Detroit Free Press

NEXT UP FOR THE SPARTANS: RICHMOND SPIDERS

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Fast facts

Matchup: Michigan State (1-0) vs. Richmond (0-1).

Kickoff: 3:30 p.m. Saturday; Spartan Stadium, East Lansing

TV/radio: Big Ten Network, WJR-AM (760).

None.

Chris Solari's three things we learned

Growing pains: Friday wasn’t a dominating performanc­e by any stretch, though the Spartans eventually used their size and depth to wear down their Mid-American Conference opponent after halftime. Noah Kim, in his first start at quarterbac­k, showed jitters early — though drops from his pass catchers were likely unnerving as well — then settled in with better accuracy in the final two-plus quarters against a solid CMU secondary. MSU failed to establish its front on offense against a veteran front seven, generating just 14 more yards rushing than their 113-yard season average in 2022. But there's room for growth in that area, considerin­g Nathan Carter’s 113-yard performanc­e on 18 carries. Defensivel­y, the secondary wasn’t tested — CMU quarterbac­k Bert Emanuel Jr. did not attempt to stretch the field much — and missed a few chances at intercepti­ons. The Spartans’ front seven mostly contained Emanuel and the Chips on the ground, giving up 123 yards and getting three sacks (one of them a slip-and-fall by the QB). Time in a bottle: In a battle of two of the worst possession-time teams from a year ago — MSU's 26:13 ranked 127th out of 130 FBS teams, and CMU (28:14) finished 107th — the Chippewas easily controlled the clock, 34:2625:34. Jay Johnson’s offense had seven of its 13 drives produce less than 30 yards, and none went longer than seven plays. CMU had an advantage of more than six minutes in the first quarter, as MSU's 11 plays produced just 42 yards — with 31 coming on the Carter run on the first play. MSU only won the possession­time battle in the second quarter (8:05-6:55)

as the Chippewas had a 16:58-13:02 edge in the second half.

Penalty problem: A year ago, MSU mostly maintained its composure, with 5.83 penalties per game (57th in FBS) for a 54.9-yard average that ranked 70th. But against CMU, there were plenty of discipline errors, with the Spartans getting whistled eight times for 66 yards. Four of those were personal foul calls on the defense: three facemask penalties and an unsportsma­nlike conduct (on defensive tackle Derrick Harmon). Only once in 2022, with nine in a win over Wisconsin, did MSU draw more flags. The Spartans had just six combined in their first two games combined against MAC opponents Western Michigan and Akron a year ago.

Know the foe

The Spiders, who went 9-4 last season and made the second round of the Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n playoffs, started their season with a splat. Despite being a 251⁄2-point favorite, Richmond lost Saturday at home, 17-10, as fellow FCS opponent Morgan State scored 10 unanswered points in the fourth quarter to pull off the upset. New starting quarterbac­k Kyle Wickersham went 23-for-30 for just 169 yards with an intercepti­on and no TDs. Despite showing dual-threat ability with 21 carries, the 6-foot-3, 225-pound Wickersham was sacked five times and finished with 39 yards after losing 29 yards on those sacks. Richmond managed just 264 yards of offense while holding the Bears to 213 yards, 114 of those on the ground.

Spiders kicker Andrew Lopes made one field goal attempt but missed a 44-yarder and had a 52-yard try blocked.

Linebacker Tristan Wheeler had 17 tackles, including a sack, in the loss. Richmond generated three turnovers while recovering two of its four forced fumbles, but the Spiders offense also turned the ball over four times, losing three fumbles. The Spiders lost their lone game against an FBS foe last season, 34-17 at Virginia. Coach Russ Huesman is 3330 as he starts his seventh season with the Spiders, whose playoff berth last year was their first since 2016.

 ?? JUNFU HAN/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Michigan State coach Mel Tucker walks off the field after talking to players during the second half against Central Michigan at Spartan Stadium.
JUNFU HAN/DETROIT FREE PRESS Michigan State coach Mel Tucker walks off the field after talking to players during the second half against Central Michigan at Spartan Stadium.
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