Why Anelu Lafaele Could Change Michigan State's Pass Rush Ceiling

As Michigan State eyes an improved pass rush, Anelu Lafaele emerges as a key player to watch after overcoming last season's challenges.

Michigan State’s pass rush needs a jump, and Anelu Lafaele is one of the players the Spartans are counting on to help make that happen.

Lafaele checks in at No. 15 on the ongoing top 30 countdown, and his value is tied to both what he flashed last season and what he could become if he gets healthy. He’s entering his second year at Michigan State and his third in college football overall after starting at Wisconsin, where he did not play a snap in 2024 before transferring to East Lansing the following offseason.

When Lafaele got on the field last fall, he made himself hard to miss. He announced himself in his collegiate debut against Western Michigan in Week 1 by beating the edge for a strip-sack, then added another sack two weeks later against FCS Youngstown State.

But the season never really got rolling for him. A foot injury ended his year in the fifth game at Nebraska, and he finished with just 68 defensive snaps across five appearances.

That usage tells the story of where Michigan State saw him fit best. Lafaele was on the field mostly to rush the passer or drop into coverage, with 60 of his 68 snaps coming in those situations. The run game was the part that kept him from becoming a bigger factor, or at least the Spartans had other options at rush end when they wanted a sturdier answer there.

That position matters plenty in Joe Rossi’s system. Rush end is a hybrid linebacker-defensive end role, and it’s important enough that Andrew Bindelglass has a dedicated coaching job for it. Michigan State added depth there this offseason, which could keep Lafaele in more of a specialized role for now.

The biggest candidate to soak up snaps is N.C. State transfer Kenny Soares Jr., who brings a linebacker’s background and a strong track record against the run.

Soares had 80 tackles for the Wolfpack last season, second-most on the team. The Spartans also have Isaac Smith back after he started all 12 games a year ago.

Kekai Burnett is another name to watch, and SEMO transfer Trey Lisle adds intrigue with his 6-foot-7, 254-pound frame.

Even with that competition, Lafaele has already shown the kind of pass-rushing upside that stands out on this roster. Had he stayed healthy, he almost certainly would have led Michigan State in sacks last season. Instead, Jordan Hall, Quindarius Dunnigan and Jalen Thompson finished in a three-way tie for the team lead with 2.5 sacks apiece, just half a sack more than Lafaele managed in a little more than four full games.

What also jumps out is the energy he plays with. His motor is one of the best on the team, and that was one of the traits that drew praise from the previous staff.

The concern now is the foot. Lafaele took part in spring ball, but he was not considered fully back from the injury.

Before arriving in East Lansing, Lafaele was a higher-tier 3-star recruit out of Farrington in Honolulu, Hawai’i. He picked Wisconsin over Arizona State and Hawai’i and was ranked No. 603 overall in the 247Sports Composite for the class of 2024, including third among prospects from Hawai’i.

There was also a connection to the current Michigan State staff. Lafaele had an offer from Oregon State in May 2022, when Jonathan Smith’s staff and defensive line coach Legi Suiaunoa were still with the Beavers. He never officially visited Corvallis, but that link helped make MSU feel like a natural landing spot when he entered the portal with all four years of eligibility still available.

Keeping him in the program was a win for Pat Fitzgerald and the new staff in East Lansing, and Bindelglass staying on as the rush ends coach may have helped too. He had previously been the assistant linebackers coach before taking over the position.

Lafaele’s long runway is part of what makes him important beyond this season. He has at least three years of eligibility left and could still have all four. The NCAA is moving to an age-based “5-in-5” system, but current players are being grandfathered in and can use the old system if it benefits them.

There is even a possibility of a medical waiver for 2025. He played in five games, but only four full ones, and the Nebraska game was cut short by the injury after about half his usual workload. Under the old rules, four games was the limit for preserving a redshirt, so Lafaele could have a case that last season should not count against him.

For now, though, he is eligible through the 2028 season. That gives him time to keep developing, and it also means Michigan State does not need him to carry a huge load right away. With Soares likely ahead of him, Lafaele can settle into a supporting role while the Spartans hope his pass-rush juice keeps showing up whenever he gets the chance.

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