Michigan State’s decision not to try to keep J Batt around after Kevin Guskiewicz reversed course says plenty about how the athletic director’s exit was viewed in East Lansing.
Tom Izzo had already helped spark the push to keep the university’s president, and that effort paid off this week when Guskiewicz chose to stay at Michigan State instead of taking the same job at Clemson. Izzo’s reaction after word broke that Guskiewicz was leaving - and that Batt was headed to Kentucky - helped rally the fan base around the president at a moment when the university was facing a messy stretch.
Batt had been considered a strong hire when Michigan State brought him in a year ago, and Georgia Tech fans were disappointed to lose him. But once things got uncomfortable in East Lansing, he was eager to move on. There had even been talk that he was looking at other athletic director openings, including some in the Big Ten, which did not sit well with people who expected him to be fully committed to Michigan State.
That’s why Justin Thind’s report that Michigan State did not want to retain Batt after Guskiewicz decided to stay landed with such weight. It suggests the relationship had cooled, especially near the end of Batt’s tenure, and that the way he handled his departure - including a parting shot at MSU - left Guskiewicz and other university leaders turned off.
Batt was hired by Kentucky last month, but Michigan State has still been paying him while he effectively promoted the Wildcats. Guskiewicz is set to end that.
Izzo’s influence was on full display throughout the episode. He called Guskiewicz “maybe the best president” that Michigan State has ever had and said the board of trustees’ selfishness in allowing him to leave should serve as a wake-up call for Spartans. After conversations with his family and likely more talks with Izzo, Guskiewicz changed his mind, saying being president of Michigan State was one of the greatest honors of his life and that East Lansing was home.
He told Clemson he would not be taking the job and instead signed a five-year extension with Michigan State worth $1 million annually.
The return of Guskiewicz has been greeted with relief, and the handling of Batt’s exit makes it clear the university believes the right person stayed. Batt did have some success during his time in East Lansing, but the reputation he arrived with as a master fundraiser never really got a full test. The $401 million donation was a major win, though the source of that effort had a lot to do with Greg Williams’ close relationship with Izzo.
The promise Batt brought to the job was real. So was the disappointment in how it ended. And the fact that Michigan State has no interest in keeping him around says everything.
In Other News...
Michigan State Still Doesn't Have Clarity On J Batt's Exit
J Batts move to Kentucky is on the calendar, but Michigan State still does not have a clear end date for his run in East Lansing. Batt is set to officially start with the Wildcats on July 28, yet he remains employed by the Spartans for now, leaving the athletic department in an awkward holding pattern as the transition continues to unfold.
The uncertainty matters because Batt was brought to Michigan State on a six-year deal worth more than $12.6 million, and his exit now has to be sorted out while Kentucky prepares to hand him a new role. For the Spartans, the bigger issue is less about the destination than the timing, with no confirmed departure date and no interim athletic director announced as the calendar moves toward late July. [Read more 🡒]
Michigan State Finally Made Its Next Move After The Batt Exit
Michigan State has moved quickly to steady its athletic department after J Batts exit, turning to a familiar internal hand to keep things moving while the school sorts out its long-term plan. Jon Palumbo brings a useful mix of administrative experience and prior athletic-director experience from Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, and his background in the department should help provide continuity at a time when the Spartans have plenty of business to manage beyond the search itself.
University president Kevin Guskiewicz said he has confidence in Palumbo during the transition, and the next phase will be about more than simply filling a chair. With Batt headed to Kentucky and the department now in interim mode, Michigan State can focus on the broader question of what it wants in its next full-time athletic director, a process Guskiewicz said will take shape over the coming weeks and months. [Read more 🡒]
Why Anelu Lafaele Could Change Michigan State's Pass Rush Ceiling
Anelu Lafaeles first year at Michigan State offered just enough of a glimpse to make the Spartans wonder what might come next. After transferring from Wisconsin and sitting out the 2024 season there, he flashed as a pass rusher last fall before a foot injury cut his season short, and even in a limited sample he showed the kind of burst that can matter in a defense searching for more pressure off the edge. In just over four games, he was productive enough to put himself near the top of the teams sack race, which is part of why his return carries real weight for a pass rush that needs more impact plays.
Michigan State does have options at rush end, with Kenny Soares Jr., Isaac Smith, Kekai Burnett and Trey Lisle all in the mix, but Lafaele still stands out because of how quickly he can tilt a snap. The Spartans are likely to use him as a specialist rather than ask him to do everything, and that makes the next step even more interesting: if he can keep building back toward full strength, he could end up changing the ceiling of the entire front without needing a huge workload. [Read more 🡒]
