Michigan State has finally moved into the preseason top five, and the timing makes plenty of sense.
Jon Rothstein’s latest “Rothstein 45” has the Spartans ranked among the nation’s elite heading into the 2026-27 season, a jump that pushes them ahead of Michigan. For much of the offseason, Rothstein had Michigan State sitting just outside that tier, trailing teams like Arizona and Michigan. That changed in his newest rankings.
The shift comes at a moment when the two programs are headed in very different directions. Michigan just promoted Mike Boynton Jr. to replace Dusty May, who left for the Dallas Mavericks after two seasons in Ann Arbor. Michigan State, meanwhile, has kept most of its roster together.
That stability is a big reason Rothstein now has the Spartans in his top five. It’s also why the gap between the two schools looks wider now than it did earlier in the offseason.
Rothstein’s top five is:
Duke
Florida
Michigan State
Illinois
UConn
The Spartans landing at No. 3 lines up closely with the broader preseason conversation, though not everyone will have them in the exact same spot. Illinois has been the popular pick to lead the Big Ten entering the 2026-27 season, but Michigan State’s depth gives it a real case for the top spot in the league. Those two teams should spend most of the year battling for Nos. 1 and 2 in the conference, with Michigan lurking close behind.
There’s also a strong case that Rothstein’s list could have been even a little more aggressive in a few spots. Texas, Arizona, Michigan and Tennessee all sit in the mix behind that top tier, with the rankings around them still taking shape.
The bigger story, though, is Michigan State moving ahead of Michigan. That had been building for a while. Rothstein kept Michigan in the top five for weeks after the season, even as the Spartans appeared to have the better projected starting five and more depth.
Once Dusty May left for the NBA, the picture changed.
At that point, Michigan could no longer lean on reputation alone to stay ahead of a Michigan State team that looks loaded. Boynton is a capable coach, but he does not bring the same buzz as May, and that matters in a preseason ranking like this.
Now the contrast is clear: Tom Izzo has one of the deepest and most talented rosters he’s had in years, while Boynton is trying to get a talented but unfamiliar group to click fast. That kind of chemistry test can go sideways in a hurry.
If it does, Michigan State fans will be more than ready to point back to this ranking.
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