MSU May Have Finally Found The Answer At Cornerback

With strategic recruiting and key transfer additions, Michigan State's cornerback unit looks poised to be a formidable force on the field this season.

Michigan State went into the offseason knowing it had to rebuild its secondary, and cornerback quickly became the area where the Spartans looked strongest.

The departures were real. Joshua Eaton and Malcolm Bell were out of eligibility, and freshman Aydan West transferred to Minnesota. MSU attacked the position hard in the portal, and the result is a corner group that looks set up not just for this fall, but for 2026 and beyond.

The most immediate boost came early, when Iowa State transfer Tre Bell committed to the Spartans on Jan. 5. He was one of the first portal additions Pat Fitzgerald landed, and the fit made sense from the start, especially with Bell following cornerbacks coach Hank Poteat.

Bell’s path has been anything but conventional. He started at Lindenwood with plans to play both football and basketball, but he eventually shifted to football full time.

Lindenwood had only recently moved from Division II to Division I, and Bell didn’t even start a majority of his games there. Still, he played enough in 20 FCS appearances, with five starts, to earn his shot at Iowa State.

Once he got to the Big 12, he made the most of it. Bell broke into the starting lineup a few games into his first season and ended up starting the final eight games for the Cyclones last fall. He finished with two interceptions, two pass breakups and a forced fumble, production that helped make him one of Michigan State’s top portal pickups.

On3 ranked Bell 420th overall and 37th among corners in its individual portal rankings, making him the fifth-best prospect in the Spartans’ class. That class has since grown to 32 players.

Michigan State’s other major win at the position came when Charles Brantley came back into the fold. At one point, it looked like his time in East Lansing was done after he transferred to Miami (FL) with one year of eligibility left. Instead, Brantley played only three games for the Hurricanes, entered the portal and committed to the Spartans almost immediately, just days before Miami played Ole Miss in the CFP Semifinal at the Fiesta Bowl.

Because Brantley’s fifth season of eligibility came through a medical redshirt in 2023, he was still able to use a normal redshirt. That opened the door to a sixth season and sent him back to Michigan State.

When Brantley was healthy and available in 2024, he was arguably MSU’s best defender. He picked off three passes and, according to PFF, didn’t give up a touchdown. He was the closest thing the Spartans had to a corner who could erase one side of the field, and he earned Honorable Mention All-Big Ten recognition even though he missed the final 2.5 games of the season.

It remains a bit of a mystery why Brantley never found much traction at Miami, but Michigan State is the clear beneficiary. He was excellent in Joe Rossi’s defense two years ago, and there’s every reason to think he can do it again this fall.

Then there’s Tyran Chappell, another portal addition with real long-term upside. The Houston Christian transfer arrives with three seasons of eligibility remaining after spending two years at HCU, including a redshirt season as a true freshman.

He broke out in 2025, intercepting four passes as a redshirt freshman and earning First Team All-Southland Conference honors. He was also the second-highest-graded freshman corner in the FCS, with an 84.8 grade.

Chappell looked like the No. 3 corner during April’s "Spring Showcase," helped in part by Brantley being unavailable for much of the spring. That gave Chappell a chance to get reps that could matter once the games count.

At 6'3", Chappell is also the tallest corner on the roster, a trait that can be a major advantage if the speed is there to match it. The height gives him a better chance to contest balls in the air, and that could turn some 50/50 throws into pass breakups or takeaways.

For Michigan State, that makes Chappell more than just a developmental piece. He may be needed right away this season if Brantley or Bell needs a breather, or if injury forces the Spartans to go deeper into the depth chart. In a room where depth matters, MSU appears to have built a real strength.

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