17 210 14-10 8 127 10-0 7 55 13-3 6 49 14-0 5 58 13-4 4 6 12-1 3 22 14-0 3 11 9- 0 2 13 12-0 1 8 1- 0 1 7 14 248 2964 14 213 2319

13.9 11.9 17.3 5.6 8.8 16.6 12.4 15.9 7.9 8.2 11.6 1.5 7.3 3.7 6.5 8.0 7.0 12.0 10.9

2 3 6 1 0 3 4 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 12

48 48 87 24 26 72 39 49 20 18 18 7 10 7 9 8 7 87 58

no.

pct

lg avg/g

Punt Returns

no.

yds avg td

lg

44 35 42 35 19 20 35 25 10 17 4 8 7 3 3 0 44 64

Kings, Macgarrett Sims, Andre Hill, Nick Total Opponents

20 15 1 36 18

206 129 18 353 120

30 33 18 33 40

Interceptions

no.

yds avg td

lg

Drummond, Kurtis Dennard, Darqueze Waynes, Trae Lewis, Isaiah Jones, Jairus Williamson, RJ Calhoun, Shilique Total Opponents

4 4 3 2 2 1 1 17 7

55 38 11 0 6 0 56 166 99

31 29 11 0 3 0 56 56 40

Kick Returns

no.

yds avg td

lg

Shelton, R.J. Hill, Nick Harris, Darien Elsworth, Kyler Kings, Macgarrett Drone, Denzel Total Opponents

9 5 1 1 1 1 18 45

199 95 14 18 16 3 345 953

36 27 14 18 16 3 36 54

Fumble Returns

no.

yds avg td

yds td

58.7 2755 22 45.5 114 0 64.3 90 0 50.0 5 1 0.0 0 0 57.7 2964 23 47.5 2319 12 43.8 36.6 47.8 11.2 14.9 21.4 15.0 9.1 5.5 3.8 4.1 0.5 1.8 0.8 1.4 0.7 7.0 211.7 165.6

101.6 28.7 26.4 11.8 5.9 5.4 4.8 2.0 8.0 1.5 16.0 2.2 0.4 0.2 0.1 -4.8 173.8 86.6 lg avg/g

87 26 18 5 0 87 58

196.8 19.0 30.0 0.4 0.0 211.7 165.6

Calhoun, Shilique Allen, Denicos Total Opponents

2 1 3 0

20 45 65 0

10.3 8.6 18.0 9.8 6.7 13.8 9.5 3.7 0.0 3.0 0.0 56.0 9.8 14.1 22.1 19.0 14.0 18.0 16.0 3.0 19.2 21.2 10.0 45.0 21.7 0.0

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 3 0

lg

16 45 45 0

Tony Lippett led the team with 44 receptions and ranked second with 613 receiving yards.

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Overall Individual Statistics (FINAL) All games

Scoring

td

fg

kick

Langford, Jeremy Geiger, Michael Fowler, Bennie Price, Josiah Muma, Kevin Kings, Macgarrett Mumphery, Keith Calhoun, Shilique Lippett, Tony Pendleton, Trevon Shelton, R.J. Gleichert, Andrew Hill, Nick Drummond, Kurtis Williams, Delton Sims, Andre Cook, Connor Allen, Denicos Total Opponents

19 6 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 51 21

15-16 4-6 19-22 13-18

36-38 12-13 48-51 20-20

Field Goals

Muma, Kevin Geiger, Michael

fg

PAT rush rcv pass dxp saf

-

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 0-1

-

pct. 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-99

4-6 66.7 0-0 15-16 93.8 0-0

3-4 3-3

1-2 4-5

0-0 8-8

FG Sequence

Michigan State

Opponents

Western Michigan South Florida Youngstown State Notre Dame Iowa Hawkeyes Indiana Purdue Illinois Michigan Nebraska Northwestern Minnesota Ohio State Stanford

(20),(30) 25 (20),(22) 30,(25),(42) 36,(27),(35),(49),(40) (40),(44),(35) (45),(25) (37) (40),(44) (31)

(49),(21) (34) (41),37 50 51,41 (31) (49),(39) (22),(20) (21),38 (28) (34),(39)

0-0 0-0

pts

Total Offense

- 114 - 81 - 36 - 24 - 24 - 18 - 18 - 18 - 12 - 12 - 12 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 - 411 - 185

g plays

rush pass

total avg/g

Cook, Connor Langford, Jeremy Hill, Nick Williams, Delton Shelton, R.J. Maxwell, Andrew O'Connor, Tyler Bullough, Riley Burbridge, Aaron Sadler, Mike Fowler, Bennie Tompkins, Nick Lippett, Tony Kings, Macgarrett Mumphery, Keith TEAM Total Opponents

14 14 12 9 13 6 3 14 13 14 13 1 14 14 14 12 14 14

lg blk

Punting

no. yds avg lg tb fc i20 50+ blk

30 49

Sadler, Mike Total Opponents

76 3233 42.5 69 76 3233 42.5 69 95 4115 43.3 62

Kickoffs

no. yds avg tb ob retn

Muma, Kevin Cronin, Kevin Sadler, Mike Total Opponents

80 4980 2 125 1 65 83 5170 46 2813

0 0

449 76 2755 2831 292 1422 0 1422 67 344 0 344 38 238 0 238 22 153 0 153 36 13 114 127 22 24 90 114 22 83 0 83 4 62 0 62 2 28 0 28 5 20 0 20 6 16 0 16 3 3 5 8 3 6 0 6 2 2 0 2 26 -57 0 -57 999 2433 2964 5397 873 1212 2319 3531

62.2 35 62.5 1 65.0 1 62.3 37 61.2 26

202.2 101.6 28.7 26.4 11.8 21.2 38.0 5.9 4.8 2.0 1.5 16.0 0.6 0.4 0.1 -4.8 385.5 252.2

9 19 33 16 9 19 33 16 6 18 23 22

0 0 1

net ydln

0 0 0 0 21.2 39.7 1 19.2 39.5

25 25

Michael Geiger, who made 13 consecutive field goals to close out the season, ranked first in the Big Ten and set a school single-season record for field-goal percentage (.938) in 2013.

53 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Overall Individual Statistics (FINAL) All games All Purpose

g

Langford, J. Kings, M. Fowler, Bennie Lippett, Tony Hill, Nick Shelton, R.J. Mumphery, Keit Burbridge, A. Williams, D. Price, Josiah Sims, Andre Pendleton, T. Bullough, Riley Cook, Connor Lyles, Jamal Calhoun, S. Drummond, K. Gleichert, A. Dennard, D. Sadler, Mike O'Connor, Tyler Elsworth, Kyler Tompkins, Nick Harris, Darien Maxwell, Andre Waynes, Trae Macksood, Matt Arnett, D. Jones, Jairus Drone, Denzel TEAM

rush

rcv

pr

kr

14 1422 14 6 13 20 14 3 12 344 13 153 14 2 13 62 9 238 14 0 10 0 14 0 14 83 14 76 14 0 14 0 14 0 13 0 14 0 14 28 3 24 14 0 1 16 14 0 6 13 14 0 12 0 1 0 4 0 14 0 12 -57

157 513 622 613 22 6 299 194 13 210 55 127 11 0 58 0 0 49 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 7 0 0 0

0 206 0 0 18 0 0 0 0 0 129 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 16 0 0 95 199 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 18 0 14 0 0 0 0 0 3 0

ir

total avg/g

0 1579 112.8 0 741 52.9 0 642 49.4 0 616 44.0 0 479 39.9 0 358 27.5 0 301 21.5 0 256 19.7 0 251 27.9 0 210 15.0 0 184 18.4 0 127 9.1 0 94 6.7 0 76 5.4 0 58 4.1 56 56 4.0 55 55 3.9 0 49 3.8 38 38 2.7 0 28 2.0 0 24 8.0 0 18 1.3 0 16 16.0 0 14 1.0 0 13 2.2 11 11 0.8 0 8 0.7 0 7 7.0 6 6 1.5 0 3 0.2 0 -57 -4.8

Jeremy Langford led the team in rushing, rushing touchdowns, scoring and allpurpose yards in 2013.

Michigan State Passing Game-by-Game (FINAL) All games #18 Cook, Connor Western Michigan South Florida Youngstown State Notre Dame Iowa Hawkeyes Indiana Purdue Illinois Michigan Nebraska Northwestern Minnesota Ohio State Stanford TOTALS

Comp 6 6 15 16 25 22 13 15 18 15 16 10 24 22 223

Att 16 11 22 32 44 31 25 16 33 31 23 20 40 36 380

Int 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 6

Pct 37.5 54.5 68.2 50.0 56.8 71.0 52.0 93.8 54.5 48.4 69.6 50.0 60.0 61.1 58.7

Yards 42 32 202 135 277 235 107 208 252 193 293 143 304 332 2755

TD Long 0 14 0 20 4 26 1 19 2 46 2 39 0 26 3 47 1 49 1 34 2 87 1 24 3 72 2 60 22 87

Sacked 0-0 1-7 0-0 1-7 0-0 1-9 0-0 2-15 1-16 2-17 1-9 2-21 1-8 4-16 16-125

Effic 59.55 78.98 205.31 95.75 120.15 149.48 87.95 264.83 122.63 111.33 205.27 116.56 143.59 151.36 135.53

#10 Maxwell, Andrew Western Michigan South Florida Notre Dame TOTALS

Comp 11 4 0 15

Att 21 9 3 33

Int 0 0 0 0

Pct 52.4 44.4 0.0 45.5

Yards 74 40 0 114

TD Long 0 26 0 18 0 0 0 26

Sacked 1-2 0-0 0-0 1-2

Effic 81.98 81.78 0.00 74.47

#7 O'Connor, Tyler South Florida Youngstown State TOTALS

Comp 2 7 9

Att 4 10 14

Int 0 0 0

Pct 50.0 70.0 64.3

Yards 22 68 90

TD Long 0 13 0 18 0 18

Sacked 0-0 0-0 0-0

Effic 96.20 127.12 118.29

54 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Overall Defensive Statistics (FINAL) All games

## 28 27 40 34 31 9 15 26 60 89 91 44 93 42 43 97 41 45 23 29 7C 39 36 6 30 37 2 33 87 52 86 3 92 11 3P 21 8 14 17 3K TM 9H

Defensive Leaders

gp-gs

ua

Allen, Denicos Drummond, Kurtis Bullough, Max Jones, Taiwan Dennard, Darqueze Lewis, Isaiah Waynes, Trae Williamson, RJ Reynolds, Micajah Calhoun, Shilique Hoover, Tyler Rush, Marcus Knox, Damon Drone, Denzel Davis, Ed Scarpinato, Mark Elsworth, Kyler Harris, Darien Jones, Jairus Meyers, Mark Cox, Demetrious Edmondson, Jermaine Colquhoun, Arjen Hicks, Mylan Bullough, Riley Robinson, Ezra Hicks, Darian Langford, Jeremy Clemons, Brandon Pepper, Taybor Macksood, Matt Sadler, Mike Gleichert, Andrew Lyles, Jamal Pendleton, Trevon Sims, Andre Thomas, Lawrence Lippett, Tony Muma, Kevin Kings, Macgarrett TEAM Heath, Joel Total Opponents

14-14 14-14 13-13 14-13 14-14 13-12 14-14 14-2 14-13 14-14 11-11 14-13 14-2 14-1 14-0 14-2 14-1 14-0 4-1 14-0 14-0 13-0 10-0 14-0 14-0 12-0 14-0 14-14 6-0 14-0 12-0 14-0 13-3 14-0 14-10 10-0 7-0 14-10 14-0 14-3 12-0 9-0 14 14

45 49 25 38 33 29 35 17 15 20 10 13 9 5 8 4 5 4 5 6 3 3 1 1 1 1 2 1 . 1 1 1 . . . 1 1 1 . 1 1 . 396 512

Tackles a tot

53 42 51 29 29 29 15 27 22 17 21 17 13 12 9 11 9 8 7 3 3 3 4 2 2 1 . 1 2 . . . 1 1 1 . . . 1 . . . 446 512

98 91 76 67 62 58 50 44 37 37 31 30 22 17 17 15 14 12 12 9 6 6 5 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . 842 1024

tfl/yds

Sacks no-yds

Pass defense int-yds brup qbh

16.5-58 3.5-18 9.5-26 7.0-16 3.5-8 1.0-3 1.5-4 3.0-6 3.5-7 14.0-75 4.5-30 7.5-38 2.5-15 5.0-24 4.0-20 1.0-13 1.5-2 0.5-0 1.0-2 . . . . . . . . . 0.5-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91-366 71-262

5.5-38 . 1.5-10 . . . . . . 7.5-45 4.0-29 5.0-27 1.0-7 2.5-18 4.0-20 1.0-13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32-207 17-127

. 4-55 . . 4-38 2-0 3-11 1-0 . 1-56 . . . . . . . . 2-6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17-166 7-99

1 6 2 . 10 8 5 2 . . 2 3 1 1 . 2 1 . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 46 44

10 . 10 1 5 2 . . 4 18 2 4 . 2 . 3 . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . 3 66 37

Fumbles rcv-yds

ff

blkd kick

saf

1-45 . . . . 1-0 1-0 . . 4-20 . 1-0 . 1-0 . . . . . . . . . . . 1-0 . . . 1-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-65 8-0

1 1 1 . 2 . . . . 2 2 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 9

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

55 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Rushing/Receiving Game-by-Game (FINAL) All games RUSHING Langford, J. RB Hill, Nick RB Williams, D. RB Shelton, R.J. WR Bullough, Riley RB Cook, Connor QB Burbridge, A. WR Sadler, Mike O'Connor, Tyler WR Fowler, Bennie WR Tompkins, Nick RB Maxwell, Andrew QB Kings, M. WR Lippett, Tony WR Mumphery, Keith WR TEAM

No-Yds/TD WMU 292-1422/18 20-94/1 67-344/1 7-33/0 38-238/1 DNP 21-153/2 DNP 22-83/0 5-12/0 69-76/1 4-35/0 4-62/0 2-28/0 8-24/0 DNP 5-20/0 6-16/0 DNP 3-13/0 2-5/0 3-6/0 1-3/0 1-3/0 2-2/0 1-3/0 26--57/0 2--4/0

USF 9-38/1 9-63/0 DNP 2-7/0 6-36/0 9-10/0 1-21/0 2--4/0 DNP DNP

YSU 15-68/2 9-83/1 DNP 1-18/0 10-34/0 2-25/0 4-18/0 1-17/0 6-16/0 DNP 1--2/0

ND 14-68/0 13-34/0 DNP 1-1/0 4-4/0 DNP 1-6/0 DNP 1-8/0 1--2/0

IOWA IND PUR ILL MICH NEB NU MINN OSU STAN 14-43/0 23-109/3 24-131/0 22-104/2 26-120/1 32-151/3 25-150/2 21-134/1 24-128/1 23-84/1 4-6/0 DNP 13-70/0 1-2/0 6-34/0 4-23/0 1--4/0 DNP 9-32/0 12-92/0 3-8/0 5-78/1 2-5/0 3-8/0 2-6/0 1-6/0 1-3/0 DNP 2-40/1 5-24/0 2-7/0 2-38/0 3-6/1 1-1/0 1-4/0 2-8/0 6-21/0 5-8/0 6-27/0 8-7/0 5--15/1 6--1/0 2--9/0 3--21/0 3-0/0 6--15/0 1-11/0 DNP 1--5/0 1-35/0 1-25/0 1-3/0 DNP DNP DNP 2-10/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 1--2/0 DNP 1-4/0 1--5/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 1--1/0 2-7/0 1--1/0 2--3/0 4--9/0 3--8/0 2--6/0 3--8/0 1--2/0 3--6/0 DNP 1--1/0 3--6/0

RECEIVING Fowler, Bennie WR Lippett, Tony WR Kings, M. WR Mumphery, Keith WR Price, Josiah TE Burbridge, A. WR Langford, J. RB Pendleton, T. FB Lyles, Jamal Sims, Andre WR Gleichert, A. TE Hill, Nick RB Williams, D. RB Bullough, Riley RB Macksood, Matt WR Arnett, D. WR Shelton, R.J. WR

No-Yds/TD 36-622/6 44-613/2 43-513/3 18-299/3 17-210/4 22-194/0 28-157/1 8-127/2 5-58/0 7-55/1 6-49/1 3-22/0 2-13/0 3-11/0 1-8/0 1-7/0 4-6/0

USF 3-24/0 1-18/0 1-20/0 5-21/0 1-10/0 DNP 1-1/0 DNP DNP -

YSU 2-39/1 4-41/0 4-61/1 1-5/0 3-28/0 3-44/0 1-12/1 2-19/0 1-13/1 DNP DNP 1-8/0 DNP -

ND 3-39/0 5-37/1 1-7/0 1-4/0 4-20/0 1-12/0 1-16/0 DNP DNP -

IOWA 9-92/1 2-29/0 5-94/1 3-22/0 2-1/0 1-14/0 1-20/0 1-2/0 1-3/0 DNP -

WMU 3-34/0 1-14/0 4-24/0 4-16/0 2-7/0 1-7/0 DNP 1-7/0 DNP 1-7/0 DNP

IND 1-34/1 6-64/0 5-28/0 1-3/0 1-39/0 2-24/0 1-11/1 1-5/0 2-11/0 1-9/0 DNP 1-7/0

PUR DNP 5-49/0 2-29/0 1-5/0 1-26/0 2-5/0 1-5/1 DNP DNP 2--7/0

ILL 2-40/1 2-7/0 1-16/0 3-77/1 2-21/1 DNP 1-13/0 1-18/0 1-6/0 1-4/0 DNP 1-6/0

MICH 6-75/1 5-62/0 2-14/0 1-9/0 1-12/0 2-62/0 1-18/0 DNP -

NEB 2-29/0 4-67/0 3-37/0 1-27/1 4-23/0 1-10/0 DNP -

NU 2-99/1 3-64/0 2-16/0 1-20/0 3-35/1 2-22/0 2-35/0 DNP 1-2/0 DNP -

MINN 1-15/0 4-71/0 1-24/0 1-12/1 2-12/0 1-9/0 DNP DNP -

OSU 3-29/0 4-65/1 5-67/0 2-84/1 3-24/1 1-14/0 5-21/0 DNP 1-0/0 DNP -

STAN 2-97/0 5-94/1 4-52/0 1-20/0 1-9/0 5-17/0 2-21/1 1-5/0 DNP 1-17/0 DNP DNP DNP -

Michigan State Total Tackles Game-by-Game (FINAL) All games Total Tackles

UA-A

Total

WMU

USF

YSU

ND

IOWA

IND

PUR

ILL

MICH

NEB

NU

MINN

OSU

STAN

Allen, Denicos LB Drummond, K. S Bullough, Max LB Jones, Taiwan LB Dennard, D. CB Lewis, Isaiah S Waynes, Trae CB Williamson, RJ S Reynolds, M. DL Calhoun, S. DE Hoover, Tyler DT Rush, Marcus DE Knox, Damon DT Davis, Ed LB Drone, Denzel DE Scarpinato, M. DT Elsworth, Kyler LB Harris, Darien LB Jones, Jairus LB Meyers, Mark DB Edmondson, J. CB Cox, Demetrious DB Colquhoun, A. CB Hicks, Mylan S Bullough, Riley Robinson, Ezra CB Hicks, Darian CB Clemons, B. DT Langford, J. Kings, M. Lippett, Tony Thomas, L. DT Lyles, Jamal DE

45-53 49-42 25-51 38-29 33-29 29-29 35-15 17-27 15-22 20-17 10-21 13-17 9-13 8-9 5-12 4-11 5-9 4-8 5-7 6-3 3-3 3-3 1-4 1-2 1-2 1-1 2-0 0-2 1-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1

98 91 76 67 62 58 50 44 37 37 31 30 22 17 17 15 14 12 12 9 6 6 5 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1

3-2 3-1 3-6 1-5 1-1 2-2 2-2 0-2 1-2 2-2 0-3 0-2 0-2 0-1 0-2 1-1 DNP 2-1 0-2 0-1 0-1 DNP DNP 0-1

3-5 4-5 1-3 2-0 0-5 3-4 2-1 0-1 1-1 3-0 1-2 0-1 1-0 1-4 1-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 DNP 1-0 DNP -

1-1 2-2 0-2 0-1 1-1 DNP 1-1 2-4 0-6 2-0 0-3 1-1 0-1 1-0 0-2 2-5 0-1 1-1 DNP -

4-5 4-3 3-4 2-3 1-1 4-0 1-9 0-1 1-1 0-5 0-3 0-2 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 1-0 DNP 0-1 DNP -

1-2 3-3 0-6 5-1 3-5 1-2 4-2 0-1 1-1 1-2 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-3 1-0 DNP DNP DNP 1-0 DNP -

5-3 2-2 3-1 3-2 4-1 4-0 4-1 1-1 0-3 1-0 5-2 1-0 0-1 1-0 1-0 DNP 1-0 DNP 0-1 1-0 DNP DNP -

3-5 4-5 3-7 2-3 5-2 3-2 0-3 1-2 2-0 1-1 1-2 0-2 1-0 0-2 1-0 0-1 DNP 0-1 DNP DNP DNP -

2-3 3-1 0-5 2-4 0-2 2-2 2-3 1-2 2-1 DNP 2-1 1-1 0-1 1-3 0-1 DNP 1-0 1-0 DNP 1-0 0-1 -

5-4 5-3 1-4 2-0 3-1 1-3 3-0 3-3 DNP 2-2 1-0 2-2 0-1 DNP 1-0 1-1 1-0 DNP -

1-4 4-6 5-4 3-2 1-0 1-1 4-1 2-2 2-0 DNP 0-1 1-2 1-1 DNP 2-0 1-0 DNP -

5-3 5-1 3-0 5-0 5-4 1-1 4-1 3-4 4-0 1-0 0-1 1-0 1-1 0-1 1-1 2-1 1-1 DNP 0-1 0-1 DNP -

3 - 10 4-6 2-7 2-4 7-2 0-6 1-1 1-1 0-4 2-5 0-4 2-2 1-3 1-0 1-3 0-1 DNP 0-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 -

3-5 3-2 1-2 3-2 2-1 9-4 3-1 1-0 1-2 1-3 0-2 1-1 3-0 1-0 0-1 DNP 1-0 DNP -

6-1 3-2 DNP 6-2 0-3 2-2 3-0 4-0 4-0 0-1 1-0 3-0 1-0 1-3 2-3 DNP 0-1 0-2 1-0 -

56 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Team Game-by-Game (FINAL) All games TEAM STATISTICS Date

Opponent

td

lg

Kick Returns no. yds td lg

Punt Returns no. yds td lg

42 181 1 18 17 116 0 26 17-37-0 116 0 38 171 1 23 12 94 0 20 12-24-0 94 0 49 277 3 35 22 270 4 26 22-32-0 270 4 35 119 0 11 16 135 1 19 16-36-1 135 1 37 135 0 25 25 277 2 46 25-44-1 277 2 47 238 4 37 22 235 2 39 22-31-1 235 2 41 182 0 18 14 112 1 26 14-26-0 112 1 55 269 3 42 15 208 3 47 15-16-0 208 3 39 142 2 40 18 252 1 49 18-33-1 252 1 48 168 4 37 15 193 1 34 15-32-0 193 1 40 171 2 37 16 293 2 87 16-23-0 293 2 31 181 1 44 10 143 1 24 10-20-1 143 1 32 134 1 34 24 304 3 72 24-40-1 304 3 35 65 1 11 22 332 2 60 22-36-1 332 2 569 2433 23 44 248 2964 23 87 248-430-7 2964 23 425 1212 8 64 213 2319 12 58 213-448-17 2319 12

26 20 26 19 46 39 26 47 49 34 87 24 72 60 87 58

2 44 1 14 2 43 2 24 1 29 0 0 0 0 1 3 2 58 2 35 2 26 0 0 3 69 0 0 18 345 45 953

5 52 5 19 6 83 1 6 3 53 4 15 2 4 1 8 3 21 1 26 0 0 1 29 1 16 3 21 36 353 18 120

no.

Aug 30 WESTERN MICHIGAN Sep 07 SOUTH FLORIDA Sep 14 YOUNGSTOWN STATE Sep 21 at Notre Dame Oct. 5 at Iowa Hawkeyes Oct 12 INDIANA Oct 19 PURDUE Oct 26 at Illinois Nov 02 MICHIGAN Nov 16 at Nebraska Nov 23 at Northwestern Nov 30 MINNESOTA Dec 07 vs Ohio State Jan 01 vs Stanford Michigan State Opponents

Rushing yds td

lg

no.

Receiving yds td

lg

Passing cmp-att-int yds

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

27 14 24 16 29 0 0 3 36 18 15 0 29 0 36 54

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

tot off

33 297 9 265 28 547 6 254 30 412 7 473 5 294 8 477 12 394 26 361 0 464 29 324 16 438 19 397 33 5397 40 3531

Games played: 14 Avg per rush: 4.3 Avg per catch: 12.0 Pass efficiency: 129.97 Kick ret avg: 19.2 Punt ret avg: 9.8 All purpose avg/game: 447.2 Total offense avg/gm: 385.5 Date

Opponent

ua

Tackles a total

42 36 32 44 28 18 38 32 24 24 22 60 26 20 446 512

63 60 46 65 52 56 67 54 55 52 64 91 59 58 842 1024

tfl-yds

Sacks no-yds

9.0-48 6.0-27 3.0-6 6.0-17 2.0-3 6.0-26 9.0-37 9.0-39 11.0-65 3.0-9 4.0-10 11.0-43 2.0-11 10.0-25 91.0-366 71.0-262

5.0-36 3.0-20 1.0-3 0.0-0 0.0-0 2.0-18 5.0-27 2.0-12 7.0-49 0.0-0 0.0-0 4.0-23 2.0-11 1.0-8 32.0-207 17.0-127

Fumble ff fr-yds

Pass Defense int-yds qbh brup

1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 0 1 1 1 10 9

3-27 1-56 0-0 0-0 2-38 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 3-34 2-11 0-0 1-0 17-166 7-99

8 11 8 1 5 9 3 3 7 4 2 4 1 0 66 37

Aug 30 WESTERN MICHIGAN Sep 07 SOUTH FLORIDA Sep 14 YOUNGSTOWN STATE Sep 21 at Notre Dame Oct. 5 at Iowa Hawkeyes Oct 12 INDIANA Oct 19 PURDUE Oct 26 at Illinois Nov 02 MICHIGAN Nov 16 at Nebraska Nov 23 at Northwestern Nov 30 MINNESOTA Dec 07 vs Ohio State Jan 01 vs Stanford Michigan State Opponents

21 24 14 21 24 38 29 22 31 28 42 31 33 38 396 512

1-16 1-4 2-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-45 1-0 0-0 4-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 11-65 8-0

Date

no.

yds

avg

long

blkd

tb

fc

50+

i20

md-att

11 7 2 5 5 4 7 1 5 7 5 6 5 6 76 95

423 319 81 207 222 237 266 54 204 284 206 251 206 273 3233 4115

38.5 45.6 40.5 41.4 44.4 59.2 38.0 54.0 40.8 40.6 41.2 41.8 41.2 45.5 42.5 43.3

48 54 42 54 51 69 53 54 51 56 53 47 52 55 69 62

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 9 6

3 1 0 2 2 1 1 0 3 1 1 2 1 1 19 18

0 2 0 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 2 16 22

6 4 1 1 2 1 3 1 3 4 1 2 1 3 33 23

2-2 0-1 2-2 2-3 4-5 0-0 0-0 0-0 3-3 2-2 1-1 0-0 2-2 1-1 19-22 13-18

Punting Opponent

Aug 30 WESTERN MICHIGAN Sep 07 SOUTH FLORIDA Sep 14 YOUNGSTOWN STATE Sep 21 at Notre Dame Oct. 5 at Iowa Hawkeyes Oct 12 INDIANA Oct 19 PURDUE Oct 26 at Illinois Nov 02 MICHIGAN Nov 16 at Nebraska Nov 23 at Northwestern Nov 30 MINNESOTA Dec 07 vs Ohio State Jan 01 vs Stanford Michigan State Opponents

Blkd kick

11 5 4 3 3 2 1 3 3 2 2 3 4 0 46 44

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2

PAT Attempts kick rush rcv

2-3 3-3 7-7 1-1 2-2 6-6 2-2 6-6 2-3 5-5 3-4 2-2 4-4 3-3 48-51 20-20

Field Goals

2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

saf

pts

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

26 21 55 13 26 42 14 42 29 41 30 14 34 24 411 185

Kickoffs

long blkd

30 0 22 42 49 0 0 0 44 45 37 0 44 31 49 49

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

no.

yds

avg

tb

ob

6 373 4 260 10 629 4 253 7 452 7 437 3 195 7 380 7 441 8 512 6 349 3 184 6 389 5 316 83 5170 46 2813

62.2 65.0 62.9 63.2 64.6 62.4 65.0 54.3 63.0 64.0 58.2 61.3 64.8 63.2 62.3 61.2

4 4 3 1 6 4 1 1 2 4 3 0 3 1 37 26

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

57


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Opponent Game-by-Game (FINAL) All games OPPONENT STATISTICS Date

Opponent

no.

Aug 30 WESTERN MICHIGAN Sep 07 SOUTH FLORIDA Sep 14 YOUNGSTOWN STATE Sep 21 at Notre Dame Oct. 5 at Iowa Hawkeyes Oct 12 INDIANA Oct 19 PURDUE Oct 26 at Illinois Nov 02 MICHIGAN Nov 16 at Nebraska Nov 23 at Northwestern Nov 30 MINNESOTA Dec 07 vs Ohio State Jan 01 vs Stanford Opponents Michigan State

Rushing yds td

27 11 0 35 89 0 20 51 1 32 82 1 16 23 0 27 92 2 34 66 0 21 25 0 29 -48 0 32 182 1 26 80 0 50 124 0 40 273 2 36 162 1 425 1212 8 569 2433 23

lg

no.

Receiving yds td

lg

Passing cmp-att-int yds

td

lg

11 18 193 2 45 18-48-3 193 2 45 24 6 66 0 25 6-26-1 66 0 25 16 11 121 1 35 11-27-0 121 1 35 14 14 142 1 37 14-34-0 142 1 37 7 26 241 2 47 26-46-2 241 2 47 64 25 259 2 53 25-47-1 259 2 53 14 14 160 0 43 14-25-1 160 0 43 21 13 103 0 27 13-21-1 103 0 27 9 15 216 0 58 15-30-1 216 0 58 51 17 210 3 38 17-32-1 210 3 38 11 27 239 0 39 27-46-3 239 0 39 12 9 125 0 29 9-25-2 125 0 29 48 8 101 1 36 8-23-0 101 1 36 47 10 143 0 51 10-18-1 143 0 51 64 213 2319 12 58 213-448-17 2319 12 58 44 248 2964 23 87 248-430-7 2964 23 87

Kick Returns no. yds td lg

Punt Returns no. yds td lg

2 0 6 3 1 3 2 6 5 4 3 3 3 4 45 18

2 4 3 20 1 1 1 2 0 0 1 10 1 40 0 0 1 5 2 -4 1 9 1 7 2 22 2 4 18 120 36 353

37 0 145 67 16 43 49 118 117 78 49 70 70 94 953 345

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

19 0 54 27 16 20 29 25 35 24 22 32 34 26 54 36

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

tot off

4 204 19 155 1 172 2 224 0 264 10 351 40 226 0 128 5 168 0 392 9 319 7 249 11 374 3 305 40 3531 33 5397

Games played: 14 Avg per rush: 2.9 Avg per catch: 10.9 Pass efficiency: 92.28 Kick ret avg: 21.2 Punt ret avg: 6.7 All purpose avg/game: 335.9 Total offense avg/gm: 252.2 Date

Opponent

ua

Tackles a total

40 34 44 46 46 40 22 58 50 34 32 24 16 26 512 446

80 68 88 71 86 81 57 91 80 76 67 53 61 65 1024 842

tfl-yds

Sacks no-yds

4.0-13 5.0-17 3.0-5 3.0-15 4.0-6 3.0-12 7.0-21 3.0-16 5.0-24 8.0-29 4.0-18 3.0-26 8.0-23 11.0-37 71.0-262 91.0-366

1.0-2 1.0-7 0.0-0 1.0-7 0.0-0 1.0-9 0.0-0 2.0-15 1.0-16 2.0-17 1.0-9 2.0-21 1.0-8 4.0-16 17.0-127 32.0-207

Fumble ff fr-yds

Pass Defense int-yds qbh brup

1 2 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 9 10

0-0 0-0 0-0 1-29 1-1 1-3 0-0 0-0 1-17 0-0 0-0 1-8 1-1 1-40 7-99 17-166

4 5 0 3 4 0 0 1 3 8 2 2 5 0 37 66

Aug 30 WESTERN MICHIGAN Sep 07 SOUTH FLORIDA Sep 14 YOUNGSTOWN STATE Sep 21 at Notre Dame Oct. 5 at Iowa Hawkeyes Oct 12 INDIANA Oct 19 PURDUE Oct 26 at Illinois Nov 02 MICHIGAN Nov 16 at Nebraska Nov 23 at Northwestern Nov 30 MINNESOTA Dec 07 vs Ohio State Jan 01 vs Stanford Opponents Michigan State

40 34 44 25 40 41 35 33 30 42 35 29 45 39 512 396

1-0 2-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 8-0 11-65

Date

no.

yds

avg

long

blkd

tb

fc

50+

i20

md-att

11 9 7 6 8 8 6 5 8 5 5 5 7 5 95 76

496 361 356 235 354 327 269 203 327 216 184 236 302 249 4115 3233

45.1 40.1 50.9 39.2 44.2 40.9 44.8 40.6 40.9 43.2 36.8 47.2 43.1 49.8 43.3 42.5

62 50 57 51 52 51 56 61 49 59 61 56 49 60 62 69

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 6 9

0 1 1 2 3 1 1 0 3 1 0 1 4 0 18 19

3 1 5 2 2 1 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 2 22 16

3 1 0 0 1 2 4 0 2 1 3 1 5 0 23 33

0-0 2-2 1-1 1-2 0-1 0-0 0-2 1-1 2-2 0-0 2-2 1-2 1-1 2-2 13-18 19-22

Punting

58

Opponent

Aug 30 WESTERN MICHIGAN Sep 07 SOUTH FLORIDA Sep 14 YOUNGSTOWN STATE Sep 21 at Notre Dame Oct. 5 at Iowa Hawkeyes Oct 12 INDIANA Oct 19 PURDUE Oct 26 at Illinois Nov 02 MICHIGAN Nov 16 at Nebraska Nov 23 at Northwestern Nov 30 MINNESOTA Dec 07 vs Ohio State Jan 01 vs Stanford Opponents Michigan State

6 3 1 4 4 2 4 0 3 4 1 4 5 3 44 46

Blkd kick

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1

PAT Attempts kick rush rcv

1-1 0-0 2-2 2-2 2-2 4-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 4-4 0-0 0-0 3-3 2-2 20-20 48-51

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Field Goals

saf

pts

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

13 6 17 17 14 28 0 3 6 28 6 3 24 20 185 411

Kickoffs

long blkd

0 49 34 41 0 0 0 31 49 0 22 21 28 39 49 49

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

no.

yds

avg

tb

ob

3 138 3 176 4 259 4 259 3 193 4 252 1 65 2 96 3 192 5 315 3 165 2 130 4 248 5 325 46 2813 83 5170

46.0 58.7 64.8 64.8 64.3 63.0 65.0 48.0 64.0 63.0 55.0 65.0 62.0 65.0 61.2 62.3

0 2 2 2 2 3 1 1 1 3 1 2 1 5 26 37

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Team Game-by-Game Comparison (FINAL) All games Opponent

Score

Total

WESTERN MICHIGAN 26 - 13 SOUTH FLORIDA 21 - 6 YOUNGSTOWN STATE 55 - 17 Notre Dame 13 - 17 Iowa Hawkeyes 26 - 14 INDIANA 42 - 28 PURDUE 14 - 0 Illinois 42 - 3 MICHIGAN 29 - 6 Nebraska 41 - 28 Northwestern 30 - 6 MINNESOTA 14 - 3 Ohio State 34 - 24 Stanford 24 - 20 Totals 411 - 185

Opponent

WESTERN MICHIGAN SOUTH FLORIDA YOUNGSTOWN STATE Notre Dame Iowa Hawkeyes INDIANA PURDUE Illinois MICHIGAN Nebraska Northwestern MINNESOTA Ohio State Stanford Totals

18 16 30 19 20 24 21 29 19 18 20 15 23 21 293

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

14 12 8 14 13 19 14 8 12 19 19 17 20 11 200

3rd Down Conversions

5-19 4-14 10-15 8-18 6-19 10-14 5-13 14-16 9-18 11-21 4-12 0-8 5-15 3-11 94-213

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

4-20 1-13 2-12 6-17 4-15 8-18 5-15 3-10 2-14 5-12 4-15 8-20 1-10 4-13 57-204

First Downs Rush Pass

11 10 12 7 6 11 14 17 6 9 10 7 8 4 132

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

2 5 4 4 1 18 2 9 0 13 4 13 6 6 3 9 2 12 7 8 5 10 8 8 14 12 6 14 64 141

4th Down Conversions

0-0 1-2 1-1 1-2 2-3 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 1-1 0-1 0-1 2-2 0-0 9-14

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

1-1 0-1 1-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 1-1 0-1 0-1 1-1 1-3 1-2 0-2 0-2 6-19

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

Rushing Number-Yards

Pen

10 2 4 2 6 0 5 3 11 1 12 0 7 1 4 3 9 1 11 1 13 0 8 0 6 3 4 3 110 20

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

2 4 1 7 2 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 26

42-181 38-171 49-277 35-119 37-135 47-238 41-182 55-269 39-142 48-168 40-171 31-181 32-134 35-65 569-2433

Time of Possession

33:14 30:39 39:09 30:38 37:13 37:28 31:01 39:06 32:21 38:37 31:39 21:19 32:51 31:11 466:26

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

26:46 28:31 20:51 29:22 22:47 22:32 28:59 20:54 27:39 21:23 28:21 38:41 27:09 28:49 372:44

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

Passing Comp-Att-Int

27-11 35-89 20-51 32-82 16-23 27-92 34-66 21-25 29--48 32-182 26-80 50-124 40-273 36-162 425-1212

TOP Margin

6:28 2:08 18:18 1:16 14:26 14:56 2:02 18:12 4:42 17:14 3:18 -17:22 5:42 2:22 93:42

17-37-0 12-24-0 22-32-0 16-36-1 25-44-1 22-31-1 14-26-0 15-16-0 18-33-1 15-32-0 16-23-0 10-20-1 24-40-1 22-36-1 248-430-7

Avg Yds/Rush

4.3 4.5 5.7 3.4 3.6 5.1 4.4 4.9 3.6 3.5 4.3 5.8 4.2 1.9 4.3

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

0.4 2.5 2.5 2.6 1.4 3.4 1.9 1.2 -1.7 5.7 3.1 2.5 6.8 4.5 2.9

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

18-48-3 116 6-26-1 94 11-27-0 270 14-34-0 135 26-46-2 277 25-47-1 235 14-25-1 112 13-21-1 208 15-30-1 252 17-32-1 193 27-46-3 293 9-25-2 143 8-23-0 304 10-18-1 332 213-448-17 2964 Avg Yds/Pass

3.1 3.9 8.4 3.8 6.3 7.6 4.3 13.0 7.6 6.0 12.7 7.2 7.6 9.2 6.9

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

4.0 2.5 4.5 4.2 5.2 5.5 6.4 4.9 7.2 6.6 5.2 5.0 4.4 7.9 5.2

Total Offense Plays-Yards

Yards

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

193 79-297 66 62-265 121 81-547 142 71-254 241 81-412 259 78-473 160 67-294 103 71-477 216 72-394 210 80-361 239 63-464 125 51-324 101 72-438 143 71-397 2319 999-5397

Avg Yds/Play

3.8 4.3 6.8 3.6 5.1 6.1 4.4 6.7 5.5 4.5 7.4 6.4 6.1 5.6 5.4

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

2.7 2.5 3.7 3.4 4.3 4.7 3.8 3.0 2.8 6.1 4.4 3.3 5.9 5.6 4.0

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

75-204 61-155 47-172 66-224 62-264 74-351 59-226 42-128 59-168 64-392 72-319 75-249 63-374 54-305 873-3531

Punting Number-Avg

11-38.5 7-45.6 2-40.5 5-41.4 5-44.4 4-59.2 7-38.0 1-54.0 5-40.8 7-40.6 5-41.2 6-41.8 5-41.2 6-45.5 76-42.5

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

11-45.1 9-40.1 7-50.9 6-39.2 8-44.2 8-40.9 6-44.8 5-40.6 8-40.9 5-43.2 5-36.8 5-47.2 7-43.1 5-49.8 95-43.3

Return Yards

139 93 126 30 120 15 49 11 79 61 60 40 85 21 929

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

41 20 146 98 17 56 89 118 139 74 58 85 93 138 1172

Penalties Number-Yards

6-75 9-94 2-19 10-115 8-70 10-100 2-14 5-34 5-25 6-60 4-30 2-15 3-20 4-35 76-706

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

7-65 8-55 5-30 8-86 3-34 7-65 3-30 7-66 3-39 3-30 2-15 3-14 5-62 8-55 72-646

TurnOvers

1 2 1 1 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 2 1 2 15

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

4 2 2 0 2 1 2 2 1 5 3 3 0 1 28

Sacks

5 3 1 0 0 2 5 2 7 0 0 4 2 1 32

/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

1 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 2 1 2 1 4 17

59 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS Rushes Yards Rushing TD Rushes Long Rush Pass attempts Pass completions Yards Passing TD Passes Long Pass Receptions Yards Receiving TD Receptions

Long Reception Field Goals Long Field Goal Punts Punting Avg Long Punt Punts inside 20 Long Punt Return Long Kickoff Return Tackles Sacks Tackles For Loss Interceptions

32 151 3 3 44 44 25 332 4 87 9 99 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 87 4 49 11 59.2 69 6 33 36 13 13 2.5 2.5 3.0 3.0 2 2 2 2

Langford, Jeremy at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Langford, Jeremy at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Langford, Jeremy vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Langford, Jeremy at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Langford, Jeremy vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) Cook, Connor at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Cook, Connor at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Cook, Connor vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) Cook, Connor vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) Cook, Connor at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) Fowler, Bennie at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Fowler, Bennie at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) Pendleton, Trevon vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 20 Kings, Macgarrett vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 20 Fowler, Bennie vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) Sims, Andre vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) Kings, Macgarrett at Notre Dame (Sep 21, 2013) Kings, Macgarrett at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Fowler, Bennie at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Fowler, Bennie vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Langford, Jeremy vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Gleichert, Andrew vs Purdue (Oct 19, 2013) Fowler, Bennie at Illinois (Oct 26, 2013) Mumphery, Keith at Illinois (Oct 26, 2013) Price, Josiah at Illinois (Oct 26, 2013) Fowler, Bennie vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) Mumphery, Keith at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Fowler, Bennie at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) Price, Josiah at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) Price, Josiah vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) Lippett, Tony vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) Mumphery, Keith vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) Price, Josiah vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) Pendleton, Trevon vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) Lippett, Tony vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) Fowler, Bennie at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) Geiger, Michael at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Geiger, Michael at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Sadler, Mike vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) Sadler, Mike vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Sadler, Mike vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Sadler, Mike vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) Sims, Andre vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) Shelton, R.J. vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) Allen, Denicos vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) Lewis, Isaiah vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) Davis, Ed vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) Calhoun, Shilique vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) Allen, Denicos vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) Calhoun, Shilique vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) Jones, Jairus vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) Dennard, Darqueze at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013 Drummond, Kurtis at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) Waynes, Trae vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013)

TEAM GAME HIGHS Rushes Yards Rushing Yards Per Rush TD Rushes Pass attempts Pass completions Yards Passing Yards Per Pass TD Passes Total Plays Total Offense Yards Per Play Points Sacks By First Downs Penalties Penalty Yards Turnovers

Interceptions By

60

Punts Punting Avg

55 277 5.8 4 4 44 25 332 13.0 4 81 81 547 7.4 55 7 30 10 10 115 2 2 2 2 3 3 11 59.2

at Illinois (Oct 26, 2013) vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) at Illinois (Oct 26, 2013) vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) at Notre Dame (Sep 21, 2013) vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) at Notre Dame (Sep 21, 2013) vs South Florida (Sep 07, 2013) vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013)

OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS Rushes Yards Rushing TD Rushes Long Rush Pass attempts Pass completions Yards Passing TD Passes

Long Pass Receptions Yards Receiving TD Receptions

Long Reception Field Goals

Long Field Goal Punts Punting Avg Long Punt Punts inside 20 Long Punt Return Long Kickoff Return Tackles Sacks

27 142 2 64 46 26 241 2 2 2 2 58 8 96 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 58 2 2 2 49 49 11 50.9 62 5 40 54 15 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0

Cobb, David, vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) Miller, Braxton, vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) Miller, Braxton, vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) Coleman, Tevin, vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Rudock, Jake, at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Rudock, Jake, at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Rudock, Jake, at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) TERRELL, Zach, vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) Rudock, Jake, at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Roberson, Tre, vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Armstrong, T., at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Gardner, Devin, vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) DAVIS, Corey, vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) DAVIS, Corey, vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) DAVIS, Corey, vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) MUSSMAN, Clark, vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) Ruiz, Martin, vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) JONES, TJ, at Notre Dame (Sep 21, 2013) Bullock, Damon, at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Fiedorowicz, CJ, at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) Latimer, Cody, vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Bolser, Ted, vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Abdullah, Ameer, at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Burtch, Sam, at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Bell, Kenny, at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Brown, Corey, vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) Chesson, Jehu, vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) KLOSS, Marvin, vs South Florida (Sep 07, 2013) Budzien, Jeff, at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) WILLIAMSON,J, vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) KLOSS, Marvin, vs South Florida (Sep 07, 2013) Wile, Matt, vs Michigan (Nov 02, 2013) SCHROEDER, J., vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) Liste, Nick, vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) SCHROEDER, J., vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) Johnston, C, vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) Williams, F., vs Purdue (Oct 19, 2013) Stubbs, Andre, vs Youngstown State (Sep 14, 2013) LATTIMORE, DeDe, vs South Florida (Sep 07, 2013) SIMON, Johnnie, vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) FORTE, Julius, vs South Florida (Sep 07, 2013) TUITT, at Notre Dame (Sep 21, 2013) Laihinen, John, vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) Bates, Houston, at Illinois (Oct 26, 2013) Evans, Ciante, at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Gregory, Randy, at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) Odenigbo, I., at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) Manuel, James, vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) Cockran,Theiren, vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) Bosa, Joey, vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) SKOV,S, vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) LUEDERS,B, vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014)

OPPONENT TEAM GAME HIGHS Rushes Yards Rushing Yards Per Rush TD Rushes Pass attempts Pass completions Yards Passing Yards Per Pass TD Passes Total Plays Total Offense Yards Per Play Points Sacks By First Downs Penalties

Penalty Yards Turnovers Interceptions By

50 273 6.8 2 2 48 27 259 7.9 3 75 75 392 6.1 28 28 4 20 8 8 8 86 5 1 1 1

vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) at Northwestern (Nov 23, 2013) vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) vs Western Michigan (Aug 30, 2013) vs Minnesota (Nov 30, 2013) at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013) at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) vs Ohio State (Dec 07, 2013) vs South Florida (Sep 07, 2013) at Notre Dame (Sep 21, 2013) vs Stanford (Jan 01, 2014) at Notre Dame (Sep 21, 2013) at Nebraska (Nov 16, 2013) at Notre Dame (Sep 21, 2013) at Iowa Hawkeyes (Oct. 5, 2013) vs Indiana (Oct 12, 2013)

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Individual Season/Career Statistics (as of Mar 10, 2014) All games SEASON att

CAREER

Rushing

gp

td

lg avg/g

gp

att

gain

loss

net

avg

td

lg

avg/g

Langford, J. Hill, Nick Williams,Delton Shelton, R.J. Bullough, Riley Cook, Connor Burbridge, A. Sadler, Mike O'Connor, Tyler Fowler, Bennie Tompkins, Nick Maxwell, Andrew Kings, M. Lippett, Tony Mumphery, Keith TEAM Total Opponents

14 292 1482 60 1422 4.9 18 12 67 357 13 344 5.1 1 9 38 240 2 238 6.3 1 13 21 159 6 153 7.3 2 14 22 91 8 83 3.8 0 14 69 221 145 76 1.1 1 13 4 67 5 62 15.5 0 14 2 28 0 28 14.0 0 3 8 29 5 24 3.0 0 13 5 27 7 20 4.0 0 1 6 18 2 16 2.7 0 6 3 15 2 13 4.3 0 14 3 7 1 6 2.0 0 14 1 3 0 3 3.0 0 14 2 3 1 2 1.0 0 12 26 0 57 -57 -2.2 0 14 569 2747 314 2433 4.3 23 14 425 1632 420 1212 2.9 8

gain loss

44 101.6 35 28.7 42 26.4 35 11.8 19 5.9 20 5.4 35 4.8 25 2.0 10 8.0 17 1.5 4 16.0 8 2.2 7 0.4 3 0.2 3 0.1 0 -4.8 44 173.8 64 86.6

37 40 9 13 14 17 24 41 3 44 1 28 22 41 41

301 118 38 21 22 73 5 3 8 16 6 50 4 4 8

1507 538 240 159 91 232 71 54 29 113 18 79 8 13 41

62 31 2 6 8 159 5 0 5 11 2 211 1 13 1

1445 507 238 153 83 73 66 54 24 102 16 -132 7 0 40

4.8 4.3 6.3 7.3 3.8 1.0 13.2 18.0 3.0 6.4 2.7 -2.6 1.8 0.0 5.0

18 2 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

44 35 42 35 19 20 35 26 10 22 4 10 7 10 14

39.1 12.7 26.4 11.8 5.9 4.3 2.8 1.3 8.0 2.3 16.0 -4.7 0.3 0.0 1.0

Passing

gp

effic comp-att-int

Cook, Connor Maxwell, Andrew O'Connor, Tyler Lippett, Tony Shelton, R.J. Total Opponents

14 6 3 14 13 14 14

135.53 223-380-6 74.47 15-33-0 118.29 9-14-0 236.00 1-2-0 -200.00 0-1-1 129.97 248-430-7 92.28 213-448-17 no.

net avg

td

lg avg/g

gp

58.7 2755 22 45.5 114 0 64.3 90 0 50.0 5 1 0.0 0 0 57.7 2964 23 47.5 2319 12

pct

yds

87 196.8 26 19.0 18 30.0 5 0.4 0 0.0 87 211.7 58 165.6

17 134.31 28 105.54 3 118.29 41 236.00 13 -200.00

effic comp-att-int

232-397-7 278-530-9 9-14-0 1-2-0 0-1-1

pct

yds

td

lg

avg/g

58.4 52.5 64.3 50.0 0.0

2849 3014 90 5 0

23 14 0 1 0

87 48 18 5 0

167.6 107.6 30.0 0.1 0.0

Receiving

gp

yds

avg

td

lg avg/g

gp

no.

yds

avg

td

lg

avg/g

Lippett, Tony Kings, M. Fowler, Bennie Langford, J. Burbridge, A. Mumphery, Keith Price, Josiah Pendleton, T. Sims, Andre Gleichert, A. Lyles, Jamal Shelton, R.J. Hill, Nick Bullough, Riley Williams,Delton Macksood, Matt Arnett, D. Total Opponents

14 44 613 14 43 513 13 36 622 14 28 157 13 22 194 14 18 299 14 17 210 14 8 127 10 7 55 13 6 49 14 5 58 13 4 6 12 3 22 14 3 11 9 2 13 12 1 8 1 1 7 14 248 2964 14 213 2319

13.9 11.9 17.3 5.6 8.8 16.6 12.4 15.9 7.9 8.2 11.6 1.5 7.3 3.7 6.5 8.0 7.0 12.0 10.9

2 3 6 1 0 3 4 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 12

48 43.8 48 36.6 87 47.8 24 11.2 26 14.9 72 21.4 39 15.0 49 9.1 20 5.5 18 3.8 18 4.1 7 0.5 10 1.8 7 0.8 9 1.4 8 0.7 7 7.0 87 211.7 58 165.6

41 22 44 37 24 41 14 23 23 24 14 13 40 14 9 12 8

84 47 93 28 51 62 17 8 10 7 5 4 3 3 2 1 4

1049 538 1341 157 558 853 210 127 78 57 58 6 22 11 13 8 76

12.5 11.4 14.4 5.6 10.9 13.8 12.4 15.9 7.8 8.1 11.6 1.5 7.3 3.7 6.5 8.0 19.0

4 3 11 1 2 4 4 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

48 48 87 24 38 72 39 49 20 18 18 7 10 7 9 8 48

25.6 24.5 30.5 4.2 23.2 20.8 15.0 5.5 3.4 2.4 4.1 0.5 0.6 0.8 1.4 0.7 9.5

61 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Individual Season/Career Statistics (as of Mar 10, 2014) All games SEASON Total Offense

62

g plays

rush

CAREER pass

total avg/g

Cook, Connor Langford, J. Hill, Nick Williams,Delton Shelton, R.J. Maxwell, Andrew O'Connor, Tyler Bullough, Riley Burbridge, A. Sadler, Mike Fowler, Bennie Tompkins, Nick Lippett, Tony Kings, M. Mumphery, Keith TEAM Total Opponents

14 14 12 9 13 6 3 14 13 14 13 1 14 14 14 12 14 14

449 76 2755 2831 292 1422 0 1422 67 344 0 344 38 238 0 238 22 153 0 153 36 13 114 127 22 24 90 114 22 83 0 83 4 62 0 62 2 28 0 28 5 20 0 20 6 16 0 16 3 3 5 8 3 6 0 6 2 2 0 2 26 -57 0 -57 999 2433 2964 5397 873 1212 2319 3531

Scoring

td

fg

Langford, J. Geiger, Michael Fowler, Bennie Price, Josiah Muma, Kevin Mumphery, Keith Calhoun, S. Kings, M. Lippett, Tony Pendleton, T. Shelton, R.J. Sims, Andre Drummond, K. Allen, Denicos Gleichert, A. Williams,Delton Hill, Nick Cook, Connor Total Opponents

19 - 15-16 6 4 - 4-6 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 51 19-22 21 13-18

202.2 101.6 28.7 26.4 11.8 21.2 38.0 5.9 4.8 2.0 1.5 16.0 0.6 0.4 0.1 -4.8 385.5 252.2

PAT rush rcv pass dxp saf

kick

36-38 12-13 48-51 20-20

-

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 0-1

-

pts

- 114 - 81 - 36 - 24 - 24 - 18 - 18 - 18 - 12 - 12 - 12 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 - 411 - 185

g

plays

rush

pass

total

avg/g

17 37 40 9 13 28 3 14 24 41 44 1 41 22 41

470 301 118 38 22 580 22 22 5 3 16 6 6 4 8

73 1445 507 238 153 -132 24 83 66 54 102 16 0 7 40

2849 0 0 0 0 3014 90 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0

2922 1445 507 238 153 2882 114 83 66 54 102 16 5 7 40

171.9 39.1 12.7 26.4 11.8 102.9 38.0 5.9 2.8 1.3 2.3 16.0 0.1 0.3 1.0

td

fg

20 - 15-16 13 4 - 5-7 4 3 3 4 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 -

PAT rush rcv pass dxp saf

kick

36-38 12-13 -

-

1 -

Punt Returns

no.

yds avg

td

lg

no.

yds

avg

td

lg

Kings, M. Sims, Andre Hill, Nick Total Opponents

20 15 1 36 18

206 129 18 353 120

10.3 8.6 18.0 9.8 6.7

0 0 0 0 0

30 33 18 33 40

20 26 14

206 221 106

10.3 8.5 7.6

0 0 0

30 44 31

Kick Returns

no.

yds avg

td

lg

no.

yds

avg

td

lg

Shelton, R.J. Hill, Nick Harris, Darien Drone, Denzel Kings, M. Elsworth, Kyler Total Opponents

9 5 1 1 1 1 18 45

199 95 14 3 16 18 345 953

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

36 27 14 3 16 18 36 54

9 74 1 1 1 2

199 1764 14 3 16 35

22.1 23.8 14.0 3.0 16.0 17.5

0 0 0 0 0 0

36 67 14 3 16 18

22.1 19.0 14.0 3.0 16.0 18.0 19.2 21.2

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

-

-

-

pts

120 81 78 24 27 26 18 18 24 12 12 6 6 6 6 6 12 6


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Individual Season/Career Statistics (as of Mar 10, 2014) All games SEASON

CAREER

Interceptions

no.

yds avg

td

lg

no.

yds

avg

td

lg

Drummond, K. Dennard, D. Waynes, Trae Jones, Jairus Lewis, Isaiah Calhoun, S. Williamson, RJ Total Opponents

4 4 3 2 2 1 1 17 7

55 38 11 6 0 56 0 166 99

13.8 9.5 3.7 3.0 0.0 56.0 0.0 9.8 14.1

1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 1

31 29 11 3 0 56 0 56 40

8 10 3 2 8 1 3

96 125 11 6 158 56 21

12.0 12.5 3.7 3.0 19.8 56.0 7.0

1 1 0 0 2 1 0

34 38 11 3 40 56 21

Fumble Returns

no.

yds avg

td

lg

no.

yds

avg

td

lg

2 1 3 0

16 45 45 0

2 1

20 45

10.0 45.0

2 1

16 45

Calhoun, S. Allen, Denicos Total Opponents All Purpose

Langford, J. Kings, M. Fowler, Bennie Lippett, Tony Hill, Nick Shelton, R.J. Mumphery, Keith Burbridge, A. Williams,Delton Price, Josiah Sims, Andre Pendleton, T. Bullough, Riley Cook, Connor Lyles, Jamal Calhoun, S. Drummond, K. Gleichert, A. Dennard, D. Sadler, Mike O'Connor, Tyler Elsworth, Kyler Tompkins, Nick Harris, Darien Maxwell, Andrew Waynes, Trae Macksood, Matt Arnett, D. Jones, Jairus Drone, Denzel TEAM Total Opponents

2 1 3 0 g

rush

20 45 65 0

10.0 45.0 21.7 0.0

rcv

pr

kr

14 1422 157 14 6 513 13 20 622 14 3 613 12 344 22 13 153 6 14 2 299 13 62 194 9 238 13 14 0 210 10 0 55 14 0 127 14 83 11 14 76 0 14 0 58 14 0 0 14 0 0 13 0 49 14 0 0 14 28 0 3 24 0 14 0 0 1 16 0 14 0 0 6 13 0 14 0 0 12 0 8 1 0 7 4 0 0 14 0 0 12 -57 0 14 2433 2964 14 1212 2319

0 206 0 0 18 0 0 0 0 0 129 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 353 120

0 16 0 0 95 199 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 18 0 14 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 345 953

Field Goals

att good

Geiger, Michael Muma, Kevin Total Opponents

16 6 22 18

15 4 19 13

ir

total avg/g

g

rush

rcv

pr

kr

ir

total

avg/g

0 1579 112.8 0 741 52.9 0 642 49.4 0 616 44.0 0 479 39.9 0 358 27.5 0 301 21.5 0 256 19.7 0 251 27.9 0 210 15.0 0 184 18.4 0 127 9.1 0 94 6.7 0 76 5.4 0 58 4.1 56 56 4.0 55 55 3.9 0 49 3.8 38 38 2.7 0 28 2.0 0 24 8.0 0 18 1.3 0 16 16.0 0 14 1.0 0 13 2.2 11 11 0.8 0 8 0.7 0 7 7.0 6 6 1.5 0 3 0.2 0 -57 -4.8 166 6261 447.2 99 4703 335.9

37 22 44 41 40 13 41 24 9 14 23 23 14 17 14 27 39 24 44 41 3 54 1 27 28 23 12 8 29 53

1445 7 102 0 507 153 40 66 238 0 0 0 83 73 0 0 0 0 0 54 24 0 16 0 -132 0 0 4 0 0

157 538 1341 1049 22 6 853 558 13 210 78 127 11 0 58 0 0 57 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 76 0 0

0 206 0 0 106 0 0 0 0 0 221 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 36 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 16 336 0 1764 199 0 -11 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 35 0 14 0 0 0 0 0 3

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 56 96 0 125 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 6 0

1602 767 1779 1049 2399 358 893 613 251 210 299 127 94 73 58 56 101 57 125 54 24 71 16 14 -132 11 8 80 6 3

43.3 34.9 40.4 25.6 60.0 27.5 21.8 25.5 27.9 15.0 13.0 5.5 6.7 4.3 4.1 2.1 2.6 2.4 2.8 1.3 8.0 1.3 16.0 0.5 -4.7 0.5 0.7 10.0 0.2 0.1

long

blkd

att

good

long

blkd

49 30 49 49

0 0 0 0

16 7

15 5

49 30

0 0

63 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State Individual Season/Career Statistics (as of Mar 10, 2014) All games SEASON

CAREER

Punting

no. yds avg

Sadler, Mike Total Opponents

76 3233 42.5 69 76 3233 42.5 69 95 4115 43.3 62

Kickoffs

no. yds avg

Muma, Kevin Cronin, Kevin Sadler, Mike Total Opponents

80 2 1 83 46

## Defensive Leaders

28 27 40 34 31 9 15 26 60 89 91 44 93 42 43 97 41 45 23 29 39 7C 36 30 6 37 87 33 2 17 14 3K TM 3 8 52 11 3P 21 92 86 9H

Allen, Denicos Drummond, K. Bullough, Max Jones, Taiwan Dennard, D. Lewis, Isaiah Waynes, Trae Williamson, RJ Reynolds, M. Calhoun, S. Hoover, Tyler Rush, Marcus Knox, Damon Drone, Denzel Davis, Ed Scarpinato, M. Elsworth, Kyler Harris, Darien Jones, Jairus Meyers, Mark Edmondson, J. Cox, Demetrious Colquhoun, A. Bullough, Riley Hicks, Mylan Robinson, Ezra Clemons, B. Langford, J. Hicks, Darian Muma, Kevin Lippett, Tony Kings, M. TEAM Sadler, Mike Thomas, L. Pepper, Taybor Lyles, Jamal Pendleton, T. Sims, Andre Gleichert, A. Macksood, Matt Heath, Joel Total Opponents

4980 125 65 5170 2813 gp

no.

0 0 1

tb ob

62.2 35 62.5 1 65.0 1 62.3 37 61.2 26 ua

lg blk

a total

avg

lg

blk

42.4

70

2

no.

0 0 0 0 1

14 45 53 98 14 49 42 91 13 25 51 76 14 38 29 67 14 33 29 62 13 29 29 58 14 35 15 50 14 17 27 44 14 15 22 37 14 20 17 37 11 10 21 31 14 13 17 30 14 9 13 2 2 14 5 12 1 7 14 8 9 17 14 4 11 1 5 14 5 9 14 14 4 8 12 4 5 7 12 14 6 3 9 13 3 3 6 14 3 3 6 10 1 4 5 14 1 2 3 14 1 2 3 12 1 1 2 6 . 2 2 14 1 1 2 14 2 . 2 14 . 1 1 14 1 . 1 14 1 . 1 12 1 . 1 14 1 . 1 7 1 . 1 14 1 . 1 14 . 1 1 14 . 1 1 10 1 . 1 13 . 1 1 12 1 . 1 9 . . . 14 396 446 842 14 512 512 102

yds

216 9164

tfl sack int pbu

16.5 3.5 9.5 7.0 3.5 1.0 1.5 3.0 3.5 14.0 4.5 7.5 2.5 5.0 4.0 1.0 1.5 0.5 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 91 71

fr

yds

avg

tb

ob

297 18946 2 125 2 113

63.8 62.5 56.5

94 1 1

5 0 0

ff blk

5 .5 . 1 1 1 . 4 6 . 1 1 .5 . 2 . 1 . . . . . . 4 10 . 2 . 2 8 1 . . 3 5 1 . . 1 2 . . . . . . . 7 .5 1 . 4 2 4 .0 . 2 . 2 5 .0 . 3 1 1 1 .0 . 1 . . 2 .5 . 1 1 . 4 .0 . . . . 1 .0 . 2 . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . 2 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . 32 17 46 11 10 17 7 44 8 9

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . 1 2

gp

54 39 53 41 44 53 23 25 43 27 48 41 16 53 27 14 54 27 29 14 13 14 15 14 23 12 7 37 14 54 41 22 41 20 27 14 23 23 24 12 14

ua

a

total

3 4 1 . 1 1 . 1 .

. . 4 1 1 . 1 . .

3 4 5 1 2 1 1 1 .

1 41 1 37 87 74 121 178 60 63 105 6 2 110 117 37 18 36 35 23 35 24 19 29 64 63 63 9 15 19 36 8 14 4 11 33 40 5 11 32 26 6 3 3 3 3 3 1 4 1 2 4 4 1 1 . 2 9 4 2 . 5 2 10 9 1 .

2 78 1 61 2 99 1 23 1 67 2 27 55 71 58 43 93 1 26 24 55 22 15 73 16 58 9 6 6 5 3 8 2 2 13 2 7 19 1

tfl

sack int pbu

46.0 19.5 1 7 9.0 1.0 8 10 30.5 8.0 3 8 13.0 1.5 . 4 10.0 1.0 10 20 5.0 . 8 18 2.0 0.5 3 5 4.0 . 3 6 5.5 1.0 . 1 16.5 8.5 1 2 9.0 7.5 . 6 27.0 11.0 . 13 2.5 1.0 . 1 10.0 6.0 1 4 4.5 4.0 . . 1.0 1.0 . 2 7.5 3.0 . 3 0.5 . . . 1.5 . 2 1 0.0 . . . 0.0 . . . 0.0 . . . 0.0 . . . 0.0 . . . 0.0 . . . 0.0 . . . 0.5 . . . 1.0 1.0 . . 0.0 . . . 0.0 . . . 0.5 . . 5 0.0 . . . 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0

64 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

. . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . 1

fr

ff blk

2 3 4 . 3 . . 1 1 2 3 3 . 1 . . 1 . 2 . . . . . . . . 1 . . . .

1 . . . 1 . . . . . . 1 . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . 1 . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . 1 .

3 1 . . 1 1 1 1 . 4 1 1 . 2 . . 1 . 1 . . . . . . 1 . 2 . . 1 .


2013 STATISTICS 2013 BIG TEN STANDINGS

COACHES’ ALL-BIG TEN TEAM

TEAM Legends Division 1. Michigan State 2. Nebraska Iowa 4. Minnesota 5. Michigan 6. Northwestern

W

-CONFERENCEL PCT. PF

PA

W

-OVERALLL PCT. PF

PA

8 5 5 4 3 1

0 3 3 4 5 7

1.000 .625 .625 .500 .375 .125

238 218 187 150 253 149

88 196 157 188 234 230

13 9 8 8 7 5

1 4 5 5 6 7

.929 .692 .615 .615 .538 .417

411 415 342 334 419 314

185 323 246 289 349 325

Leaders Division 1. Ohio State 2. Wisconsin 3. Penn State 4. Indiana 5. Illinois 6. Purdue

8 6 4 3 1 0

0 2 4 5 7 8

1.000 .750 .500 .375 .125 .000

368 279 211 283 195 104

182 129 256 335 326 314

12 9 7 5 4 1

2 4 5 7 8 11

.857 .692 .583 .417 .333 .083

637 453 344 461 356 179

317 212 314 466 425 456

BIG TEN AWARDS Graham-George Offensive Player of the Year Braxton Miller, Ohio State Nagurski-Woodson Defensive Player of the Year Chris Borland, Wisconsin Thompson-Randle El Freshman of the Year Christian Hackenberg, Penn State

FIRST TEAM Braxton Miller, Ohio State Ameer Abdullah, Nebraska Carlos Hyde, Ohio State Allen Robinson, Penn State Jared Abbrederis, Wisconsin Corey Linsley, Ohio State John Urschel, Penn State Ryan Groy, Wisconsin Brandon Scherff, Iowa Taylor Lewan, Michigan C.J. Fiedorowicz, Iowa Jeff Budzien, Northwestern

OFFENSE Quarterback Running Back Running Back Receiver Receiver Center Guard Guard Tackle Tackle Tight End Kicker

SECOND TEAM Connor Cook, Michigan State Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin James White, Wisconsin Jeremy Gallon, Michigan Corey Brown, Ohio State Cole Pensick, Nebraska Blake Treadwell, Michigan State Andrew Norwell, Ohio State Brett Van Sloten, Iowa Jack Mewhort, Ohio State Devin Funchess, Michigan Mitch Ewald, Indiana

FIRST TEAM Shilique Calhoun, Michigan State Ra’Shede Hageman, Minnesota Randy Gregory, Nebraska DaQuan Jones, Penn State Max Bullough, Michigan State Ryan Shazier, Ohio State Chris Borland, Wisconsin Darqueze Dennard, Michigan State* Kurtis Drummond, Michigan State* Isaiah Lewis, Michigan State* Brock Vereen, Minnesota* Ciante Evans, Nebraska* Bradley Roby, Ohio State* Mike Sadler, Michigan State* Cody Webster, Purdue

DEFENSE Line Line Line Line Linebacker Linebacker Linebacker Defensive Back Defensive Back Defensive Back Defensive Back Defensive Back Defensive Back Punter

SECOND TEAM Carl Davis, Iowa Frank Clark, Michigan Michael Bennett, Ohio State Noah Spence, Ohio State Anthony Hitchens, Iowa James Morris, Iowa Denicos Allen, Michigan State Blake Countess, Michigan# Stanley Jean-Baptiste, Nebraska#

Hayes-Schembechler Coach of the Year (coaches vote) Mark Dantonio, Michigan State

HONORABLE MENTION (Michigan State only): C Jack Allen, OT Fou Fonoti, OG Dan France, RB Jeremy Langford, DL Marcus Rush, CB Trae Waynes.

Dave McClain Coach of the Year (media vote) Mark Dantonio, Michigan State

MEDIA ALL-BIG TEN TEAM

Griese-Brees Quarterback of the Year Braxton Miller, Ohio State Richter-Howard Receiver of the Year Allen Robinson, Penn State Ameche-Dayne Running Back of the Year Carlos Hyde, Ohio State Kwalick-Clark Tight End of the Year Devin Funchess, Michigan Rimington-Pace Offensive Lineman of the Year Taylor Lewan, Michigan Smith-Brown Defensive Lineman of the Year Shilique Calhoun, Michigan State Butkus-Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year Chris Borland, Wisconsin Tatum-Woodson Defensive Back of the Year Darqueze Dennard, Michigan State Bakken-Andersen Kicker of the Year Jeff Budzien, Northwestern Eddleman-Fields Punter of the Year Cody Webster, Purdue Big Ten Sportsmanship Award (Michigan State only) Tyler Hoover

FIRST TEAM Braxton Miller, Ohio State Ameer Abdullah, Nebraska Carlos Hyde, Ohio State Allen Robinson, Penn State Jared Abbrederis, Wisconsin Corey Linsley, Ohio State Andrew Norwell, Ohio State John Urschel, Penn State Taylor Lewan, Michigan Jack Mewhort, Ohio State Devin Funchess, Michigan Jeff Budzien, Northwestern

OFFENSE Quarterback Running Back Running Back Receiver Receiver Center Guard Guard Tackle Tackle Tight End Kicker

SECOND TEAM Nathan Scheelhaase, Illinois Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin James White, Wisconsin Cody Latimer, Indiana Jeremy Gallon, Michigan Jack Allen, Michigan State Blake Treadwell, Michigan State Ryan Groy, Wisconsin Brandon Scherff, Iowa Rob Havenstein, Wisconsin C.J. Fiedorowicz, Iowa Mike Meyer, Iowa

FIRST TEAM Shilique Calhoun, Michigan State Ra’Shede Hageman, Minnesota Randy Gregory, Nebraska Noah Spence, Ohio State Max Bullough, Michigan State Ryan Shazier, Ohio State Chris Borland, Wisconsin B.J. Lowery, Iowa Blake Countess, Michigan Darqueze Dennard, Michigan State Bradley Roby, Ohio State Cody Webster, Purdue

DEFENSE SECOND TEAM Line Theiren Cockran, Minnesota Line Tyler Scott, Northwestern Line Michael Bennett, Ohio State Line DaQuan Jones, Penn State Linebacker Jonathan Brown, Illinois Linebacker James Morris, Iowa Linebacker Denicos Allen, Michigan State Defensive Back Kurtis Drummond, Michigan State Ciante Evans, Nebraska Defensive Back Defensive Back Stanley Jean-Baptiste, Nebraska Defensive Back Ricardo Allen, Purdue Punter Mike Sadler, Michigan State

HONORABLE MENTION (Michigan State only): QB Connor Cook, OT Fou Fonoti, OG Dan France, K Michael Geiger, RB Jeremy Langford, DB Isaiah Lewis, DL Marcus Rush, CB Trae Waynes. * Additional honorees due to ties; # Second team reduced by two due to additional first-team honorees

2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS

65


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Big Ten Team Statistics Through games of Jan 08, 2014 SCORING OFFENSE 1. Ohio State 2. Indiana 3. Wisconsin 4. Michigan 5. Nebraska 6. Illinois 7. Michigan State 8. Penn State 9. Iowa 10. Northwestern 11. Minnesota 12. Purdue

G

TD

FG

XPT

2XP

14 12 13 13 13 12 14 12 13 12 13 12

87 62 59 52 54 45 51 43 42 35 42 23

9 9 14 18 13 12 19 15 16 23 14 6

80 56 57 49 50 40 48 41 42 35 36 21

2 2 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 0 2 0

SCORING DEFENSE 1. Michigan State 2. Wisconsin 3. Iowa 4. Minnesota 5. Ohio State 6. Nebraska 7. Penn State 8. Michigan 9. Northwestern 10. Illinois 11. Purdue 12. Indiana

G

TD

FG

XPT

2XP

14 13 13 13 14 13 12 13 12 12 12 12

21 25 30 36 42 38 38 40 40 55 61 63

13 13 12 14 9 19 15 24 16 13 9 9

20 21 30 31 36 36 37 37 35 52 61 61

0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0

TOTAL OFFENSE 1. Ohio State 2. Indiana 3. Wisconsin 4. Penn State 5. Illinois 6. Nebraska 7. Northwestern 8. Michigan State 9. Iowa 10. Michigan 11. Minnesota 12. Purdue

G

Rush

14 12 13 12 12 13 12 14 13 13 13 12

4321 2422 3689 2088 1668 2804 2069 2433 2339 1634 2538 805

TOTAL DEFENSE 1. Michigan State 2. Iowa 3. Wisconsin 4. Nebraska 5. Michigan 6. Minnesota 7. Ohio State 8. Penn State 9. Northwestern 10. Purdue 11. Illinois 12. Indiana

G

Rush

14 13 13 13 13 13 14 12 12 12 12 12

1212 1669 1333 2030 1822 2056 1532 1728 2012 2825 2863 2853

Pass Plays

2846 3680 2562 3110 3452 2557 2726 2964 2562 3221 1925 2590

1003 928 912 910 866 962 889 999 932 893 853 745

Pass Plays

2319 2271 2633 2790 3007 2796 3752 2848 3069 2694 2915 3482

873 861 839 926 912 858 1000 864 930 886 867 940

DXP Saf

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1

DXP Saf

Yards

7167 6102 6251 5198 5120 5361 4795 5397 4901 4855 4463 3395 Yards

3531 3940 3966 4820 4829 4852 5284 4576 5081 5519 5778 6335

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 1 0

Pts

Avg/G

637 461 453 419 415 356 411 344 342 314 334 179

45.5 38.4 34.8 32.2 31.9 29.7 29.4 28.7 26.3 26.2 25.7 14.9

Pts

Avg/G

185 212 246 289 317 323 314 349 325 425 456 466

13.2 16.3 18.9 22.2 22.6 24.8 26.2 26.8 27.1 35.4 38.0 38.8

Avg/P TD

7.1 6.6 6.9 5.7 5.9 5.6 5.4 5.4 5.3 5.4 5.2 4.6

83 61 57 43 43 49 31 46 37 48 35 21

Avg/P TD

4.0 4.6 4.7 5.2 5.3 5.7 5.3 5.3 5.5 6.2 6.7 6.7

20 28 24 38 37 35 40 34 36 55 54 59

Avg/G

511.9 508.5 480.8 433.2 426.7 412.4 399.6 385.5 377.0 373.5 343.3 282.9 Avg/G

252.2 303.1 305.1 370.8 371.5 373.2 377.4 381.3 423.4 459.9 481.5 527.9

RUSHING OFFENSE 1. Ohio State 2. Wisconsin 3. Nebraska 4. Indiana 5. Minnesota 6. Iowa 7. Penn State 8. Michigan State 9. Northwestern 10. Illinois 11. Michigan 12. Purdue

G

Att.

Yards

Avg/A

Long

TD

Avg/G

14 13 13 12 13 13 12 14 12 12 13 12

635 557 584 458 586 557 501 569 507 411 498 319

4321 3689 2804 2422 2538 2339 2088 2433 2069 1668 1634 805

6.8 6.6 4.8 5.3 4.3 4.2 4.2 4.3 4.1 4.1 3.3 2.5

70 93 62 75 60 43 61 44 55 55 40 62

45 35 24 25 23 18 22 23 16 20 27 6

308.6 283.8 215.7 201.8 195.2 179.9 174.0 173.8 172.4 139.0 125.7 67.1

RUSHING DEFENSE 1. Michigan State 2. Wisconsin 3. Ohio State 4. Iowa 5. Michigan 6. Penn State 7. Nebraska 8. Minnesota 9. Northwestern 10. Purdue 11. Indiana 12. Illinois

G

Att.

Yards

Avg/A

Long

TD

Avg/G

14 13 14 13 13 12 13 13 12 12 12 12

425 414 466 466 478 441 538 453 485 529 525 513

1212 1333 1532 1669 1822 1728 2030 2056 2012 2825 2853 2863

2.9 3.2 3.3 3.6 3.8 3.9 3.8 4.5 4.1 5.3 5.4 5.6

64 61 48 59 53 58 47 64 71 70 93 75

8 8 9 8 14 16 21 19 16 28 35 29

86.6 102.5 109.4 128.4 140.2 144.0 156.2 158.2 167.7 235.4 237.8 238.6

PASS OFFENSE 1. Indiana 2. Illinois 3. Penn State 4. Michigan 5. Northwestern 6. Purdue 7. Michigan State 8. Ohio State 9. Wisconsin

G Comp-Att-Int

11. Nebraska 12. Minnesota

12 12 12 13 12 12 14 14 13 13 13 13

PASS DEFENSE 1. Michigan State 2. Iowa 3. Wisconsin 4. Nebraska 5. Minnesota 6. Purdue 7. Michigan 8. Penn State 9. Illinois 10. Northwestern 11. Ohio State 12. Indiana

14 13 13 13 13 12 13 12 12 12 14 12

Iowa

279-470-14 302-455-14 241-409-10 237-395-13 241-382-13 235-426-13 248-430-7 238-368-9 217-355-15 213-375-15 218-378-13 137-267-7

G Comp-Att-Int

213-448-17 217-395-13 227-425-9 210-388-14 247-405-10 233-357-13 243-434-17 249-423-13 231-354-3 266-445-19 330-534-16 253-415-7

Pct.

Yds

59.4 66.4 58.9 60.0 63.1 55.2 57.7 64.7 61.1 56.8 57.7 51.3

3680 3452 3110 3221 2726 2590 2964 2846 2562 2562 2557 1925

Pct.

Yds

47.5 54.9 53.4 54.1 61.0 65.3 56.0 58.9 65.3 59.8 61.8 61.0

2319 2271 2633 2790 2796 2694 3007 2848 2915 3069 3752 3482

66 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

Avg/A TD

7.8 7.6 7.6 8.2 7.1 6.1 6.9 7.7 7.2 6.8 6.8 7.2

36 23 21 21 15 15 23 38 22 19 25 12

Avg/A TD

5.2 5.7 6.2 7.2 6.9 7.5 6.9 6.7 8.2 6.9 7.0 8.4

12 20 16 17 16 27 23 18 25 20 31 24

Avg/G

306.7 287.7 259.2 247.8 227.2 215.8 211.7 203.3 197.1 197.1 196.7 148.1 Avg/G

165.6 174.7 202.5 214.6 215.1 224.5 231.3 237.3 242.9 255.8 268.0 290.2


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Big Ten Team Statistics Through games of Jan 08, 2014 PASS EFFICIENCY 1. Ohio State 2. Indiana 3. Illinois 4. Michigan 5. Penn State 6. Wisconsin 7. Michigan State 8. Nebraska 9. Northwestern 10. Iowa 11. Minnesota 12. Purdue

14 12 12 13 12 13 14 13 12 13 13 12

PASS DEFENSE EFFIC. 1. Michigan State 2. Iowa 3. Wisconsin 4. Nebraska 5. Penn State 6. Michigan 7. Northwestern 8. Minnesota 9. Ohio State 10. Purdue 11. Indiana 12. Illinois

14 13 13 13 12 13 12 13 14 12 12 12

213-448-17 217-395-13 227-425-9 210-388-14 249-423-13 243-434-17 266-445-19 247-405-10 330-534-16 233-357-13 253-415-7 231-354-3

KICKOFF RETURNS 1. Wisconsin 2. Purdue 3. Ohio State 4. Nebraska 5. Michigan 6. Minnesota 7. Iowa 8. Northwestern 9. Indiana 10. Illinois 11. Michigan State 12. Penn State

G

No.

Yards

TD

Long

Avg.

13 12 14 13 13 13 13 12 12 12 14 12

31 49 29 41 51 40 39 30 50 52 18 36

716 1129 665 934 1128 884 857 652 1052 1015 345 689

1 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0

91 100 51 99 44 98 96 47 48 100 36 44

23.1 23.0 22.9 22.8 22.1 22.1 22.0 21.7 21.0 19.5 19.2 19.1

PUNT RETURN AVG 1. Iowa 2. Indiana 3. Illinois 4. Purdue 5. Michigan State 6. Minnesota 7. Ohio State 8. Penn State 9. Wisconsin 10. Northwestern 11. Michigan 12. Nebraska

G

No.

Yards

TD

Long

Avg.

13 12 12 12 14 13 14 12 13 12 13 13

24 10 21 9 36 19 30 23 28 9 18 23

337 130 272 104 353 170 243 184 208 64 114 70

2 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0

83 58 67 40 33 65 65 31 35 22 30 19

14.0 13.0 13.0 11.6 9.8 8.9 8.1 8.0 7.4 7.1 6.3 3.0

G Comp-Att-Int

238-368-9 279-470-14 302-455-14 237-395-13 241-409-10 217-355-15 248-430-7 218-378-13 241-382-13 213-375-15 137-267-7 235-426-13

G Comp-Att-Int

Pct.

Yds

64.7 59.4 66.4 60.0 58.9 61.1 57.7 57.7 63.1 56.8 51.3 55.2

2846 3680 3452 3221 3110 2562 2964 2557 2726 2562 1925 2590

Pct.

Yds

47.5 54.9 53.4 54.1 58.9 56.0 59.8 61.0 61.8 65.3 61.0 65.3

2319 2271 2633 2790 2848 3007 3069 2796 3752 2694 3482 2915

Avg/G TD

203.3 306.7 287.7 247.8 259.2 197.1 211.7 196.7 227.2 197.1 148.1 215.8

38 36 23 21 21 22 23 25 15 19 12 15

Avg/G TD

165.6 174.7 202.5 214.6 237.3 231.3 255.8 215.1 268.0 224.5 290.2 242.9

12 20 16 17 18 23 20 16 31 27 24 25

Effic.

158.8 144.5 140.6 139.5 134.9 133.7 130.0 129.4 129.2 122.9 121.5 111.8 Effic.

92.3 113.4 113.6 121.8 123.3 123.8 124.0 127.1 134.0 146.3 147.2 156.0

INTERCEPTIONS 1. Northwestern 2. Michigan 3. Michigan State 4. Ohio State 5. Nebraska 6. Purdue 7. Iowa 8. Penn State 9. Minnesota 10. Wisconsin 11. Indiana 12. Illinois

G

No.

Yards

TD

Long

Avg.

12 13 14 14 13 12 13 12 13 13 12 12

19 17 17 16 14 13 13 13 10 9 7 3

261 322 166 197 257 59 174 127 191 30 55 22

4 2 2 2 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0

56 72 56 63 43 27 71 33 89 20 28 16

13.7 18.9 9.8 12.3 18.4 4.5 13.4 9.8 19.1 3.3 7.9 7.3

PUNTING 1. Purdue 2. Ohio State 3. Michigan State 4. Illinois 5. Nebraska 6. Iowa 7. Michigan 8. Minnesota 9. Wisconsin 10. Penn State 11. Indiana 12. Northwestern

G

No.

Yards

Avg/P

Ret. Avg/R

12 14 14 12 13 13 13 13 13 12 12 12

73 49 76 51 71 65 62 62 53 55 54 70

3158 2156 3233 2094 2954 2598 2527 2687 2045 2086 2110 2504

43.3 44.0 42.5 41.1 41.6 40.0 40.8 43.3 38.6 37.9 39.1 35.8

75 115 120 117 121 103 178 271 94 40 140 61

KICKOFF COVERAGE 1. Indiana 2. Ohio State 3. Northwestern 4. Wisconsin 5. Minnesota 6. Nebraska 7. Michigan State 8. Illinois 9. Iowa 10. Michigan 11. Penn State 12. Purdue

G

No.

Yards

Avg.

Ret.

TB

NetAvg

12 77 14 107 12 65 13 85 13 68 13 78 14 83 12 66 13 69 13 76 12 67 12 38

4873 6446 3982 5119 4233 4902 5170 4134 4258 4545 4079 2234

63.3 60.2 61.3 60.2 62.2 62.8 62.3 62.6 61.7 59.8 60.9 58.8

643 1361 829 1313 946 566 953 719 908 792 1186 760

38 28 21 15 22 48 37 35 30 37 18 6

42.6 41.0 40.4 40.4 40.2 40.2 39.7 38.5 37.7 37.2 36.5 34.8

FIELD GOALS 1. Nebraska 2. Northwestern 3. Ohio State 4. Michigan State 5. Indiana 6. Minnesota 7. Iowa 8. Michigan 9. Illinois 10. Wisconsin 11. Penn State 12. Purdue

G

Made

Att

Pct.

13 12 14 14 12 13 13 13 12 13 12 12

13 23 9 19 9 14 16 18 12 14 15 6

14 25 10 22 11 18 22 25 17 21 23 12

.929 .920 .900 .864 .818 .778 .727 .720 .706 .667 .652 .500

TB

Net/P

2 2 9 2 7 3 2 6 3 5 3 6

41.7 40.8 38.6 38.0 37.9 37.5 37.2 37.0 35.7 35.4 35.4 33.2

1.0 2.3 1.6 2.3 1.7 1.6 2.9 4.4 1.8 0.7 2.6 0.9

67 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Big Ten Team Statistics Through games of Jan 08, 2014 PAT KICKING 1. Indiana

G

Made

Att

Pct.

Michigan Iowa Illinois Northwestern Wisconsin Penn State Ohio State Purdue Nebraska Michigan State Minnesota

12 13 13 12 12 13 12 14 12 13 14 13

56 49 42 40 35 57 41 80 21 50 48 36

56 49 42 40 35 58 42 82 22 53 51 39

1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .983 .976 .976 .955 .943 .941 .923

SACKS BY 1. Ohio State 2. Nebraska 3. Michigan State 4. Penn State 5. Northwestern 6. Wisconsin 7. Michigan 8. Iowa 9. Indiana 10. Minnesota 11. Illinois 12. Purdue

G

No.

Yards

Avg/G

14 13 14 12 12 13 13 13 12 13 12 12

42 39 32 28 27 26 25 24 20 18 15 14

292 270 207 200 198 148 182 129 126 133 94 60

3.00 3.00 2.29 2.33 2.25 2.00 1.92 1.85 1.67 1.38 1.25 1.17

G

No.

Yards

Avg/G

12. Purdue

13 13 14 13 12 12 14 13 12 12 13 12

15 16 17 17 18 22 22 27 30 36 36 38

61 94 127 140 121 135 136 170 231 198 270 265

1.15 1.23 1.21 1.31 1.50 1.83 1.57 2.08 2.50 3.00 2.77 3.17

FIRST DOWNS 1. Ohio State 2. Indiana 3. Michigan State 4. Nebraska 5. Illinois 6. Wisconsin 7. Penn State 8. Michigan 9. Iowa 10. Northwestern 11. Minnesota 12. Purdue

G

Rush

Pass

Pen

Total

Avg/G

14 12 14 13 12 13 12 13 13 12 13 12

216 121 132 144 114 163 112 100 126 110 134 57

126 163 141 128 154 116 133 149 113 135 93 113

19 16 20 17 20 7 25 17 17 10 11 8

361 300 293 289 288 286 270 266 256 255 238 178

25.8 25.0 20.9 22.2 24.0 22.0 22.5 20.5 19.7 21.2 18.3 14.8

6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12.

SACKS AGAINST 1. Iowa 2. Wisconsin 3. Michigan State

Nebraska

5. Indiana 6. Penn State

Ohio State

8. Minnesota 9. Illinois 10. Northwestern

Michigan

OPPONENT 1ST DOWNS 1. Michigan State 2. Iowa 3. Wisconsin 4. Penn State 5. Minnesota 6. Michigan 7. Nebraska 8. Ohio State 9. Illinois 10. Northwestern 11. Purdue 12. Indiana

G

Rush

Pass

Pen

Total

Avg/G

14 13 13 12 13 13 13 14 12 12 12 12

64 96 76 86 108 108 108 102 133 123 162 149

110 103 113 140 123 138 130 166 131 155 119 149

26 8 20 7 14 9 23 15 20 9 14 12

200 207 209 233 245 255 261 283 284 287 295 310

14.3 15.9 16.1 19.4 18.8 19.6 20.1 20.2 23.7 23.9 24.6 25.8

3RD-DOWN CONVERSIONS 1. Illinois 2. Ohio State 3. Indiana 4. Michigan State 5. Iowa 6. Minnesota 7. Wisconsin 8. Northwestern 9. Nebraska 10. Michigan 11. Penn State 12. Purdue

G

Conv.

Att.

Pct.

12 14 12 14 13 13 13 12 13 13 12 12

81 79 86 94 88 77 74 75 73 71 59 53

170 169 184 213 202 182 177 188 186 181 172 172

47.6 46.7 46.7 44.1 43.6 42.3 41.8 39.9 39.2 39.2 34.3 30.8

OPP 3RD-DN CONVERT 1. Michigan State 2. Wisconsin 3. Nebraska 4. Ohio State 5. Iowa 6. Penn State 7. Minnesota 8. Michigan 9. Northwestern 10. Illinois 11. Indiana 12. Purdue

G

Conv.

Att.

Pct.

14 13 13 14 13 12 13 13 12 12 12 12

57 57 58 73 71 66 64 76 73 76 80 95

204 186 188 205 199 181 174 191 182 168 172 168

27.9 30.6 30.9 35.6 35.7 36.5 36.8 39.8 40.1 45.2 46.5 56.5

4TH-DOWN CONVERSIONS 1. Minnesota 2. Nebraska 3. Michigan State 4. Ohio State 5. Wisconsin 6. Penn State 7. Michigan 8. Indiana 9. Purdue 10. Northwestern 11. Illinois 12. Iowa

G

Conv.

Att.

Pct.

13 13 14 14 13 12 13 12 12 12 12 13

14 10 9 14 11 13 7 12 12 6 5 5

20 15 14 22 20 24 13 24 25 14 15 17

70.0 66.7 64.3 63.6 55.0 54.2 53.8 50.0 48.0 42.9 33.3 29.4

68 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Big Ten Team Statistics Through games of Jan 08, 2014 OPP 4TH-DN CONVERT 1. Michigan State 2. Nebraska 3. Michigan 4. Penn State 5. Indiana 6. Wisconsin 7. Northwestern 9. 10. 11. 12.

Illinois Ohio State Purdue Iowa Minnesota

PENALTIES 1. Iowa 2. Penn State 3. Michigan 4. Northwestern 5. Minnesota 6. Wisconsin 7. Indiana

G

Conv.

Att.

Pct.

14 13 13 12 12 13 12 12 14 12 13 13

6 8 6 6 13 9 8 9 13 10 12 13

19 21 15 14 29 20 16 18 24 18 21 22

31.6 38.1 40.0 42.9 44.8 45.0 50.0 50.0 54.2 55.6 57.1 59.1

G

No.

Yards

Avg/G

Purdue Ohio State Illinois Michigan State Nebraska

13 12 13 12 13 13 12 12 14 12 14 13

52 55 54 49 57 54 62 61 73 70 76 76

425 403 448 417 469 474 515 515 638 563 706 665

32.7 33.6 34.5 34.8 36.1 36.5 42.9 42.9 45.6 46.9 50.4 51.2

OPPONENT PENALTIES 1. Illinois 2. Penn State 3. Michigan State 4. Ohio State 5. Indiana 6. Iowa 7. Michigan 8. Nebraska 9. Northwestern 10. Wisconsin 11. Minnesota 12. Purdue

G

No.

Yards

Avg/G

12 12 14 14 12 13 13 13 12 13 13 12

82 72 72 77 66 60 62 59 52 67 44 42

685 638 646 621 523 559 522 511 422 427 382 320

57.1 53.2 46.1 44.4 43.6 43.0 40.2 39.3 35.2 32.8 29.4 26.7

TIME OF POSSESSION 1. Wisconsin 2. Michigan State 3. Minnesota 4. Ohio State 5. Michigan 6. Iowa 7. Penn State 8. Nebraska 9. Northwestern 10. Illinois 11. Purdue 12. Indiana

G

Total possesion

Avgerage/game

13 14 13 14 13 13 12 13 12 12 12 12

436:24 466:26 427:33 439:44 406:43 405:17 359:55 381:20 351:05 350:16 330:58 309:45

33:34 33:19 32:53 31:24 31:17 31:10 29:59 29:20 29:15 29:11 27:34 25:48

9. 10. 11. 12.

TURNOVER MARGIN 1. Michigan State 2. Michigan 3. Ohio State 4. Northwestern 5. Minnesota 6. Wisconsin 7. Iowa 8. Purdue

Penn State

10. Indiana 11. Illinois 12. Nebraska

Gained Fum Int Tot

14 13 14 12 13 13 13 12 12 12 12 13

RED ZONE OFFENSE 1. Northwestern 2. Ohio State 3. Minnesota 4. Nebraska 5. Wisconsin 6. Michigan 7. Indiana 8. Penn State 9. Michigan State 10. Illinois 11. Iowa 12. Purdue

12 14 13 13 13 13 12 12 14 12 13 12

RED ZONE DEFENSE 1. Minnesota 2. Wisconsin 3. Ohio State 4. Michigan State 5. Penn State 6. Illinois 7. Indiana 8. Michigan 9. Iowa 10. Northwestern 11. Nebraska 12. Purdue

13 13 14 14 12 12 12 13 13 12 13 12

ON-SIDE KICKS BY 1. Illinois 2. Purdue 3. Indiana

Michigan State Penn State Ohio State Wisconsin Michigan Iowa Northwestern Nebraska Minnesota

11 9 8 4 9 11 8 7 7 10 8 4

17 17 16 19 10 9 13 13 13 7 3 14

G Scores

44-46 60-63 33-37 44-50 51-59 47-55 46-56 41-51 40-50 38-48 40-53 19-26

G Scores

37-50 25-33 34-43 24-30 31-37 48-57 44-52 39-46 24-28 38-44 39-44 52-56

28 26 24 23 19 20 21 20 20 17 11 18

Fum

Lost Int

8 8 10 7 9 4 7 9 12 6 7 16

7 13 9 13 7 15 15 13 10 14 14 13

Tot Margin

Per/G

15 21 19 20 16 19 22 22 22 20 21 29

0.93 0.38 0.36 0.25 0.23 0.08 -0.08 -0.17 -0.17 -0.25 -0.83 -0.85

+13 +5 +5 +3 +3 +1 -1 -2 -2 -3 -10 -11

Pct.

TDs

(R-P)

FGs

95.7 95.2 89.2 88.0 86.4 85.5 82.1 80.4 80.0 79.2 75.5 73.1

24 53 25 34 39 37 38 31 28 28 27 15

13-11 33-20 20-5 19-15 22-17 23-14 17-21 20-11 15-13 17-11 17-10 4-11

20-21 7-7 8-9 10-10 12-16 10-12 8-9 10-14 12-15 10-13 13-16 4-8

Pct.

TDs

(R-P)

FGs

74.0 75.8 79.1 80.0 83.8 84.2 84.6 84.8 85.7 86.4 88.6 92.9

26 14 29 14 22 36 36 24 15 25 26 44

17-9 7-7 7-22 6-8 12-10 19-17 25-11 10-14 7-8 13-12 19-7 23-21

11-13 11-13 5-7 10-12 9-11 12-14 8-11 15-16 9-10 13-15 13-15 8-8

G

Recovered

Attempts

Success%

12 12 12 14 12 14 13 13 13 12 13 13

1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

3 4 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0

33.3 25.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0

TurnO

0 2 2 3 2 4 4 3 3 3 5 2 TurnO

5 1 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 1 1 3

69 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Big Ten Individual Statistics Through games of Jan 08, 2014 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

RUSHING

Cl

G

Att.

Hyde, Carlos-OSU Abdullah, Ameer-NEB Gordon, Melvin-WIS White, James-WIS Coleman, Tevin-IND Langford, J.-MSU Cobb, David-MINN Miller, Braxton-OSU Zwinak, Zach-PSU Weisman, Mark-IOWA

Sr Jr So Sr So Jr Jr Jr Jr Jr

11 13 13 13 9 14 13 12 12 13

208 281 206 221 131 292 237 171 210 227

PASSING AVG/GAME

Cl

G

Comp-Att-Int

Scheelhaase, N-ILL Gardner, Devin-MICH Hackenberg, C.-PSU Sudfeld, Nate-IND Cook, Connor-MSU Stave, Joel-WIS Rudock, Jake-IOWA Siemian, Trevor-NU Miller, Braxton-OSU Nelson, Philip-MINN

Sr Jr Fr So So So So Jr Jr So

12 12 12 12 14 13 13 12 12 12

287-430-13 208-345-11 231-392-10 194-322-9 223-380-6 208-336-13 204-346-13 178-298-9 162-255-7 94-186-6

PASS EFFICIENCY

Cl

G

Comp-Att-Int

Guiton, Kenny-OSU Roberson, Tre-IND Miller, Braxton-OSU Gardner, Devin-MICH Sudfeld, Nate-IND Scheelhaase, N-ILL Stave, Joel-WIS Cook, Connor-MSU Hackenberg, C.-PSU Kellogg III, R.-NEB

Sr So Jr Jr So Sr So So Fr Sr

13 12 12 12 12 12 13 14 12 10

75-109-2 83-138-4 162-255-7 208-345-11 194-322-9 287-430-13 208-336-13 223-380-6 231-392-10 80-134-3

RECEPTIONS/GAME 1. Robinson, Allen-PSU 2. Gallon, Jeremy-MICH 3. Latimer, Cody-IND

Abbrederis, Jar-WIS

5. Hull, Steve-ILL 6. Jones, Tony-NU 7. Brown, Corey-OSU

Jones, C.-NU

9. Ferguson, Josh-ILL 10. Bell, Kenny-NEB

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

Yds Avg. TD

1521 1690 1609 1444 958 1422 1202 1068 989 975

Cl

G

No.

Jr Sr Jr Sr Sr Jr Sr Jr So Jr

12 13 12 13 12 12 14 12 12 13

97 89 72 78 59 55 63 54 50 52

RECEIVE YDS/GAME

Cl

G

No.

Robinson, Allen-PSU Gallon, Jeremy-MICH Latimer, Cody-IND Abbrederis, Jar-WIS Hull, Steve-ILL Hughes, Kofi-IND Enunwa, Quincy-NEB Funchess, Devin-MICH Jones, C.-NU Brown, Corey-OSU

Jr Sr Jr Sr Sr Sr Sr So Jr Sr

12 13 12 13 12 12 13 13 12 14

97 89 72 78 59 47 51 49 54 63

7.3 6.0 7.8 6.5 7.3 4.9 5.1 6.2 4.7 4.3

Yds TD

15 9 12 13 12 18 7 12 12 8

Lg

Avg/G

55 62 80 93 75 44 60 70 61 37

138.3 130.0 123.8 111.1 106.4 101.6 92.5 89.0 82.4 75.0

Yds TD

3272 2960 2955 2523 2755 2494 2383 2149 2094 1306

21 21 20 21 22 22 18 11 24 9

Yds TD

749 1128 2094 2960 2523 3272 2494 2755 2955 919 Lg

14 15 24 21 21 21 22 22 20 6

Avg/G

272.7 246.7 246.2 210.2 196.8 191.8 183.3 179.1 174.5 108.8

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

Eff.

165.2 158.9 158.1 146.1 142.0 140.7 138.1 135.5 134.0 127.6

Lg

Avg/C Yds/G

1432 6 65 1373 9 84 1096 9 77 1081 7 65 993 7 60 739 7 67 753 12 99 748 6 59 668 4 36 771 10 58

14.8119.3 15.4105.6 15.2 91.3 13.9 83.2 16.8 82.8 15.7 61.6 14.8 57.9 15.3 57.5 12.4 55.7 12.2 55.1

TOTAL OFFENSE

Cl

Scheelhaase, N-ILL Gardner, Devin-MICH Miller, Braxton-OSU Hackenberg, C.-PSU Sudfeld, Nate-IND Cook, Connor-MSU Rudock, Jake-IOWA Stave, Joel-WIS Siemian, Trevor-NU Nelson, Philip-MINN

Sr Jr Jr Fr So So So So Jr So

SCORING

Cl

Hyde, Carlos-OSU Budzien, Jeff-NU Langford, J.-MSU Coleman, Tevin-IND Basil, Drew-OSU Gibbons, B.-MICH Geiger, Michael-MSU Ficken, Sam-PSU White, James-WIS Ewald, Mitch-IND

Sr Sr Jr So Sr Sr Fr Jr Sr Sr

SCORING (TDs)

Cl

Hyde, Carlos-OSU Langford, J.-MSU Coleman, Tevin-IND White, James-WIS Wynn, Shane-IND Toussaint, F.-MICH 7. Miller, Braxton-OSU Zwinak, Zach-PSU 9. Gardner, Devin-MICH 10. Gordon, Melvin-WIS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Yds/G Rec/G

1432 6 65 119.3 8.1 1373 9 84 105.6 6.8 1096 9 77 91.3 6.0 1081 7 65 83.2 6.0 993 7 60 82.8 4.9 630 4 47 52.5 4.6 771 10 58 55.1 4.5 668 4 36 55.7 4.5 535 4 53 44.6 4.2 577 4 42 44.4 4.0 Yds TD

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.

Sr Jr So Sr Jr Sr Jr Jr Jr So

G Rush Pass

12 12 12 12 12 14 13 13 12 12

271 483 1068 -68 -34 76 218 -24 33 364

G TD FG

11 12 14 9 14 12 11 12 13 12

18 0 19 12 0 0 0 0 15 0

Plays

Total

Yds/G

543 510 426 441 360 449 413 374 346 279

3543 3443 3162 2887 2489 2831 2601 2470 2182 1670

295.2 286.9 263.5 240.6 207.4 202.2 200.1 190.0 181.8 139.2

3272 2960 2094 2955 2523 2755 2383 2494 2149 1306 0 23 0 0 9 15 15 15 0 9

XPT

2XP

Pts

Pts/G

0 35 0 0 77 44 36 41 0 56

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

108 104 114 72 104 89 81 86 90 83

9.8 8.7 8.1 8.0 7.4 7.4 7.4 7.2 6.9 6.9

G TD Run Pass Ret Pat

11 14 9 13 12 12 12 12 12 13

18 19 12 15 13 13 12 12 11 12

15 3 18 1 12 0 13 2 1 11 13 0 12 0 12 0 11 0 12 0

0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

Pts Avg/G

0 108 9.8 0 114 8.1 0 72 8.0 0 90 6.9 0 78 6.5 0 78 6.5 0 72 6.0 0 72 6.0 1 68 5.7 0 72 5.5

SCORING (KICK)

Cl

G

PAT

FG

Pts

Avg/G

Budzien, Jeff-NU Basil, Drew-OSU Gibbons, B.-MICH Geiger, Michael-MSU Ficken, Sam-PSU Ewald, Mitch-IND Meyer, Mike-IOWA Zalewski, T.-ILL Smith, Pat-NEB Hawthorne,Chris-MINN

Sr Sr Sr Fr Jr Sr Sr So Sr Sr

12 14 12 11 12 12 13 12 13 13

35-35 77-79 44-44 36-38 41-42 56-56 41-41 38-38 43-45 36-39

23-25 9-10 15-20 15-16 15-23 9-11 16-22 12-17 12-13 14-18

104 104 89 81 86 83 89 74 79 78

8.7 7.4 7.4 7.4 7.2 6.9 6.8 6.2 6.1 6.0

PUNT RETURN AVG

Cl

G

No.

Yds

Bentley, V.-ILL Martin-Manley,K-IOWA Kings, M.-MSU Della Valle, J.-PSU Brown, Corey-OSU Doe, Kenzel-WIS Westerkamp, J.-NEB

So Jr So Jr Sr Jr Fr

10 13 14 12 14 11 13

12 20 20 18 23 16 19

189 314 206 156 179 116 51

70 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL

TD Long

1 2 0 0 0 0 0

67 83 30 31 65 26 19

Avg/G

15.8 15.7 10.3 8.7 7.8 7.2 2.7


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Big Ten Individual Statistics Through games of Jan 08, 2014 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

KICK RETURN AVG

Cl

G

No.

Yds

Bell, Kenny-NEB Doe, Kenzel-WIS Hunt, Akeem-PUR Cotton, Jordan-IOWA Wilson, Dontre-OSU Jones, Marcus-MINN Norfleet, D.-MICH Wynn, Shane-IND Harris, Matthew-NU Lewis, Eugene-PSU

Jr Jr Jr Sr Fr Jr So Jr Fr Fr

13 11 12 13 14 13 13 12 12 12

23 20 24 29 21 25 40 18 21 22

609 529 626 731 523 622 938 415 484 491

ALL PURPOSE

Cl

Abdullah, Ameer-NEB Hyde, Carlos-OSU Coleman, Tevin-IND White, James-WIS Gordon, Melvin-WIS Robinson, Allen-PSU Hunt, Akeem-PUR Langford, J.-MSU Ferguson, Josh-ILL Gallon, Jeremy-MICH

Jr Sr So Sr So Jr Jr Jr So Sr

PUNTING

Cl

Johnston, C-OSU Webster, Cody-PUR Mortell, Peter-MINN Sadler, Mike-MSU Foltz, Sam-NEB DuVernois, J.-ILL Wile, Matt-MICH Toth, Erich-IND Kornbrath, C.-IOWA Butterworth, A.-PSU

Fr Sr So Jr Fr Jr Jr So So Sr

FIELD GOALS 1. Budzien, Jeff-NU 2. Geiger, Michael-MSU 3. Gibbons, B.-MICH 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

Ficken, Sam-PSU Meyer, Mike-IOWA Hawthorne,Chris-MINN Zalewski, T.-ILL Smith, Pat-NEB Ewald, Mitch-IND Basil, Drew-OSU

Cl

Sr Fr Sr Jr Sr Sr So Sr Sr Sr

G Rush

13 11 9 13 13 12 12 14 12 13

1690 1521 958 1444 1609 36 464 1422 779 4

G No.

13 12 13 14 13 11 13 12 13 12

49 70 62 76 71 51 61 52 65 51

1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

Avg/G

99 91 99 96 51 98 44 48 47 44

26.5 26.5 26.1 25.2 24.9 24.9 23.5 23.1 23.0 22.3

Rcv PR KR

Yds

Avg/G

232 0 77 147 0 0 193 0 124 300 0 7 10 0 0 1432 0 0 340 0 626 157 0 0 535 0 37 1373 32 0

1999 1668 1275 1751 1619 1468 1430 1579 1351 1409

153.8 151.6 141.7 134.7 124.5 122.3 119.2 112.8 112.6 108.4

Yds

2156 3047 2687 3233 2954 2094 2476 2110 2598 2000

G Made

12 11 12 12 13 13 12 13 12 14

TD Long

6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

Gibbons, B.-MICH Meyer, Mike-IOWA Zalewski, T.-ILL Budzien, Jeff-NU Ficken, Sam-PSU Basil, Drew-OSU Smith, Pat-NEB Griggs, Paul-PUR Geiger, Michael-MSU

Cl

G

Made

Att.

Pct.

Sr Sr Sr So Sr Jr Sr Sr So Fr

12 12 13 12 12 12 14 13 11 11

56 44 41 38 35 41 77 43 21 36

56 44 41 38 35 42 79 45 22 38

100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 97.6 97.5 95.6 95.5 94.7

Lg I20 50+ TB Avg.

71 73 62 69 64 66 69 57 55 66

31 24 21 33 22 13 16 18 27 17

11 17 15 16 16 10 10 7 11 3

2 1 6 9 7 2 2 3 3 4

44.0 43.5 43.3 42.5 41.6 41.1 40.6 40.6 40.0 39.2

Att.

Long

Pct.

FG/G

25 16 20 23 22 18 17 13 11 10

43 49 47 54 49 45 51 46 50 45

92.0 93.8 75.0 65.2 72.7 77.8 70.6 92.3 81.8 90.0

1.92 1.36 1.25 1.25 1.23 1.08 1.00 0.92 0.75 0.64

23 15 15 15 16 14 12 12 9 9

PAT KICKING PCT 1. Ewald, Mitch-IND

FIELD GOAL PCT

Cl

G

Made

Att.

Long

Pct.

Geiger, Michael-MSU Smith, Pat-NEB Budzien, Jeff-NU Hawthorne,Chris-MINN Gibbons, B.-MICH Meyer, Mike-IOWA Zalewski, T.-ILL Ficken, Sam-PSU Griggs, Paul-PUR

Fr Sr Sr Sr Sr Sr So Jr So

11 13 12 13 12 13 12 12 11

15 12 23 14 15 16 12 15 6

16 13 25 18 20 22 17 23 12

49 46 43 45 47 49 51 54 47

93.8 92.3 92.0 77.8 75.0 72.7 70.6 65.2 50.0

Jeremy Langford led the Big Ten in total touchdowns (19), rushing touchdowns (18) and carries (292) in 2013. He also ranked among the league leaders in rushing (sixth with 101.6 ypg.), scoring (third with 8.1 ppg.) and all-purpose yards (eighth with 112.8 ypg.)

71 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Big Ten Individual Statistics Through games of Jan 08, 2014 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 15.

19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 29. 31. 33. 34. 35. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 45. 47. 48. 49. 50.

72

TACKLES (All positions)

Cl

Shazier, Ryan-OSU Brown, Jonathan-ILL Borland, Chris-WIS Proby, Damien-NU Ariguzo, C.C.-NU Hitchens, A.-IOWA Thomas III, E.-ILL Morris, James-IOWA Monheim, Mason-ILL Kirksey, C.-IOWA Hull, Mike-PSU Carson, Glenn-PSU Cooper, David-IND Ross III, James-MICH Allen, Denicos-MSU Cooper, Corey-NEB Murphy, Mark-IND Henry, Traveon-NU Heban, Greg-IND Santos, David-NEB Taylor, Raymon-MICH Drummond, K.-MSU Barnett, C.J.-OSU Ellis, Collin-NU Petty, Zane-ILL Campbell, I.-NU Bennett, Tim-IND Lucas, Will-PUR Thompson,Cedric-MINN Morgan, Desmond-MICH Wilson, Damien-MINN Lowdermilk, J.-IOWA Hardin, Forisse-IND Bullough, Max-MSU Brown, Anthony-PUR Roby, Bradley-OSU Simmons, T.J.-IND Hill, Aaron-MINN Rose, Michael-NEB Lucas, Jordan-PSU Miller, Tanner-IOWA Richards, T.-PUR Johnson,Antonio-MINN King, Desmond-IOWA Willis, Malcolm-PSU Williams, F.-PUR Gregory, Randy-NEB VanHoose, Nick-NU Caputo, Michael-WIS Gordon, Thomas-MICH

Jr Sr Sr Sr Jr Sr Jr Sr So Sr Jr Sr Jr So Sr Jr Jr So Sr So Jr Jr Sr Jr Jr Jr Jr Sr Jr Jr Jr Jr Jr Sr So Jr Fr Sr Fr So Sr Jr So Fr Sr So So So So Sr

G Pos

14 12 12 12 12 13 12 13 12 13 10 12 12 12 14 13 12 11 12 13 13 14 13 12 12 12 12 12 13 13 13 13 10 13 12 12 12 13 12 12 13 12 13 13 12 12 13 12 13 12

LB LB LB LB DB LB LB LB

LB LB DB

LB

LB DB CB LB

LB DB LB LB

LB LB LB DB DB DB CB DE CB

Solo

Ast

Total

Avg/G

101 62 73 64 62 54 57 52 42 47 44 43 52 46 45 52 51 53 57 48 61 49 56 39 28 41 61 50 52 40 47 36 40 25 51 54 42 52 39 45 36 43 45 44 40 46 40 39 36 33

42 57 39 47 44 58 44 54 55 57 34 47 33 39 53 39 33 24 25 39 25 42 28 38 47 33 12 23 27 39 31 42 19 51 18 15 26 20 27 20 34 21 24 25 21 15 26 21 27 25

143 119 112 111 106 112 101 106 97 104 78 90 85 85 98 91 84 77 82 87 86 91 84 77 75 74 73 73 79 79 78 78 59 76 69 69 68 72 66 65 70 64 69 69 61 61 66 60 63 58

10.2 9.9 9.3 9.2 8.8 8.6 8.4 8.2 8.1 8.0 7.8 7.5 7.1 7.1 7.0 7.0 7.0 7.0 6.8 6.7 6.6 6.5 6.5 6.4 6.2 6.2 6.1 6.1 6.1 6.1 6.0 6.0 5.9 5.8 5.8 5.8 5.7 5.5 5.5 5.4 5.4 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.1 5.1 5.1 5.0 4.8 4.8

1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 8. 9. 10. 11.

14. 15. 16.

19. 20.

SACKS

Cl

Gregory, Randy-NEB Spence, Noah-OSU Cockran,Theiren-MINN Bennett, M-OSU Morris, James-IOWA Bosa, Joey-OSU Calhoun, S.-MSU Scott, Tyler-NU Odenigbo, I.-NU Shazier, Ryan-OSU Olaniyan, C.J.-PSU Gordon, Cameron-MICH Brown, Jonathan-ILL Lowry, Dean-NU Allen, Denicos-MSU Laihinen, John-IND Moss, Avery-NEB Kelly, Brendan-WIS Hoover, Tyler-MSU Rush, Marcus-MSU

So So So Jr Sr Fr So Sr Fr Jr Jr Sr Sr So Sr Jr Fr Sr Sr Jr

TACKLES FOR LOSS 1. Shazier, Ryan-OSU 2. Gregory, Randy-NEB 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.

Morris, James-IOWA Brown, Jonathan-ILL Allen, Denicos-MSU Spence, Noah-OSU Hitchens, A.-IOWA Calhoun, S.-MSU Hageman,RaShede-MINN Bates, Houston-ILL Bosa, Joey-OSU Jones, DaQuan-PSU Clark, Frank-MICH Olaniyan, C.J.-PSU Bennett, M-OSU Scott, Tyler-NU Evans, Ciante-NEB Cockran,Theiren-MINN Bullough, Max-MSU Gordon, Cameron-MICH

Cl

Jr So Sr Sr Sr So Sr So Sr Jr Fr Sr Jr Jr Jr Sr Sr So Sr Sr

G Pos

13 13 13 13 13 14 14 12 12 14 12 12 12 11 14 12 12 12 11 14

DE DE LB DE DL DL

LB DL LB DE DE DE DT DE

G Pos

14 13 13 12 14 13 13 14 13 12 14 12 13 12 13 12 13 13 13 12

DE LB LB LB LB DE DT DL

DL CB DE LB

Solo Ast

10 6 7 5 7 6 6 6 5 5 4 5 3 4 4 4 4 4 2 5

1 4 1 4 0 3 3 0 1 2 2 0 4 1 3 1 1 1 4 0

Total

10.5 8.0 7.5 7.0 7.0 7.5 7.5 6.0 5.5 6.0 5.0 5.0 5.0 4.5 5.5 4.5 4.5 4.5 4.0 5.0

Solo Ast

Total

20 5 15 4 14 6 11 8 12 9 10 9 8 11 10 8 11 4 10 4 12 3 10 3 9 6 10 2 9 5 9 2 10 1 9 2 5 9 8 1

22.5 17.0 17.0 15.0 16.5 14.5 13.5 14.0 13.0 12.0 13.5 11.5 12.0 11.0 11.5 10.0 10.5 10.0 9.5 8.5

Denicos Allen ranked among the Big Ten leaders in tackles (15th with 7.0 avg.), tackles for loss (fifth with 16.5) and sacks (15th with 5.5).

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2013 STATISTICS 2013 Big Ten Individual Statistics Through games of Jan 08, 2014 PASSES DEFENDED 1. Bennett, Tim-IND 2. Lowery, B.J.-IOWA 3. Roby, Bradley-OSU

Lucas, Jordan-PSU

5. Jean-Baptiste-NEB 6. Keiser, Ryan-PSU

9. 10. 11. 12.

16.

19. 20.

Taylor, Raymon-MICH Dennard, D.-MSU Grant, Doran-OSU Shelton, Sojour-WIS Williams, T.-PSU Evans, Ciante-NEB Lewis, Isaiah-MSU Countess, Blake-MICH Murray, Eric-MINN Allen, Ricardo-PUR Campbell, I.-NU Ellis, Collin-NU Drummond, K.-MSU Barnett, C.J.-OSU

INTERCEPTIONS 1. Allen, Ricardo-PUR 2. Countess, Blake-MICH 3. Ariguzo, C.C.-NU

Cl

G

BrUp

Int.

Total

Avg/G

Jr Sr Jr So Sr Jr Jr Sr Jr Fr So Sr Sr So So Sr Jr Jr Jr Sr

12 13 12 12 13 11 13 14 14 13 12 13 13 13 13 12 12 12 14 13

20 16 13 13 12 8 9 10 10 7 8 6 8 4 10 3 5 6 6 5

1 3 3 3 4 3 4 4 3 4 2 4 2 6 0 6 4 3 4 4

21 19 16 16 16 11 13 14 13 11 10 10 10 10 10 9 9 9 10 9

1.75 1.46 1.33 1.33 1.23 1.00 1.00 1.00 0.93 0.85 0.83 0.77 0.77 0.77 0.77 0.75 0.75 0.75 0.71 0.69

Cl

G

No.

Yds

Taylor, Raymon-MICH Barnett, C.J.-OSU Morris, James-IOWA Evans, Ciante-NEB Shelton, Sojour-WIS

Sr So Jr Jr Sr Jr Sr Sr Sr Fr

12 13 12 12 13 13 13 13 13 13

6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4

42 169 26 22 134 75 29 29 27 10

Campbell, I.-NU

5. Jean-Baptiste-NEB

FUMBLES FORCED

Cl

G

No.

Avg/G

1. 2. 3. 4.

Cockran,Theiren-MINN Hardin, Forisse-IND Shazier, Ryan-OSU Olaniyan, C.J.-PSU Thomas III, E.-ILL Kelly, Brendan-WIS 7. Bennett, M-OSU Lowery, B.J.-IOWA 9. Williams, A.-NEB 10. Hoover, Tyler-MSU

So Jr Jr Jr Jr Sr Jr Sr Jr Sr

13 10 14 12 12 12 13 13 10 11

4 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 2 2

0.31 0.30 0.29 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.23 0.23 0.20 0.18

FUMBLES RECOVERED 1. Calhoun, S.-MSU 2. Nelson, Kenny-ILL 3. Bates, Houston-ILL

Cl

G

No.

Avg/G

So So Jr Sr Jr Jr Sr Sr Jr Sr

14 11 12 12 12 13 13 13 13 13

4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2

0.29 0.18 0.17 0.17 0.17 0.15 0.15 0.15 0.15 0.15

Borland, Chris-WIS Schmitt, Jesse-PUR 6. Thompson,Cedric-MINN Hill, Aaron-MINN Kirksey, C.-IOWA Clark, Frank-MICH Armstrong, Etha-WIS

TD Long

0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0

27 72 14 22 43 54 17 27 22 10

Avg/G

0.50 0.46 0.33 0.33 0.31 0.31 0.31 0.31 0.31 0.31

Jim Thorpe Award winner Darqueze Dennard ranked among the Big Ten leaders in interceptions (4), passes break-ups (10) and passes defended (14).

Shilique Calhoun led the Big Ten and ranked tied for second in the NCAA FBS with four fumble recoveries, including two for touchdowns.

73 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 STATISTICS SCORING DRIVES BREAKDOWN MSU SCORING DRIVES (Game-by-Game) Opp. WMU WMU WMU USF YSU YSU YSU YSU YSU YSU YSU YSU YSU UND UND UND IOWA IOWA IOWA IOWA IOWA IOWA IND IND IND IND IND IND MSU ILL ILL ILL ILL ILL ILL MICH MICH MICH MICH MICH MICH NEB NEB NEB NEB NEB NEB NEB NU NU NU NU NU MINN MINN OSU OSU OSU OSU OSU OSU STAN STAN STAN STAN

Plays 7 9 4 9 5 6 11 1 5 6 11 16 4 14 15 10 12 7 7 4 8 12 15 7 14 9 8 3 9 4 15 10 9 2 8 5 6 10 10 9 8 7 2 17 3 1 10 8 11 3 6 8 1 7 8 14 2 5 9 8 6 13 7 6 3

Yards 69 28 -1 33 24 76 73 24 70 75 59 77 7 79 75 51 48 75 75 8 34 45 83 60 75 75 65 73 73 23 99 75 56 75 77 52 57 75 46 68 97 12 8 74 22 3 75 67 80 92 52 87 37 80 75 75 68 66 48 90 61 75 75 61 27

Time 1:46 3:40 0:58 4:34 2:09 2:09 4:45 0:06 0:44 2:48 6:31 8:58 2:11 5:46 8:39 4:04 5:23 3:13 3:05 1:37 2:56 5:49 6:53 4:30 4:57 4:57 4:24 1:28 4:07 1:45 8:08 4:53 5:19 0:46 4:31 1:28 2:40 2:54 4:58 4:20 3:40 1:47 0:46 7:10 0:39 0:04 5:46 5:06 5:42 1:40 3:27 3:33 0:08 3:20 12:20 6:29 0:14 2:12 3:07 3:12 3:25 5:55 1:39 2:04 1:28

Result TD FG FG TD TD TD TD TD TD TD TD FG FG TD FG FG FG TD TD FG FG FG TD TD TD TD TD TD TD TD TD TD TD TD TD FG FG TD FG TD TD FG TD FG TD TD TD TD TD TD FG TD TD TD TD FG TD TD FG TD TD TD TD FG TD

Qtr 2 3 3 4 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 2 3 4 2 2 3 3 4 4 2 2 2 3 3 4 4 2 2 3 3 4 4 1 2 2 3 4 4 1 1 2 2 3 4 4 2 2 3 4 4 1 3 1 2 2 3 4 4 2 2 3 4

Scoring Play Langford 2-yd. run Muma 20-yd. FG Muma 30-yd. FG Langford 2-yd. run Langford 3-yd. run Sims 13-yd. pass; Cook Pendleton 12-yd. pass; Cook Kings 24-yd. pass; Cook Fowler 17-yd. pass; Cook Hill 35-yd. run Langford 2-yd. run Muma 20-yd. FG Muma 22-yd. FG Kings 12-yd. pass; Cook Geiger 25-yd. FG Geiger 42-yd. FG Geiger 27-yd. FG Kings 46-yd. pass; Cook Fowler 37-yd. pass; Cook Geiger 35-yd. FG Geiger 49-yd. FG Geiger 40-yd. FG Langford 11-yd. pass; Cook Fowler 34-yd. pass; Cook Langford 5-yd. run Langford 2-yd. run Langford 32-yd. run Shelton 34-yd. run Gleichert 5-yd. pass; Lippett Langford 1-yd. run Fowler 29-yd. pass; Cook Price 13-yd. pass; Cook Langford 7-yd. run Mumphery 47-yd. pass; Cook D. Williams 42-yd. run Geiger 40-yd. FG Geiger 39-yd. FG Fowler 14-yd. pass; Cook Geiger 35-yd. FG Cook 1-yd. run Langford 40-yd. run Geiger 45-yd. FG Shelton 5-yd. run Geiger 25-yd. FG Langford 6-yd. run Langford 3-yd. run Mumphery 27-yd. pass; Cook Langford 37-yd. run Langford 20-yd. run Fowler 87-yd. pass; Cook Geiger 37-yd. FG Price 15-yd. pass; Cook Langford 37-yd. run Langford 15-yd. run Price 12 yd. pass; Cook Geiger 40-yd. FG Mumphery 72-yd. pass; Cook Lippett 33-yd. pass; Cook Geiger 44-yd. FG Price 9-yd. pass; Cook Langford 26-yd. run Langford 2-yd. run Pendleton 2-yd. pass; Cook Geiger 31-yd. FG Lippett 25-yd. pass; Cook

Longest Drives Breakdown by No. of Plays: 17, vs. Nebraska by No. of Yards: 99, at Illinois Time of Possession: 8:58, vs. Youngstown State Longest Scoring Play (run): Langford 40 yards vs. Michigan Longest Scoring Play (pass): Fowler 87-yard pass from Cook, at Northwestern

OPPONENT SCORING DRIVES (Game-by-Game) Opp. WMU WMU USF USF YSU YSU YSU UND UND UND IOWA IOWA IND IND IND IND ILL MICH MICH NEB NEB NEB NEB NU NU MINN OSU OSU OSU OSU STAN STAN STAN

Plays 4 8 12 4 8 5 5 7 9 5 6 6 4 5 7 6 12 9 6 5 3 11 12 13 7 14 5 7 7 5 7 7 9

Yards 59 56 44 20 58 33 46 57 50 52 75 65 75 41 72 37 53 51 57 75 63 79 75 75 69 60 84 53 75 44 77 69 50

Time 1:29 1:16 7:24 0:26 8:38 2:46 2:12 3:30 2:43 2:22 1:59 2:04 1:01 1:28 2:11 1:22 5:19 4:22 2:40 2:13 1:01 4:09 1:48 4:17 2:39 7:32 2:28 1:23 2:39 2:12 3:44 2:41 4:46

Result TD TD FG FG FG TD TD FG TD TD TD TD TD TD TD TD FG FG FG TD TD TD TD FG FG FG TD FG TD TD TD FG FG

Qtr 2 4 2 2 1 2 3 1 2 4 2 2 1 2 3 4 1 1 2 1 3 3 4 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 1 1 4

Scoring Play Mussman 14-yd. pass; Terrell Davis 14-yd. pass; Terrell Kloss 49-yd. FG Kloss 21-yd. FG Cejudo 34-yd. FG Ruiz 5-yd. run Ruiz 34-yd. pass; Hess Brindza 41-yd. FG Jones 2-yd. pass; Rees McDaniel 7-yd. run Bullock 47-yd. pass; Rudock Fiedorwicz 10-yd. pass; Rudock Coleman 64-yd. run Latimer 3-yd. pass; Roberson Wynn 2-yard run Bolser 4-yard pass; Roberson Zaleski 31-yard FG Wile 49-yd. FG Gibbons 39-yd. FG Burtch 32-yd. pass; Armstrong Cross 51-yd. run Bell 38-yd. pass; Armstrong Abdullah 12-yd. pass; Kellogg Budzien 22-yd. FG Budzien 20-yd. FG Hawthorne 21-yd. FG Brown 20-yd. pass; Miller Basil 28-yd. FG Miller 8-yd. run Miller 6-yd. run Gaffney 16-yd. run Williamson 34-yd. FG Williamson 39-yd. FG

Longest Drives Breakdown by No. of Plays: 14, vs. Minnesota by No. of Yards: 84, vs. Ohio State Time of Possession: 8:38, vs. Youngstown State Longest Scoring Play (run): Coleman (Indiana) 64 yards Longest Scoring Play (pass): Bullock 47-yard pass from Rudock (Iowa) TD Drive Breakdown No. of TD Scoring Drives: 20 1-9 yards: 0 10-19 yards: 0 20-29 yards: 0 30-39 yards: 2 40-49 yards: 3 50-59 yards: 4 60-69 yards: 2 70-79 yards: 8 80-89 yards: 1 90-99 yards: 0 1st Quarter: 3 2nd Quarter: 7 3rd Quarter: 6 4th Quarter: 4 Most Points in a Quarter: 14, three times (at Iowa/at Nebraska/vs. Ohio State) Most Points in 1st Half: 14, at Iowa/vs. Indiana Most Points in 2nd Half: 21, at Nebraska

TD Drive Breakdown No. of TD Scoring Drives: 46 1-9 yards: 2 10-19 yards: 0 20-29 yards: 5 30-39 yards: 2 40-49 yards: 0 50-59 yards: 2 60-69 yards: 8 70-79 yards: 19 80-89 yards: 4 90-99 yards: 4 1st Quarter: 5 2nd Quarter: 18 3rd Quarter: 9 4th Quarter: 14

74

Most Points in a Quarter: 21, vs. Youngstown State/Indiana Most Points in 1st Half: 35, vs. Youngstown State Most Points in 2nd Half: 28, at Illinois

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2013 STATISTICS 2013 Michigan State Football Michigan State - Long Plays 20-YARD PLUS PLAYS Yds Type Player(s) 87* Pass Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor 72* Pass Mumphery, Keith from Cook, Connor 60 Pass Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor 56* INT Calhoun, Shilique 49 Pass Pendleton, Trevon from Cook, Connor 48 Pass Kings, Macgarrett from Cook, Connor 48 Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 47* Pass Mumphery, Keith from Cook, Connor 46* Pass Kings, Macgarrett from Cook, Connor 45* FR Allen, Denicos 44 Rush Langford, Jeremy 42* Rush Williams, Delton 40* Rush Langford, Jeremy 39 Pass Price, Josiah from Cook, Connor 37* Pass Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor 37* Rush Langford, Jeremy 37 Pass Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor 37* Rush Langford, Jeremy 37 Rush Williams, Delton 36 KR Shelton, R.J. 35* Rush Hill, Nick 35 Rush Burbridge, Aaron 35 Rush Shelton, R.J. 34 Rush Langford, Jeremy 34* Rush Shelton, R.J. 34 Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 34* Pass Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor 33 PR Sims, Andre 33* Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 32* Rush Langford, Jeremy 31 INT Drummond, Kurtis 30 PR Kings, Macgarrett 29 KR Shelton, R.J. 29 INT Dennard, Darqueze 29* Pass Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor 29 PR Kings, Macgarrett 29 KR Shelton, R.J. 28 Rush Williams, Delton 28 PR Sims, Andre 27 KR Hill, Nick 27* Pass Mumphery, Keith from Cook, Connor 27 Pass Mumphery, Keith from Cook, Connor 26 PR Kings, Macgarrett 26 Pass Fowler, Bennie from Maxwell, Andrew 26 Pass Burbridge, Aaron from Cook, Connor 26 Pass Price, Josiah from Cook, Connor 26* Rush Langford, Jeremy 25 Pass Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor 25 Pass Kings, Macgarrett from Cook, Connor 25* Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 25 Rush Sadler, Mike 24 Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 24 Pass Langford, Jeremy from Cook, Connor 24 Pass Kings, Macgarrett from Cook, Connor 24 Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 24 KR Hill, Nick 24 Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 24* Pass Kings, Macgarrett from Cook, Connor 23 Pass Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor 23 Rush Hill, Nick 22 Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 22 KR Shelton, R.J. 22 Pass Kings, Macgarrett from Cook, Connor 22 KR Shelton, R.J. 22 Pass Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor 21 Rush Burbridge, Aaron 21 Rush Hill, Nick 21 Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 21 PR Sims, Andre 20 Pass Sims, Andre from Cook, Connor 20 Pass Mumphery, Keith from Cook, Connor 20 Pass Mumphery, Keith from Cook, Connor 20 Pass Lippett, Tony from Cook, Connor 20 Pass Burbridge, Aaron from Cook, Connor 20 Pass Kings, Macgarrett from Cook, Connor 20 Rush Cook, Connor

Opponent Northwestern Ohio State Stanford South Florida Michigan Ohio State Northwestern Illinois Iowa Hawkeyes Purdue Minnesota Illinois Michigan Indiana Iowa Hawkeyes Northwestern Stanford Nebraska Indiana Michigan Youngstown State Minnesota Michigan Ohio State Indiana Nebraska Indiana Western Michigan Ohio State Indiana Northwestern Iowa Hawkeyes Iowa Hawkeyes Iowa Hawkeyes Illinois Minnesota Ohio State Illinois Youngstown State Western Michigan Nebraska Illinois Nebraska Western Michigan Youngstown State Purdue Ohio State Michigan Purdue Stanford Iowa Hawkeyes Minnesota Northwestern Minnesota Stanford Youngstown State Stanford Youngstown State Michigan South Florida Minnesota Ohio State Stanford Michigan Youngstown State South Florida South Florida Michigan Western Michigan Iowa Hawkeyes Stanford Northwestern Iowa Hawkeyes South Florida Youngstown State Youngstown State

LONG PLAYS BY THE NUMBERS Long Plays By Yards No. TD 100+ 0 0 90-99 0 0 80-89 1 1 70-79 1 1 60-69 1 0 50-59 1 1 40-49 9 5 30-39 19 8 20-29 46 6 Long Plays By Type Rushing Passing Punt returns Kick returns Interceptions Fumble returns Other TOTAL

No. 20 41 6 7 3 1 0 78

TD 9 11 0 0 1 1 0 22

20-YARD PLUS BY PLAYER Player No. TD R P KR PR IR FR Lippett, Tony 11 2 0 11 0 0 0 0 Fowler, Bennie 10 4 0 10 0 0 0 0 Kings, Macgarrett 10 2 0 7 0 3 0 0 Langford, Jeremy 9 6 8 1 0 0 0 0 Shelton, R.J. 7 1 2 0 5 0 0 0 Mumphery, Keith 6 3 0 6 0 0 0 0 Hill, Nick 5 1 3 0 2 0 0 0 Sims, Andre 4 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 Burbridge, Aaron 4 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 Williams, Delton 3 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 Price, Josiah 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 Calhoun, Shilique 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 Allen, Denicos 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 Dennard, Darqueze 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Sadler, Mike 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cook, Connor 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Pendleton, Trevon 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Drummond, Kurtis 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 TOTAL 78 22 20 41 7 6 3 1 LONGEST PLAYS OF THE YEAR Rushing 44 Langford, Jeremy vs Minnesota (11/30/2013) Rushing Touchdown 42 Williams, Delton vs Illinois (10/26/2013) Passing 87 Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor vs Northwestern (11/23/2013) Passing Touchdown 87 Fowler, Bennie from Cook, Connor vs Northwestern (11/23/2013) Punt Return 33 Sims, Andre vs Western Michigan (8/30/2013) Kick Return 36 Shelton, R.J. vs Michigan (11/2/2013) Interception Return 56 Calhoun, Shilique vs South Florida (9/7/2013) Fumble Return 45 Allen, Denicos vs Purdue (10/19/2013) Punt 69 Sadler, Mike vs Indiana (10/12/2013) Field Goal 49 Geiger, Michael vs Iowa Hawkeyes (10/5/2013)

* touchdown scored on play

75 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS


2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 1 • MICHIGAN STATE 26, WESTERN MICHIGAN 13 Game 1 | Michigan State 26, Western Michigan 13 Aug. 30, 2013 • East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium • Att: 71,214

SCORE BY QUARTERS Western Michigan (0-1) Michigan State (1-0)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Michigan State’s defense held Western Michigan to 193 yards of total offense and forced four turnovers, including two defensive touchdowns, in the 26-13 season-opening win.

KEY STAT • Michigan State limited Western Michigan to 11 yards rushing on 27 attempts.

KEY PLAY • On third-and-11 from the WMU 20-yard line midway through the first quarter, Jairus Jones recorded his first career interception and lateraled the ball to Kurtis Drummond, who ran it in 21 yards for a touchdown.

QUOTABLE “The thing to talk about here is the defense - I thought they played extremely well. We need to dwell on those positives and build on them. We need to always play to our strengths, period. I’ll go back to what I said, the name of the game is to win. We’ve got to do this collectively, together. Am I totally happy, no, but I’ll go home with a win.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

KEY NOTE • Michigan State extended its winning streak in home openers to 15.

RECAP EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Jeremy Langford’s 2-yard touchdown run late in the first half broke a tie and he finished with 94 yards rushing, helping Michigan State beat Western Michigan 26-13. The Spartans scored two touchdowns on defense. Jairus Jones had two interceptions, the first of which turned into a score with his lateral to Kurtis Drummond, whose 21-yard return was the game’s first score midway through the first quarter. The Broncos tied the game with 6:14 left in the second quarter, but couldn’t do enough on offense to keep the game close in coach P.J. Fleck’s debut with the Mid-American Conference team. Langford’s go-ahead TD was followed up by two field goals in the third quarter and Shilique Calhoun’s fumble return with 9:02 left to play that made it 26-7.

1 0 7

2 7 6

3 0 6

4 6 7

-

F 13 26

FIRST QUARTER MSU (7-0) Drummond 21-yard interception return (Muma kick), 6:27 left SECOND QUARTER WMU (7-7) Mussman 14-yard pass from Terrell (Haldeman kick), 6:14 left Drive: 4 plays, 59 yards, 1:29 MSU (13-7) Langford 2-yard run (Muma kick failed), 0:22 left Drive: 7 plays, 69 yards, 1:46 THIRD QUARTER MSU (16-7) Muma 20-yard field goal, 4:45 left Drive: 9 plays, 28 yards, 3:40 MSU (19-7) Muma 30-yard field goal, 0:06 left Drive: 4 plays, -1 yard, 0:58 FOURTH QUARTER MSU (26-7) Calhoun 16-yard fumble recovery (Muma kick), 9:02 left WMU (13-26) Davis 14-yard pass from Terrell (Terrell pass failed), 1:51 left Drive: 8 plays, 56 yards, 1:16

TEAM STATISTICS

WMU

MSU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

14 27-11 193 18-48-3 204 11-45.1 1-1 7-65 26:46

17 42-181 116 17-37-0 297 11-38.5 1-1 6-75 33:14

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) WMU: Fields 12-24, Chance 5-9, Van Tubbergen 2-(-1), Team 1-(-2), Terrell 7-(-19); MSU: Langford 20-94, Cook 4-35, Hill 7-33, R. Bullough 5-12, Maxwell 2-5, Mumphery 1-3, Lippett 1-3, Team 2-(-4). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) WMU: Terrell 12-28-1-120-2; Van Tubbergen 6-20-2-73-0; MSU: Maxwell 11-21-0-74-0, Cook 6-16-0-42-0. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) WMU: Davis 8-96, Keith 3-55, Chance 3-7, Mussman 2-26, Bynes 1-6, Boyden 1-3; MSU: Mumphery 4-24, Burbridge 4-16, Fowler 3-34, Langford 2-7, Kings 1-14, Gleichert 1-7, Arnett 1-7, R. Bullough 1-7. TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) WMU: Celiscar 11 (6-5), Lark 9 (4-5), Currie 8 (5-3), Jones 8 (3-5), Atkins 7 (3-4); MSU: M. Bullough 9 (3-6), T. Jones 6 (1-5), D. Allen 5 (3-2), Four with 4.

76

Kurtis Drummond celebrates with his teammates in the end zone following his 21yard return for a touchdown in the first quarter.

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 2 • MICHIGAN STATE 21, SOUTH FLORIDA 6 Game 2 | Michigan State 21, South Florida 6 Sept. 7, 2013 • East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium • Att: 70,401

SCORE BY QUARTERS South Florida (0-2) Michigan State (2-0)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• For the second consecutive game, Michigan State’s defense dominated its opponent, scoring two touchdowns and limiting South Florida to just 155 yards of total offense, including only 66 passing yards.

KEY STAT • Michigan State forced USF to eight three-and-out possessions and limited the Bulls to just 2.5 yards per offensive play.

KEY PLAY • With MSU leading 7-6 midway through the third quarter and South Florida driving in Spartan territory on second-and-15 from the MSU 39, Denicos Allen hit USF quarterback Bobby Eveld as he was throwing, forcing the ball up in the air; Shilique Calhoun picked off the pass for his first career interception, and ran it back 56 yards for the touchdown, giving MSU a 14-6 advantage.

QUOTABLE “Through camp we discussed being able to score on defense. Even if our offense is good, even if they are doing great, we just wanted to make that another aspect of our game to be able to score on defense. Being able to create touchdowns, we were very excited for the challenge and we were looking forward to it. To see it all play out after all that practice is mind blowing; it is a great feeling definitely.” - MSU defensive end Shilique Calhoun, after scoring two TDs vs. USF

KEY NOTE • Shilique Calhoun became the first Spartan defensive player to score three touchdowns in one season since linebacker T.J. Turner in 1999.

RECAP EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Shilique Calhoun scored on a fumble return and an interception return, enabling Michigan State to a 21-6 victory over South Florida. The Spartans rotated Connor Cook, Tyler O’Connor and Andrew Maxwell at quarterback, but their offense contributed only one touchdown. USF quarterback Bobby Eveld was 6 of 25 for 66 yards with a fumble and an interception. Michigan State’s offense finally scored in the fourth quarter when Jeremy Langford ran 2 yards for a touchdown. That drive was only 33 yards after a short South Florida punt.

1 0 0

2 6 7

3 0 7

4 0 7

-

F 6 21

SECOND QUARTER MSU (7-0) Calhoun 4-yard fumble recovery (Muma kick), 9:30 left USF (3-7) Kloss 49-yard field goal, 2:06 left Drive: 12 plays, 44 yards, 7:24 USF (6-7) Kloss 21-yard field goal, 0:03 left Drive: 4 plays, 20 yards, 0:26 THIRD QUARTER MSU (14-7) Calhoun 56-yard interception return (Muma kick), 6:51 left FOURTH QUARTER MSU (21-6) Langford 2-yard run (Muma kick), 10:12 left Drive: 9 plays, 33 yards, 4:34

TEAM STATISTICS

USF

MSU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

12 35-89 66 6-26-1 155 9-40.1 1-1 8-55 28:31

16 38-171 94 12-24-0 265 7-45.6 2-2 9-94 30:39

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) USF: Shaw 23-94, Pierre 5-15, Bench 1-4, Eppes 1-1, Eveld 5-(-27); MSU: Hill 9-63, Langford 9-38, Bullough 6-36, Burbridge 1-21, Cook 9-10, Shelton 2-7, O’Connor 2-(-4). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) USF: Eveld 6-25-1-66-0, Bench 0-1-0-0-0; MSU: Cook 6-11-0-32-0, Maxwell 4-9-0-40-0, O’Connor 2-4-0-22-0. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) USF: Davis 2-41, Hopkins 2-14, Eppes 2-11; MSU: Langford 5-21, Kings 3-24, Burbridge 1-20, Mumphery 1-18, Hill 1-10, Bullough 1-1. TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) USF: Lattimore 15 (10-5), Cliett 7 (6-1), Mims 7 (3-4), Joyce 6 (2-4), Three with 4; MSU: Drummond 9 (4-5), Allen 8 (3-5), Lewis 7 (3-4), Drone 5 (1-4), Dennard 5 (0-5).

Shilique Calhoun returned an interception 56 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter to give MSU a 14-6 lead over South Florida. Calhoun scored two defensive TDs vs. USF.

2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS

77


2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 3 • MICHIGAN STATE 55, YOUNGSTOWN STATE 17 Game 3 | Michigan State 55, Youngstown State 17 Sept. 14, 2013 • East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium • Att: 71,626

SCORE BY QUARTERS Youngstown State (2-1) Michigan State (3-0)

WHAT HAPPENED

FIRST QUARTER MSU (7-0) Langford 3-yard run (Muma kick), 11:49 left Drive: 5 plays, 24 yards, 2:09 YSU (3-7) Cejudo 34-yard field goal, 8:38 left Drive: 8 plays, 58 yards, 3:11 MSU (14-3) Sims 13-yard pass from Cook (Muma kick), 6:23 left Drive: 6 plays, 76 yards, 2:09 MSU (21-3) Pendleton 12-yard pass from Cook (Muma kick), 1:11 left Drive: 11 plays, 73 yards, 4:45

• Michigan State equaled the most points it has scored under head coach Mark Dantonio with 55 as the Spartans totaled a season-high 547 yards of total offense in the 55-17 victory over Youngstown State.

KEY STAT • The Spartans collected 547 yards of total offense - the fifth most under head coach Mark Dantonio - in their best offensive effort since racking up 602 yards of total offense vs. Western Michigan in 2009.

KEY PLAY • With MSU leading 28-10 late in the second quarter, senior wide receiver Bennie Fowler all but iced the game with a 17-yard touchdown reception from Connor Cook with 1:50 left in the first half to put MSU up 35-10. It marked Connor Cook’s fourth TD of the first half.

QUOTABLE “I thought today we obviously got great play from our offense. The most impressive thing to me was that we made those 50-50 catches - those catches that are difficult to make. We made them in crowds with people hanging on you. I thought (Connor) Cook played well. He ran the ball effectively and controlled things. I thought he threw the ball really well.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

KEY NOTE • Connor Cook tied a Michigan State record with four first-half touchdown passes. The four TDs overall tied for second most by a Spartan quarterback.

RECAP EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Connor Cook threw four touchdown passes in the first half, and the Michigan State offense finally looked smooth in a 55-17 victory over Youngstown State. Cook went 15 of 22 for 202 yards before being replaced by Tyler O’Connor early in the third quarter. Michigan State needed one of its quarterbacks to show progress after the defense accounted for four of the team’s six touchdowns in the first two games. Cook started and led Michigan State to a 35-10 halftime lead.

1 3 21

2 7 14

3 7 14

4 0 6

-

F 17 55

SCORING SUMMARY

SECOND QUARTER YSU (10-21) Ruiz 5-yard run (Cejudo kick), 4:57 left Drive: 5 plays, 33 yards, 2:46 MSU (28-10) Kings 24-yard pass from Cook (Muma kick), 3:24 left Drive: 1 play, 24 yards, 0:06 MSU (35-10) Fowler 17-yard pass from Cook (Muma kick), 1:50 left Drive: 5 plays, 70 yards, 0:44 THIRD QUARTER MSU (42-10) Hill 35-yard run (Muma kick), 12:12 left Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 2:48 MSU (49-10) Langford 2-yard run (Muma kick), 3:58 left Drive: 11 plays, 59 yards, 6:31 YSU (17-49) Ruiz 34-yard pass from Hess (Cejudo kick), 1:36 left Drive: 5 plays, 46 yards, 2:12 FOURTH QUARTER MSU (52-17) Muma 20-yard field goal, 7:37 left Drive: 16 plays, 77 yards, 8:58 MSU (55-17) Muma 22-yard field goal, 5:22 left Drive: 4 plays, 7 yards, 2:11

TEAM STATISTICS

YSU

MSU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

8 20-51 121 11-27-0 172 7-50.9 3-2 5-35 20:51

30 49-277 270 22-32-0 547 2-40.5 2-1 2-19 39:09

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) YSU: Ruiz 11-36, Stubbs 2-8, Pace 3-5, Hess 3-3, Webb 1-(-1); MSU: Hill 9-83, Langford 15-68, Bullough 10-34, Cook 2-25, Shelton 1-18, O’Connor 4-18, Fowler 1-17, Tompkins 6-16, Team 1-(-2). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) YSU: Hess 11-27-0-121-1; MSU: Cook 15-22-0-202-4, O’Connor 7-10-0-68-0. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) YSU: Ruiz 4-57, Stubbs 3-47, Wheary 1-7, Williams 1-6, Adams 1-3, Watts 1-1; MSU: Kings 4-61, Lippett 4-41, Burbridge 3-44, Price 3-28, Fowler 2-39, Lyles 2-19, Sims 1-13, Pendleton 1-12, Macksood 1-8, Mumphery 1-5.

78

Connor Cook tied a Michigan State record with four first-half touchdown passes in the Spartans’ 55-17 win over Youngstown State.

TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) YSU: Childs 11 (8-3), D’Alesio 7 (3-4), Williams 7 (2-5), Moore 6 (5-1), two with 5; MSU: J. Jones 7 (2-5), Williamson 6 (2-4), Reynolds 6 (0-6), Drummond 4 (2-2), Hoover 3 (0-3).

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 4 • NO. 22/21 NOTRE DAME 17, RV/NO. 24 MICHIGAN STATE 13 Game 4 | Notre Dame 17, Michigan State 13 Sept. 21, 2013 • Notre Dame, Ind. Notre Dame Stadium • Att: 80,795

SCORE BY QUARTERS Michigan State (3-1) Notre Dame (3-1)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Although being outgained and outrushed, Notre Dame held off Michigan State, 17-13, to record its third consecutive win in the series.

KEY STAT • Michigan State, which entered the game No. 1 in the NCAA FBS in total defense, allowed just 224 total yards of offense to the Irish, the fewest in the Brian Kelly era at Notre Dame; it was the fewest total yards by Notre Dame since it had just 91 in a loss to USC on Nov. 29, 2008.

KEY PLAY • With the score tied at 10, Notre Dame faced a third-and-10 from the MSU 22 yardline on the first play of the fourth quarter. The Spartans were flagged for their fourth pass interference of the game on the play, setting up first-and-goal for the Irish. Two plays later, Cam McDaniel scored on a 7-yard TD run to put Notre Dame up for good, 17-10.

QUOTABLE “Great football game, first of all. I thought very well played football game in terms of intensity and enthusiasm. As far as Michigan State is concerned, get down in the red zone, you’ve got to score touchdowns. Fact of the matter is they did not turn the ball over and we had to come up with turnovers. We ran the ball effectively. Had our opportunities in the red zone. Kicked a couple field goals, missed one. You’ve got to score touchdowns in those situations.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

KEY NOTE • Ten of the last 10 meetings between Michigan State and Notre Dame have been decided by seven points or less.

RECAP NOTRE DAME, Ind. (AP) - Notre Dame took advantage of a trick play that backfired, as well as four pass interference calls and a holding penalty that kept drives alive, to defeat Michigan State for the third straight time. The mistakes led to all of Notre Dame’s points in the 17-13 victory, including two on the game-winning drive after a pass by Michigan State receiver R.J. Shelton led to an interception by safety Matthias Farley, setting up the go-ahead touchdown.

1 0 3

2 7 7

3 3 0

4 3 7

-

F 13 17

FIRST QUARTER ND (3-0) Brindza 41-yard field goal, 3:48 left Drive: 7 plays, 57 yards, 3:30 SECOND QUARTER MSU (7-3) Kings 12-yard pass Cook (Geiger kick), 7:43 left Drive: 14 plays, 79 yards, 5:46 ND (10-7) Jones 2-yard pass from Rees (Brindza kick), 0:17 left Drive: 9 plays, 50 yards, 2:43 THIRD QUARTER MSU (10-10) Geiger 25-yard field goal, 6:21 left Drive: 15 plays, 75 yards, 8:39 FOURTH QUARTER ND (17-10) McDaniel 7-yard run (Brindza kick), 14:44 left Drive: 5 plays, 52 yards, 2:22 MSU (13-17) Geiger 42-yard field goal, 6:21 left Drive: 10 plays, 51 yards, 4:04

TEAM STATISTICS

MSU

ND

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

19 35-119 135 16-36-1 254 5-41.4 0-0 10-115 30:38

14 32-82 142 14-34-0 224 6-39.2 0-0 8-86 29:22

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) MSU: Langford 14-68, Hill 13-34, Maxwell 1-8, Fowler 1-6, Cook 4-4, Bullough 1-1, Team 1-(-2); ND: McDaniel 16-44, Atkinson 6-23, Folston 4-12, Carlisle 3-9, Team 3-(-6). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) MSU: Cook 16-32-0-135-1, Maxwell 0-3-0-0-0, Shelton 0-1-1-0-0; ND: Rees 14-34-0142-1. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) MSU: Kings 5-37, Burbridge 4-20, Fowler 3-39, Lyles 1-16, Langford 1-12, Mumphery 1-7, Price 1-4; ND: Robinson 3-54, Daniels 3-6, Atkinson 2-17, Jones 2-15, Fuller 1-37, Smith 1-9, Niklas 1-7, Prosise 1-(-3). TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) MSU: Williamson 10 (1-9), Allen 9 (4-5), Drummond 7 (4-3), Bullough 7 (3-4), Two with five; ND: Calabrese 8 (3-5), Grace 8 (0-8), Jackson 7 (3-4), Tuitt 6 (3-3), Nix 6 (1-5).

Michigan State’s defense limited Notre Dame to just 224 yards of total offense, the fewest in the Brian Kelly era.

2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 5 • MICHIGAN STATE 26, IOWA 14 Game 5 | Michigan State 26, Iowa 14 Oct. 5, 2013 • Iowa City, Iowa Kinnick Stadium • Att: 69,025

SCORE BY QUARTERS Michigan State (4-1, 1-0) Iowa (4-2, 0-1)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Down 14-10 at halftime, Michigan State rallied in the second half, outscoring Iowa 16-0 in the final two quarters to win its Big Ten opener, 26-14.

KEY STAT • On 14 Iowa possessions, MSU’s defense forced 10 three-and-outs (three-and-out: either holding an opponent without a first down within three plays on a new series or forcing a turnover in the first three plays). The Hawkeyes were held to just 23 yards rushing.

KEY PLAY • On Michigan State’s first drive of the third quarter, trailing 14-10, Connor Cook threw a 37-yard touchdown pass to Bennie Fowler that put the Spartans ahead for good.

QUOTABLE “We’ve been thinking about our last game, how to strengthen ourselves, re-evaluating ourselves as a football team and we came out and played. We kept talking about how you’re going to have adversity here and basically have to just flood the gates. We were tough to run the ball against, maybe that was an understatement, and we came up with two big turnovers at the right times. Just a solid team win.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

KEY NOTE • Michigan State’s 26-14 win over Iowa gave the Spartans back-to-back victories in Iowa City for the first time since 1987 and 1989. MSU snapped a seven-game losing streak in Iowa City with a 37-21 victory in 2011.

RECAP IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - Connor Cook threw for 277 yards and two touchdowns and Michigan State opened Big Ten play with a 26-14 win over Iowa. Darqueze Dennard had a pair of interceptions for the Spartans, who held the Hawkeyes scoreless in the second half. Freshman Michael Geiger added three field goals in the second half for the Spartans. Mark Weisman ran for just 9 yards on seven carries for the Hawkeyes, who lost for the first time since its season opener. Michigan State was again led by its standout defense. But the Spartans also came up huge on special teams. Up 6 early in the fourth quarter, Michigan State pulled off a crucial fake punt. Mike Sadler ran for 25 yards, setting up a 49-yard field goal by Geiger that put the Spartans up 23-14 with 13:28 left. Jake Rudock threw for 241 yards and two touchdowns for the Hawkeyes. But Dennard picked him off twice, including an interception with 5:09 left that largely ended the suspense.

1 0 0

2 10 14

3 10 0

4 6 0

-

F 26 14

SECOND QUARTER MSU (3-0) Geiger 27-yard field goal, 11:44 left Drive: 12 plays, 48 yards, 5:23 MSU (10-0) Kings 46-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 6:18 left Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 3:13 IOWA (7-10) Bullock 47-yard pass from Rudock (Meyer kick), 4:19 left Drive: 6 plays, 75 yards, 1:59 IOWA (14-10) Fiedorowicz 10-yard pass from Rudock (Meyer kick), 1:10 left Drive: 6 plays, 65 yards, 2:04 THIRD QUARTER MSU (17-14) Fowler 37-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 11:55 left Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 3:05 MSU (20-14) Geiger 35-yard field goal, 2:38 left Drive: 4 plays, 8 yards, 1:37 FOURTH QUARTER MSU (23-14) Geiger 49-yard field goal, 13:28 left Drive: 8 plays, 34 yards, 2:56 MSU (26-14) Geiger 40-yard field goal, 5:25 left Drive: 12 plays, 45 yards, 5:49

TEAM STATISTICS

MSU

IOWA

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

20 37-135 277 25-44-1 412 5-44.4 0-0 8-70 37:13

13 16-23 241 26-46-2 264 8-44.2 0-0 3-34 22:47

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) MSU: Langford 14-43, D. Williams 9-32, Sadler 1-25, Cook 6-21, Burbridge 1-11, Hill 4-6, Team 2-(-3); IOWA: Rudock 3-11, Weisman 7-9, Bullock 4-6, Team 1-(-1), Cotton 1-(-2). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) MSU: Cook 25-44-1-277-2; IOWA: Rudock 26-46-2. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) MSU: Fowler 9-92, Kings 5-94, Burbridge 3-22, Lippett 2-29, Langford 2-1, Sims 1-20, Pendleton 1-14, R. Bullough 1-3, Hill 1-2; IOWA: T. Smith 6-59, Bullock 5-71, VandeBerg 4-36, Fiedorowicz 3-21, Powell 2-19, McCarron 2-11, Weisman 1-8, Hamilton 1-6, Duzey 1-5, Shumpert 1-5. TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) MSU: Dennard 8 (3-5), T. Jones 6 (5-1), Waynes 6 (4-2), Drummond 6 (3-3), M. Bullough 6 (0-6); IOWA: Morris 12 (6-6), Hitchens 12 (4-8), King 11 (7-4), Lowdermilk 9 (3-6), Lowery 8 (7-1).

80

Darqueze Dennard was named the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week after tying his career high with two interceptions and collecting a career-best eight tackles in the win at Iowa.

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 6 • MICHIGAN STATE 42, INDIANA 28 Game 6 | Michigan State 42, Indiana 28 Oct. 12, 2013 • East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium • Att: 73,185

SCORE BY QUARTERS Indiana (3-3, 1-1) Michigan State (5-1, 2-0)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Junior running back Jeremy Langford recorded his first career 100-yard rushing game with 23 carries for 109 yards in MSU’s 42-28 win over Indiana on Homecoming at Spartan Stadium. Langford accounted for a career-best four touchdowns, including three scoring runs against the Hoosiers.

KEY STAT • Michigan State limited Indiana to season lows in passing offense (259 yards) and total offense (351). The Hoosiers entered the game ranked ninth in the nation in total offense (535.0 ypg.) and 10th in passing offense (346.0 ypg).

KEY PLAY • With Michigan State leading 28-21, Jeremy Langford broke free from several tacklers at the line of scrimmage and busted loose for a 32-yard touchdown run, putting the Spartans on top 35-21 with 3:23 left to play in the third quarter.

QUOTABLE “We sort of characterized this game as an iron man lift. If you know anything about Spartan football, we have iron man lifts for our younger players at 5:30 a.m. Everybody in our football program has to go through that. We felt like that’s what it was going to be - you are going to be challenged (playing against Indiana’s up-tempo offense), you were going to have adversity, you’re going to be pushed to the brink. I think overall it’s a good team win for us. We’re 5-1 and we can set the tone for the next phase. We’re halfway through the season. Now we start playing for things.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

KEY NOTE • Spartan Stadium played host to its 500th game, as Michigan State improved its all-time home record to 340-147-13 (.693) in 90 seasons. The Spartans also retained the Old Brass Spittoon, as MSU defeated Indiana for the fifth-straight time.

RECAP EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Jeremy Langford scored four touchdowns, and Michigan State recovered from an early defensive breakdown to beat Indiana 42-28. The Spartans prevailed in a matchup between their top-ranked defense and Indiana’s fast-paced offense. Tevin Coleman scored on a 64-yard run for the Hoosiers just 61 seconds into the game, but Michigan State took control shortly after halftime. Langford tied it early in the second quarter, catching an 11-yard touchdown pass from Connor Cook on third down. He later added three more TDs on the ground, becoming the first Michigan State player to score four in a game since Edwin Baker in 2010 against Minnesota.

1 7 0

2 7 21

3 7 14

4 7 7

-

F 28 42

FIRST QUARTER IU (7-0) Coleman 64-yard run (Ewald kick), 13:59 left Drive: 4 plays, 75 yards, 1:01 SECOND QUARTER MSU (7-7) Langford 11-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 13:34 left Drive: 15 plays, 83 yards, 6:53 MSU (14-7) Fowler 34-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 7:13 left Drive: 7 plays, 60 yards, 4:30 IU (14-14) Latimer 3-yard pass from Roberson (Ewald kick), 4:36 left Drive: 5 plays, 41 yards, 1:28 MSU (21-14) Langford 5-yard run (Geiger kick), 0:37 left Drive: 14 plays, 75 yards, 4:57 THIRD QUARTER MSU (28-14) Langford 2-yard run (Geiger kick), 10:03 left Drive: 9 plays, 75 yards, 4:57 IU (21-28) Wynn 2-yard run (Ewald kick), 7:47 left Drive: 7 plays, 72 yards, 2:11 MSU (35-21) Langford 32-yard run (Geiger kick), 3:23 left Drive: 8 plays, 65 yards, 4:24 FOURTH QUARTER MSU (42-21) Shelton 34-yard run (Geiger kick), 12:34 left Drive: 3 plays, 73 yards, 1:28 IU (42-28) Bolser 4-yard pass from Roberson (Ewald kick) Drive: 6 plays, 37 yards, 1:22

TEAM STATISTICS

IU

MSU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

19 27-92 259 25-47-1 351 8-40.9 1-0 7-65 22:32

24 47-238 235 22-31-1 473 4-59.2 2-1 10-100 37:28

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) IU: Coleman 15-79, Roberson 5-20, Wynn 1-2, Team 1-(-4), Sudfeld 5-(-5); MSU: Langford 23-109, D. Williams 12-92, Shelton 2-40, Cook 5-8, Fowler 1-(-2), Team 4-(-9). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) IU: Sudfeld 14-30-0-137-0, Roberson 11-17-1-122-2; MSU: Cook 22-31-1-235-2. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) IU: Latimer 7-58, Wynn 4-67, Bolser 4-32, Hughes 4-21, Roundtree 2-30, Wilson 1-20, Coleman 1-20, Stoner 1-12, Houston 1-(-1); MSU: Lippett 6-64, Kings 5-28, Burbridge 2-24, Sims 2-11, Price 1-39, Fowler 1-34, Langford 1-11, D. Williams 1-9, Shelton 1-7, Pendleton 1-5, Mumphery 1-3.

Jeremy Langford was named the Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week after scoring four touchdowns (three rushing, one receiving) and rushing for 109 yards on 23 carries against Indiana.

TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) IU: Murphy 11 (3-8), Hunter 9 (7-2), Bennett 9 (7-2), Hardin 7 (5-2), Simmons 6 (4-2); MSU: D. Allen 8 (5-3), Hoover 7 (5-2), Dennard 5 (4-1), Waynes 5 (4-1), T. Jones 5 (3-2).

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 7 • MICHIGAN STATE 14, PURDUE 0 Game 7 | Michigan State 14, Purdue 0 Oct. 19, 2013 • East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium • Att: 71,514

SCORE BY QUARTERS Purdue (1-6, 0-3) Michigan State (6-1, 3-0)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Michigan State recorded its first shutout over a Big Ten opponent since 1999, defeating the Boilermakers, 14-0, for its fifth-straight win in the series.

KEY STAT • Michigan State limited Purdue to three first downs, 7 rushing yards (10 carries) and 113 total yards in the second half.

1 0 0

2 0 7

3 0 0

4 0 7

-

F 0 14

SECOND QUARTER MSU (7-0) Allen 45-yard fumble recovery (Geiger kick), 10:17 left FOURTH QUARTER MSU (14-0) Gleichert 5-yard pass from Lippett (Geiger kick), 8:55 left Drive: 9 plays, 73 yards, 4:07

KEY PLAY • With the game scoreless in the second quarter, Max Bullough recorded a 7-yard sack on Purdue quarterback Danny Etling that produced a fumble, which senior Denicos Allen then recovered and returned 45 yards for a touchdown with 10:17 left in the first half.

QUOTABLE “We knew it was on us. We told each other it was on us. If they don’t score, we win. It was as simple as that. We had no choice but to step it up. Last year in the close games, we would sometimes give up touchdowns at the end of the game. We didn’t want to do that this year. It’s a new year. It’s a new team and we needed to make changes. That was the main change we wanted to make this year.” - MSU fifth-year senior linebacker Denicos Allen

KEY NOTE • Michigan State shut out Purdue for just the fourth time in series history and for the first time since 1963.

RECAP EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Denicos Allen returned a fumble 45 yards for a touchdown, and Michigan State’s offense finally added an insurance score in the fourth quarter of a 14-0 win over Purdue. The Spartans didn’t make it past the Purdue 32-yard line until the fourth quarter, when receiver Tony Lippett threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Andrew Gleichert on a trick play. Purdue kept it close after being routed by Wisconsin and Nebraska in its first two conference games, but Paul Griggs missed two field goals. The Spartans entered with the nation’s top-ranked defense, and Allen opened the scoring in the second quarter with Michigan State’s fifth defensive touchdown of the season. Max Bullough hit quarterback Danny Etling, the ball popped free, and Allen was able to scoop it up and score easily. Jeremy Langford rushed for 131 yards on 24 carries for Michigan State. While the Spartans were sputtering offensively, punter Mike Sadler gave them a lift, landing three punts inside the 10-yard line.

82

TEAM STATISTICS

PUR

MSU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

14 34-66 160 14-25-1 226 6-44.8 1-1 3-30 28:59

21 41-182 112 14-26-0 294 7-38.0 0-0 2-14 31:01

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) PUR: Hunt 9-43, Cottom 12-39, Dawkins 3-5, Etling 10-(-21); MSU: Langford 24-131, Cook 6-27, Shelton 5-24, D. Williams 3-8, Team 3-(-8). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) PUR: Etling 14-25-1-160-0; MSU: Cook 13-25-0-107-0; Lippett 1-1-0-5-1. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) PUR: Posey 5-50, Sinz 4-30, Hunt 3-36, Yancey 1-32, Carter 1-12; MSU: Lippett 5-49, Kings 2-29, Sims 2-5, Shelton 2-(-7), Price 1-26, Mumphery 1-5, Gleichert 1-5. TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) PUR: A. Brown 6 (4-2), Richards 6 (3-3), Allen 5 (4-1), Gaston 5 (3-2), Russell 5 (2-3); MSU: Bullough 10 (3-7), Drummond 9 (4-5), D. Allen 8 (5-3), Dennard 7 (5-2), Two with 5.

Max Bullough sacked Purdue quarterback Danny Etling and forced a fumble in the second quarter, which was then recovered and returned by Denicos Allen 45 yards for a Spartan touchdown. Bullough also recorded a season-high 10 tackles.

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 8 • MICHIGAN STATE 42, ILLINOIS 3 Game 8 | Michigan State 42, Illinois 3 Oct. 26, 2013 • Champaign, Ill. Memorial Stadium • Att: 45,895

SCORE BY QUARTERS Michigan State (7-1, 4-0) Illinois (3-4, 0-3)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Michigan State scored 42 unanswered points and compiled 477 yards of total offense in dominating Illinois, 42-3, to win its seventh-straight game in Memorial Stadium.

KEY STAT • Sophomore quarterback Connor Cook set a school record for single-game completion percentage (.938), as he connected on 15 of his 16 passes for 208 yards and three touchdowns; he finished the game with 11 straight completions.

KEY PLAY • With Michigan State leading 7-3 midway through the second quarter, the Spartans stuffed Illinois on fourth-and-goal from the 1-yard line; MSU proceeded to drive the ball 99 yards on 15 plays for a touchdown, using 8:08 on the clock, to go up 14-3 before the half.

QUOTABLE “We’ve played very well away from home really since 2010. Our guys sort of come together, and we are confident when we go away. It talks to team chemistry I think and good things happen when you have team chemistry. It wasn’t as easy as the score would indicate. The first half was definitely in question and you have to credit Illinois with that, too. You know things can flow and momentum has a way of shifting and creating a lot things for a team.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

1 0 3

2 14 0

3 14 0

4 14 0

-

F 42 3

FIRST QUARTER ILL (3-0) Zalewski 31-yard field goal, 9:41 left Drive: 12 plays, 53 yards, 5:19 SECOND QUARTER MSU (7-3) Langford 1-yard run (Geiger kick), 12:40 left Drive: 4 plays, 23 yards, 1:45 MSU (14-3) Fowler 29-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 0:09 left Drive: 15 plays, 99 yards, 8:08 left THIRD QUARTER MSU (21-3) Price 13-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 10:07 left Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 4:53 MSU (28-3) Langford 7-yard run (Geiger kick), 2:37 left Drive: 9 plays, 56 yards, 5:19 FOURTH QUARTER MSU (35-3) Mumphery 47-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 14:52 left Drive: 2 plays, 75 yards, 0:46 MSU (42-3) D. Williams 42-yard run (Geiger kick), 8:05 left Drive: 8 plays, 77 yards, 4:31

KEY NOTE • Michigan State held Illinois to just 128 yards of total offense, a season low for a Spartan opponent and the fewest given up by MSU since Minnesota had 96 yards of total offense on Nov. 24, 2012. MSU allowed 53 yards to Illinois on the Illini’s first drive, which resulted in a field goal; the rest of the game, the Spartans gave up just 75 yards. Illinois had just 18 yards of total offense and one first down in the second half.

RECAP CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) - Connor Cook threw for three touchdowns and Michigan State’s defense locked down Illinois on the way to a 42-3 win. Cook finished 15-of-16 for 208 yards, setting a Michigan State record for completion percentage. Tailback Jeremy Langford had 104 yards on 22 carries and two touchdowns for the Spartans. The Michigan State defense came into the game ranked first in the nation in total defense at 228 yards a game, and looked even better Saturday, holding Illinois to just 128.

TEAM STATISTICS

MSU

ILL

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

29 55-269 208 15-16-0 477 1-54.0 1-1 5-34 39:06

8 21-25 103 13-21-1 128 7-40.6 1-1 7-66 20:54

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) MSU: Langford 22-104, D. Williams 5-78, Hill 13-70, O’Connor 2-10, Shelton 2-7, Cook 8-7, Mumphery 1-(-1), Team 2-(-6); ILL: Ferguson 10-26, Scheelhaase 6-11, Davis 2-2, Bailey 1-(-1), Lankford 2-(-13). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) MSU: Cook 15-16-0-208-3; ILL: Scheelhaase 13-21-1-103-0. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) MSU: Mumphery 3-77, Fowler 2-40, Price 2-21, Lippett 2-7, Lyles 1-18, Kings 1-16, Pendleton 1-13, Shelton 1-6, Sims 1-6, D. Williams 1-4; ILL: Harris 6-46, Ferguson 2-15, Barr 2-8, Lankford 1-22, Osei 1-13, Davis 1-(-1). TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) MSU: T. Jones 6 (2-4), Waynes 5 (2-3), D. Allen 5 (2-3), Bullough 5 (0-5), Three with 4; ILL: Monheim 14 (4-10), Brown 10 (8-2), Petty 8 (1-7), Spence 7 (4-3), Thomas 7 (2-5).

Connor Cook completed 15-of-16 passes for 208 yards and three TDs at Illinois, setting a Michigan State single-game record for completion percentage (.938).

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 9 • NO. 24/24 MICHIGAN STATE 29, NO. 23/21 MICHIGAN 6 Game 9 | Michigan State 29, Michigan 6 Nov. 2, 2013 • East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium • Att: 76,306

SCORE BY QUARTERS Michigan (6-2, 2-2) Michigan State (8-1, 5-0)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Michigan State scored 23 unanswered points to defeat Michigan, 29-6, in the largest margin of victory for the Spartans over the Wolverines since 1967. It marked MSU’s fifth win in the last six meetings against Michigan.

KEY STAT • The Spartans recorded seven sacks and 11 tackles for loss in limiting the Wolverines to minus-48 yards rushing - the lowest single-game rushing total in U-M history. It also marked the fewest rushing yards allowed by MSU under head coach Mark Dantonio and tied for the third fewest allowed in school history (school record -63 rushing yards by Pittsburgh in 1960; -60 rushing yards by Pittsburgh in 1981; -48 rushing yards by Northwestern in 1983).

KEY PLAY • With the scored tied at 6 late in the second quarter, Connor Cook capped a 10-play, 75yard drive with a 14-yard pass to Bennie Fowler in the back, right corner of the end zone with 23 seconds left in the first half that gave MSU the lead for good over the Wolverines.

QUOTABLE

1 3 3

2 3 10

3 0 3

4 0 13

SECOND QUARTER MSU (6-3) Geiger 44-yard field goal, 11:19 left Drive: 10 plays, 26 yards, 4:13 MICH (6-6) Gibbons 39-yard field goal, 3:22 left Drive: 6 plays, 57 yards, 2:40 MSU (13-6) Fowler 14-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 0:23 left Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 2:54 THIRD QUARTER MSU (16-6) Geiger 35-yard field goal, 9:54 left Drive: 10 plays, 46 yards, 4:58 FOURTH QUARTER MSU (22-6) Cook 1-yard run (Geiger kick blocked), 10:31 left Drive: 9 plays, 68 yards, 4:20 MSU (29-6) Langford 40-yard run (Geiger kick), 2:43 left Drive: 8 plays, 97 yards, 3:40

KEY NOTE

TEAM STATISTICS

MICH

MSU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

12 29-(-48) 216 15-30-1 168 8-40.9 3-0 3-39 27:39

19 39-142 252 18-33-1 394 5-40.8 0-0 5-25 32:21

RECAP EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Mark Dantonio has always embraced Michigan State’s rivalry with Michigan, but this week the confident coach took a fairly calm approach. Dantonio’s Spartans battered their biggest rivals for the full 60 minutes Saturday, and 24th-ranked Michigan State remained unbeaten in the Big Ten with a 29-6 victory over the 23rd-ranked Wolverines. Michigan was sacked seven times and finished with minus-48 yards rushing, the worst output in the Ann Arbor program’s lengthy history. Connor Cook threw for a touchdown and ran for one, but this game belonged to Michigan State’s defense, which solidified its spot among the nation’s best with an overwhelming performance on a rainy afternoon at Spartan Stadium. Shilique Calhoun and Ed Davis had 2 1/2 sacks each, and Denicos Allen added two more.

F 6 29

FIRST QUARTER MICH (3-0) Wile 49-yard field goal, 10:38 left Drive: 9 plays, 51 yards, 4:22 MSU (3-3) Geiger 40-yard field goal, 9:10 left Drive: 5 plays, 52 yards, 1:28

“A lot of passion goes into this football game...We talked all week about keeping the lion in the cage, just peaking at game time. Don’t worry about all the things that are being said, just keep your mouth shut, get ready to play, start the game and finish stronger than when you started. We were going to let the lion out of the cage at 3:30 and that’s what happened. We got stronger as the game continued.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

• Michigan State held Michigan without a touchdown for the second consecutive season.

-

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) MICH: Toussaint 8-20, Morris 1-0, Team 2-(-22), Gardner 18-(-46); MSU: Langford 26120, Shelton 2-38, Williams 2-5, Hill 1-2, Team 3-(-8), Cook 5-(-15). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) MICH: Gardner 14-27-1-210-0, Morris 1-3-0-6-0; MSU: Cook 18-33-1-252-1. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) MICH: Funchess 6-65, Gallon 5-67, Chesson 3-82, Toussaint 1-2; MSU: Fowler 6-75, Lippett 5-62, Pendleton 2-62, Kings 2-14, Gleichert 1-18, Price 1-12, Mumphery 1-9. TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) MICH: Taylor 12 (6-6), Clark 9 (3-6), Bolden 8 (2-6), Morgan 8 (1-7), Two with five; MSU: D. Allen 9 (5-4), Drummond 8 (5-3), Calhoun 6 (3-3), Bullough 5 (1-4), Four with four.

84

Denicos Allen was named the National Defensive Player of the Week after recording nine tackles, including three for losses with two sacks, against Michigan.

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 10 • NO. 14/16 MICHIGAN STATE 41, NEBRASKA 28 Game 10 | Michigan State 41, Nebraska 28 Nov. 16, 2013 • Lincoln, Neb. Memorial Stadium • Att: 90,872

SCORE BY QUARTERS Michigan State (9-1, 6-0) Nebraska (7-3, 4-2)

1 10 7

2 10 0

3 7 14

4 14 7

-

F 41 28

SCORING SUMMARY

WHAT HAPPENED • For the first time in eight meetings, Michigan State defeated Nebraska, 41-28. The win clinched a share of the Big Ten Legends Division title for the Spartans.

KEY STAT • Michigan State forced five Nebraska turnovers, the most caused by the Spartans in the Coach Mark Dantonio era (fumble recovery by Shilique Calhoun in first quarter; interception by Kurtis Drummond in first quarter; fumble recovery by Taybor Pepper in first quarter; fumble recovery by Isaiah Lewis in second quarter; fumble recovery by Trae Waynes in third quarter). MSU converted those five turnovers into 24 points.

KEY PLAY • With MSU leading 27-21 midway through the fourth quarter, Spartan placekicker Michael Geiger lined up for a 45-yard field goal to put MSU up two scores; however, holder Mike Sadler pulled off the fake field goal by gaining 3 yards on the ground up the middle for a first down. Later on the drive, Connor Cook found Keith Mumphery for a 27-yard touchdown pass to give MSU a 35-21 advantage.

QUOTABLE “We have played for a championship in 2008 at the end of the season, 2010, 2011 and now 2013, we will have a chance to play for a championship. On the last game of the season, any way you cut it, it is a Legends Championship, any way you cut it. Those are positives, those are big positive steps for a program from when we came here. It shows we have a solid foundation but we need to continue to coach, and play and play up and continue to climb the latter. You want to be where we are at, at the end of the season. I think it was a statement for a lot of people, for recruits and for everybody else.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

FIRST QUARTER MSU (3-0) Geiger 45-yard field goal, 12:23 left Drive: 7 plays, 12 yards, 1:47 MSU (10-0) Shelton 5-yard run (Geiger kick), 4:57 left Drive: 2 plays, 8 yards, 0:46 NEB (7-10) Burtch 32-yard pass from Armstrong (Smith kick), 2:44 left Drive: 5 plays, 75 yards, 2:13 SECOND QUARTER MSU (13-7) Geiger 25-yard field goal, 10:29 left Drive: 17 plays, 74 yards, 7:10 MSU (20-7) Langford 6-yard run (Geiger kick), 0:21 left Drive: 3 plays, 22 yards, 0:39 THIRD QUARTER NEB (14-20) Cross 51-yard run (Smith kick), 11:25 left Drive: 3 plays, 63 yards, 1:01 MSU (27-14) Langford 3-yard run (Geiger kick), 5:26 left Drive: 1 play, 3 yards, 0:04 NEB (21-27) Bell 38-yard pass from Armstrong, 1:12 left Drive: 11 plays, 79 yards, 4:09

KEY NOTE

FOURTH QUARTER MSU (34-21) Mumphery 27-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 7:56 left Drive: 10 plays, 75 yards, 5:46 MSU (41-21) Langford 37-yard run (Geiger kick) Drive: 8 plays, 67 yards, 5:06 NEB (28-41) Abdullah 12-yard pass from Kellogg (Smith kick), 0:10 left Drive: 12 plays, 75 yards, 1:48

• The 2013 senior class won its 38th game since 2010 (38-12) to become the winningest senior class in the 117-year history of Michigan State football.

TEAM STATISTICS

MSU

NEB

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

18 48-168 193 15-32-0 361 7-40.6 0-0 6-60 38:37

19 32-182 210 17-32-1 392 5-43.2 6-4 3-30 21:23

RECAP LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Michigan State all but locked up a spot in the Big Ten Championship Game, and the Spartans didn’t even need their nation-leading defense at its best to do it. With Nebraska turning over the ball five times and Connor Cook directing a gamebreaking drive in the fourth quarter, the Spartans won 41-28 to take a two-game lead in the Legends Division with two games to play. Jeremy Langford ran 32 times for 151 yards and scored two touchdowns, and Keith Mumphery caught a 27-yard touchdown from Cook after the Cornhuskers pulled within six points.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) MSU: Langford 32-151; D. Williams 3-8; Shelton 3-6, Fowler 1-4, Sadler 1-3, Cook 6-(-1), Kings 1-(-1), Team 1-(-2); NEB: Abdullah 22-123, Cross 3-50, Armstrong 5-9, Newby 1-3, Team 1-(-3). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) MSU: Cook 15-31-0-193-1, Lippett 0-1-0-0-0; NEB: Armstrong 9-21-1-143-2, Kellogg 8-11-0-67-1. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) MSU: Lippett 4-67, Langford 4-23, Kings 3-37, Fowler 2-29, Mumphery 1-27, Hill 1-10; NEB: Bell 7-81, Burtch 5-86, Allen 3-22, Abdullah 1-12, Carter 1-9.

Jeremy Langford recorded career highs in carries (32) and rushing yards (151) and tied a career high with three rushing TDs in MSU’s 41-28 win at Nebraska.

TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) MSU: Drummond 10 (4-6), Bullough 9 (5-4), Waynes 5 (4-1), T. Jones 5 (3-2), D. Allen 5 (1-4); NEB: Evans 8 (6-2), Cooper 8 (5-3), Santos 8 (5-3), Anderson 8 (3-5), Gregory 8 (3-5).

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 11 • NO. 13/13 MICHIGAN STATE 30, NORTHWESTERN 6 Game 11 | Michigan State 30, Northwestern 6 Nov. 23, 2013 • Evanston, Ill. Ryan Field • Att: 40,013

SCORE BY QUARTERS Michigan State (10-1, 7-0) Northwestern (4-7, 0-7)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Michigan State clinched the Big Ten Legends Division title outright for the second time in three years with a 30-6 victory over Northwestern.

KEY STAT • With the wind chill in single figures, temperatures in the low-20s, and gusts swirling up to 25 mph, Connor Cook completed 16-of-23 passes for 293 yards.

KEY PLAY • With Michigan State leading 7-3 late in the second quarter, the Spartans had the ball on their own 13-yard line. On third-and-5, Connor Cook found Bennie Fowler down the sideline, who tipped the ball to himself as he slid past two Northwestern defenders, and raced to the end zone for an 87-yard touchdown. It tied for the fourth-longest reception in school history.

QUOTABLE “I want to congratulate our football team. Ten wins. Legends [Division] champions and as we go forward it’s exciting times. We’ve talked about there being moments that we’d remember for the rest of our lives and I think that’s what is happening for us, so we just need to continue and press on...Very happy for our program and everybody associated with it. Like I said, we got a hat on. Hopefully we want to wear this hat for a couple of weeks and we’ll trade it in, but we will see. That’s what makes things so special.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

KEY NOTE • Jeremy Langford recorded his sixth-straight 100-yard rushing game, a first for a Spartan since Lorenzo White accomplished the feat in seven-straight games in 1985. Langford accounted for 150 rushing yards, a career-high 185 all-purpose yards, and two TDs against the Wildcats.

RECAP EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) - Mark Dantonio and his players wore hats commemorating their division championship. They hope bigger prizes are coming. Connor Cook threw for 293 yards, Jeremy Langford ran for 150, and No. 13 Michigan State clinched a spot in the Big Ten title game with a 30-6 victory over Northwestern. Langford ran 20 yards untouched for the game’s first touchdown in the second quarter. He sealed it with a 37-yard scoring run in the fourth after Kurtis Drummond picked off a short pass by Trevor Siemian, sending Michigan State to its seventh straight win and Northwestern to its seventh loss in a row. Drummond had two interceptions, and the Spartans closed in on 11 wins for the third time in four seasons.

1 0 3

2 14 3

3 9 0

4 7 0

-

F 30 6

FIRST QUARTER NU (3-0) Budzien 22-yard field goal, 7:55 left Drive: 13 plays, 75 yards, 4:17 SECOND QUARTER MSU (7-3) Langford 20-yard run (Geiger kick), 8:22 left Drive: 11 plays, 80 yards, 5:42 MSU (14-3) Fowler 87-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 4:31 left Drive: 3 plays, 92 yards, 1:40 NU (6-14) Budzien 20-yard field goal, 1:52 left Drive: 7 plays, 69 yards, 2:39 THIRD QUARTER MSU (17-6) Geiger 37-yard field goal, 11:33 left Drive: 6 plays, 52 yards, 3:27 MSU (23-6) Price 15-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick blocked), 5:00 left Drive: 8 plays, 87 yards, 3:33 FOURTH QUARTER MSU (30-6) Langford 37-yard run (Geiger kick), 12:37 left Drive: 1 play, 37 yards, 0:08

TEAM STATISTICS

MSU

NU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

20 40-171 293 16-24-0 464 5-41.2 0-0 4-30 31:39

19 26-80 239 27-46-3 319 5-36.8 0-0 2-15 28:21

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) MSU: Langford 25-150, Hill 6-34, D. Williams 2-6, Shelton 1-1, Burbridge 1-(-5), Team 3-(-6), Cook 2-(-9); NU: Siemian 4-28, Green 11-25, Trumpy 8-17, Vitale 1-8, Colter 2-2.. PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) MSU: Cook 16-23-0-293-2; NU: Siemian 25-43-2-227-0, Colter 2-2-0-12-0, Oliver 0-11-0-0. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) MSU: Lippett 3-64, Price 3-35, Fowler 2-99, Langford 2-35, Burbridge 2-22, Kings 2-16, Mumphery 1-20, Gleichert 1-2; NU: T. Jones 7-59, Vitale 5-58, Lawrence 4-18, C. Jones 4-43, Trumpy 3-15, Green 2-13, Dickerson 1-18, Jensen 1-15, Prater 1-0. TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) MSU: Dennard 9 (5-4), D. Allen 8 (5-3), Williamson 7 (3-4), Drummond 6 (5-1), Waynes 5 4-1); NU: Hall 11 (6-5), Ariguzo 10 (5-5), Campbell 10 (4-6), Proby 7 (4-3), Harris 6 (3-3).

86

Michigan State clinched the Big Ten Legends Division title with a 30-6 win at Northwestern.

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 12 • NO. 11/11 MICHIGAN STATE 14, MINNESOTA 3 Game 12 | Michigan State 14, Minnesota 3 Nov. 30, 2013 • East Lansing, Mich. Spartan Stadium • Att: 71,418

SCORE BY QUARTERS Minnesota (8-4, 4-4) Michigan State (11-1, 8-0)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Michigan State completed its third perfect Big Ten regular season in program history and the first since the conference expanded to eight games with a 14-3 victory over Minnesota on Senior Day. The 18-member senior class, the winningest in school history, closed their careers with a 23-5 (.821) mark at Spartan Stadium.

KEY STAT • With an 11-point victory, Michigan State became the first Big Ten team to win all eight of its conference games by double-digit points since the league went to an eight-game schedule in 1971.

KEY PLAY • With Michigan State leading 14-3 in the fourth quarter, Minnesota drove the ball 77 yards on 17 plays in 9:21 to the Spartan 11-yard line; on third-and-10, Gopher quarterback Mitch Leidner was sacked by Shilique Calhoun and Tyler Hoover popped the ball loose, and Denzel Drone recovered the fumble for MSU at the 14-yard line, ending Minnesota’s scoring threat.

QUOTABLE “We’ve been here before, we’ve won 11 games before. It feels good. I don’t think there’s any question it feels very good. You feel like you’ve attained a goal. But at the same time, you’re right, nobody’s giving anyone Gatorade showers. We’ve got one more to go. That’s what we want to do. Those are our goals.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

KEY NOTE • Jeremy Langford rattled off a career-long 44-yard rush late in the fourth quarter to push him past the 100-yard mark for the seventh game in a row, which tied a school record along with Lorenzo White, who accomplished the feat in 1985.

RECAP EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Jeremy Langford ran for 134 yards and a touchdown, and No. 11 Michigan State wrapped up an unbeaten regular season in Big Ten play with a 14-3 victory over Minnesota. The Spartans’ top-ranked defense forced three turnovers and kept the Golden Gophers out of the end zone, repeating a formula that has brought Michigan State within a win of the Rose Bowl. The Spartans went undefeated at home for the third time in four years. They took the lead right away Saturday on Langford’s 15-yard touchdown run in the first quarter, which capped a seven-play, 80-yard drive. Minnesota’s Philip Nelson attempted only seven passes in the first half, and two of them were picked off by Michigan State’s Trae Waynes.

1 0 7

2 3 0

3 0 7

4 0 0

-

F 3 14

FIRST QUARTER MSU (7-0) Langford 15-yard run (Geiger kick) Drive: 7 plays, 80 yards, 3:20 SECOND QUARTER MINN (3-7) Hawthorne 21-yard field goal Drive: 14 plays, 60 yards, 7:32 THIRD QUARTER MSU (14-3) Price 12-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick) Drive: 8 plays, 75 yards, 2:40

TEAM STATISTICS

MINN

MSU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

17 50-124 125 9-25-2 249 5-47.2 1-1 3-14 38:41

15 31-181 143 10-20-1 324 6-41.8 1-1 2-15 21:19

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) MINN: Cobb 27-101, Nelson 4-7, Kirkwood 7-7, Williams 1-7, Jones, 2-2, Leidner 8-2, Team 1-(-2); MSU: Langford 21-134, Burbridge 1-35, Hill 4-23, Williams 1-6, Shelton 1-4, Cook 3-(-21). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) MINN: Nelson 6-18-2-77-0, Leidner 3-7-0-48-0; MSU: Cook 10-20-1-143-1. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) MINN: Wolitarsky 3-56, Jones 3-47, Williams 1-11, Fruechte 1-9 Henry 1-2; MSU:Lippett 4-71, Burbridge 2-12, Kings 1-24, Fowler 1-15, Price 1-12, Langford 1-9. TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) MINN: Manuel 8 (5-3), Hill 6 (3-3), Wilson 5 (4-1), Thompson 5 (2-3), Murray 4 (3-1); MSU: D. Allen 13 (3-10), Drummond 10 (4-6), Dennard 9 (7-2), Bullough 9 (2-7), Calhoun 7 (3-4).

Michigan State completed a perfect 7-0 home season for the third time in the past four years with a 14-3 win over Minnesota on Senior Day.

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2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 13 • NO. 10/9 MICHIGAN STATE 34, NO. 2/2 OHIO STATE 24 Game 13 vs. Ohio State (Big Ten Championship Game) Dec. 7, 2013 • Indianapolis, Ind. Lucas Oil Stadium • Att: 66,002

SCORE BY QUARTERS Ohio State (12-1) Michigan State (12-1)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Michigan State snapped Ohio State’s school-record 24-game winning streak and defeated the Buckeyes, 34-24, to win the program’s eighth Big Ten Championship and seal its first trip to the Rose Bowl since 1988.

KEY STAT • Ohio State entered the game ranked in the FBS Top 10 in scoring offense and total offense, but the Spartans held the Buckeyes to season lows in points (24) and total yards (374). The Buckeyes were 1-of-10 on third-down conversions and 0-of-2 on fourth down.

KEY PLAY • With Michigan State leading 27-24 midway through the fourth quarter, Ohio State deflected a punt, and took over at the MSU 47-yard line. After three rushes for 8 yards, the Buckeyes faced a fourth-and-2 at the MSU 39-yard line and called timeout. On the fourth-down play, Denicos Allen stopped OSU quarterback Braxton Miller 1-yard short of the first down, and MSU took over on downs. The Spartans iced the game with a 6-play, 61-yard drive in three minutes and 33 seconds, capped off by Jeremy Langford’s 26-yard TD run up the middle.

QUOTABLE “We’re going to live this one for a while, live it for a month. But it’s important that we finish what we started and that will end with a bowl game.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

KEY NOTE • Michigan State won its school-record 12th game of the season (11 wins in 2010 and 2011).

RECAP INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Connor Cook was determined to shake things up in the Big Ten title game. By the end of the night, the sophomore quarterback’s teammates were bouncing up and down right along with him. No. 10 Michigan State rallied from a seven-point third-quarter deficit by scoring the final 17 points to upset No. 2 Ohio State 34-24 and deny the Buckeyes a chance to play for the BCS National Championship. It was a game that almost defied logic. Ohio State came into the game with the nation’s longest winning streak (24), had not lost under Meyer in two seasons and had one of the nation’s most productive offenses and underrated defenses. Michigan State turned the conventional wisdom upside down by scoring the first 17 points. Then the nation’s stingiest defense gave up the next 24 points as Braxton Miller, Carlos Hyde & Co. took command. Cook responded to the challenge by driving the Spartans for a field goal, hooking up with the wide open Josiah Price in the flat of the end zone and then burned 3 1/2 critical minutes on the clinching drive, capped by Jeremy Langford’s sealing 26-yard TD run.

1 0 3

2 10 14

3 14 3

4 0 14

-

F 24 34

FIRST QUARTER MSU (3-0) Geiger 40-yard field goal, 8:31 left Drive: 14 plays, 47 yards, 6:29 SECOND QUARTER MSU (10-0) Mumphery 72-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 14:50 left Drive: 2 plays, 68 yards, 0:14 MSU (17-0) Lippett 33-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 9:01 left Drive: 5 plays, 66 yards, 2:12 OSU (7-17) Brown 20-yard pass from Miller (Basil kick), 6:26 left Drive: 5 plays, 84 yards, 2:28 OSU (10-17) Basil 28-yard field goal, 0:00 left Drive: 7 plays, 53 yards, 1:23 THIRD QUARTER OSU (17-17) Miller 8-yard run (Basil kick), 12:21 left Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 2:39 OSU (24-17) Miller 6-yard run (Basil kick), 5:36 left Drive: 5 plays, 44 yards, 2:12 MSU (20-24) Geiger 44-yard field goal, 2:29 left Drive: 9 plays, 48 yards, 3:07 FOURTH QUARTER MSU (27-24) Price 9-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 11:41 left Drive: 8 plays, 90 yards, 3:12 MSU (34-24) Langford 26-yard run (Geiger kick), 2:16 left Drive: 6 plays, 61 yards, 3:25

TEAM STATISTICS

OSU

MSU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

20 40-273 101 8-23-0 374 7-43.1 2-0 5-62 27:09

23 32-134 304 24-40-1 438 5-41.2 0-0 3-20 32:51

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) OSU: Miller 21-142, Hyde 18-118, Hall 1-13; MSU: Langford 24-128, Shelton 1-8, D. Williams 1-3, Cook 3-0, Team 1-(-1), Hill 1-(-4). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) OSU: Miller 8-21-0-101-1; Team 0-1-0-0-0 MSU: Cook 24-40-1-304-3. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) OSU: Brown 5-53, Heuerman 1-36, Smith 1-16, Hyde 1-1; MSU: Kings 5-67, Langford 5-21, Lippett 4-65, Fowler 3-29, Price 3-24, Mumphery 2-84, Burbridge 1-14, Gleichert 1-0. TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) OSU: Shazier 12 (10-2), Barnett 7 (4-3), Spence 6 (4-2), Washington 6 (4-2), Roby 6 (4-2); MSU: Lewis 13 (9-4), D. Allen 8 (3-5), Drummond 5 (3-2), T. Jones 5 (3-2), Two with 4.

88

The Spartans celebrate following their 34-24 win over No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game that sealed MSU’s first trip to the Rose Bowl since 1988.

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


2013 GAME RECAPS GAME 14 • NO. 4/4 MICHIGAN STATE 24, NO. 5/7 STANFORD 20 Game 14 vs. Stanford (100th Rose Bowl Game) Jan. 1, 2014 • Pasadena, Calif. Rose Bowl • Att: 95,173

SCORE BY QUARTERS Stanford (11-3) Michigan State (13-1)

WHAT HAPPENED

SCORING SUMMARY

• Michigan State won its first Rose Bowl since 1988 and its fourth in program history with a 24-20 comeback victory over fifth-ranked and defending Rose Bowl Champion Stanford.

KEY STAT • Michigan State’s defense held Stanford to just one offensive touchdown and 11 first downs (season lows), 162 rushing yards (second-lowest total of the season) and 304 yards of total offense (third-lowest total of the season).

KEY PLAY • With Michigan State leading 24-20 and 1:46 remaining in the game, Stanford faced a fourth-and-1 from its own 34-yard line. All 22 players on the field lined up in the box as the Cardinal attempted to hand the ball off to fullback Ryan Hewitt for the first down, but he was stopped in midair by a leaping Kyler Elsworth, who made the initial hit and kept Hewitt shy of the first-down marker. Shilique Calhoun and Darien Harris also assisted on the play, which cliniched MSU’s first Rose Bowl victory in 26 years.

QUOTABLE “The Rose Bowl to me is the pinnacle of what we do in the Big Ten Conference...I think the Rose Bowl, I can just tell you the experiences that we had this week are really unparalleled, and I’ve been to a lot of bowls over the course of my time. But it’s unparalleled. They have the resources and they have the interest, and they put those resources to work and make it an unbelievable experience for you...I’m so impressed and proud of our football team and happy for all those involved.” - MSU head coach Mark Dantonio

KEY NOTE • Offensive MVP Connor Cook threw for a career-high 332 yards and completed 22-of-36 passes, including two touchdowns.

RECAP PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Connor Cook passed for a career-high 332 yards and hit Tony Lippett with a tiebreaking 25-yard touchdown pass early in the fourth quarter, and No. 4 Michigan State held off the fifth-ranked Cardinal in the 100th Rose Bowl Game, 24-20. Cook also threw a TD pass to Trevon Pendleton, and Jeremy Langford rushed for 84 yards and a score as the Spartans overcame their first double-digit deficit of the entire season before surging ahead late and preserving the lead with stalwart defense. Michigan State’s FBS-best defense capped its dominant season with one more old-school performance befitting the centennial celebration of the Granddaddy of Them All. The Spartans (13-1) yielded just 159 yards in the final three quarters, and they closed it out by stopping Stanford fullback Ryan Hewitt on fourth-and-1 on the Cardinal 34-yard line with 1:46 to play.

1 10 0

2 7 14

3 0 3

4 3 7

-

F 20 24

FIRST QUARTER STAN (7-0) Gaffney 16-yard run (Williamson kick), 11:16 left Drive: 7 plays, 77 yards, 3:44 STAN (10-0) Williamson 34-yard field goal, 1:40 left Drive: 7 plays, 69 yards, 2:41 SECOND QUARTER MSU (7-10) Langford 2-yard run (Geiger kick), 10:45 left Drive: 13 plays, 75 yards, 5:55 STAN (17-7) Anderson 40-yard interception return (Williamson kick), 2:07 left MSU (14-17) Pendleton 2-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 0:28 left Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, 1:39 THIRD QUARTER MSU (17-17) Geiger 31-yard field goal, 12:56 left Drive: 6 plays, 61 yards, 2:04 FOURTH QUARTER MSU (24-17) Lippett 25-yard pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 13:22 left Drive: 3 plays, 27 yards, 1:28 STAN (20-24) Williamson 39-yard field goal, 4:15 left Drive: 9 plays, 50 yards, 4:46

TEAM STATISTICS

STAN

MSU

First Downs Rushes-Yards Passing Yards Passes Total Offense Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Possession Time

11 36-162 143 10-18-1 305 5-49.8 2-0 8-55 28:49

21 35-65 332 22-36-1 397 6-45.5 1-1 4-35 31:11

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) STAN: Gaffney 24-91, Hogan 8-41, Rector 1-27, Seale 1-4, Hewitt 1-0, Team 1-(-1); MSU: Langford 23-84, Kings 2-7, Fowler 1-(-5), Team 3-(-6), Cook 6-(-15). PASSING (C-A-I-YARDS-TD) STAN: Hogan 10-18-1-143-0; MSU: Cook 22-36-1-332-2. RECEIVING (RECEPTIONS-YARDS) STAN: Montgomery 3-21, Rector 2-44, Cajuste 1-51, Sanders 1-11, Hewitt 1-11, Wilkerson 1-7, Gaffney 1-(-2); MSU: Lippett 5-94, Langford 5-17, Kings 4-52, Fowler 2-97, Pendleton 2-21, Mumphery 1-20, Gleichert 1-17, Price 1-9, Lyles 1-5. TACKLES-TOP FIVE (TOTAL-SOLO-ASSISTS) STAN: Reynolds 10 (7-3), Skov 9 (6-3), Tarpley 6 (3-3), Richards 5 (2-3), Lyons 5 (2-3); MSU: T. Jones 8 (6-2), D. Allen 7 (6-1), Drummond 5 (3-2), Harris 5 (2-3), Four with 4.

Kyler Elsworth (No. 41) leaps in the air to make the game-winning stop against Stanford fullback Ryan Hewitt on fourth-and-1 with under two minutes remaining in the game.

2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS

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COACHING STAFF MARK DANTONIO HEAD COACH EIGHTH SEASON @DANTONIOMARK

Mark Dantonio, who is in his eighth season as head coach at Michigan State, has restored the pride and tradition of Spartan football while transforming the program into an annual Big Ten Championship contender. A Zanesville, Ohio, native with Midwest ties, Dantonio led Michigan State to a record-setting season in 2013. MSU won a school-record 13 games, defeated No. 5 Stanford in the 100th Rose Bowl Game, beat No. 2 Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game for the school’s eighth Big Ten title, and finished No. 3 in both national polls, the highest ranking for the Spartans since 1966. Michigan State (13-1) became just the third team in Big Ten history to win at least 13 games in a season (Minnesota, 1904; and Ohio State, 2002). In its first-ever Bowl Championship Series appearance, Michigan State rallied from its largest deficit of the season - twice trailing Stanford by 10 points - for a 24-20 victory over the Cardinal in the 100th Rose Bowl Game. The Spartans closed out the 2013 season with a 10game winning streak. After leading the Spartans to their second Big Ten Legends Division title in three years, Dantonio guided MSU past previously undefeated and second-ranked Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game, 34-24, to win the school’s eighth Big Ten Championship and earn a berth in the Rose Bowl Game for the first time since 1988. Bowl eligible for a school-record seventh consecutive season, the Spartans finished fourth in the final Bowl Championship Series standings, marking the highest BCS ranking in school history. In addition, Michigan State became the first school in Big Ten history to win all eight of its conference games by double digits. Dantonio, who has 34 years of collegiate coaching experience, has coached in 18 bowl games. He has led Michigan State to a school-record three consecutive bowl wins (2012 Outback Bowl against No. 18 Georgia; 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl against TCU; 2014 Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford). Dantonio has participated in four New Year’s Day games as a head coach (2009 Capital One Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl), and has led Michigan State to Top 25 finishes in four of the last six seasons (2008: No. 24 both polls; 2010: No. 14 both polls; 2011: No. 10 USA TODAY/No. 11 AP; 2013: No. 3 both polls). Dantonio owns a 64-29 record (.688) at Michigan State since his arrival in 2007. He already ranks among MSU’s all-time leaders in career wins (fourth) and winning percentage (fifth), and is the only coach in MSU history to lead multiple teams to double-digit win seasons (11 in 2010 and 2011; 13 in 2013). Among Spartan coaches who have coached at least 10 Big Ten games, Dantonio owns the best conference winning percentage (.679, 38-18 record). MSU’s 42 wins over the last four seasons are most in the Big Ten and tied for ninth most in the NCAA Football

Bowl Subdivision during that period; it’s also the winningest four-year stretch in school history. The Spartans have posted four consecutive winning seasons, a first for the program since recording six in a row from 1985-90. MSU produced back-to-back 11-win seasons in 2010-11 for the first time in program history, claimed a share of the Big Ten Championship in 2010, and won the Big Ten Legends title in 2011. In addition, Michigan State has recorded 35 Big Ten victories since 2008, the most of any team in the conference. Since 2011, Michigan State’s defense has been one of the most consistent in the FBS. The Spartans are one of just four schools, along with Alabama, Florida and Florida State, to rank among the FBS Top 10 in total defense the past three seasons. In addition, Michigan State and Alabama are the only teams to rank in the FBS Top 11 the past three years in total defense, scoring defense, rushing defense and passing defense. Dantonio earned 2013 Big Ten Coach of the Year honors from both the media and coaches, as the Spartans finished their conference schedule with a perfect 8-0 record for the first time in school history. Michigan State became the 14th Big Ten team to post an 8-0 mark in league play. The Spartans were the first Big Ten team to win all eight of their conference games by double-digit points since the league went to an eight-game schedule in 1971, and also defeated the Buckeyes by double figures in the championship game. In addition, MSU became the first undefeated Big Ten team to win all of its league games by double-figure points since Michigan in 1943 (6-0 record). Dantonio also was named a finalist for the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year, Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year, Bobby Bowden Coach of the Year and Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Awards. In addition, he was named one of 16 semifinalists for the Maxwell Football Club Coach of the Year and was tabbed Big Ten Coach of the Year by Sporting News and CollegeFootballNews.

com. Known as one of the top defensive minds in the country, Dantonio and his staff assembled the No. 1 defense in the Big Ten for the third-straight season in 2013. The Spartans led the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision in total defense for 13 straight weeks and finished the season ranked No. 2 in the FBS, allowing just 252.2 yards per game. MSU was the only school to rank in the top three in the four major defensive stat categories: No. 2 in total defense, No. 2 in rushing defense (86.6 ypg.), No. 3 in scoring defense (13.2 ppg.) and No. 3 in pass defense (165.6 ypg.). In addition, the Spartans led the FBS in pass efficiency defense (92.3 rating) and ranked No. 2 in opponent third-down conversions (.279) and No. 5 in first-downs defense (14.3 pg). MSU’s defense allowed just 4.04 yards per play, which also ranked No. 1 in the FBS. The Spartans also led the Big Ten in nine defensive categories (total defense, scoring defense, rushing defense, pass defense, pass efficiency defense, turnover margin, opponent third-down conversions, opponent fourth-down conversions, first downs defense). MSU is the first team to rank first in total defense and rushing defense three years in a row since the Big Ten awarded conference stat champions in 1985 for overall games. Offensively, the Spartans evolved into championship form as the season progressed, culminating with strong performances against Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game and Stanford in the Rose Bowl Game. The Spartans produced 438 yards of total offense against the Buckeyes and nearly 400 yards (397) against Stanford, which entered the game No. 14 in the FBS in total defense. Sophomore quarterback Connor Cook was named the Most Outstanding Player in the Big Ten Championship Game after throwing for 304 yards and three touchdowns, and he topped that performance by racking up a career-high 332 passing yards and two touchdowns against the Cardinal while being named the Rose Bowl Game’s Offensive MVP. In his

90 2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


COACHING STAFF ford finished with 1,442 rushing yards, the eighth most in an MSU single-season, and he set a school record with eight consecutive 100-yard rushing games. MSU ranked among the Big Ten leaders in conference games in passing efficiency (third with 139.5 rating), scoring offense (fifth with 29.8 ppg.) and rushing offense (fifth with 185.8 ypg.). The offensive line allowed just 17 sacks - second fewest in the Big Ten and tied for 15th fewest in the FBS. In addition, Michigan State ranked seventh in the FBS in time of possession (33:19 per game). Another key reason for MSU’s success was creating turnovers on defense and limiting mistakes on offense, as Michigan State ranked first in the Big Ten and tied for 10th in the FBS in turnover margin (+13, 0.9 per game). The Spartans forced a total of 28 turnovers (11 fumbles, 17 interceptions), including five for touchdowns (three fumble recoveries, two interception returns). MSU forced the most turnovers in the Big Ten (28) and also turned the ball over the least amount of times (15) in the conference. MSU’s seven interceptions were also tied for fewest in the Big Ten and tied for 11th fewest in the FBS. Michigan State was rewarded for winning the Legends Division by three games, as six Spartans were named to the All-Big Ten First Team and a total of 16 players received all-conference recognition. The six first-team selections were the most for Michigan State since 1990, and the 16 honorees overall equaled the second most under Dantonio (19 in 2011, 16 in 2010). Two Spartans took home individual awards, as senior Darqueze Dennard was named the Tatum-Woodson Big Ten Defensive Back of the Year, while sophomore Shilique Calhoun was named the Smith-Brown Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year. Dennard, Calhoun and senior linebacker Max Bullough were first-team selections by both the coaches and media. Junior safety Kurtis Drummond, senior safety Isaiah Lewis and junior punter Mike Sadler were named first-team All-Big Ten by the coaches. The five first-team selections on defense tied for the most in school history (1966). Since 2007, Dantonio has helped produce 26 first-team All-Big Ten selections. Michigan State defeated five bowl-bound teams in 2013, including victories over Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, Minnesota and Ohio State. The Spartans snapped Ohio State’s school-record 24-game winning streak in the Big Ten Championship. Since 2007, Dantonio has helped produce five consensus first-team All-Americans (2008: RB Javon Ringer; 2009-10: LB Greg Jones; 2011: DT Jerel Worthy; and 2013: CB Darqueze Dennard) and 16 NFL Draft picks, including six in 2012. Dennard was a unanimous AllAmerica selection and also won the Jim Thorpe Award, which is given annually to the nation’s best defensive back. From his first day on the job, Dantonio has pledged to support student-athletes as they pursue excellence, both in the classroom and on the playing field. In his first seven seasons, more than 80 percent (98 of 123) of his Michigan State players who have completed their eligibility have earned their undergraduate degrees. In addition, 87 Spartans have earned Academic All-Big Ten honors, including six Academic All-Americans (Blair White, 2009 second team; Mike Sadler, 2013 first team, 2012 second team, 2011 second team; Max Bullough, 2013 first team, 2012 second team).

Under Dantonio, Michigan State has produced a 38-11 record (.776) in home games, including a 15-game winning streak (7-0 in 2010, 7-0 in 2011, won first game in 2012). The Spartans have won 23 of their last 28 home games. Michigan State secured its third-straight winning campaign (7-6) in 2012 with a thrilling 13-point second-half comeback victory over TCU in the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, defeating the Horned Frogs, 17-16. A total of 11 Spartans received All-Big Ten recognition last in 2012, including junior running back Le’Veon Bell, who garnered consensus first-team honors after leading the Big Ten and ranking No. 3 in the NCAA FBS in rushing with 137.9 yards per game. The Spartan defense ranked among the NCAA FBS Top 10 in eight categories: touchdowns allowed (second with 16), pass efficiency defense (third at 98.8), total defense (fourth at 274.4 ypg.), pass break-ups (tied for eighth at 4.8 pg.), rushing defense (eighth at 98.6 ypg.), third-down defense (eighth at .305), pass defense (ninth at 175.8 ypg.) and scoring defense (ninth at 16.3 ppg.). In 2011, thanks to its 33-30 triple-overtime victory over Georgia in the 2012 Outback Bowl, Michigan State (113) finished No. 10 in the final USA TODAY Coaches Poll and No. 11 in the final Associated Press Poll. Michigan State’s 11 wins in 2011 tied a then-school singleseason record, as the Spartans became bowl eligible for a school-record fifth consecutive year. MSU won the Big Ten Legends Division title outright with a 7-1 conference record. The Spartans came up just short of their first Rose Bowl appearance since 1988, falling to Wisconsin, 42-39, in the inaugural Big Ten Championship Game. Michigan State defeated five bowl-bound teams, including a victory over the Badgers earlier in the season on Oct. 22 in Spartan Stadium, 37-31, on a last-second, 44-yard touchdown pass from Kirk Cousins to Keith Nichol. MSU also beat No. 11 Michigan for the fourthstraight year on Oct. 15 in Spartan Stadium, 28-14, a first for the program since 1959-62. Other landmark victories included a 10-7 win at Ohio State on Oct. 1, MSU’s first win in Ohio Stadium since 1998, and a 3721 victory at Iowa on Nov. 12, the Spartans’ first triumph in Kinnick Stadium since 1989. Following the successful 2011 campaign, six Spartans were selected in the 2012 NFL Draft, the most since 2000: Worthy (Green Bay Packers, second round), Cousins (Washington Redskins, fourth round), Keshawn Martin (Houston Texans, fourth round), Trenton Robinson (San Francisco 49ers, sixth round), Cunningham (Miami Dolphins, sixth round) and Edwin Baker (San Diego, seventh round). Dantonio, who led Michigan State to a then schoolrecord 11 wins in 2010 and a share of its first Big Ten Championship since 1990, was named the Dave McClain Big Ten Coach of the Year, as selected by the conference’s media panel. A finalist for the Paul “Bear” Bryant, Eddie Robinson and Liberty Mutual National Coach of the Year Awards, Dantonio helped manage the thirdbiggest turnaround among NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision teams during the regular season, as the Spartans improved from 6-7 in 2009 to 11-1 in 2010. He was also named the AFCA (American Football Coaches Association) Region 3 Coach of the Year, and earned National

Coach of the Year honors from CBSSports.com, Scout. com and Rivals.com. Thanks to its 28-22 victory at Penn State in the regularseason finale, Michigan State recorded its first win in State College since 1965 and finished in a tie with Wisconsin for the 2010 Big Ten Championship. MSU also dealt Wisconsin its only loss of the 2010 regular season, 34-24, in the Big Ten opener. The Spartans finished the season ranked No. 14 in both The Associated Press and USA TODAY/ Coaches’ Polls. One of 15 semifinalists for the George Munger Coach of the Year Award, Dantonio had a breakthrough season as a head coach in 2008. Under his leadership, the Spartans went 9-3 in the regular season and compiled a 6-2 record in the Big Ten, the best league mark for the program since 1999. In his first season as head coach at Michigan State, Dantonio sparked a three-game turnaround as the Spartans finished the 2007 regular season with a 7-5 record, securing the program’s first bowl bid in four years with a berth against Boston College in the Champs Sports Bowl in Orlando, Fla. The 58-year old Dantonio established himself as one of the nation’s up-and-coming coaches during his threeyear tenure at Cincinnati, where he compiled an 18-17 overall record and led the program in its transition from Conference USA to the BIG EAST Conference. Prior to his appointment at Cincinnati, Dantonio served as the defensive coordinator under Jim Tressel at Ohio State for three seasons, where his defensive unit helped the Buckeyes to a combined record of 32-6. Dantonio assembled the defense which led Ohio State to the 2002 National Championship. Dantonio spent six years (1995-2000) as Michigan State’s secondary coach, including five seasons under Saban and one under Bobby Williams. For Dantonio’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans. com.

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COACHING STAFF MARK DANTONIO: HONOR ROLL 2013

• Dave McClain Big Ten Coach of the Year (media) • Hayes-Schembechler Big Ten Coach of the Year (coaches) • FWAA Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award finalist (one of eight) • Paul “Bear” Bryant National Coach of the Year finalist (one of five) • Bobby Bowden National Coach of the Year Award finalist (one of five) • Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award finalist (one of 10) • Maxwell Football Club Coach of the Year Semifinalist (one of 16) • Sporting News Big Ten Coach of the Year • CollegeFootballNews.com Big Ten Coach of the Year • Touchdown Club of Columbus Big Ten Coach of the Year

2010

• CBSSports.com National Coach of the Year • Rivals.com National Coach of the Year • Scout.com National Coach of the Year • Paul “Bear” Bryant National Coach of the Year finalist • Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award finalist (one of 10) • FWAA Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award finalist (one of eight) • Dave McClain Big Ten Coach of the Year (media) • AFCA Region 3 Coach of the Year • Sporting News Big Ten Coach of the Year • Rivals.com Big Ten Coach of the Year

2008

• George Munger National Coach of the Year Semifinalist (one of 15)

THE DANTONIO FILE PERSONAL DATA: Born Mark Dantonio in El Paso, Texas, on March 9, 1956. Family: wife Becky and two daughters, Kristen and Lauren. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College - Graduate assistant at Ohio U. (1980); graduate assistant at Purdue (1981); defensive coordinator at Butler (Kan.) Junior College (1982); graduate assistant at Ohio State (1983-84); defensive secondary coach at Akron (1985); defensive secondary coach and defensive coordinator at Youngstown State (1986-90); defensive secondary coach at Kansas (1991-94); defensive secondary coach (19952000) and associate head coach (2000) at Michigan State; defensive coordinator at Ohio State (2001-03); head coach at Cincinnati (2004-06). COACHING RECORD: 82-46 (.641) in 10 seasons as a college head coach; 18-17 in three seasons at Cincinnati (2004-06); 64-29 (.688) in seven seasons at Michigan State (2007-). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in education from South Carolina in 1979; master’s degree in education from Ohio U. in 1980. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College - Three-year letterman as a defensive back at South Carolina (1976-78). POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach - 1987 NCAA I-AA playoffs, 1989 NCAA I-AA playoffs, 1990 NCAA I-AA playoffs, 1983 Fiesta Bowl, 1984 Rose Bowl, 1992 Aloha Bowl, 1995 Independence Bowl, 1996 Sun Bowl, 1997 Aloha Bowl, 2000 Florida Citrus Bowl, 2002 Outback Bowl, 2003 Fiesta Bowl, 2004 Fiesta Bowl, 2004 Fort Worth Bowl, 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

Dantonio’s Career Record - Head Coach Overall Year School W L 2004 Cincinnati 7 5 2005 Cincinnati 4 7 2006 Cincinnati 7 5 2007 Michigan State 7 6 2008 Michigan State 9 4 2009 Michigan State 6 7 2010 Michigan State 11 2 2011 Michigan State 11 3 2012 Michigan State 7 6 2013 Michigan State 13 1 Totals 82 46 * Did not coach Cincinnati in bowl game

Pct. .583 .364 .583 .538 .692 .462 .846 .786 .538 .929 .641

Conference W L 5 3 2 5 4 3 3 5 6 2 4 4 7 1 7 1 3 5 8 0 49 29

Pct. .625 .286 .571 .375 .750 .500 .875 .875 .375 1.000 .628

Finish T-2nd (C-USA) T-6th (Big East) T-7th (Big East) T-7th (Big Ten) 3rd (Big Ten) T-6th (Big Ten) T-1st (Big Ten) 1st (Big Ten Legends) 4th (Big Ten Legends) 1st (Big Ten Legends)

ALL-TIME WINNINGEST COACHES MICHIGAN STATE HISTORY OVERALL Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Coach (Years).......................................Wins Duffy Daughery (1954-72) ....................... 109 Charles Bachman (1933-46) ..................... 70 George Perles (1983-94) ........................... 68 Mark Dantonio (2007-) ............................. 64 Chester Brewer (1903-10, ‘17, ‘19) ........... 58

Rk. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Coach (Years)................................. Win Pct. John Macklin (1911-15) .......................... .853 Clarence “Biggie” Munn (1947-53) ......... .846 Jim Crowley (1929-32) ........................... .712 Chester Brewer (1903-10, ‘17, ‘19) ........ .699 Mark Dantonio (2007-) .......................... .688

BIG TEN Rk. 1. 2. 3.

Coach (Years).......................................Wins Duffy Daughery (1954-72) ......................... 72 George Perles (1983-94) ........................... 53 Mark Dantonio (2007-) ............................. 38

Rk. 1. 2. 3.

Coach (Years) [Min. 10 games]..... Win Pct. Mark Dantonio (2007-) .......................... .679 Denny Stolz (1973-75)............................ .604 Nick Saban (1995-99)............................. .602

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Postseason/Bowl Fort Worth Bowl International Bowl* Champs Sports Bowl Capital One Bowl Alamo Bowl Capital One Bowl Outback Bowl Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl Rose Bowl Nine Bowl Games*


COACHING STAFF Now in his eighth season as Michigan State’s defensive coordinator, Pat Narduzzi has developed the Spartans into one of the top defensive teams in the nation. Narduzzi was promoted to assistant head coach on March 4, 2013. Narduzzi helped construct the No. 1 defense in the Big Ten for the third consecutive year in 2013. The Spartans led the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision in total defense for 13 straight weeks and finished the season ranked No. 2 in the FBS, allowing just 252.2 yards per game. MSU was the only school to rank in the top three in the four major defensive stat categories: No. 2 in total defense, No. 2 in rushing defense (86.6 ypg.), No. 3 in scoring defense (13.2 ppg.) and No. 3 in pass defense (165.6 ypg.). In addition, the Spartans led the FBS in pass efficiency defense (92.3 rating) and ranked No. 2 PAT NARDUZZI in opponent third-down conversions (.279) and No. 5 in first-downs defense (14.3 pg). MSU’s defense allowed ASSISTANT HEAD COACH/ just 4.04 yards per play, which also ranked No. 1 in DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR the FBS. EIGHTH SEASON Michigan State led the Big Ten in nine defensive stat categories, including total defense and rushing defense for the third year in a row. Since the Big Ten awarded conference stat champions in 1985 for overall games, MSU is the first team to win three straight titles in total defense and rushing defense. Narduzzi was named the winner of the 2013 Frank Broyles Award, which is awarded annually to the nation’s top assistant coach. He is the first MSU coach to win the award, which started in 1996. Narduzzi also was named the National Defensive Coordinator of the Year by FootballScoop. Since 2011, Michigan State’s defense has been one of the most consistent in the FBS. The Spartans are one of just four schools, along with Alabama, Florida and Florida State, to rank among the FBS Top 10 in total defense the past three seasons. In addition, Michigan State and Alabama are the only teams to rank in the FBS Top 11 the past three years in total defense, scoring defense, rushing defense and passing defense. Michigan State held all 14 of its opponents in 2013 under their season average in points and total offense. MSU prevented six opponents from scoring a touchdown (South Florida, Purdue, Illinois, Michigan, Northwestern, Minnesota), and the Spartans shut out six of their eight Big Ten opponents in the second half. The Spartans allowed just 20 touchdowns on defense (eight rushing, 12 passing), which ranked second fewest in the FBS for the second year in a row. In the 2014 Rose Bowl Game victory over No. 5 Stanford, the Cardinal were held to just one offensive touchdown and 11 first downs (season lows), 162 rushing yards (second-lowest total of the season) and 304 yards of total offense (third-lowest total of the season). The foundation of Michigan State’s defense is stopping the run, and Narduzzi’s unit once again proved it could stop the rush in 2013. The Spartans led the Big Ten and ranked second in the NCAA FBS in rushing defense, allowing just 86.6 yards per game, which also marked the seventh-best effort in school history. MSU has finished in the Top 25 nationally in rushing defense four of the past five seasons (24th in 2009; ninth in 2011; eighth in 2012; second in 2013). Since the beginning of 2011, Michigan State has held 25 opponents under 100 rushing yards (seven in 2011; eight in 2012; 10 in 2013), which ranks tied for third most in the NCAA FBS (Alabama: 29; Stanford: 27; MSU/Florida State: 25). The Spartans featured five first-team All-Big Ten selections on defense, which tied for the most in school history (1966). Senior linebacker Max Bullough, sophomore defensive end Shilique Calhoun, senior cornerback Darqueze Dennard, junior safety Kurtis Drummond and senior safety Isaiah Lewis all garnered first-team accolades from the league’s coaches, while Bullough, Calhoun and Dennard were also on the media’s first team. Eight of MSU’s starters received All-Big Ten recognition (second team: senior linebacker Denicos Allen; honorable mention: junior defensive end Marcus Rush, sophomore cornerback Trae Waynes). Calhoun was named the Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year, while Dennard was named the Big Ten Defensive Back of the Year. Dennard also won the Jim Thorpe Award (nation’s best defensive back) and Jack Tatum Award (nation’s top defensive back by The Touchdown Club of Columbus), and was one of five finalists for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy (nation’s best defensive player). Narduzzi has been named the National Coordinator of the Week four times in his career three for his game plans in wins over Michigan (2010, 2011, 2013), including last season, when the Wolverines were sacked seven times and were held to a school-record low minus-48 yards rushing, and also for his role in helping MSU defeat Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game. The Spartans held the previously undefeated and second-ranked Buckeyes to a season-low 374 yards of total offense and 24 points. During Narduzzi’s tenure at MSU, his players have earned All-Big Ten honors 56 times, including 11 different first-team selections, and first-team All-America accolades on four occasions.

THE NARDUZZI FILE

Dave Warner enters his second season as the co-offensive coordinator and his eighth overall at Michigan State. Warner, who also coaches the running backs, was promoted to co-offensive coordinator on March 4, 2013. He previously coached the quarterbacks for six seasons. The Spartan offense steadily improved all season long during MSU’s record-setting campaign in 2013, culminating with strong performances against Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship Game and Stanford in the Rose Bowl Game. The Spartans produced 438 yards of total offense against the Buckeyes and nearly 400 yards (397) against Stanford, which entered the game No. 14 in the FBS in total defense. DAVE WARNER Sophomore quarterback Connor Cook was named the CO-OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR/ Most Outstanding Player in the Big Ten Championship Game after throwing for 304 yards and three touchdowns, RUNNING BACKS and he topped that performance by racking up a careerEIGHTH SEASON high 332 passing yards and two touchdowns against the Cardinal while being named the Rose Bowl Game’s Offensive MVP. Cook finished his first year as the starter with one of the best statistical seasons in school history, ranking second in the MSU single-season record book in touchdown passes (22), fourth in total offense (2,831 yards) and pass attempts (380), fifth in passing yards (2,755), and sixth in pass completions (223). In his first year working with Jeremy Langford, Warner helped developed the junior into one of the top running backs in the Big Ten. Langford, who hadn’t started a game entering the season, emerged as a dynamic scoring threat, as he led the Big Ten with 18 rushing touchdowns. The Wayne, Mich., native also ranked among the Big Ten leaders in total touchdowns (first with 19), scoring (third with 8.1 ppg.) and rushing (sixth with 101.6 ypg.). In addition, Langford ranked among MSU’s single-season leaders in touchdowns (third), rushing touchdowns (fourth), rushing attempts (sixth with 292) and rushing yards (eighth with 1,422). He established a school record by rushing for more than 100 yards in eight consecutive games. MSU’s offense also featured a balanced passing attack. The Spartans were one of only two teams in the Big Ten to have seven players with at least 17 receptions, and nine different players caught touchdown passes. The offensive line, which rotated in eight different players, was one of the top units in the country and a key reason why MSU ranked seventh in the FBS in time of possession (33:19). In addition to a strong running game, the Spartans only allowed 17 sacks, second fewest in the Big Ten and 15th fewest in the FBS. Six starters earned All-Big Ten recognition on the offense, including Cook (second team, coaches), senior offensive guard Blake Treadwell (second team, coaches and media), sophomore center Jack Allen (second team, media), senior offensive tackle Fou Fonoti (honorable mention), senior offensive guard Dan France (honorable mention) and Langford (honorable mention). Warner has been a quarterbacks coach and/or offensive coordinator or passing game coordinator for 25 of his 30 seasons as a college assistant. Warner served as the offensive coordinator for two seasons (1999-2000) at Connecticut, and was the passing game coordinator at Wyoming (1998) and Houston (2001-02). Under the direction of Warner, Spartan quarterbacks posted record numbers. Kirk Cousins, the winningest quarterback in school history with 27 victories as a starter, became MSU’s career record holder in 2011 for passing touchdowns (66), passing yards (9,131), completions (723), passing efficiency (146.1 rating), total offense (9,004 yards) and 200-yard passing games (26). Cousins’ numbers were some of the best in Big Ten history, as finished his career ranked among the conference’s all-time Top 10 in completion percentage (tied for sixth at .641), passing efficiency rating (sixth), passing yards (10th) and TD passes (tied for 10th). Warner also tutored Brian Hoyer at Michigan State from 2007-08; Hoyer recently completed his fifth season in the NFL with the Cleveland Browns. For Warner’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

THE WARNER FILE FAMILY: Wife Leigh Ann, son Jackson and daughter Alexandra. YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Eighth. Joined the staff on Dec. 1, 2006, from Cincinnati.

FAMILY: Wife Donna and four children: Arianna, Christina, Patrick and Isabella. YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Eighth. Joined staff on Dec. 6, 2006, from Cincinnati. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College - Graduate assistant coach (199091) and receivers coach (1992) at Miami-Ohio; linebackers (1993-97) and defensive coordinator (1998-99) at Rhode Island; linebackers coach at Northern Illinois (200002); defensive coordinator at Miami-Ohio (2003); defensive coordinator at Cincinnati (2004-06).

PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College – Graduate assistant at Syracuse (1982-83); running backs coach (1984-85) and quarterbacks coach (1986-87) at Kent State; quarterbacks coach at Kansas (1988-96); quarterbacks coach at Bucknell (1997); passing game coordinator at Wyoming (1998); offensive coordinator at Connecticut (1999-2000); passing game coordinator at Houston (2001-02); wide receivers coach at Southern Miss (2003-04); quarterbacks coach at Cincinnati (2006). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in speech communications from Syracuse in 1982; master’s degree in physical education from Syracuse in 1984.

EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in physical education from Rhode Island in 1990; master’s degree in sports psychology from Miami-Ohio in 1992.

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College – Three-year letterwinner as a quarterback at Syracuse (1979-81).

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College - Three-year starter at linebacker at Rhode Island (1987-89); one year at linebacker at Youngstown State (1985).

POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Player – 1979 Independence Bowl. Coach – 1992 Aloha Bowl, 1995 Aloha Bowl, 2003 Liberty Bowl, 2004 New Orleans Bowl, 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach - 2003 GMAC Bowl, 2004 Fort Worth Bowl, 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

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COACHING STAFF

JIM BOLLMAN CO-OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR/TIGHT ENDS SECOND SEASON

Jim Bollman, who has 37 years of coaching experience, both at the collegiate and professional levels, enters his second year as the co-offensive coordinator and tight ends coach. Bollman, who spent 11 years as the offensive coordinator/offensive line coach at Ohio State (2001-11), was named co-offensive coordinator on March 4, 2013.

Harlon Barnett, a four-year letterwinner at Michigan State (1986-89) as a defensive back who was named a captain and All-American as a senior, is in his eighth season as the Spartans’ secondary coach. Barnett returned to East Lansing with seven years of professional playing experience and nine seasons of coaching experience under his belt.

Bollman coached in his ninth BCS Bowl and 18th postseason game overall as the Spartans defeated No. 5 Stanford in the 2014 Rose Bowl Game. He was the offensive coordinator for the Buckeyes during their 2002 National Championship season and has coached in three BCS National Championship Games.

Barnett mentors one of the top secondaries in the nation, as the Spartans are the only school in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision to rank among the nation’s Top 20 in pass defense and pass efficiency defense the past three seasons. In addition, the Spartans are one of just two FBS schools, along with Alabama, to rank among the HARLON BARNETT nation’s top 11 in pass defense in 2011 (11th at 175.8 SECONDARY ypg.), 2012 (ninth at 176.9 ypg.) and 2013 (third at 165.6 ypg.). After ranking third in pass efficiency defense in EIGHTH SEASON 2012 with a 98.8 rating, the Spartans were No. 1 in the FBS in 2013 with a 92.3 rating. MSU also ranked tied for second in the Big Ten with 17 interceptions last season.

Under the tutelage of Bollman, the Spartan tight ends showed tremendous growth during the 2013 season. The entire group had a combined five starts entering the season, but the trio of red-shirt freshman Josiah Price and juniors Michael Dennis and Andrew Gleichert all contributed with multiple starts in helping create the position into a strength for the offense. Price caught 17 passes for 210 yards and ranked second on the team with four touchdown receptions. A former offensive line coach at Michigan State in the mid-1990s, Bollman also was instrumental in developing one of the top offensive lines in the country. All five starters received postseason recognition and the group gave up just 17 sacks in 2013, which was second fewest in the Big Ten. Bollman and Dantonio have coached together before on three previous occasions: Youngstown State (1986-90), Michigan State (1995-97) and Ohio State (2001-03). Bollman was the offensive line coach for three seasons (1995-97) at MSU under Nick Saban while Dantonio was the secondary coach. Dantonio and Bollman both arrived at Ohio State for the 2001 season. Dantonio spent three years (2001-03) as the defensive coordinator under Jim Tressel, while Bollman went on to coach 11 years (2001-11) for the Buckeyes, both as an offensive line coach and offensive coordinator. Dantonio and Bollman first coached together at Youngstown State for four seasons (1986-90). The Buckeyes compiled a 100-28 overall record (.781) during Bollman’s tenure as offensive coordinator from 2001-11 (Ohio State had to vacate 12 wins from the 2010 season). The Buckeyes achieved seven 10-win (or more) seasons during that stretch, and he coached in 11 bowl games, including eight BCS games (2003 BCS National Championship, 2004 Fiesta, 2006 Fiesta, 2007 BCS National Championship, 2008 BCS National Championship, 2009 Fiesta, 2010 Rose, 2011 Sugar). Under Bollman’s offensive direction at Ohio State, his players earned first-team All-Big Ten honors 23 times, including quarterback Troy Smith, who captured the 2006 Heisman Trophy and also earned the Walter Camp Award, Davey O’Brien Award, AP Player of the Year, Sporting News Player of the Year and Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year his senior season. While at OSU, Bollman also mentored 15 linemen that went on to make NFL rosters, and he has worked with 29 players overall that have played professionally during his coaching career. For Bollman’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

THE BOLLMAN FILE FAMILY: Wife Terri and two daughters: Courtney and Stephanie. YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Fifth overall. Rejoined staff on March 4, 2013, from Purdue.

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All four of MSU’s starting defensive backs received All-Big Ten recognition in 2013, including three first-team All-Big Ten selections. The group was led by senior captain Darqueze Dennard, the first-ever cornerback at Michigan State to earn unanimous first-team AllAmerica honors. Dennard was also the first Spartan to win the Jim Thorpe Award, which is given annually to the nation’s best defensive back. In addition, Dennard was named the winner of the Jack Tatum Award, which is presented to college football’s top defensive back by The Touchdown Club of Columbus. The lock-down corner, who was a finalist for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy and named the Big Ten Defensive Back of the Year, ranked among the Big Ten leaders in interceptions (4), pass break-ups (10) and passes defended (14). Senior strong safety Isaiah Lewis and junior free safety Kurtis Drummond were also selected All-Big Ten First Team by the coaches, while sophomore cornerback Trae Waynes garnered honorable mention. Lewis was invited to participate in the 2014 Senior Bowl. For his efforts in leading the Big Ten’s top pass defense in 2013, Barnett was named one of three finalists for National Defensive Back Coach of the Year by FootballScoop. Barnett’s players have earned All-Big Ten honors 20 times since his arrival as secondary coach at MSU, including six different first-team selections (Otis Wiley in 2008; Trenton Robinson in 2011; Johnny Adams in 2011-12; Darqueze Dennard in 2011-12, Kurtis Drummond in 2012; Isaiah Lewis in 2012). The past four seasons alone, Spartan defensive backs have picked up All-Big Ten recognition on 15 occasions, and all four of MSU’s starters in the secondary garnered All-Big Ten recognition during the 2010, 2011 and 2013 seasons. Three Spartans in the secondary have been selected in the NFL Draft under Barnett’s tutelage: Jeremy Ware (2010, Oakland Raiders, seventh round), Chris L. Rucker (2011, Indianapolis Colts, sixth round), and Robinson (2012, San Francisco 49ers, sixth round). In June 2012, Barnett was one of eight football coaches to participate in the Champion Forum, the top tier of the NCAA’s coaching academy programs, held in conjunction with the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) Convention in Dallas. Barnett, who spent three seasons as secondary coach on Mark Dantonio’s staff at Cincinnati, landed his first collegiate coaching job as a graduate assistant at LSU in 2003 under Nick Saban, where he was a part of the Tigers’ National Championship campaign. A native of Cincinnati, Barnett was a three-year starter for Coach George Perles at MSU. He was a member of the 1987 Big Ten and 1988 Rose Bowl championship team and earned first-team All-America recognition by The Sporting News as a senior in 1989. Following his impressive career at MSU, Barnett was taken in the fourth round of the 1990 NFL Draft by Cleveland, where he played for three seasons (1990-92). He spent two seasons at New England (1993-94) and two more with Minnesota (1995-96). For Barnett’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College - Graduate assistant coach (1977) and offensive line coach (1978-82) at Miami-Ohio; assistant head coach and offensive line (1983-84) and linebackers (1985) at North Carolina State; defensive coordinator (198688) and offensive coordinator (1989-90) at Youngstown State; offensive line (1991-94) at Virginia; offensive line (1995-97) at Michigan State; offensive coordinator and offensive line (2001-2011) at Ohio State; offensive line/running game coordinator (2012) at Boston College; Professional – Tight ends coach (1998) at Philadelphia Eagles; tight ends coach (1999-2000) at Chicago Bears.

FAMILY: Wife Tammy and two children: Todd and Tori.

EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in business education from Ohio in 1977.

EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in communication from Michigan State in 1990.

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College – Four-year letterman as an offensive lineman at Ohio (1972-76).

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College - Four-year letterwinner as a defensive back at Michigan State (1986-89) and named captain as a senior. Professional - Spent seven seasons in the National Football League, including stints with the Cleveland Browns (1990-92), New England Patriots (1993-94) and Minnesota Vikings (1995-96).

POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach – 1987 NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, 1989 NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, 1990 NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, 1991 Gator Bowl, 1993 Carquest Bowl, 1994 Independence Bowl, 1995 Independence Bowl, 1996 Sun Bowl, 1997 Aloha Bowl, 2002 Outback, Bowl, 2003 BCS National Championship, 2004 Fiesta Bowl, 2004 Alamo Bowl, 2006 Fiesta Bowl, 2007 BCS National Championship, 2008 BCS National Championship, 2009 Fiesta Bowl, 2010 Rose Bowl, 2011 Sugar Bowl, 2012 Gator Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

THE BARNETT FILE YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Eighth. Joined staff on Dec. 1, 2006, from Cincinnati. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College - Graduate assistant coach at LSU (2003); secondary coach at Cincinnati (2004-06).

POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Player - 1985 All-American Bowl, 1988 Rose Bowl, 1989 Gator Bowl, 1989 Aloha Bowl, 1994 NFL Playoffs, 1996 NFL Playoffs. Coach 2004 Sugar Bowl, 2004 Fort Worth Bowl, 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


COACHING STAFF Ron Burton, a 22-year coaching veteran who also played four seasons in the NFL, enters his second season as defensive line coach at Michigan State. Burton previously spent 10 seasons (2003-12) as the defensive line coach at Air Force.

Brad Salem, a former head coach at NCAA Division II Augustana College in Sioux Falls, S.D., is in his fifth year on the coaching staff at Michigan State and his second as quarterbacks coach. He is also in his fourth year as the program’s recruiting coordinator.

Burton made an immediate impact in his first year on the Spartan staff in 2013. Michigan State’s defensive line showed significant improvement in its productivity under Burton, increasing its totals in sacks (+12) and tackles for loss (+10) from 2012.

Salem was instrumental in helping the development of Connor Cook in his first season as the starting quarterback in 2013. Cook, who took over the starting role in Week 2 against South Florida, went 12-1 as the starter and finished his sophomore year ranked among MSU’s single-season leaders in passing touchdowns (second with 22), total offense (fourth with 2,831 yards), pass attempts (fourth with 380), passing yards (fifth BRAD SALEM with 2,755) and pass completions (sixth with 223). His QUARTERBACKS/ progress was on full display in the final two games RECRUITING COORDINATOR of the season. Cook took home Most Outstanding FIFTH SEASON Player honors at the Big Ten Championship Game after completing 24-of-40 passes for 304 yards and three touchdowns against No. 2 Ohio State, and followed that effort by being named the Rose Bowl Offensive MVP, as he threw for a career-high 332 yards and two touchdowns in the win over No. 5 Stanford. Cook was a second-team All-Big Ten selection by the coaches.

In his first year as a starter, sophomore Shilique Calhoun garnered second-team All-America honors from RON BURTON numerous organizations and was named the Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year as well as the National DEFENSIVE LINE Defensive Performer of the Year by the College Football SECOND SEASON Performance Awards. Calhoun led the team in sacks (7.5) and ranked second in tackles for loss (14), ranked first in the Big Ten with four fumble recoveries, and was one of only two players in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision to score three defensive touchdowns. Junior Marcus Rush garnered honorable mention All-Big Ten accolades for the third year in a row, while senior defensive tackles Micajah Reynolds and Tyler Hoover both delivered their most productive seasons wearing the Green and White. In addition, Burton helped develop sophomores Damon Knox and Mark Scarpinato, who each filled in as starters and added quality depth to the defensive front. For his efforts in 2013, Burton was named the National Defensive Line Coach of the Year by FootballScoop. During his 10 seasons at Air Force, Burton helped the Falcons to a combined record of 67-57 (.540), including a school-record six consecutive postseason bowl appearances (2007-12), while developing some of the top defensive linemen in school history. Burton also served as the program’s NFL liaison. In 2008, Jake Paulson became the first-ever defensive lineman at Air Force to earn first-team All-Mountain West honors after recording 14.5 tackles for loss and nine sacks. One year later, nose guard Ben Garland was a second-team All-MWC selection and signed a free agent contract with the Denver Broncos. In the Falcons’ 2010 Independence Bowl victory over Georgia Tech, defensive lineman Rick Ricketts, a second-team All-MWC choice, was named the defensive most valuable player of the game. Burton also coached two-time Academic All-American (defensive end) Ryan Carter. Before arriving at Air Force, Burton spent one season (2002) at Grand Valley State and helped lead the Lakers to a perfect 14-0 record and the 2002 NCAA Division II National Championship, the first in school history. Burton has Big Ten coaching experience, as he spent five seasons as the linebackers coach at Indiana from 1997-2001. A four-year letterman (1982-86) at North Carolina, Burton helped the Tar Heels to three bowl appearances during his career and was named team captain and best defensive lineman as a senior. He graduated from UNC with a bachelor’s degree in industrial relations in 1987. Following graduation, Burton spent four seasons playing linebacker in the NFL for the Dallas Cowboys (1987-89), Phoenix Cardinals (1989) and Los Angeles Raiders (1990). Burton started 15 games for the Cowboys in 1988 and recorded two sacks, and played on the 1990 Raiders team that advanced to the 1990 AFC Championship Game. After his NFL career, Burton returned to North Carolina and spent two years as a graduate assistant (1992-93) for the Tar Heels.

Salem has been either an offensive coordinator or quarterbacks coach for eight seasons as a college assistant. He spent his first three seasons at Michigan State (2010-12) coaching the running backs. Salem mentored one of the most productive running backs in Spartan history, Le’Veon Bell, from 2010-12. Bell had a career year in 2012, winning the Big Ten rushing title and ranking third in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision, averaging 137.9 yards per game. Named a first-team All-American by CollegeFootballNews.com, Bell compiled 1,793 rushing yards, the second-highest single-season total in MSU history. The first-team All-Big Ten selection finished his career ranked among MSU’s all-time leaders in rushing TDs (sixth with 33), rushing attempts (sixth with 671), rushing yards (seventh with 3,346), 100-yard rushing games (eighth with 12) and all-purpose yards (ninth with 4,114). Bell was selected in the second round of the 2013 National Football League Draft by the Pittsburgh Steelers and was named the Steelers Rookie of the Year last season. Salem coached one of the most talented backfields in the Big Ten in 2011, as junior Edwin Baker and Bell combined for 1,613 rushing yards (115.2 yards per game) – the second most of any running back duo in the conference – to go along with 18 rushing touchdowns. Baker was selected in the seventh round of the 2012 National Football League Draft by the San Diego Chargers and recently finished his second season in the NFL with the Cleveland Browns. Under Salem’s direction in 2010, Michigan State’s running backs improved their totals from 2009. The resurgent running game was led by Baker, who became just the sixth sophomore in MSU history to reach the 1,000-yard milestone as he compiled 1,201 rushing yards. A first-team All-Big Ten honoree by the media, Baker ranked fourth in the Big Ten and 30th nationally in rushing, averaging 92.4 ypg. In five seasons (2005-09) as head coach at Augustana College, Salem compiled a 31-26 record. Salem led Augustana College to back-to-back 8-4 records and consecutive trips to the Mineral Water Bowl in 2008-09. Prior to being promoted to head coach, he spent two seasons as an assistant coach under Jim Heinitz, serving as quarterbacks coach in 2003 and offensive coordinator in 2004. For Salem’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

For Burton’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

THE BURTON FILE

THE SALEM FILE

FAMILY: Wife Andrea and four children: Ronald, Ryan, Roya and Reid.

FAMILY: Wife Christina and two children: Elijah and Jeremiah.

YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Second. Joined staff on Feb. 8, 2013, from Air Force.

YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Fifth. Joined staff on Feb. 19, 2010, from Augustana (S.D.) College.

PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College - Graduate assistant coach at North Carolina (1992-93); defensive backs at Morehead State (1994); linebackers at Eastern Michigan (1995-96); linebackers at Indiana (1997-2001); defensive line at Grand Valley State (2002); defensive line at Air Force (2003-12). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in industrial relations from North Carolina in 1987. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College – Four-year letterman as a defensive lineman at North Carolina (1982-86). Professional - Spent four seasons in the National Football League, including stints with the Dallas Cowboys (1987-89), Phoenix Cardinals (1989) and Los Angeles Raiders (1990). POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Player – 1982 Sun Bowl, 1983 Peach Bowl, 1986 Aloha Bowl; Coach – 1993 Peach Bowl, 1993 Gator Bowl, 2002 NCAA Division II Playoffs, 2007 Armed Forces Bowl, 2008 Armed Forces Bowl, 2009 Armed Forces Bowl, 2010 Independence Bowl, 2011 Military Bowl, 2012 Armed Forces Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College - Graduate assistant coach at Michigan State (1994-95); offensive and recruiting coordinator at Luther (Iowa) College (1997-98); passing game and recruiting coordinator at South Dakota (1999-2001); quarterbacks coach at Augustana College (2003); offensive coordinator at Augustana College (2004); head coach at Augustana College (2005-09). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Augustana College in 1992; master’s degree in athletic administration from Michigan State in 1996. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College - Quarterback at Northern Arizona (1988-89); quarterback and wide receiver at Augustana (1990-92). POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach - 1995 Independence Bowl, 2008 Mineral Water Bowl, 2009 Mineral Water Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

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COACHING STAFF Mark Staten is in his eighth year on the coaching staff at Michigan State and his fourth as the offensive line coach. He was promoted to offensive line coach in February 2011 after serving as the tight ends/tackles coach and recruiting coordinator for four years. Staten adds a mix of professional playing experience with a solid coaching background.

Terrence Samuel, a 16-year coaching veteran who played his collegiate football at Purdue, is in his fourth year as wide receivers coach at Michigan State.

TERRENCE SAMUEL WIDE RECEIVERS FOURTH SEASON

Perhaps no position group on the team made as much improvement as the wide receiver corps during MSU’s Big Ten Championship season in 2013. A year after having to break in as many as four starters, the unit solidified itself as one of the best in the Big Ten. The Spartans were one of only two teams in the conference, along with Illinois, to have seven players with at least 17 receptions. In addition, nine different Spartans caught touchdowns in 2013, led by fifth-year senior Bennie Fowler, who hauled in six.

Fowler, whose strong senior campaign earned him a spot in the Senior Bowl and an invite to the NFL Scouting Combine, led the Spartans with a career-high 622 receiving yards on 36 catches, while junior Tony Lippett (44 catches for 613 yards) and sophomore Macgarrett Kings Jr. (43 for 513 yards) both recorded career highs in receptions and receiving yards. Lippett was named to the ESPN. com Big Ten All-Bowl Team after collecting a career-high 94 receiving yards in the Rose Bowl Game victory over No. 5 Stanford, including the game-winning 22-yard touchdown grab in the fourth quarter. After a record-breaking season in 2011, Samuel had the difficult challenge of restocking MSU’s receiving corps as only 23 percent of the team’s receptions and 16 percent of the team’s receiving yards returned in 2012. The young Spartans – featuring four new full-time starters and no seniors – improved significantly as the season progressed. Michigan State was the only team in the Big Ten to feature six players with at least 29 receptions, and three receivers recorded their first career touchdown catch. Samuel made an immediate impact at MSU in his first season in 2011. He helped tutor fifthyear senior B.J. Cunningham, who became the school’s all-time leader in receptions (218) and receiving yards (3,086). Under Samuel, Cunningham had his finest season as a Spartan, setting career highs in receptions (79), receiving yards (1,306) and touchdown catches (12). Those marks also ranked among MSU’s single-season leaders in receptions (tied for first), receiving yards (third) and touchdowns (tied for third). In addition, he set an MSU singleseason record with eight 100-yard receiving games. Cunningham was a second-team All-Big Ten selection by the coaches and media, and also earned All-America honors from Phil Steele (fourth team) and SI.com (honorable mention). Senior Keshawn Martin, an honorable mention All-Big Ten pick, also produced his best year, recording career highs in receptions (66) and receiving yards (777). A multi-dimensional threat, Martin finished his career ranked second in MSU history in punt return yards (659), eighth in kick return yards (1,100), 10th in all-purpose yards (4,013), 11th in receptions (127), 16th in receiving yards (1,714) and tied for 17th in touchdown receptions (10). Cunningham (79 catches) and Martin (66) combined for 145 receptions in 2011, the most ever by a receiving duo in a Michigan State season (previous record: 124 by Charles Rogers (67) and Herb Haygood (57) in 2001). Cunningham (1,306 yards) and Martin (777) also produced the most receiving yards of any receiving duo in an MSU season, teaming up for 2,083 receiving yards in 2011 (previous record: Plaxico Burress (1,142) and Gari Scott (843) with 1,985 receiving yards in 1998). Both of those marks by Cunningham and Martin (145 receptions; 2,083 receiving yards) ranked first among receiving duos in the Big Ten in 2011. Martin was selected in the fourth round of the 2012 National Football League Draft by the Houston Texas, while Cunningham was picked in the sixth round by the Miami Dolphins. Samuel spent the 2010 season at Central Michigan under former Spartan quarterback and assistant coach Dan Enos.

THE SAMUEL FILE

MARK STATEN OFFENSIVE LINE EIGHTH SEASON

Staten helped mold the top offensive line in head coach Mark Dantonio’s tenure in East Lansing during MSU’s record-setting season in 2013. The versatile group, which saw as many as eight lineman in the playing rotation, was one of the main reasons why Michigan State continued to improve throughout the season on the offensive side of the ball.

All five starters received postseason recognition, including left guard Blake Treadwell (second-team All-Big Ten, coaches and media), center Jack Allen (secondteam All-Big Ten, media), right tackle Fou Fonoti (honorable mention All-Big Ten), right guard Dan France (honorable mention All-Big Ten) and left tackle Jack Conklin (first-team Freshman All-American by Football Writers Association of America, Sporting News and CollegeFootballNews.com). In addition, Allen and Treadwell were each named to the ESPN. com Big Ten All-Bowl Team for their performances in the Rose Bowl Game victory over No. 5 Stanford. Junior center Travis Jackson, junior guard Connor Kruse and sophomore tackle Donavon Clark also were instrumental to the line’s success. For the third-straight season, Staten mentored a Freshman All-American, as Conklin earned first-team honors from the FWAA, Sporting News and CollegeFootballNews.com. Allen was a first-team selection by the FWAA and Sporting News in 2012, while Jackson garnered Freshman All-America accolades in 2011. Michigan State not only protected first-year starting quarterback Connor Cook, as the line gave up only 17 sacks (second fewest in Big Ten and tied for 15th fewest in the FBS), but it also paved the way for Jeremy Langford, who led the conference with 18 rushing touchdowns. When the game was on the line, the unit performed at its best – the Spartans ranked 16th in the FBS in fourth quarter rushing (56.8 avg.) and ranked seventh in the nation in time of possession (33:19 per game). MSU had to deal with multiple injuries throughout the first half of 2012, including the loss of starters Fonoti and Jackson. The Spartans used six different starting combinations along the offensive line, but still managed to lead the way for first-team All-Big Ten selection Le’Veon Bell, who led the Big Ten and ranked third in the NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision in rushing, averaging 137.9 yards per game. The line showed signs of improvement toward the end of the season, as Bell averaged 183.0 rushing yards when the Spartans used the same starting five up front for the last four games. Heading into 2011, Michigan State’s offensive line had to replace three starters, but Staten helped develop a young group that featured just one senior starter into one of the best in the Big Ten. Although the Spartans had to use four different starting combinations on the offensive line, including three different starting centers, the unit allowed just 16 sacks, second-fewest in the Big Ten and 19th-fewest in the FBS. As tight ends/tackles coach, Staten’s players collected All-Big Ten honors on seven occasions, including second-team tackle Pete Clifford (2007), second-team tackle Jesse Miller (2008), second-team tight end Charlie Gantt (2010) and second-team tackle D.J. Young (2010). As recruiting coordinator, Staten helped put together a 2009 recruiting class that analysts ranked among the nation’s Top 25 (MaxPreps/Tom Lemming No. 12, PrepStar No. 15, Rivals. com No. 17 and Scouts, Inc. No. 21). The Spartans followed that effort with another stellar class in 2010 that was ranked among the nation’s Top 30 (MaxPreps/Tom Lemming No. 22, Rivals.com No. 29). For Staten’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

FAMILY: Wife Jaclyn and two children: Brooklyn and Draven.

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YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Fourth. Joined staff on Feb. 11, 2011, from Central Michigan.

THE STATEN FILE

PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College – Graduate assistant coach at Nebraska-Omaha (1998-2000); graduate assistant coach at Arizona (2001-02); defensive backs coach (2003-04) and outside linebackers coach/special teams coordinator (2005) at Nebraska-Omaha; wide receivers at Southeast Missouri State (2006); the offensive coordinator and running backs coach at Nebraska-Omaha (2007); wide receivers coach at North Dakota State (2008-09); wide receivers coach at Central Michigan (2010).

FAMILY: Wife Dana and two children: Quinn and Maximus.

EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in communication and psychology from Purdue in 1995; master’s degree in recreation administration from Nebraska-Omaha in 2001.

EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in elementary education from Miami-Ohio in 2001.

YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Eighth. Joined staff on Nov. 30, 2006, from Cincinnati. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College – Graduate assistant coach at MiamiOhio (2001); graduate assistant coach at Ohio State (2002-03); tight ends/tackles and recruiting coordinator at Cincinnati (2004-06).

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College - Four-year letterwinner as a wide receiver at Purdue (1991-94).

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College – Four-year starter as a defensive tackle at MiamiOhio (1989-92). Professional – Spent parts of two seasons in the National Football League, with the Cincinnati Bengals (1993) and New England Patriots (1993-94).

POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach – 2000 NCAA Division II Playoffs, 2005 NCAA Division II Playoffs, 2007 NCAA Division II Playoffs, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach – 2003 Fiesta, 2004 Fiesta, 2004 Fort Worth, 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


COACHING STAFF Mike Tressel is in his eighth year as the linebackers and special teams coach at Michigan State.

Ken Mannie is in his 20th year as Michigan State’s head strength and conditioning coach for football, while additionally directing and overseeing the strength and conditioning programs for all men’s and women’s sports. His “Fourth Quarter” and “Bottom Line” offseason conditioning programs have been a significant reason for Michigan State’s success in the Coach Mark Dantonio era, as the Spartans have earned a school-record seven consecutive bowl bids, including a victory in the 2014 Rose Bowl Game over No. 5 Stanford.

The impressive play of the Spartan linebackers under Tressel is one of the main reasons why Michigan State has led the Big Ten in rushing defense and total defense the past three seasons. In addition, the Spartans are one of just two NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Schools, along with Alabama, to rank in the Top 10 nationally in total defense, rushing defense and scoring defense the last three years. Senior captain Max Bullough, a two-time first-team AllBig Ten selection, was the quarterback of the league’s top-ranked defense in 2013. A third-team All-America honoree by The Associated Press, Bullough ranked among the team leaders in tackles (76) and tackles for loss (9.5). He closed his career with 40 starts at middle linebacker and ranks 11th in school history in tackles for loss (30.5) and 18th in tackles (299). MIKE TRESSEL LINEBACKERS/SPECIAL TEAMS EIGHTH SEASON

Fellow three-year starter Denicos Allen picked up second-team All-America accolades from SI.com. Allen led the team with a career-high 98 tackles as a senior and also led the team with 16.5 tackles for loss, good for seventh most in an MSU single-season. He finished his career ranked third in the school record book with 46 career tackles for loss. Allen capped his illustrious career with seven tackles, including 1.5 for losses, in the 100th Rose Bowl Game against No. 5 Stanford, and was named to the SI.com All-Bowl Team and ESPN.com Big Ten All-Bowl Team. Junior Taiwan Jones, the starter at Star (weakside) linebacker, ranked fourth on the team with a career-high 67 tackles, including seven for loss. Tressel also oversees a successful special teams unit that has been one of the best in the Big Ten since his arrival. Junior punter Mike Sadler, who was selected a first-team All-American by CBSSports.com and ESPN.com, has proven to be a valuable weapon throughout his career. In 2013, he led the nation with 24 punts downed inside the 10-yard line and ranked tied for second with 33 placed inside the 20. True freshman placekicker Michael Geiger stepped into the starting role in Week 4 and rose to the challenge. Geiger made 13 consecutive field goals to close the season and set the MSU single-season field-goal percentage record (.938; 15 of 16). He was an honorable mention All-America pick by SI.com and a first-team Freshman All-America selection by the Football Writers Association of America. The past seven years, MSU has had two first-team All-Big Ten placekickers (Conroy and Brett Swenson), two first-team All-Big Ten punters (Sadler and Aaron Bates), and has featured conference leaders in both kick returns (Devin Thomas) and punt returns (Keshawn Martin).

Mannie is a certified strength and conditioning specialist with the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association (CSCCa), the National Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association (NSCA) and holds an honorary certification with the International Association of Resistance Trainers (IART). In May 2002 at its annual conference in Salt Lake City, the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association awarded Mannie the title of Master Strength and Conditioning Coach (MSCC) in recognition of his credentials, professional contributions, mentorship, expertise, and longevity in the field. He is also a professional member of the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), the National Association for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE), and the American Association for Health Education (AAHE). KEN MANNIE HEAD STRENGTH & CONDITIONING COACH 20TH SEASON

In both 2006 and 2007, Mannie was named to Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers in recognition for his numerous and ongoing educational efforts in the field of strength and conditioning and in bringing awareness to the anabolic drug abuse problem in sports. He has been recognized and is widely-published on his adamant stance against performanceenhancing drugs. In June 2007, the Varsity S Club inducted him as an honorary member. He has written more than 300 articles and four book chapters on the various aspects of strength/conditioning, speed/power development, sports nutrition, motivation, athletics, and the anabolic drug abuse issue. Since 2000, Mannie has written the monthly column “Powerline” for Coach and Athletic Director, the nation’s oldest and most prestigious coaching publication. He is also a frequent contributor to the Championship Performance newsletter. He also serves on the advisory boards for the National Strength Professionals Association (NSPA), the information-based Athletic Strength and Power (ASAP) website, and the Ultimate Strength and Conditioning website. Mannie has coached numerous All-Americans, as well as a host of players who went on to have highly successful NFL careers.

In 2011, Michigan State led the Big Ten in rushing defense (100.5 yards per game) and total defense (277.4 ypg.) en route to winning the Big Ten Legends Division title. For the first time since 1990, all three of MSU’s starting linebackers garnered All-Big Ten honors. Allen, who ranked second in the Big Ten in sacks with 11 and fourth in tackles for loss with 18.5, was named second-team all-conference by the media. Bullough picked up second-team accolades from the coaches after leading the Spartans with 89 tackles and junior Chris Norman was named honorable mention after recording career highs in tackles (76) and tackles for loss (6.5).

Additionally, he has served as a consultant to several NFL teams on training equipment, program design, and the organization and administration of testing protocols.

Tressel arrived at Michigan State following the 2006 regular season, as he was one of eight assistants to follow Dantonio to MSU from Cincinnati.

For Mannie’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

Prior to his arrival at Michigan State, Mannie spent nine years in a similar capacity at the University of Toledo (1985-94). He worked for Nick Saban in 1990 when the Rockets won a share of the Mid-American Conference title and finished 9-2. He served as a graduate assistant along with Mark Dantonio at Ohio State in 1984, working with the Buckeyes’ Big Ten championship football team.

For Tressel’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

THE TRESSEL FILE

THE MANNIE FILE

FAMILY: Wife Megan and two children: Logan and Quincy.

FAMILY: Wife Marianne and daughter Alaina.

YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Eighth. Joined staff on Dec. 1, 2006, from Cincinnati.

YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: 20th. Joined staff on Dec. 8, 1994, from Toledo.

PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College – Graduate assistant coach at South Dakota (1996-97); offensive line coach (1998-2000) and offensive coordinator/ quarterbacks coach (2001) at Wartburg (Iowa) College; graduate assistant linebackers coach at Ohio State (2002-03); linebackers and special teams coach at Cincinnati (2004-06).

PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College — Graduate assistant at Ohio State (1984); head strength and conditioning coach at Toledo (1985-94). Also coached and taught at the high school level for ten years.

EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Cornell (Iowa) College in 1996; master’s degree in sports administration at South Dakota in 1998. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College – Four-year starter in the secondary at Cornell (Iowa) College (1992-95). POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach – 1999 NCAA Division III Playoffs, 2003 Fiesta Bowl, 2004 Fiesta Bowl, 2004 Fort Worth Bowl, 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in health and physical education from Akron in 1974; master’s degree in health and physical education with an emphasis in exercise science from Ohio State in 1985. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College — Three-year letterman and two-year starter at offensive guard at Akron (1971-73). BOWL EXPERIENCE: Coach — 1985 Rose Bowl, 1995 Independence Bowl, 1996 Sun Bowl, 1997 Aloha Bowl, 2000 Florida Citrus Bowl, 2001 Silicon Valley Football Classic, 2003 Alamo Bowl, 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

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SUPPORT STAFF Tommy Hoke is in his 11th year as associate head strength and conditioning coach at Michigan State. He was named a Master Strength and Conditioning Coach (MSCC) in May 2010 by the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association (CSCCa), which is the highest honor given to a strength and conditioning professional.

TOMMY HOKE ASSOCIATE HEAD STRENGTH & CONDITIONING COACH 11TH SEASON

Along with Coach Mannie, Hoke has been instrumental in coordinating the “Fourth Quarter” and “Bottom Line” offseason conditioning programs that have been one of the key reasons for MSU’s success in the Coach Mark Dantonio era.

Hoke came to Michigan State following eight seasons at Appalachian State (1996-2003), including three years as an assistant before being promoted to head strength and conditioning coach in 1999 by head football coach Jerry Moore. In his role as head strength and conditioning coach, he organized workouts for Appalachian State’s 20 varsity sports. A certified strength and conditioning specialist, Hoke played an integral part in helping Appalachian State football to a combined record of 67-30 (.691) from 1996-2003, including a 48-16 record (.750) in Southern Conference games. The Mountaineers made five-straight appearances in the NCAA I-AA playoffs from 1998-2002. During his tenure, 13 Appalachian State players were invited to National Football League training camps.

Tim Allen, who previously worked together with Spartan head coach Mark Dantonio and quarterbacks coach Dave Warner at Kansas in the early 1990s, is in his seventh season as director of football operations at Michigan State.

TIM ALLEN DIRECTOR OF FOOTBALL OPERATIONS SEVENTH SEASON

Allen oversees the day-to-day operations and budget of the football program. His duties include coordinating team travel, bowl game preparations, future scheduling and facility updates to the Skandalaris Football Center. In addition, Allen serves as Dantonio’s liaison to the equipment staff, training room, video department, field maintenance and all athletic administration. Allen previously spent 19 seasons on Glen Mason’s coaching staff at Kansas (1988-96) and Minnesota (19972006).

Allen came to Michigan State following 10 years at Minnesota where he served as assistant athletics director for football operations. During his tenure, the Golden Gophers made seven postseason bowl appearances, including fivestraight trips from 2002-06, and finished ranked among the nation’s Top 25 on two occasions (1999: ESPN/USA TODAY No. 17 and Associated Press No. 18; 2003: No. 17 ESPN/USA TODAY and AP No. 20). From 1999-2005, Minnesota averaged better than seven wins per season (50 total).

Hoke first arrived on the Appalachian State campus in 1992, working for four years as assistant strength and conditioning coach (1992-95).

Allen previously spent 11 seasons at Kansas, first as a defensive graduate assistant in 1986 before being promoted to administrative assistant for football operations in 1987. He was retained when Mason became the Jayhawks’ head coach in 1988. During his stint in Lawrence, Allen was part of one of college football’s most dramatic turnarounds as Kansas recorded a pair of Aloha Bowl victories (1992 over BYU and 1995 over UCLA) and two Top 25 finishes (1992: AP No. 22 and United Press International No. 23; 1995: No. 9 AP and No. 10 UPI).

He began his coaching career as an assistant track and field coach at UNC Wilmington in 1991.

While at Kansas, he served as the academic liaison for football and organized the on-campus recruiting efforts in addition to his other football operations duties.

A native of Durham, N.C., Hoke lettered in track and field at UNC Wilmington, competing in the javelin and shot put in 1990. He also participated in soccer in 1986.

From 1982-85, he worked as an assistant football coach (wide receivers, 1982-83; defensive backs/special teams coordinator, 1984-85) and admissions counselor at his alma mater, Bethel College in North Newton, Kansas. In October 2003, Allen and members of the 1984 Threshers’ football team that posted an undefeated regular-season record (9-0) en route to winning the Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference (KCAC) championship and finishing second in the NAIA Division II final rankings were inducted into the Bethel College Athletic Hall of Fame.

Prior to his second stint at Appalachian State, Hoke spent one year as assistant strength and conditioning coach at Texas Tech (1995-96) where he worked primarily with the Red Raiders’ men’s basketball, women’s soccer, softball and track and field programs while assisting football.

For Hoke’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

A native of Seneca, Kansas, Allen earned two letters as a wide receiver and was elected team captain as a senior at Bethel College. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in health, physical education and recreation from Bethel College in 1986. For Allen’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

THE HOKE FILE FAMILY: Wife Rachel and two children: Drew and Jennifer. YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: 11th. Joined staff on April 26, 2004, from Appalachian State. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College — assistant track and field coach at UNC Wilmington (1991); assistant strength and conditioning coach at Appalachian State (1992-95); assistant strength and conditioning coach at Texas Tech (1995-96); assistant strength and conditioning coach at Appalachian State (1996-1998); head strength and conditioning coach at Appalachian State (1999-2003). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in physical education from UNC Wilmington in 1990; master’s degree in exercise science from Appalachian State in 1993. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College — Lettered in track and field at UNC Wilmington (1990).

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POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach — 1998 NCAA I-AA playoffs, 1999 NCAA I-AA playoffs, 2000 NCAA I-AA playoffs, 2001 NCAA I-AA playoffs, 2002 NCAA I-AA playoffs, 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

THE ALLEN FILE FAMILY: Wife Rochelle and four children: Brett, Brianna, Brooke and Brandon. YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Seventh. Joined staff on June 13, 2008, from Minnesota. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College – Wide receivers coach (1982-83) and defensive backs coach/special teams coordinator (1984-85) at Bethel College; defensive graduate assistant (1986), administrative assistant for football operations (1987) and director of football operations (1988-96) at Kansas; assistant athletics director for football operations at Minnesota (1997-2006). EDUCATION: Bachelor of Science in health, physical education and recreation from Bethel College in 1986. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College – Two-year letterman as a wide receiver at Bethel College. POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach – 1984 NAIA Division II playoffs, 1992 Aloha Bowl, 1995 Aloha Bowl, 1999 Sun Bowl, 2000 MicronPC.com Bowl, 2002 Music City Bowl, 2003 Sun Bowl, 2004 Music City Bowl, 2005 Music City Bowl, 2006 Insight Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • 2013 BIG TEN CHAMPIONS • 2014 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS

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SUPPORT STAFF Brad Lunsford is in his eighth year as a full-time member of the Spartan football staff as director of executive football operations. Lunsford’s primary responsibilities include coordinating team travel, preseason camp, training table and food services as well as administrative oversight over all practice sessions.

BRAD LUNSFORD DIRECTOR OF EXECUTIVE FOOTBALL OPERATIONS EIGHTH SEASON

In addition, he supervises the comp ticket program for MSU players during the regular season and postseason; develops all administrative manuals for the program; plus assists in planning the yearly calendar as well as camps and clinics. Lunsford also organizes and coordinates all day-to-day football-related activities for head coach Mark Dantonio and serves as the football office’s liaison to the athletic communications staff.

Lunsford spent one year at Delaware State, serving as the school’s first director of football operations. In his dual role as assistant athletics director, he oversaw all operations of the Hornet program in 2006, managing day-to-day administrative tasks while arranging team travel and scheduling. Prior to spending the 2006 season at Delaware State, Lunsford worked for five years in the Michigan State football office. From September 2000 to May 2004, he was the assistant to the recruiting coordinator, managing all mailings for high school and junior college film requests, maintaining the program’s recruiting database and organizing a nationwide recruiting board. In 2003, he was employed by Palace Sports and Entertainment in Auburn Hills, Mich., as a basketball operations intern for the WNBA’s Detroit Shock. For Lunsford’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com

addition, Folino coached three first-team All-Big Ten selections: safety John Miller (1987-88), safety Harlon Barnett (1989) and cornerback Demetrice Martin (1994). Barnett, who now serves as secondary coach under seventh-year Michigan State head coach Mark Dantonio, also earned first-team All-America honors from The Sporting News in 1989. For Folino’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

THE FOLINO FILE FAMILY: Wife Anita and eight children: sons, Anthony, Chuck, John and Danny; and daughters, Alyse, Ann, Ellen and Carlyann. The couple also has 11 grandchildren: Johnny, Dano, Jack, Drew, George, Caroline, June, Charlie, Lilian, Nina and Luciano. YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: 20th overall. Rejoined staff in 2002. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College - Graduate assistant at Ohio State (1974-75); defensive backs coach at New Hampshiire (1976); defensive backs coach at Cincinnati (1977-80); defensive backs coach at Pittsburgh (1981-84); defensive coordinator/defensive backs coach at Pennsylvania (1985-86); defensive backs coach at Rice (1986-87); defensive backs coach at Michigan State (1988-94); defensive backs at Albion College (1995-96); defensive coordinator at Alma (1997); defensive backs coach and defensive coordinator at Vanderbilt (1998-2001). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in education from Villanova in 1971; master’s degree in educational administration from Ohio State in 1975. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College – Three-year starter at safety for Villanova. POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach – 1975 Rose Bowl, 1976 Rose Bowl, 1976 NCAA Division II Playoffs, 1982 Sugar Bowl, 1983 Cotton Bowl, 1984 Fiesta Bowl, 1989 Gator Bowl, 1989 Aloha Bowl, 1990 Sun Bowl, 1993 Liberty Bowl, 1996 NCAA Division III Playoffs, 2003 Alamo Bowl, 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl. Curtis Blackwell begins his second season at Michigan State as the director of college advancement and performance/camp director.

THE LUNSFORD FILE FAMILY: Wife April.

Blackwell has previous coaching experience in high school (Detroit Martin Luther King, 2003-05, 2007; Detroit Mackenize (2006) and spent nine years as the co-director of the “Sound Mind, Sound Body” Football Academy, a program devoted to high school student-athletes who aspire to play in college that emphasizes the importance of both academics and athletics.

YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Eighth on full-time staff as director of executive football operations. PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE: College – Assistant to the recruiting coordinator at Michigan State (2000-03); assistant director of football operations at Michigan State (2004-05); assistant athletics director/director of football operations at Delaware State (2006). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in public policy from Michigan State in 2004; master’s degree in sports administration from Michigan State in 2005. POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: 2007 Champs Sports Bowl, 2009 Capital One Bowl, 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl. Former Spartan assistant coach Dino Folino is in his 13th year as director of personnel/player development and relations at Michigan State.

DINO FOLINO DIRECTOR OF PERSONNEL/ PLAYER DEVELOPMENT & RELATIONS 13TH SEASON

Folino’s responsibilities include coordinating football student-athlete housing and summer jobs program, high school coaches clinics and football fantasy camp. In addition, he serves as the football office’s liaison to National Football League scouts, student-athlete support services, sports marketing department, MSU Football Players Association and Michigan High School Football Coaches Association. Prior to accepting a position in athletics administration, he spent 27 years in the college coaching ranks. Folino returned to Michigan State following four years at Vanderbilt (1998-2001), where he coached the secondary and served as defensive coordinator under Woody Widenhofer.

He worked one season as a defensive coordinator at Alma College (1997) and two years as the defensive backs coach at Albion College (1995-96).

CURTIS BLACKWELL DIRECTOR OF COLLEGE ADVANCEMENT/ PERFORMANCE CAMP DIRECTOR SECOND SEASON

One of Blackwell’s primary duties is to mentor current student-athletes, with a focus on leadership, graduation and career objectives. He will also play a key role in the development and implementation of strategic plans in football recruiting.

In addition, Blackwell will coordinate and serve as the camp director for all MSU football summer camps and work on the continuing development of relationships with youth football programs throughout the state of Michigan.

THE BLACKWELL FILE YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Second. Joined staff on Aug. 2, 2013. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: High School - Assistant coach at Detroit Martin Luther King (2003-05, 2007); assistant coach at Detroit Mackenzie (2006). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in sport management from Hampton in 2000; master’s degree in sports administration from Baylor in 2002. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College – Four-year letterwinner (1996-99) as a defensive back at Hampton University POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Player - 1997 Division I-AA Playoffs, 1998 Division I-AA Playoffs, 1999 Heritage Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

Folino previously spent seven years as the secondary coach at Michigan State (1988-94) under George Perles. During his tenure, the Spartans made four bowl appearances (1989 Gator, 1989 Aloha, 1990 Sun and 1993 Liberty) and won a share of the 1990 Big Ten championship. In 1994, Michigan State led the Big Ten in passing defense (103.1 rating). In

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SUPPORT STAFF Former Michigan State safety Lorenzo Guess is in his third year as an assistant strength and conditioning coach at Michigan State. Guess is a certified strength and conditioning specialist with the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA) and certified by USA Weightlifting as a level one sports performance coach.

LORENZO GUESS ASSISTANT STRENGTH & CONDITIONING COACH THIRD SEASON

Guess, who previously worked with Mark Dantonio at Cincinnati as a staff assistant in 2006, has eight years of experience as a strength and conditioning coach at the collegiate level. Dantonio also served as Guess’ position coach for three seasons in East Lansing (1998-2000).

ZAC HUETER GRADUATE ASSISTANT

RYAN MANALAC GRADUATE ASSISTANT

MATT MUELLER DIRECTOR/ ON-CAMPUS RECRUITING

NICK RUFFING VIDEO INTERN

BEN MATHERS OPERATIONS ASSISTANT

JOEL KUNTZMAN OPERATIONS ASSISTANT

SALLY NOGLE HEAD ATHLETIC TRAINER

DAVID JAGER FOOTBALL TRAINER

BOB KNICKERBOCKER EQUIPMENT COORDINATOR

DYLAN MARINEZ EQUIPMENT MANAGER

MATT HARPER DIRECTOR/FOOTBALL TECHNOLOGY

JUSTIN MARTIN ASST. DIR./FOOTBALL TECHNOLOGY

TODD EDWARDS DIRECTOR/ACADEMIC SERVICES

CINDY MEJORADO OFFICE ASSISTANT

SIMONE PROULX SPORT OPERATIONS ASSISTANT

PARIS JOHNSON GRADUATE ASSISTANT

A native of Wayne, Mich., Guess spent two seasons (201011) as an assistant director of strength and conditioning at Notre Dame while working with head coach Brian Kelly.

The 34-year old Guess also worked with Kelly for one season at Cincinnati as a tight ends coach, helping the Bearcats to a 12-1 record in 2009 and an appearance in the Sugar Bowl following UC’s second-straight BIG EAST Championship. Guess mentored Ben Guidugli, who earned second-team All-BIG EAST honors after ranking fourth on the team with 27 receptions for 364 yards and three touchdowns. For Guess’ complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

THE GUESS FILE FAMILY: Wife Bianca and daughter Nadia. YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Third. Joined staff on June 6, 2012, from Notre Dame. PREVIOUS COACHING EXPERIENCE: College – Secondary coach/assistant strength and conditioning coach at Tiffin University (2005); staff assistant at Cincinnati (2006); secondary coach/football strength and conditioning coach at Kentucky State (2007); head strength and conditioning coach at Alcorn State (2008); assistant strength and conditioning coach at South Florida (2009); tight ends coach at Cincinnati (2009); assistant director of strength and conditioning at Notre Dame (2010-11). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary social science from Michigan State in 2002; master’s degree in business administration from Tiffin University in 2007. PLAYING EXPERIENCE: College – Four-year letterman as a safety at Michigan State (1998-2001). POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Player – 2000 Citrus Bowl, 2001 Silicon Valley Classic. Coach – 2007 International Bowl, 2010 Sugar Bowl, 2010 Sun Bowl, 2011 Champs Sports Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl. Bill Burghardt is in his third year as an assistant strength and conditioning coach for the Spartans.

BILL BURGHARDT ASSISTANT STRENGTH & CONDITIONING COACH THIRD SEASON

Burghardt, who spent two seasons (2010-11) as a strength and conditioning graduate assistant at Michigan State, rejoined the Spartan program in July 2012 following a six-month stint as an assistant strength and conditioning coach at the United States Military Academy in West Point, N.Y. Burghardt worked directly with the Cadet hockey and wrestling teams at West Point, organizing, designing and implementing all aspects of the strength and conditioning programs. Burghardt is a certified strength and conditioning specialist with the Collegiate Strength and Conditioning Coaches Association (CSCCa) and the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA).

For Burghardt’s complete bio, please visit msuspartans.com.

THE BURGHARDT FILE FAMILY: Wife Alaina. YEARS AT MICHIGAN STATE: Third. Joined staff on July 1, 2012, from United States Military Academy. PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE: College – Strength and conditioning graduate assistant at Michigan State (2010-11); assistant strength and conditioning coach at United States Military Academy (2011). EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree in kinesiology from Michigan State in 2009; master’s degree in kinesiology from Michigan State in 2011. POSTSEASON EXPERIENCE: Coach – 2010 Alamo Bowl, 2011 Capital One Bowl, 2012 Outback Bowl, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, 2014 Rose Bowl.

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2014 MICHIGAN STATE SPRING FOOTBALL • MSUSPARTANS.COM • @MSU_FOOTBALL


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