Michigan State's Leadership Mess Just Keeps Getting More Awkward

The prolonged uncertainty of leadership at Michigan State University is causing confusion and speculation about the future of its administration.

Michigan State’s leadership picture has turned into a strange holding pattern, with Kevin Guskiewicz and J Batt both still on the job even after being announced for new positions elsewhere.

Guskiewicz was named Clemson’s next president more than a month ago. Batt was announced as Kentucky’s new athletic director about three weeks ago. Yet both remain in their Michigan State roles, and that delay has left the Spartans unable to officially name interim replacements at either spot.

The longer this drags on, the messier it gets for MSU. There’s no clean handoff yet, just two major offices stuck in limbo.

The contracts help explain why. Guskiewicz’s deal allows him to give Michigan State six months’ notice if he voluntarily ends his employment. It would be unusual for him to use the full stretch, especially with Clemson waiting, but the language means he could technically remain in East Lansing until late November.

Batt’s situation is tied to Guskiewicz’s. His contract includes a clause that cuts his buyout in half “in the event” that Guskiewicz is no longer president at Michigan State.

While Guskiewicz is still technically in charge, the buyout sits at $5 million. Once Guskiewicz officially leaves, it drops to $2.5 million.

Kentucky is reportedly set to cover Batt’s buyout, and that gives them a clear incentive to wait and save the extra $2.5 million.

That connection between the two departures has now become the connection between their exits, too. And at least one report has raised the possibility that Guskiewicz might not leave at all.

According to David Harns of Spartans Illustrated, there is a chance. In a tweet Friday morning, he recapped the recent run of chaos around MSU and said Guskiewicz “may actually stay.”

The backdrop is already wild enough: Spartan Ventures officially launched on Wednesday, Batt is leaving, Guskiewicz was announced as Clemson’s next president but may stay, and a trustee is threatening to sue the university.

If Guskiewicz were to reverse course, it would be a huge development. Tom Izzo called him “the best president who may have ever been here before,” not long after Batt’s departure became public. Keeping Guskiewicz would also spare Michigan State the time and resources of a full presidential search.

It also naturally raises the question of Batt. Could he stay, too?

That seems far less likely. Kentucky already lists Batt as its athletic director in the school directory, even though his Michigan State profile is still up.

A return would be awkward on several levels, and not just because Batt would effectively be reversing a move that already looked set. His path to Kentucky was almost certainly tied to Guskiewicz’s move to Clemson. Once that opened up, Batt moved quickly to find his next stop.

If Guskiewicz were to stay, Batt would likely be better off taking the buyout and starting fresh. Coming back after all of this would mean trying to rebuild trust with MSU fans and donors.

For Michigan State, the biggest issue is simple: two of the most important jobs in the athletic and university structure are still unresolved. Guskiewicz is within his rights to wait, and he said he would remain for a bit to help with the transition. But this nearly month-long stretch with outgoing leaders still occupying the top spots has only deepened the uncertainty.

Some resolution is needed. If Guskiewicz changes his mind and stays, that would be a major turn. If he leaves, then Michigan State can finally move forward, name an interim president, and begin sorting out the next steps.

Batt’s position is easier to understand, even if it still looks odd from the outside. His boss left, the Power Four market is limited, and Kentucky is offering him a hefty $3 million average annual salary, a raise of $2.1 million over his Michigan State deal. In that light, waiting a bit to save his new school $2.5 million is a pretty understandable move.

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