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词条 1985 Michigan State Spartans football team
释义

  1. Schedule

  2. Personnel

  3. Game summaries

     Iowa  Michigan  Purdue  Indiana  Wisconsin 

  4. References

{{Infobox NCAA team season
|Year=1985
|Team=Michigan State Spartans
|Image = Michigan State Spartans script.svg
|ImageSize = 120
|Conference=Big Ten Conference
|ShortConference=Big Ten
|Record=7–5
|ConfRecord=5–3
|CoachRank=
|APRank=
|HeadCoach=George Perles
|hc_year = 3rd
|DefCoach=Nick Saban
|dc_year = 3rd
|MVP=
|Captain=Anthony Bell, John Wojciechowski
|StadiumArena=Spartan Stadium
(Capacity: 76,000)
|Champion=
|BowlTourney=Hall of Fame Classic
|BowlTourneyResult=L 14–17 vs Georgia Tech
}}{{1985 Big Ten football standings}}

The 1985 Michigan State Spartans football team represented Michigan State University in the 1985 Big Ten Conference football season. In their third season under head coach George Perles, the Spartans compiled a 7–5 overall record (5–3 against Big Ten opponents), finished in a tie for fourth place in the Big Ten Conference, and lost to Georgia Tech in the 1985 Hall of Fame Classic.[1][2]

Six Spartans were recognized by the Associated Press (AP) and/or the United Press International (UPI) on the 1984 All-Big Ten Conference football team: running back Lorenzo White (AP-1; UPI-1); offensive guard John Wojciechowski (AP-1); offensive tackle Steve Bogdalek (AP-2); linebacker Shane Bullough (AP-2); defensive back Phil Parker (UPI-1); and punter Greg Montgomery (AP-1).[3][4]

Schedule

{{CFB schedule
| poll = AP
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 14
| time = 12:08 PM
| w/l = w
| nonconf = y
| opponent = Arizona State
| site_stadium = Spartan Stadium
| site_cityst = East Lansing, MI
| tv =
| score = 12–3
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 21
| time = 7:46 PM
| w/l = l
| nonconf = y
| away = y
| opponent = Notre Dame
| gamename = Megaphone Trophy
| site_stadium = Notre Dame Stadium
| site_cityst = South Bend, IN
| tv = ESPN
| score = 10–27
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 28
| time = 1:00 PM
| w/l = w
| nonconf = y
| opponent = Western Michigan
| site_stadium = Spartan Stadium
| site_cityst = East Lansing, MI
| tv =
| score = 7–3
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 5
| time = 2:42 PM
| w/l = l
| away = y
| opponent = Iowa
| opprank = 1
| site_stadium = Kinnick Stadium
| site_cityst = Iowa City, IA
| tv = CBS
| score = 31–35
| attend = 66,044
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 12
| time = 2:42 PM
| w/l = l
| opponent = Michigan
| opprank = 3
| gamename = Paul Bunyan Trophy
| site_stadium = Spartan Stadium
| site_cityst = East Lansing, MI
| tv = CBS
| score = 0–31
| attend = 78,235
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 19
| time = 1:00 PM
| w/l = l
| opponent = Illinois
| site_stadium = Spartan Stadium
| site_cityst = East Lansing, MI
| tv =
| score = 17–30
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 26
| time = 12:38 PM
| w/l = w
| away = y
| opponent = Purdue
| site_stadium = Ross–Ade Stadium
| site_cityst = West Lafayette, IN
| tv = TBS
| score = 28–24
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 2
| time = 12:08 PM
| w/l = w
| opponent = Minnesota
| site_stadium = Spartan Stadium
| site_cityst = East Lansing, MI
| tv = TBS
| score = 31–26
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 9
| time = 1:00 PM
| w/l = w
| away = y
| opponent = Indiana
| gamename = Old Brass Spittoon
| site_stadium = Memorial Stadium
| site_cityst = Bloomington, IN
| tv =
| score = 35–16
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 16
| time = 1:00 PM
| w/l = w
| opponent = Northwestern
| site_stadium = Spartan Stadium
| site_cityst = East Lansing, MI
| tv =
| score = 32–0
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 23
| time = 2:05 PM
| w/l = w
| away = y
| opponent = Wisconsin
| site_stadium = Camp Randall Stadium
| site_cityst = Madison, WI
| tv =
| score = 41–7
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = {{tooltip|December 31|Tuesday}}
| time = 8:00 PM
| w/l = l
| nonconf = y
| neutral = y
| opponent = Georgia Tech
| gamename = Hall of Fame Classic
| site_stadium = Legion Field
| site_cityst = Birmingham, AL
| tv = TBS
| score = 14–17
| attend =
}}
}}

Personnel

{{American football roster/Header|year=1985|team=Michigan State Spartans|teamcolors=y
|offensive_players={{American football roster/Player|num=|class=Fr|first=Bobby|last=McAllister|pos=QB}}{{American football roster/Player|num=34|class=So|first=Lorenzo|last=White|pos=RB|link=y}}{{American football roster/Player|num=|class=|first=Dave|last=Yarema|pos=QB}}
|defensive_players={{American football roster/Player|num=|class=Sr|first=Phil|last=Parker|pos=S|link=y}}{{American football roster/Player|num=93|class=Sr|first=Kelly|last=Quinn|pos=DE}}
|special_teams_players=
}}{{American football roster/Footer|roster_url=|accessdate=
|head_coach=
  • George Perles

|asst_coach=
}}

Game summaries

Iowa

  • Lorenzo White 39 Rush, 229 Yds

Michigan

{{AFB game box start
|Title=
|Visitor=Michigan
|V1=14 |V2=3 |V3=0 |V4=14
|Host=Michigan State
|H1= 0|H2=0 |H3=0 |H4=0
|Date=October 12
|Location=Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, MI
|StartTime=
|TimeZone=
|ElapsedTime=
|Attendance=
|Weather=
|Referee=
|TVAnnouncers=
|TVStation=
}}{{AFB game box end}}

On October 12, 1985, Michigan State lost to Michigan, 31–0, in front of a crowd of 78,235 at Spartan Stadium. The victory was regarded at the time as revenge for the Spartans' 19–7 upset of the Wolverines in 1984. Michigan struck early after Michigan State quarterback Bobby McAllister fumbled the snap on the second play of the game, Andy Moeller recovered the ball on the Spartans' 16-yard line, and Jim Harbaugh threw a touchdown pass to tight end Eric Kattus. Less than two minutes after Michigan's first score, Dieter Heren blocked a Greg Montgomery punt, and Ed Hood recovered the ball in the end zone for Michigan's second touchdown. Harbaugh completed 13 of 23 passes, threw two touchdown passes to Kattus and gave up three interceptions. Jamie Morris rushed for 84 yards on 19 carries. Mike Gillette also kicked a field goal. On defense, Michigan held Lorenzo White (who set a Big Ten record with 2,066 yards in 1985) to a season-low 47 yards on 18 carries. The Wolverines' defense also sacked Bobby McAllister three times, intercepted him once, and held him to 83 passing yards.[5]

{{-}}

Purdue

  • Lorenzo White 53 Rush, 244 Yds

Indiana

  • Lorenzo White 25 Rush, 286 Yds, 2 TD (played just over a half)

Wisconsin

  • Lorenzo White 42 Rush, 223 Yds (set single season Big Ten rushing record)

References

1. ^{{cite news|title=Michigan State Yearly Results (1985-1989)|publisher=David DeLassus|work=College Football Data Warehouse|accessdate=July 18, 2015|url=http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/active/m/michigan_state/1985-1989_yearly_results.php}}
2. ^{{cite web|title=2015 Michigan State Football Media Guide|publisher=Michigan State University|page=147|accessdate=July 4, 2016|url=http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/msu/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/2015-16/misc_non_event/msu-media-guide-135-186-histor.pdf}}
3. ^{{cite news|title=Soph White, Station, Unanimous Choices|newspaper=Toledo Blade (AP story)|date=December 3, 1985|page=33|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1350&dat=19851203&id=og1PAAAAIBAJ&sjid=0wIEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6768,3394959}}
4. ^{{cite news|title=Long Nips Everett For Spot On All-Big Ten First Team|newspaper=Logansport Pharos-Tribune|date=November 26, 1985|page=10|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/13843275/?terms=long%2Bwhite%2Bharmon%2Bmallory%2BUPI}}
5. ^{{cite news|title=Wolverines get revenge: U-M defense manhandles MSU, 31–0|newspaper=Detroit Free Press|author=Jack Saylor|date=October 13, 1985|page=G1|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/4094415/wolverines_get_revenge/}}
{{Michigan State Spartans football navbox}}{{collegefootball-season-stub}}

3 : 1985 Big Ten Conference football season|Michigan State Spartans football seasons|1985 in sports in Michigan

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