Michigan State just kept stacking its 2026-27 schedule, and the latest addition comes in exhibition play.
The Spartans will travel to Milwaukee on Oct. 25 to take on Marquette, according to the program’s official account. That gives Michigan State a second preseason meeting with a Big East team that has been a real contender in recent years.
Headed to Milwaukee this fall 🏀 pic.twitter.com/e629lyBYbT
- Michigan State Men's Basketball (@MSU_Basketball) July 9, 2026
That Marquette trip comes on the heels of another exhibition matchup with UConn, which Michigan State is set to host in October after going to Connecticut before the 2025-26 season. That earlier preseason game did not go well for Tom Izzo and the Spartans, who were outplayed by Dan Hurley and the Huskies. Michigan State also ran into UConn in the NCAA Tournament, where a slow start ended in a heartbreaking Sweet 16 loss.
Now the Spartans will get two more chances to test themselves before the games start counting, and that should matter for a team about to face a brutal non-conference run.
Michigan State’s schedule already looks like a grind, and the Marquette addition only sharpens that edge. The Spartans are set to play Arkansas on Thanksgiving Day at Little Caesars Arena, with that game announced Wednesday as a 4:30 p.m.
ET tipoff. They’ll also meet Duke in the Champions Classic, head to California to play Gonzaga right before Christmas, and go on the road to face Tennessee in a game that still does not have an official date.
There have also been rumblings about another potentially ranked non-conference opponent, though those remain just rumors for now.
And that’s before Michigan State even gets into Big Ten play. Illinois and Michigan are both projected to be top-five teams in the conference this season, which only adds to the challenge.
Marquette may not have been a contender last season, but the Golden Eagles have been one of the Big East’s strongest programs over the last couple of decades, and they were favored the last time they met Michigan State in the NCAA Tournament a few years ago. Shaka Smart gives them a real edge, and this will be no soft tune-up for a top-10 Spartans team.
Izzo is clearly loading up the slate with the kind of games that leave no room for easing in. If Michigan State wants to make a serious run, it will have to be ready from the jump.
Like Izzo says: anybody, any place, any time.
In Other News...
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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 🡒]
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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 🡒]
