Jon Rothstein’s latest preseason Big Ten power rankings already have people looking twice, and the biggest eyebrow-raiser is Michigan State landing at No. 2 ahead of Michigan.
Rothstein rolled out his preseason conference list on Wednesday, with Illinois at No. 1 and Michigan State right behind it. He said the timing made sense because Big Ten rosters are basically set as of July 15, aside from any late moves such as a Donovan Dent addition.
Michigan State’s spot is the one that jumps off the page. Rothstein called the Spartans the best team in the league outside of Illinois, and even said that’s still up for debate.
His case is built on continuity: Michigan State brings back nearly everyone from a 27-8 team that reached the Sweet 16 and was “a play or two away from a second straight Elite Eight.” The Spartans also return their All-American point guard, who has been labeled by some experts as the best player in college basketball, plus a freakishly athletic wing viewed as an NBA draft prospect, some shooters, a transfer who missed the entire 2025-26 season, and a top-five recruiting class.
Michigan, meanwhile, is the team Rothstein sees taking a clear step back. He wrote that the Wolverines will still be talented, but they’re losing Yaxel Lendeborg, Aday Mara, and Morez Johnson. He even floated the idea that Michigan could fall outside the top 10 nationally before the season, and said that wouldn’t draw much pushback outside Ann Arbor.
Rothstein’s own list goes like this: Illinois, Michigan State, Michigan, USC, Nebraska, UCLA, Ohio State, Purdue, Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, Oregon, Minnesota, Washington, Maryland, Northwestern, Penn State, Rutgers.
He also shared his personal version of the rankings, based on “vibes” and excitement for the season. In that order, he had Michigan State first, Illinois second, Michigan third, USC fourth, Nebraska fifth, UCLA sixth, Ohio State seventh, Purdue eighth, Wisconsin ninth, Iowa 10th, Indiana 11th, Oregon 12th, Minnesota 13th, Washington 14th, Maryland 15th, Northwestern 16th, Penn State 17th and Rutgers 18th.
In that version, Rothstein said Michigan State and Illinois are basically “1A and 1B,” and he expects Michigan to stay in the top three conversation. He also pointed to USC and Nebraska as teams that could be right there, saying he trusts Fred Hoiberg more than he probably should and believes Nebraska could be surprisingly good again. He added that this could be the year Eric Musselman figures it out at USC.
He finished by grouping Purdue, Wisconsin, Iowa, and Indiana as teams that will be pests, while saying he is not fully sold on Ohio State yet despite its serious potential. The bottom six or seven teams, he said, will be looking to play spoiler.
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Michigan State has jumped into the chase for Antonio Pemberton, a four-star point guard in the 2027 class who has quickly become one of the more coveted guards on the board. The Spartans offer adds another major name to a resume that already includes 20 scholarship offers, and it comes with the kind of profile that makes recruiting battles escalate fast: Pemberton is ranked No. 35 overall, sits among the top point guards nationally, and is the top player in Massachusetts.
The timing matters, too, because Michigan State is not entering this one alone. UCLA and Kansas have already shown interest after the Spartans made their move, turning what looked like a strong early offer into a much tougher national pursuit. Pemberton has been standing out in summer showcases with the efficiency and playmaking that have drawn comparisons to established college and pro guards, which means this recruitment figures to stay crowded for a while. [Read more 🡒]
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The appeal goes beyond just filling a spot. He has been one of the more decorated centers in his league, and his arrival gives Michigan State a legitimate chance to settle a position that has been a concern. The only real question now is how quickly that production and poise translate once he steps into a Power Four huddle. [Read more 🡒]
