The Denver Post

No. 7 Michigan State looks to stop march of No. 4 Buckeyes

- By Mitch Stacy Carlos Osorio, The Associated Press

When Mel Tucker took the coaching job at Michigan State, he promised his players they would play for championsh­ips.

The second-year coach has the Spartans knocking at the door already.

“I meant that,” Tucker said of his pronouncem­ent in February 2020 when he replaced the retiring Mark Dantonio. “We’re in November, and we’re in the hunt.”

The hunt is about to get a good deal more rugged for surprising No. 7 Michigan State (9-1, 6-1 Big Ten). The Spartans are a big underdog against No. 4 Ohio State (9-1, 7-0) on Saturday in Columbus, where 100,000 fans in Ohio Stadium will make the visitors’ expedition even more difficult.

“Certainly turned that roster, quickly, over to a championsh­iplevel roster,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said of his Michigan State counterpar­t.

This game is huge. The winner stays in the race for the Big Ten East and the College Football Playoff. The loser likely will be left outside looking in.

Michigan State dealt No. 8 Michigan its only loss of the season, but then the Spartans were upset by unranked Purdue, a team torched by the Buckeyes last week.

Of course, Ohio State and Michigan clash in “The Game” next week at Ann Arbor to finish the regular season.

“I feel we’re in the best conference in college football right now. It shows,” Ohio State defensive end Zach Harrison said. “We got three teams in the top 10. That’s not by accident.”

The Buckeyes, winners of eight straight since being upset by Oregon in Week 2, aren’t worried about anybody else right now.

“We always say it’s always been about us,” Day said. “It doesn’t matter who we’re playing.”

Tucker appreciate­s that teams only get so many opportunit­ies to be where the Spartans are this late in the season. Michigan State finished a dismal 2-5 in the pandemicsh­ortened 2020 season, Tucker’s first in East Lansing after a year at

Colorado.

“It’s November, we’re coming down the stretch,” he said. “The most important game is the next game. We’re going on the road against a great football team, and we need to prepare that way all week. We have to dig deeper into the details.”

Tucker, who is from Cleveland, was on Jim Tressel’s staff at Ohio State from 2001 to 2004. He was the Buckeyes’ defensive backs coach in 2002 when they won the national title and was co-defensive coordinato­r in his last season with the team.

“I can put things in perspectiv­e,” Tucker said. “I can help our team in terms of making sure that they understand what to expect going into Ohio Stadium.”

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