Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Dantonio: It’s time to retire

Coach won 3 Big Ten titles in 13 seasons at Mich. St.

- By Noah Trister

EAST LANSING, Mich. — From “pride comes before the fall” to Little Giants, Mark Dantonio leaves Michigan State fans with an abundance of fond memories after bringing the Spartans to heights they hadn’t reached in decades.

Dantonio announced his retirement Tuesday, ending a 13-year run in which his teams won three Big Ten titles and he became the school’s winningest coach. The 63-year-old Dantonio called his decision a difficult one while noting the nonstop demands of the job.

“I just found myself never having the opportunit­y to come up for air, and that can wear on you,” he said Tuesday night at a news conference.

Dantonio went 114-57 as Michigan State’s coach and won Big Ten titles in 2010, 2013 and 2015. The last of those three seasons included a trip to the College Football Playoff, but the Spartans declined after that. They went 7-6 this past season.

Defensive coordinato­r Mike Tressel will be the acting head coach while Michigan State seeks a replacemen­t for Dantonio, who said qualified candidates would be willing to crawl to campus for the job.

Michigan State athletic director Bill Beekman said he will seek Dantonio’s input on the search for his successor. Dantonio plans to have a role within the athletic department.

Beekman acknowledg­ed the timing isn’t ideal to search for a new football coach.

“There are times that are better than other times,” he said. “But I think when you’ve won 114 games, you’re our all-time winningest coach, and you’ve taken us to the places Mark has taken us and you’ve set the bar where Mark set it, I was comfortabl­e operating on his timeline whatever that would be.

“We’ll find a very good coach.”

The Spartans have fallen from the Big Ten’s elite in recent years, but only after Dantonio brought Michigan State to the top echelon of the league — and the nation — during a terrific stretch from 2010-15. He won at least 11 games five times in that six-year span — the first time a Big Ten coach had done that.

A turning point in his tenure occurred in 2010, when the Spartans memorably beat Notre Dame on a fake field goal in overtime. The trick play was called “Little Giants” — and Dantonio had a heart attack in the immediate aftermath of that victory. He returned to coach his team soon after and led Michigan State to a share of the Big Ten title.

The Spartans went to the conference title game three of the next five years after that, winning it twice.

Michigan State also dominated its rivalry with Michigan for much of Dantonio’s tenure. In 2007, his first season, the Spartans lost to the Wolverines. Afterward, Michigan’s Mike Hart referred to Michigan State as a little brother. Dantonio responded by warning the Wolverines that “pride comes before the fall” — and the Spartans won four straight meetings after that.

Dantonio ended up going 8-5 against the Wolverines.

The Spartans went just 27-24 in the four seasons since their playoff appearance.

In 2017, four players were dismissed from the team after criminal sexual conduct charges were brought against them. A report from an external law firm found no evidence that Dantonio violated school policy on handling sexual misconduct claims, but the issues damaged the program’s reputation.

Curtis Blackwell, a former Michigan State football employee, filed a lawsuit claiming his employment agreement was violated when he was discipline­d while the school addressed sexual assault allegation­s against players in 2017. Dantonio was named as a defendant in the suit and gave a lengthy deposition.

Dantonio said the deposition and potential fallout from the lawsuit had “zero” to do with his decision to retire.

“No relevance whatsoever,” he said.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO/AP ?? Mark Dantonio retires as the winningest coach in Michigan State football history.
CARLOS OSORIO/AP Mark Dantonio retires as the winningest coach in Michigan State football history.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States