Cam Edwards: The Next MSU Running Revelation
UConn transfer Cam Edwards arrives in East Lansing after leading the Huskies with 1,240 rushing yards, 15 touchdowns, and 19 receptions for 187 yards in 2025. Known for forcing 49 missed tackles, Edwards stands out among portal backs despite ranking just 39th on On3’s list. Michigan State hopes his elusiveness and ball security—zero fumbles all season—will fill the Kenneth Walker III-sized hole in its backfield and ignite the Spartans’ ground game.
Michigan State fans are already penciling a 2,000-yard campaign for Edwards, conveniently ignoring the fact that half of his carries will now allegedly be touchdowns and the other half TikTok highlights. Some are even lobbying to rename Spartan Stadium “Edwards’s Emporium of Broken Ankles,” where defensive backs will leave with more spin moves than a DJ at a rave. After all, if on-field reality can’t keep pace with fans’ collective imagination, at least their social feeds will be set ablaze.
Skating to Big Ten Glory: MSU’s Icy Advantage
Michigan State hockey split a crucial series at Michigan but still secured enough points to leapfrog into first place in the Big Ten standings. The Spartans captured four of six possible points against top-ranked Wolverines and topped the USCHO.com poll and NPI charts, implying they’d enter the NCAA tournament as a No. 1 overall seed if brackets were drawn today. With an upcoming schedule featuring only three lower-ranked foes and a well-timed weekend bye, MSU’s path to another conference banner is unusually clear.
Nothing says dominance like playing the conference’s bottom three right after besting the nation’s elite. It’s like scheduling dodgeball only against toddlers after outplaying the high school varsity. Rumor has it the next bye week will be spent rebuilding the ice under the Munn Arena by hand, just to remind opponents that even the rink fears Spartan skates. Fans are already drafting thank-you notes to Notre Dame, Ohio State, and Minnesota for showing up to be glorified practice squads.
Spartans Eye Sweet 16: March Magic in East Lansing
With a marquee overtime victory over then-No. 5 Illinois and a recovery from a surprising loss to Minnesota, No. 10 Michigan State appears destined for a 3-seed in the upcoming NCAA basketball tournament’s South Region. CBS Sports projects the Spartans will face Wright State, followed by potential matchups against Saint Louis and deeper runs in Houston. Coach Tom Izzo’s squad stands at 20-4 with just eight guaranteed games left, locking in a streak that could extend their NCAA streak to 28 straight appearances.
Spartans fans are already dialing their bracket’s Sweet 16 party planners and ordering “Green and White or Bust” hats, though the season is technically not over. Meanwhile, college bracketologists juggle NCAA auto-bids and at-large hopes like reality-show contestants balancing eggs on spoons—thrilling until someone inevitably drops one (usually Minnesota). If only MSU could schedule their last eight games against bubble teams with self-esteem issues, they’d clinch a national title by Valentine’s Day and use the rest of winter break to perfect their celebratory dance.

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