Michigan State’s offense has a chance to look a lot different this fall, and the biggest reason is sitting in the wide receiver room.
The Spartans have spent the last four seasons stuck below .500, and they haven’t been to a bowl game since 2021, when Kenneth Walker III and former head coach Mel Tucker powered an 11-win season. Since then, the program has been searching for something that can change the conversation. Head coach Pat Fitzgerald is hoping to start that turnaround, and the wideouts could be one of the clearest signs of whether this team is ready to move forward.
The group drawing the most attention is Chrishon McCray, KK Smith, and Fredrick Moore. That trio has the chance to become a real factor for Michigan State this season, especially with Nick Marsh no longer in the mix after transferring to Indiana this past winter.
McCray looks like the centerpiece. He’s the clear No. 1 option in the room and should bring the most value from the slot, though he could also spend time outside at X or Z.
What stands out is how dangerous he can be once the ball is in his hands. He brings juice, and he’s shown enough dependability on film to help keep the offense on schedule.
With Alessio Milivojevic projected to start at quarterback, McCray should see plenty of targets as the No. 2 threat in the offense behind running back transfer Cam Edwards.
Smith and Moore give the room a different kind of intrigue. Both have the kind of quickness and route-running ability that can create separation, and both have the athletic traits to turn routine catches into explosive plays. Smith already showed some of that at Notre Dame as a rotational player who made a few impact plays in the passing game.
Moore is harder to pin down. His production at Michigan this past fall was limited to the point that he remains the biggest question mark in the group, but the talent is there for Michigan State to work with.
That’s why this receiver trio matters. If the Spartans are going to be better than expected on offense, it will come down to Milivojevic’s steadiness and whether this group can consistently make plays. If that doesn’t happen, the offense will run through Edwards, both in theory and in practice.
Still, McCray, Smith, and Moore have enough upside to matter. Spartan fans have reason to see this group either as a potential spark or as a wait-and-see project.
I’m betting on the ceiling. If it hits, Michigan State could surprise people, put up points, and create explosive plays every week in a crowded Big Ten.
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The offer also fits the bigger picture in East Lansing, where the staff is balancing present-day roster building with an eye on what comes next in the backcourt. Michigan State is already preparing for the 2026-27 season with a strong returning core and help from the transfer portal, but the early pursuit of Davis and other 2027 recruits shows the program is not waiting around to shape its next guard room. [Read more 🡒]
