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Michigan State Spartans
University Michigan State University
Conference(s) Big Ten, CCHA
NCAA Division I
Athletics director Mark Hollis
Location East Lansing, MI
Varsity teams 25
Football stadium Spartan Stadium
Basketball arena Breslin Student Events Center
Baseball stadium John H. Kobs Field
Other arenas Munn Ice Arena
Mascot Sparty
Nickname Spartans
Fight song MSU fight song
Colors Green and White

         

Homepage MSU Spartans

The Michigan State Spartans are the athletic team that represent Michigan State University. The school's athletic program includes 25 varsity sports teams. Their mascot is a Spartan warrior named Sparty, and the school colors are green and white. The university participates in the NCAA's Division I-A and in the Big Ten Conference in all Varsity sports except ice hockey, which competes in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association. Michigan State offers 12 varsity sports for men and 13 for women.[1]

The university's athletic director is Mark Hollis, who was promoted to the position on January 1, 2008.[2] Hollis replaced Ron Mason, who also served as head hockey coach from 1979 to 2002, retiring with a 608–261–64 record at MSU.[3]

MSU's football team has won or shared six national championships in 1951, 1952, 1955, 1957, 1965 and 1966, and has won the Rose Bowl in 1954, 1956 and 1988.[4] Its men's basketball team won the NCAA National Championship in 1979 and 2000.[4] The MSU men's ice hockey has won national titles in 1966, 1986 and 2007.[4] MSU's golf team won the Big Ten Championship in 1969 and again in 2005.[4]

History[]

In 1925, the institution changed its name to Michigan State College of Agriculture and Applied Science, and as an agricultural school, its teams were referred to as the Aggies. Looking to move beyond its agricultural roots, Michigan State held a contest to find a new nickname. They decided to call the teams the "Michigan Staters". Local sports writers for the Lansing State Journal and the Capital News went through the losing entries to find a shorter and more heroic name. They decided on the "Spartans", which had been suggested by a recent immigrant from Sparta, Stephen G. Scofes. By coincidence, Justin Morrill had once compared the Land Grant colleges to the schools of ancient Sparta. With a heroic name and a historic precedent, the "Spartans" quickly caught on as the teams' new nickname. They later changed the lyrics of the Fight Song to reflect the name change of the College and its sports teams.[5]

Rose Bowls[6]
1954   Michigan State   28     UCLA   20
1956   Michigan State   17     UCLA   14
1966   UCLA   14     Michigan State   12
1988   Michigan State   20     Southern California   17

As the college grew in size, it looked to join a major collegiate conference. When the University of Chicago eliminated varsity football and withdrew from the Western Conference (now the Big Ten) in 1946, Michigan State president John A. Hannah lobbied hard to take its place. Despite opposition from the University of Michigan, the Big Ten finally admitted M.S.C. on May 20, 1949.[7] After joining the conference, head football coach Clarence L. "Biggie" Munn led the Spartan football team to the Rose Bowl in the 1953–54 season, beating UCLA 28–20.[8] Successor coach Hugh "Duffy" Daugherty carried the football team to a second Rose Bowl where it again defeated UCLA, 17–14.[9]

File:MSU Spartan Stadium Facade.jpg

Spartan Stadium hosts football games and other events.

Varsity sports[]

Michigan State has 23 NCAA Division I-A varsity teams: 11 varsity sports for men and 12 for women. They participate in the Big Ten Conference in all sports except ice hockey, which competes in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association[10] and fencing, where until 1997, from the University founding, MSU featured fencing as a varsity sport. During that time, MSU was coached by the first American recognized as a master of fencing, Charles Schmitter, for 45 years, from 1939 to 1984. Upon his retirement, his student, Fred Freiheit, coached from 1984 until fencing was demoted from varsity status in 1997. The Michigan State University Fencing Club is a competing member of the Midwest Fencing Conference, which consists of sixteen (16) schools with varsity or club programs.

Basketball[]

Retired Basketball Jerseys
Number Player Years

4 Scott Skiles 1982–1986
12 Mateen Cleaves 1996–2000
21 Steve Smith 1987–1991
24 Johnny Green 1955–1958
24 Shawn Respert 1991–1995
31 Jay Vincent 1978–1981
32 Greg Kelser 1976–1979
33 Earvin "Magic" Johnson 1977–1979
42 Morris Peterson 1995—2000
Coach Jud Heathcote 1976–1995

MSU's men's basketball team has won the National Championship twice: in 1979 and 2000.[11] In 1979, Earvin "Magic" Johnson,[12] along with Greg Kelser,[13] Jay Vincent[14] and Mike Brkovich, carried the MSU team to a 75–64 win against the Larry Bird-led Indiana State Sycamores. In 2000, three players from Flint, Morris Peterson,[15] Charlie Bell[16] and Mateen Cleaves,[17] carried the team to its second national title. Dubbed the "Flintstones", they were the key to the Spartans' win against the University of Florida.[18] Lost to UNC 89-72 in the 2009 NCAA National Championship game. On December 13, 2003, Michigan State and Kentucky played at the most-attended basketball game in history, when they played a match in front of 78,130 at Ford Field, a stadium in Detroit. Kentucky won 79–74.[19] Since 1995, Michigan State has been coached by Tom Izzo, who has a 364–146 record.[20] Izzo's coaching helped the team make six of twelve NCAA Final Fours from 1999 to 2010, winning the title in 2000. Michigan State basketball has been selected for 15 consecutive NCAA tournament bids from 1998 to 2012, making six final fours during that span. This span has provided every four-year player under Tom Izzo the opportunity to play in a final four. Overall, Michigan State has made it to the final four eight times and has made 25 NCAA Tournament appearances.[21]

Spartans formerly or currently in the NBA include Earvin "Magic" Johnson,[12] Shawn Respert,[22] Steve Smith,[23] Greg Kelser,[13] Jay Vincent,[14] Steve Smith,[23] Scott Skiles,[24] Jason Richardson,[25] Mateen Cleaves,[17] Alan Anderson,[26] Zach Randolph,[27] Morris Peterson,[15] Eric Snow,[28] Mike Peplowski, Kevin Willis, Charlie Bell,[16] Shannon Brown, Jamie Feick, Maurice Ager, Paul Davis and Drew Naymick.[29]

MSU also has a fairly successful women's basketball team, with its greatest accomplishment being a national runner-up finish to Baylor in 2005. Suzy Merchant took over as head coach in 2007,[30] and replaced Joanne P. McCallie who left MSU to coach for Duke University. Before coming to Michigan State, Merchant spent nine years as head coach of Eastern Michigan University's team, where she won the most games in the school's history.[31] During the 2007–2008 season, the team won more games, 23, than any other Big Ten team.[32]

Football[]

File:Michigan-State-logo-block-s.svg

Michigan State's classic 'S' logo

Football has a long tradition at Michigan State. Starting as a club sport in 1884, football gained varsity status in 1896.[33] During that time, the Spartans had a roster of impressive players, including Lynn Chandnois, Dorne Dibble, Meredith Assaly, and Don McAulliffe. In 1951, the Spartans finished the season undefeated, and performed the same feat the following year in addition to the nation's longest winning streak of 24 games. The team was named the "undisputed national champions by every official poll".[34]

After waiting for several years, the team was finally admitted into the Big Ten Conference as a regular member in 1953. They promptly went on to capture the league championship (losing only one game during the season) and beating UCLA in their first Rose Bowl game. After the 1953 season Biggie Munn, the legendary Spartan coach, turned the team over to his protégé and future legend Duffy Daugherty. Daughtery went on to win the 1956 Rose Bowl. George Perles was the head coach when the Spartans defeated USC in the 1988 Rose Bowl.[35] All told, Michigan State has won six national championships and nine Big Ten championships.[36]

Today, the football team competes in Spartan Stadium, a renovated 75,005-person football stadium in the center of campus. The coach is Mark Dantonio, who was hired on November 27, 2006.[37] Dantonio has a 33–19 (20-12) record in his coaching tenure. Dantonio won the Big Ten Championship in 2010 and was named Big Ten Coach of the Year.

MSU's traditional archrival is the University of Michigan, against whom they compete for the Paul Bunyan Trophy; MSU has a 23–34–1 record in the annual trophy game. The Spartans have won the trophy each of the last four years: 2008, 2009 2010, and 2011.[dated info][38][39][40] Michigan State is one of three Big Ten teams to have an annual non-conference football game against Notre Dame, with whom they compete for the Megaphone Trophy. MSU's record in the trophy series against the Fighting Irish is 26–31–1. The one tie, dubbed the "Game of the Century", occurred in 1966, when Notre Dame was ranked first and MSU second in the country. The result of the game was a 10–10 tie, after Notre Dame elected not to attempt a score when they had the ball late in the game.[41] Michigan State won the Megaphone Trophy in 2010 after beating the Irish 34–31 in East Lansing on an OT fake field goal play known as "Little Giants".[42]

In the National Football League, MSU alumni include Morten Andersen,[43] Plaxico Burress,[44] Andre Rison,[45] Derrick Mason,[46] Muhsin Muhammad,[47] T. J. Duckett,[48] Flozell Adams,[49] Julian Peterson,[50] Herb Haygood, Charles Rogers,[51] Jim Miller,[52] Earl Morrall,[53] Wayne Fontes,[54] Bubba Smith,[55] Tony Banks,[56] Percy Snow,[57] Rob Fredrickson, Jeff Smoker, Tony Mandarich, Lorenzo White, Hank Bullough, Drew Stanton,[58] Devin Thomas, Tupe Peko, Domata Peko, Chris Morris, Javon Ringer, Chris L. Rucker and Greg Jones.

Ice hockey[]

File:The Cold War UofM v.s MSU.jpg

"The Cold War"

Michigan State has two varsity hockey teams: a men's ice hockey team and a women's field hockey team. Helen Knull is the head coach of the women's field hockey team.

The men's ice hockey team plays at the Munn Ice Arena. The head coach was Rick Comley, who had a 116–73–19 record at MSU.[59] The current head coach is Tom Anastos. Since the Big Ten Conference does not cover Division I ice hockey, Michigan State competes in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association. Along with the University of Michigan (U-M) and the Ohio State University, it is one of three Big Ten schools in the CCHA.[60]

On October 6, 2001, the team was involved in what was then the most-attended hockey game in history: The Cold War. The Spartans set up a hockey rink in the middle of their football stadium, Spartan Stadium and played U-M before a crowd of 74,554. The game ended in a 3–3 tie.[61] A decade later, the same two teams were involved again in the most-attended ice hockey game in history. This time, Michigan hosted the rivalry game at its own Michigan Stadium. The Big Chill at the Big House set the current record with an officially certified crowd of 104,173.[62]

The MSU ice hockey program has seven CCHA regular season championships and 11 CCHA Tournament titles. MSU has also won 11 Great Lakes Invitational titles. The Spartans have been in the NCAA tournament 23 times, with nine Frozen Four appearances and three national titles (1966, 1986 and 2007). On April 7, 2007, the Michigan State Spartans won their third Collegiate Championship by beating the Boston College Eagles 3–1.[63]

Former Michigan State players in the National Hockey League include Rod Brind'Amour,[64] Anson Carter,[65] Donald McSween,[66] Adam Hall,[67] John-Michael Liles, Shawn Horcoff, Justin Abdelkader, Jim Slater, brothers Kelly Miller[68] and Kip Miller,[69] as well as their cousins, brothers Ryan Miller[70] and Drew Miller.[71] Two players for MSU have won the Hobey Baker Award: Kip Miller in 1990 and Ryan Miller in 2001.[72] Few other players also excelling in other leagues including forward Brock Radunske and defenseman Brad Fast.

Cross country[]

Historically, the Michigan State Cross Country men's team has been one of the school's most successful programs. Between World War I and World War II, Michigan State College competed in the Central Collegiate Conference, winning titles in 1926-1929, 1932, 1933 and 1935. Michigan State also experienced success in the IC4A, at New York’s Van Cortlandt Park, winning 15 team titles (1933–1937, 1949, 1953, 1956–1960, 1962, 1963 and 1968). Since entering the Big Ten in 1950, Michigan State has won 14 men’s titles (1951–1953, 1955–1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1970 and 1971). Michigan State hosted the inaugural NCAA cross country championships in 1938 and every year thereafter through 1964 (except a one-year vacation in 1943 due to war). The Spartans won eight NCAA championships from 1930 to 1959, including 1939, 1948, 1949, 1952, and 1955-1959 (minus 1957).[73][74][75] Walt Drenth is the current director of both the men's and women's cross country and track and field programs. After joining MSU in 2004, Drenth led the men's cross country team to a NCAA Championship bid during the 2004 season. The women's cross country team also advanced to the NCAA Championship Meet after winning the Great Lakes Regional race.[76]

Other varsity sports[]

MSU has a number of other team sports. As in many other NCAA institutions, Michigan State has a baseball team for men and a softball team for women. Jake Boss Jr. is head coach of the MSU baseball team. Former Michigan State players in Major League Baseball include Kirk Gibson,[77] Steve Garvey,[78] John Smoltz,[79] Robin Roberts[80] and Mark Mulder.[81] Since 2007, the baseball team plays a popular annual exhibition game against the nearby minor-league Lansing Lugnuts. The MSU women's fastpitch softball team won the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) Division I national title in 1976. Its coach, Jacquie Joseph, has headed the program since 1994.[82] Since taking over the program, Joseph has helped bring MSU to a record of 445–372–1 and four NCAA Regional appearances.[83]

The Spartans also have a men's soccer team, which won two back-to-back championships in 1967 and 1968. They shared the 1968 title with the University of Maryland, College Park.[84] The men's coach is Joe Baum, who is in his 31st year as head coach at Michigan State.[85] The men's soccer team battles Michigan annually in the Big Bear Trophy game, a series in which the Spartans lead 7-1-1 against their in-state rival.[86] Coaching the women's team is Baum's former assistant, Tom Saxton.[87]

There is also a volleyball team; Cathy George has been the head coach of the women's volleyball team since 2005. During her first year at Michigan State, she led her team to a 12–18 record, including a 5–15, ninth-place finish in the conference standings.[88]

There are a number of contact sports at MSU, including boxing and wrestling. MSU's boxing team won national titles in 1951 and 1955, although it is no longer an NCAA varsity sport.[89] Wrestling was one of the earliest sports formed at the Michigan Agricultural College. While the sport was dropped in 1906, it was reformed by the college 15 years later.[90] The school's wrestling team has won the NCAA Division I championship once, in 1967.[91] Its current coach, Tom Minkel, has produced 33 All-Americans, 11 Big Ten Champions and one NCAA Champion.[92]

Water sports at MSU include rowing and swimming. MSU's women's rowing crew coach is Matt Weise. In his third year as MSU head coach, Weise coached the Spartans to a program-best sixth-place team finish at the NCAA Championship.[93] He has continued to be a great coach for the sport. Matt Gianiodis is the head coach of both the men and women's swimming and diving. In his four years as head coach, Spartan swimmers and divers have broken 14 varsity records.[94]

Other sports at MSU include golf, gymnastics and tennis. Golf has had a long tradition at MSU. Hall of Fame Coach Bruce Fossum helped carry MSU to its first Big Ten title in 1969.[95] The Big Ten title would elude the Spartans until 2005, when arguably, the best team ever assembled, took home the rings in stellar fashion. Not only did the Spartans win the Big Ten Championship in 2005, but they captured two other titles along the way and rose all the way to #5 in the U.S. Sam Puryear coaches the men's golf team.[95] A former assistant coach at Stanford University, this is his first year as a head coach.[96] Stacy Slobodnik-Stoll coaches the women's team. In the last ten seasons, she has brought the Spartans to nine straight NCAA regional appearances.[97]

The men's gymnastics team at MSU won one national title, which they shared with the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1958.[98] In 2001, the MSU Board of Trustees disbanded the team in order to comply with Title IX regulations.[99] The women's team retained its varsity status. Its coach is Kathie Klages, who has had 16 winning seasons in a row.[100] In 2008, the team ranked 17th in the nation in the final season standings, the highest placement in program history.

Gene Orlando is the coach of the men's tennis team. In his 17 years as MSU head coach, Orlando has taken the Spartan men to four NCAA Championship singles qualifiers.[101] Coaching the women's team is Erica Perkins, a second-year head coach who, in her first year, led the Spartan women to a 12–11 record (2–8, Big Ten.)[102]

Notable non varsity sports[]

Rugby[]

The Michigan State University Rugby Football Club was founded in 1964.[103] Michigan State rugby has been steadily improving in college rugby in recent years. During the 2010-11 season, the Spartans played in Division 2, finishing with a 10-3 record and qualifying for the playoffs.[104] The Spartans' success led to them moving up to Division 1-AA for the 2011-12 season.[105] For the 2012-13 season, the Spartans once again moved to a higher level of competition--the Big Ten Universities D1-A conference, against traditional Big 10 rivals such as Michigan. The Spartans are led by head coach Dave Poquette, who has been coaching at Michigan State since 1992.[106]

MSU Athletics Hall of Fame[]

In 1992, thirty former Spartan athletes, coaches, and administrators were inducted into the MSU Athletics Hall of Fame as its charter class.[107] On October 1, 1999, the University opened its new Athletics Hall of Fame, in the Clara Bell Smith Student-Athlete Academic Center.[108]

Awards[]

See footnote[109]

Academic All-Americans[]

See footnote[110]

Championships[]

National champions[]

See footnote[111]

Conference champions[]

See footnote[112]

Spartan sports almanac[]

See footnote[113]

Spartan traditions[]

See footnote[114]

NCAA Division I: Director's Cup[]

See footnote[115] and NACDA Directors' Cup
Year Rank: National Rank: Big 10
1993-94 60th 10th
1994-95 76th 10th
1995-96 41st 8th
1996-97 31st 7th
1997-98 54th 10th
1998-99 34th 6th
1999-00 22nd 6th
2000-01 39th 8th
2001-02 29th 6th
2002-03 26th 6th
2003-04 37th 7th
2004-05 33rd 7th
2005-06 46th 10th
2006-07 34th 7th
2007-08 29th 6th
2008-09 27th 6th
2009-10 39th 7th

See also[]

  • List of college athletic programs in Michigan

References[]

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