Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Sparty party

Walker-led No. 8 Spartans rally to knock off No. 6 Wolverines

- By Larry Lage

EAST LANSING, Mich. — Kenneth Walker earned the right to stump for Heisman Trophy votes and humbly refused, shaking off questions about the coveted award as if they were linebacker­s trying to tackle him.

Walker ran for 197 yards and five touchdowns, helping No. 8 Michigan State top No. 6 Michigan 37-33 for a thrilling comeback win on Saturday.

“I don’t feel like it was a Heisman moment,” said Walker, who started the day leading the nation in rushing and finished it with 1,194 yards rushing and 15 touchdowns. “But it was just a great team win.”

The Wake Forest transfer had a lot to do with it.

The Spartans (8-0, 5-0 Big Ten) trailed by nine at halftime and 30-14 with 6:47 left in the third quarter before rallying as Walker boosted his chances of being selected college football’s most outstandin­g player.

“That was an epic game,” Michigan State coach Mel Tucker said.

Walker’s fifth touchdown — a 23-yard run — lifted the Spartans to a 37-33 lead with 5:08 remaining. He had 8.6 yards a carry, an average that spiked thanks to his 58-yard touchdown that helped the Spartans pull into a 30-all tie early in the fourth quarter.

“This was a huge stage, the whole world was watching, and you got a chance to see what type of player he is,” Tucker said. “Any recognitio­n he’s getting for Heisman considerat­ion is well deserved.”

The Wolverines (7-1, 4-1) forced a final punt and had the ball at their 33 with 1:15 and no timeouts left.

After a roughing-the-passer penalty gave them the ball at midfield, Michigan State cornerback Charles Brantley sealed the victory by picking off a floating pass from Cade McNamara.

“This one stings,” McNamara said. “We have to respond. Our backs are against the wall now.”

McNamara threw for 383 yards and two touchdowns, but his intercepti­on was costly, as was freshman quarterbac­k J.J. McCarthy’s

lost fumble on an attempted handoff in the fourth quarter.

“That exchange didn’t go smoothly,” said Harbaugh, who said McNamara was “working through something,” when he the freshman replaced him.

The rivals were on the same field with 7-0 or better records for the first time, matching up as top-10 teams for the first time since 1964.

Michigan State’s win puts the program in contention for the Big Ten conference championsh­ip and potentiall­y a spot in the College Football Playoff.

“We’re in the hunt,” Tucker said. Michigan’s loss leaves Jim Harbaugh with a 3-4 record against Michigan State as a coach, putting even more pressure on him to earn his first victory against No. 5 Ohio State next month.

The Spartans had some calls and reviews go their way, including one that overturned Payton Thorne’s fumble late in the first half that Aidan Hutchinson recovered in the end zone, but Harbaugh refused to publicly lash out.

“I made my thoughts known throughout the game,” he said.

 ?? JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL ?? Michigan State players celebrate with the Paul Bunyan trophy after Saturday’s win over Michigan.
JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL Michigan State players celebrate with the Paul Bunyan trophy after Saturday’s win over Michigan.

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