Cam Ward isn’t shying away from the noise around Michigan State. If anything, he sounds like a player leaning into it.
The Spartans are coming off back-to-back deep tournament runs, and the bar is obvious now: get back to the Final Four and finish the job. MSU reached the Elite Eight two years ago, then fell in a tight Sweet 16 game to eventual runner-up UConn last season. Ward’s freshman year ended there, and he later watched his arch-rival cut down the nets.
Now the conversation around East Lansing has shifted to what comes next, especially with the Final Four set for Detroit.
"The guys down the street [Michigan] won last year," Ward said last week at the Moneyball Pro-Am. "It's pretty clear.
Like, 'Yo, we ain't wasting no time. We've got to make it.'
And it's in Detroit this year. That's kind of been the saying around the offices -- 'Yo, the Final Four is in Detroit.'"
"Last time they went to Detroit [in 2009], they didn't really get the job done. So now it's like, 'The Final Four is in Detroit, you've got to make it happen.' I think that's the biggest thing with it: you've got to get there."
Ward made it clear that Michigan’s title run stings, but he also put the responsibility back on Michigan State for not being the team that got there first.
"It hurts a little bit," Ward admitted. "I don't think that's anybody's focus, though.
Somebody had to win. The fact that it's them, alright, yeah, but that's not really in our control.
We lost, so it wasn't up to us... We had the opportunity to go meet them there [in the title game].
We didn't take advantage of the opportunity to do it."
That’s the backdrop for a season that starts with a clean slate and a roster that looks loaded. Michigan State is almost certain to open in the AP preseason top 10, and the Spartans are bringing back a core that has become increasingly rare in the transfer portal era.
Ward is part of that continuity. So is the addition of Anton Bonke. Add in a recruiting class ranked fifth nationally by 247Sports, and Tom Izzo may have his most complete roster in a long time.
That completeness shows up all over the floor. Michigan State has shooting at every position, offensive options in both the backcourt and frontcourt, and plenty of size. The one area that could still raise questions is how the center group handles things defensively.
Ward believes the Spartans can adapt to whatever matchup they face.
"We're matchup-proof the whole way," Ward said. "If some guys don't match up well here, we can just move down the line or move up the line. We can do things that most teams can't do."
Ward himself is a big part of why that flexibility matters. He may not be the most polished player on the roster, but he brings an edge and a motor that show up every night. His rebounding numbers back that up: 11.0 rebounds per 40 minutes last season, second only to Jaxon Kohler’s 12.9 among regular contributors.
At 6-foot-9, Ward wasn’t even the tallest player on the team, but a lot of those rebounds came from pure effort. Those are the kinds of plays that earn trust, and they’re a big reason his future at Michigan State looks so bright.
The Spartans will enter the 2026-27 season with 12 scholarship players, and all 12 appear to have a real shot at minutes. That depth became even more noticeable when Julius Avent, the lowest-rated freshman in the class, stood out during the first week of Moneyball games.
For Izzo, that creates a good problem: narrowing down the rotation as the season goes on. But depth only matters if it holds up once the bench gets called on, and Michigan State appears to have enough players to keep the level from dropping.
That matters even more now with the NCAA’s new age-based "5-in-5" rule effectively eliminating redshirts. Young players are going to get chances right away, because the year counts whether they play or not.
In Other News...
This New Spartans Receiver Could Change Everything For MSU's Passing Game
Michigan States passing game is getting a fresh look under Pat Fitzgerald, and the Spartans have already added help at receiver with KK Smith and Fredrick Moore coming through the portal to fill the gaps left by departed players. Moore, in particular, brings a profile that stands out because of the way he moves through routes and creates space, traits that can matter quickly in a new offense if the quarterback and receiver get on the same page.
What makes Moore interesting is not just the addition itself, but the possibility that his skill set fits what Michigan State needs most right now. He showed enough as a route runner and pass catcher in 2024 to suggest there is more there than a depth role, and if that translates in East Lansing, he could end up being one of the more important targets in the Spartans passing game this fall. [Read more 🡒]
Why Michigan State Fans Should Watch This New Linebacker Closely
Michigan States linebacker room looks like one of the cleaner strengths on the roster heading into the season, with Jordan Hall set to anchor the middle and transfer Dion Crawford expected to step in at WILL. The interesting name behind them is Caleb Wheatland, the Auburn transfer who previously spent time at Maryland and now profiles as the next man up in a group the Spartans hope can bring more juice to the front seven.
Wheatland is not being talked about as a starter, but his fit is still worth watching because his best traits line up with what Michigan State needs from its depth. He brings pass-rushing and coverage ability, and that gives him a path to carve out real snaps if he can hold up in the parts of the game that have been less consistent. For a defense looking to turn linebacker depth into a true asset, he could end up being one of the more important pieces in the room. [Read more 🡒]
