Michigan State May Finally Have An Answer Up Front

Michigan State has bolstered its offensive line with seasoned transfers, spotlighting Nick Sharpe's anticipated impact as he builds on past experience under familiar coaching.

Michigan State’s offseason overhaul up front has put a lot of pressure on its transfer additions to hit the ground running, and South Carolina import Nick Sharpe looks like one of the more important pieces in that group.

Sharpe lands at No. 19 on my top-30 list for the Spartans this fall, and the appeal is pretty straightforward: he has been around, he has played a lot, and he already knows what offensive line coach Nick Tabacca wants. That last part matters more than anything else. Sharpe is the only lineman on the roster with prior experience under Tabacca, having played for him at Wake Forest before later transferring to South Carolina.

This should be Sharpe’s only season at Michigan State, and it comes with the kind of résumé that stands out on a line still trying to settle in. He was a sixth-year senior in 2025, with his first four college seasons coming at Wake Forest before he moved on as a graduate transfer. He also overlapped with Spartans safeties coach James Adams at Wake Forest during the 2022 and 2023 seasons.

The most useful recent tape on Sharpe came last year at Wake Forest, where he started 10 games and played in all 12 contests. Before that, he logged five starts in eight appearances at South Carolina in 2025, playing 392 offensive snaps. PFF credited him with three sacks and eight pressures allowed on 237 pass-blocking snaps, and his 65.9 overall grade ranked 15th among SEC guards.

What changes now is the side of the line. At Wake Forest, Sharpe was a right guard - the only spot he had played before last year at South Carolina.

At Michigan State, though, everything points to him working on the left side. He was there in the spring, and the Spartans have other options at right guard in Luka Vincic, Rakeem Johnson, and possibly Conner Moore.

That left guard role is especially important because it’s essentially the job Gavin Broscious held last season. Broscious transferred to Iowa State in the offseason after playing every offensive snap at left guard in 2025.

He technically started four games, but Michigan State’s constant line rotation under Jim Michalczik made the label less meaningful than the actual snap count. Broscious still played at least 30 snaps in nine games and appeared in all 12.

The Spartans are hoping for a different kind of setup now. Tabacca likely won’t rotate bodies quite as heavily, and that should help limit the constant shuffling that can wreck chemistry along the line. Interior linemen do not always need to come off the field, either; Sharpe played all 61 offensive snaps in South Carolina’s rivalry game against Clemson last season.

Michigan State’s line could also wind up looking very old by college football standards. If Vincic ends up starting at right guard, every starter up front would be either a fifth- or sixth-year senior.

That kind of experience brings expectations with it, especially for a program that wants better play in the trenches. Sharpe’s familiarity with Tabacca gives the Spartans a useful shortcut, and it also makes him a natural source for teammates who need help with terminology or just want a clearer read on what the coach is looking for.

There is leadership value there, too, even if captaincy is not necessarily in the cards. A sixth-year senior is supposed to bring some of that already, and Sharpe’s unique connection to Tabacca only increases his usefulness inside the room.

He also arrives with some real physical presence. Sharpe is listed at 6-foot-2 and 351 pounds, making him the heaviest player on the team.

He looked to use that size well during April’s spring game. By comparison, Broscious was listed at 308 pounds last season and was two inches taller than Sharpe.

Michigan State did not bring in many portal players with more proven experience than Sharpe. On3 ranked him 804th overall in the transfer portal this offseason and 71st among interior offensive linemen, which places him comfortably in the upper tier of MSU’s 32-man portal class.

He was a 3-star recruit in the class of 2021, ranked 1,581st overall on the 247Sports Composite, and his only listed Power Five offer online was Wake Forest. His other offers were Akron, Appalachian State, East Carolina, Charlotte, and Liberty.

That kind of background is a big part of why Sharpe stands out in this group. He has spent his entire career in Power Four or Power Five football, unlike some of the other linemen Michigan State leaned on last season.

Broscious had only 65 career offensive snaps before 2025, while Carter’s 16 career starts came at the FCS level with Western Carolina. Sharpe has already been through enough high-level football to give Michigan State something it did not consistently have last year, and he looks well positioned to help steady the offense.

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