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Sports | Football 1000

ICE HOCKEY

Comley welcomes 4 new recruits

With the lack of offensive production this season for the MSU hockey team, head coach Rick Comley said it’s going to be vital to bring players to MSU who bring offensive power and physical strength to the table.

SPORTS

Ringer, Wiley, Jones earn All-Big Ten team honors

MSU head coach Mark Dantonio and senior running back Javon Ringer failed to garner the Big Ten’s top honors — but Ringer, senior strong safety Otis Wiley and sophomore linebacker Greg Jones were all selected to the 2008 All-Big Ten coaches’ first team Monday.

SOCCER

MSU aims to extend shutout streak

The MSU men’s soccer team hasn’t given up a goal in 11 hours and 51 minutes of game time. Ironically, the last goal scored on the Spartans came on a penalty kick against Illinios-Chicago — the team MSU will host in the second round of the NCAA Tournament at 1 p.m. today at DeMartin Stadium at Old College Field.

BASKETBALL

Izzo preparing team for Old Spice Classic

With arguably the toughest four-game stretch in program history on the horizon, MSU men’s basketball head coach Tom Izzo is preparing for a stressful holiday season. “This might be toughest four-game stretch because … none of (the games) are at home,” Izzo said. “It just gives me something else to worry about over Thanksgiving.”

SPORTS

Rijpma, Deacon earn All-America honors

Two MSU field hockey players were named to All-America teams Monday. Junior midfielder Floor Rijpma was named first-team NFHCA All-America, leading MSU with 18 goals and 40 total points, while netting two game-winning shots. She earned third-team honors last season.

SPORTS

Spartans finish 11th, Bush seventh

The MSU women’s cross country team finished 11th out of 31 teams at the NCAA Championships on Monday in Terre Haute, Ind. Senior Nicole Bush, MSU’s most decorated runner, placed seventh with a time of 20 minutes, 8 seconds.

BASKETBALL

Spartans look to limit mistakes against 2 ranked opponents

The men’s basketball team isn’t the only hoops squad that has to endure a tough stretch of games the next week. The No. 24 women’s basketball team, fresh off winning the TD Banknorth Classic championship, now has to face No. 23 Old Dominion and No. 14 Notre Dame this week, something head coach Suzy Merchant said she is looking forward to.

FOOTBALL

MSU not yet elite

In a few days, when the sting of Saturday’s 49-18 beatdown in Beaver Stadium wears off, the MSU football team will be able to reflect on its 9-3 season. The No. 22 Spartans (9-3 overall, 6-2 Big Ten) can take pride in likely becoming the first MSU team to reach a New Year’s Day bowl game since 2000, when the Spartans stunned Florida with a 37-34 win in the Citrus Bowl (now known as the Capital One Bowl). MSU will either receive a berth in the Capital One Bowl in Orlando, Fla., or the Outback Bowl in Tampa, Fla.

FOOTBALL

Dantonio has many faces as head of team

Mark Dantonio can be described many ways. He can be called old-school, perhaps a traditionalist. Or he can be defined by any one of his Dantonioisms, such as “Stay the course” and “They all count one.”

SOCCER

Defense wins championships

If you don’t allow goals, you can’t lose. That’s the motto the MSU men’s soccer team has been living by this season. And it’s working perfectly for the Spartans, as they have racked up seven straight shutouts. With an established scorer in Doug DeMartin up top, head coach Joe Baum has been able to focus his attention on molding the defensive unit into a back line that has been impenetrable of late.

FOOTBALL

Spartans routed by Penn State, 49-18

State College, Pa. —- Playing on the program’s biggest stage in 18 years, the No. 17 MSU football team stumbled and came to a crashing fall under the bright lights of Beaver Stadium, losing in convincing fashion to No. 7 Penn State 49-18.

FOOTBALL

One shot

It started out as a vision. Perhaps the idea could be called a pipe dream. But when George Perles, then-MSU’s football coach and Athletics Director, emerged from the Spartan Stadium tunnel for MSU’s regular season finale against Illinois in 1991 and saw a mere 61,721 fans in the crowd, he decided the MSU football program needed a change.