Michigan State got a jolt of good news on Monday, and it came with a twist nobody saw coming after Kevin Guskiewicz had already been introduced as Clemson’s next president.
According to Justin Thind, Guskiewicz changed course and decided to remain at Michigan State for personal reasons after initially agreeing to take the Clemson job. The move followed a stretch of uncertainty tied to Michigan State’s board of trustees, which Guskiewicz said earlier this summer was not on the same page with him and was preventing him from doing his job effectively.
What looked settled at Clemson suddenly wasn’t. Guskiewicz had accepted the position, and the Tigers had already introduced him as their next president. But after taking more time to weigh everything, the decision flipped back to East Lansing, and the news became official on Monday.
There had been whispers for weeks that a return could still happen, though most of that talk felt more like hope than anything else. Thind’s report on Monday made it real, and Michigan State came away with a major win after what had seemed like a lost cause.
Tom Izzo’s public comments added weight to the situation. He spoke out against the board of trustees for pushing Guskiewicz out, and his backing of the president made clear how strongly he felt about the situation. Izzo called Guskiewicz one of the best presidents that the university has ever had.
That matters at Michigan State, where Izzo has long been the steady voice in the room and has stayed loyal despite several NBA opportunities.
With Guskiewicz staying put, Michigan State now has the leadership in place to move forward with an athletic director hire. J Batt is gone, and the Spartans have no interest in keeping him, so the president’s return clears the path for that next move.
The school also locked in Guskiewicz on a five-year extension worth $1 million per year. That figure is lower than the previously approved raise he was set to receive before the Clemson situation unfolded.
For Michigan State, it was the kind of outcome that changes the mood around a program fast. The Spartans kept the president they wanted, steadied the top of the athletic department, and gave themselves a chance to make the next hire from a stronger position.
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Coopers start has been especially notable because it has moved beyond simple summer intrigue and into actual roster conversation. Through two games, he is averaging 10.5 points and 5.5 rebounds, and the way he has looked has Memphis fans buzzing about whether he can keep forcing his way into the picture. The two-way deal already gave him a foothold, but the bigger question now is whether his play can keep building into something more permanent as the Grizzlies sort through their frontcourt options. [Read more 🡒]
