Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Jack Kebling here with my good friend Matt Sloan a
graph of Okeemists. Big summer here, Matt.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
That's right, Jack. We got the summer savings going on
right now at Graf Nissan and Graf Chevy of Okamists.
Great deals. We're offering zero percent financing and select vehicles
up to sixty months. If you're a Casto member. We
got extra rebates for that. We're getting fresh inventory every day.
It's been a great summer. We got great deals for you.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Zero percent.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
Can't get much lower than that.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
That's exactly right.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Papacy, Matt in the gang here on West Grand riverd Okamiz.
They're making friends, Yogi. What are we going to see?
Do you have any idea of which UCLA is going
to show up? It's a nine a m. Pacific time
kick for the Bruins, and if you can figure out
which Spartans are going to be there, I'd sure.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Love to know. Well, I'm excited to be there. I'll
tell you that. I'm sure we'll figure out as the
game gets closer and closer with the availability reports that
are part of the Big Ten Conference. But I'm looking
forward to this one. I think it's a really cool
opportunity for everybody, right, and there's so many storylines. You
hit a couple of them, but from Michigan State coming
(01:05):
off of two tough road games where all you know
hear it all the time, but like the three phases,
never were all driving right, whether it's the defensive they
struggled your reference special teams last week, the win with
a factor so curiously if they could put it together
at home on homecoming and you know, a new kickoff
to your point. And then for the Bruins, find a
(01:27):
team on a bigger high in America, you know, after
last Saturday. And I'll wait right, so it's gonna be
really fun. I was at their practice earlier this week,
just left the facility here in East Lancing, and I
can't wait. Love being around your community. Man, other than
the rain that just came down, feel pretty excited.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
The name new Heisel is so closely associated with UCLA
football from his rose ball heroic sent his coaching days,
but that's Rick Newheisl and a lot of people weren't
aware of how long Jerry had been with this program.
Has any coach that you know? Yogi had a better
(02:06):
debut as a play caller than Jerry new Heiseel did
last week.
Speaker 3 (02:12):
I don't know. I mean, I'm sure some have in
terms of like yardage and how they felt and you know,
but they were probably ones that had the job for
the entirety of an offseason.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:23):
I can't think of one in my career that was
as dramatic or really as symbolic as Jerry new Heidel
is to UCLA. I mean, you know, I don't know
if you've ever been to campus there, but the UCLA
Hospital is literally a stone's throw from the facility. That's
where Jerry was born. For crying out loud, right, his
dad was a rose ball MVP as a quarterback at UCLA,
(02:43):
the head coach at UCLA. Jerry walked on Plade started
at UCLA iconic win as everybody knows now, carried off
the field in Arlington against Texas in a neutral psyche
game a few years ago, and what he did was
was impressive, man. And I think it's just a if
I'm being honest, I think that the way that college
(03:03):
football is going now, with teams that have to rebuild
their teams via the portal, it's going to take all
of them a month or so to get really in sync.
I think it's just the truth. You see, the last year,
this time of the year, they got hot. I called
a bunch of their games. They went to Nebraska, one
on the road, went to Rutgers one on the road.
They lost in Minnesota last play of the game, like
(03:23):
all of a sudden, it slipped. It's kind of the
same timing, right. They made a bunch of changes to
also impact the start of the season. But you're seeing
a team that has much more talent than people thought
when you watch their first four games of the fall,
and I think that definitely has caught the eyes and
the football minds of Spartans as it should.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
Yoga, you know, everybody on the West Coast. I am
so curious as to what de Sean Foster was thinking
last Saturday as he watched that game, or if he
didn't watch it, if he had just heard about it.
Speaker 3 (04:01):
Yeah, I know it's done really well. And you know
I speak to him or a Kaika Maloyer or Tino Cenceery,
three people I consider good friends, and they were you know,
you get in this coaching profession for usually for the
for one reason. You want to spear on the game
and the next part of that is you want to be
on the players in the locker room. It's the close
thing you get to play him. Knowing to Shawn as
I do, he was thrilled. He was thrilled for Kim Skipper,
(04:23):
a guy he's known since he was a child, who's
the interim head coach. Now. He was thrilled for the players,
all of whom he recruited. He was thrilled for the
coaches because it's one thing when a head coach gets fired,
and I know that it's either celebrated by a fan
base or ridiculed by whatever, but there's also like three
hundred people that get affected on average. I'm talking about spouses, coaches,
(04:45):
assistants that aren't making seven figures, aren't making six figures,
children like, so when you see him win, like DeShawn
is such a good man, like, he was thrilled for
those players and probably mom that he didn't get enough
time or he didn't get enough out of him early on,
because he knew it would take a little bit to
put together a roster with so many new players. I mean,
(05:06):
the entire defense is new. You know, they haven't started.
It started last year on the entirety of the defense,
so they had to rebuild the whole thing. And and
I know that those three coaches who you know, all
were you know, sadly no longer part of the program.
And then when they were thrilled for for what the
program was able to accomplish, you.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
Know, can you tell us about Nico Imalaeva and what
we can expect? He ran the ball so well last
week and maybe a little bit like Bryce Underwood when
they had him under bubble wrap. The Michigan offense wasn't
the same. Is this a different UCLA team when they
tell I just let her rip?
Speaker 3 (05:47):
Yeah, Nicolaiava, he is probably the most misunderstood player in
the country. And I'll say that to start the broadcast tomorrow.
I think that oftentimes at that position you got a
lot of praise, he got a little blame. In My
favorite phrase is praise and blame are all the same.
I'm stealing that from Ship Kelly, who he wrote about
it in a book I wrote called five Star QB.
(06:09):
And I love that because it really is symbolic of Nico.
He is a guy. If you look at the first
four games, and I've watched every snap for whatever it's
worth The system didn't change. The system didn't change. The
effort changed. The way the players played with a belief
and a passion changed. The execution dramatically changed, and they
(06:31):
met the moment and they kept riding that wave. And
a big part of him to me, when I watched
him play, he oftentimes I only counted two steps the
whole game. We had to go to his second or
third read. It was first read, not there, I'm going
to run, and he utilized that athleticism. Now part of
that is the monsters coming up the edge for Penn State,
and they were rushing up the field as fast as possible.
(06:53):
I can't imagine Michigan State doing that no tomorrow. I
think it's got to be a controlled rush because the
game change. I mean, he is six foot six, all
of two fifteen, and he just takes up a lot
of ground when he takes one step, let alone three
or four, and all of a sudden, you know you're
gonna run over you, like he did in the first
drive of the game against ben State, or you're gonna
run past you like he did the majority of the
(07:14):
game against Penn State. So yeah, man, I don't think
they necessarily cut him loose. I mean, he's been their
leading rusher before in the season, he's obviously the leading
pass or like everything goes through him. I just think
finally got some help up front on his offensive line,
his receivers. They were the most disappointing part of that
offense in the first four games in my eyes, because
(07:35):
I thought that they there were too many loafs on tape.
The body language is horrible. They were balling, blocking down field,
making plays downfield, catching the ball on a screen pass
and turn on a two yard game into a first down,
and part of that at him. And I think that's
also part of really what turned the tides a week
ago is he told the team, you know every saying
is Nco going to stay? He called the team, if
you don't want to stay, and I know who he are,
(07:56):
get out in so many words, and if you want
to stay, let's go win the game, and they did so. Again.
I just think he's the most misundertood player in America,
and I think that he's playing at a really high
level and the whole thing again is going to go
through him.
Speaker 1 (08:10):
So if I Maliava is playing the way he can,
the way he has shown he can at Tennessee and
last week is he one of the top quarterbacks in
the Big ten? Could he be in the top five
of the eighteen?
Speaker 3 (08:28):
Well do you think about it? I mean, let's just
do it. I don't have it in front of me.
I haven't done the exercise. Be a defensive coordinator who
freaks you out. Okay, So let's just start with anybody
who's a dual threat player or a premier passer. So
I'll start with Dante Moore. I think he's the best
quarterback in the conference. Okay, so that's sitting at one.
(08:49):
You can't not say Fernando mendoz Is. The way that
he's played, he's a Heisman candidate. He's got to be
in the conversation, even though he's not really a dual
threat type of factor. I have to put Jade Mayava
in that conversation because of the way that he's played.
Luke Altmeyer has won I think eight games in the
last in a two minute drive in his career. Uh
(09:09):
in a come in, comeback fashion. So you've got to
scay a little bit when the ball in his hands.
Joliet's saying to use a point that you made moments
ago like they kind of let him rip, right, and
I just think, like that's kind of what the league
is demon Waningams is probably the scariest guy to a
d C at Washington, So I don't know. I mean,
(09:29):
I think it depends on the weekend. I'd argue, like
who is not scary in the Big Ten? And we
started thinking about, like who aren't you worried about? Like, sure,
I can't think of one of the top of my head, man,
I mean, Ryan Brown a perdue scares yet because he's
a dual threat guy. And Leake Washington and Bryce Underwooter
freaky freshmen who are going to be NFL players in
my eyes. So yeah, sure, top five eight and child
(09:52):
no doubt. Gilan Royola, he's a throw he made in
the wind last week was pretty impressive. His commanded that
offense is in fre so so I think I said
in the preseason, I don't know if it's true. You
know better than me. I think it's the most talented
the Big ten's ever been at quarterback. Topped about them,
I would agree, and I think the West Coast had
a lot to do with it. And then you added
(10:13):
the new transfers and the freshmen and the new starters
like more insane and it's hard to argue another league
over the Big Ten.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
In my team, we're talking with Yogi Roth, a Big
ten network here to do the UCLA Michigan State game,
and a guy who's worn as many hats as anyone
has here in terms of college football. Yogi, you are
a Jonathan Smith believer. You know him, you like him,
you understand what he did at Oregon State. There are
(10:44):
a lot of people here who don't care what hether
Oregon State. Frankly, they've already made up their mind about him,
and right now the fan base is kind of waiting
for a sign of how this is going to work out.
How important do you think this game and maybe the
next couple of games are to him and to what
(11:05):
he can do here.
Speaker 3 (11:08):
Yeah, tell me more about the fan base, Like when
you say a sign, what do you mean by that?
Speaker 1 (11:14):
Well, a lot of them say, you know, he's not charismatic,
they're not wild about the recruiting, and you know he
has a process. He is very successful with what could
only be a slow build in Corvallis. But when you
win twenty five games in three years, there You've done
a lot of things right, and they're seeing up and
(11:36):
down performances. They don't see any trends or anything to
get excited about. I don't want to say there's apathy
that's set in, but there are a lot of people
who are definitely taking a show me attitude and a
loss to UCLA and maybe not making a bowl for
a second straight year would be an indictment.
Speaker 3 (11:56):
Yeah, well, I think Look, we're being realistic. We're in
a different era in college football where you can rebuild
your roster quickly. The money is ridiculous, and society in
general is a show me society. Hey, let me see
a clip on that cool. Let me just chat GPT
that real quick. Hey what do you want to eat?
And let me just ask ai Hey, like everything is
(12:16):
just at our fingertips. You know football as well as
anybody in this state, and you know that that's not
reality when it comes to anything that's worth a damn.
Ask the Detroit Lions, right, Ask any program when it
comes to charisma. I've known Jonathan since I was twenty.
I've hung out with Jonathan many times. I spent time
with him today in their facility. I'm a huge fan
(12:39):
of his personality? Do you want it depends? Like I'd
be curious to fan base like what do you define
that as? Like is Nick Saban charismatic? Is Kaelin de
Borger charismatic? Like how do you find that? Is Marcus
Freeman charismatic? Like what does that even mean? It would
probably be my question to that. I feel fire from him.
I felt it since I met him as a young coach.
(13:01):
I watched him play. I heard him in the press
conference after the Nebraska game. I felt a different pulse
of frustration after that. Like it's not like he didn't play.
I just urged people to be Like he walked down
and Saturday as a quarterback and led a team to
the Fiesta Bowl win against Notre Dame. Again, it's twenty
some years ago, But he going to go into like
(13:22):
who his DNA traits are? I say, like, do a
little bit more work before we start judging, Like if
he's charismatic en, I was like, yeah, he has that.
Is he going to be a cheerleader on the sideline
Like that's not his personality? And I think he's more stoic,
and I think that's good because he knows what he
is and that's who he's always been. Right As a player,
he's been steady, and his teams traditionally have been steady.
(13:43):
I think what's frustrating for fans and probably way more
so for him and his staff, is the inconsistency they've seen.
Like I referenced off the top, and you know, I
referenced three different phases in three different games, and they've
all been a little different. I think part of that
comes when you're playing with five different offensive line in
the first five games of the year because of injury
(14:04):
or competition, which would mean that like you don't have
five that are truly a separator. If you ask any
coach in America to me, it takes about it takes
up seven eight years to really build an offensive line pipeline.
It just takes a long time, Like because the minute
you gain credence and credibility and recruiting, you get them
on campus, it takes them two or three years to
(14:24):
develop and then rent and repeat. It takes a minute
to get that moving. So I would just say that,
and then you're in the most competitive league in the country.
So yeah, Ucla, you should go win that game. If
we didn't see who they were a week ago. If
you asked me who played more complete ballgame last Saturday,
(14:45):
I probably say UCLA against Penn State at home versus
that Nebraska where Michigan State had had to make consistencies.
So do I think he's the right guy for the job, Yeah,
for sure. Do I think his blue collar personality will
remind people of a coach and who was indicted into
the Hall of Fame a couple weeks when out here
for Young Sun State then you and I talked about Yeah, yeah,
(15:07):
I mean he wasn't the most charismatic guy from everything
that I can recall. No, So I think you got
a great one. I think Michigan State should be really
fortunate that they have him. And I also recognize that
we're in an era where everybody wants to win now
and some that's impossible. But that is coaching. You know,
every coaching, every coaching hire doesn't work out, Like that's
(15:29):
just the profession. So define workout. Is that the fourth
best team in the Big Ten again in the playoffs
that overtake Ohio State is the number one team in Oregon, Like,
I don't know what that is for the fan base,
if it's to be the best and be better than
those two at the top. It's going to take a
couple of years developing recruiting classes, folks like that's just
the truth of how far apart, or really like how
(15:50):
deep Ohio State and Oregon are. I don't think Michigan
State can't play with them, but they don't have the
competitive depth right now that those two programs. No.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
I think that the thing that a lot of people
we're looking for was to make a bowl game that
was kind of like the minimum. After a five and
seven season and a couple of games got away last year,
Michigan State could have been seven and five, And the
schedule is different this year. They don't have to play
Oregon Ohio State, but they don't have any road games
that they would be favored in either. So I get that.
(16:21):
One of the things I see with a lot of
coaches Yogi and new coaches coming into programs. We talked
about fan impatience is the Kurt Signetti factor, and I've
had a lot of fans say, well, Indiana did it,
and Indiana doesn't have all the resources that Michigan State has.
Why can't it be done here? Why is it taking
so long?
Speaker 3 (16:43):
Okay, I think that's just I mean, it's a fair criticism.
Like I it's a really fun conversation. Now, let's think
about Dan Lanning versus Lincoln Riley right like same year.
And here's Dan Lanning, you know, playoffs, FAC twelve championship
game year before that, and has lost a big ten
conference game and is a drilling people and is a
(17:04):
toast to college football right now, and he was Lincoln
took over a different circumstance, right. You could say the
same thing about Jed Fish and Washington in his second
year and caught him to other second year coaches, and
I just think that they're all a little different, and
I think the paths of success that all of them
are a little different. Let's talk about Indiana because I
called a bunch of their games last year and big
(17:26):
fan of coach Signett. He's a Pittsburgh guy and I
love bona with him over Pennsylvania stories. He came from,
you know, one of the most successful FCS program and
he took a bunch of players with him. I think
it was over near twenty from that very team who
were starters that weren't six three, two forty five, There
(17:46):
were six to one to twenty five, and guys like
Aiden Fisher and Elijah Surratt went from you know, no
name players to Big ten All Conference players. That happened
at every layer of their defense. So I think there's
a world where, like did Jonathan Smith bring twenty guys
in them from Oregon? Say no, he didn't. He brought
in a quarterback to run a tight end offensive line,
(18:07):
like you brought a couple of key figures, But he
didn't bring a ton of people because you'd like to
think that he didn't have to. You know, Indiana, Kurt
was saying, I'm bringing everything almost kind of did what
Dion did, just didn't say the quote that d I
made famous in Colorado. So I just think they're a
little different in that style in which both programs inherited
(18:27):
and took over their programs, And that's kind of I
think it shakes out. I mean, I go back to
Michigan State Ohio State a year ago. If you remember
that game here in town, and you go back inside
of that game, and I think I'm gonna get a
closer to right. First drive, Michigan drives down the field,
they go for it on fourth down inside the ten,
don't get it. Next drive, they drive allder down the field,
(18:50):
go forward again, and I think on fourth own instead
of twenty don't get it. Next drive, drive all down
the field, fumble it. Next time, drive over down the field,
miss a field goal like they moved the ball up
and down on the field. And then you look at
half time and it's twenty one seven or twenty one
three or whatever it was. And I just think, like
the margins for Michigan State since Jonathan has gotten there
are just really small. I think they're really small again
(19:12):
this year for a variety of reasons, health being one
of them. And then well and we'll kind of see.
I think in year three or four is where programs
get evaluated and you're right, like it's it's it's fair
to say no, I want to evaluate you right up
the jump, because that's what happened in Indiana, and I
think it's also fossil and insightful to stay no, Like
(19:32):
we want to build this thing to high school recruiting,
and we want to build this thing in a different manner,
and that's how Jonathan built organizat in.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
The pad Yogi Roth from Big Network, Yeah, yeah, whatever,
go ahead, I'm sorry. I lost you for a second here.
Speaker 3 (19:48):
I mean I just yeah, go ahead, Oh okay, go
for it.
Speaker 1 (19:54):
I just want to ask you about two other games
tomorrow very quickly, and get your take on what we're
going to see in Eugene, with Indiana going out there
and playing a team that is one or one A
in the country, a lot of people's minds in the
Oregon Ducks, and what might happen at the coliseum when
(20:15):
Michigan goes out there to face USC.
Speaker 3 (20:19):
What do you think of those games? I can't wait.
I mean they should be tremendously competitive and really physical.
We'll start the one in LA. I think that the
lineup scrimmage is clearly where it's going to be one.
Michigan ran the ball all over sc last year, they
win late. I think this is a different SC team.
(20:40):
They're more physical team up front, but they didn't show
that against Illinois. So what do they look like coming
off of that loss? I think that's the biggest question
mark you're going to ask yourself, and then you can
Michigan and Bryce Underwood. Can they move the ball through
the air right to your point? Like Bryce got moved
a little bit pass game. He's going up against Danton Land,
(21:02):
who comes from the same pree as Link Martindale. So
it'll just be a fun game. I see it coming
down right to the end. I think being at home.
It's sold out the coliseum. There's a vibe in La
where I just slow in from yesterday around this game.
For many reasons. Two blue bloods and for see, this
is a huge one. If they get this, someone like
look out and I call this one kind of like
(21:22):
a CFP entrance exam. You know, the winners really in
the mix of it, the loser. It's going to be
hard depending on how the rest of the season shakes out.
In the flip side of the early game. With game
day being and Eugene it's the first game, I believe
their students are there check because the quarter system is
the way they do school. So yeah, yeah, so the
place will be crazy. I mean, game day will be
(21:44):
nuts lean lead right in flowing into the stadium. Coach
Landing will have his team prepared for this. I'm mostly
curious about that part of it. Though they are really young,
they are inexperienced at being the face of the sport,
and right now they're in that dialogue. I mean, there's
red hot, you know, as anybody coming off the Penn
(22:05):
State game, then a bye week and all the contents
they put out, So how do they manage that? And
then here comes Indiana. Last time they went on the
road in a big time conference game was Ohio State
and they struggled, admittingly with the noise. With the environment,
I'd imagine they'll be more steady, even though it's a
different cast of players, most notably Fernana Mendoza. But I
(22:26):
called the game last time Fernando played in Austin, so
he knows what it's like. I don't think he'll be
shook by what the environment is, but that one'll be
one at the line of scrimmage again, you know which
team can run the football. I expected to be a
really physical one, and I'm excited for Indianax. I don't
think they're still getting any of the respect that I
believe they've earned based on what they've done in a
year and a half under coach Signetti. So I hope
(22:48):
it's a great game, but I think both home teams
will prevail in those games on the West Coast.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
I think it's maybe as fascinating a weekend of Big
ten football as we are going to yet and that
includes Ohio State at Illinois. We haven't talked about that yet,
but Illinois had that game circled as it's chance to
prove it belongs and erase the stench of what happened
in that the loss, fifty three point loss to IU.
(23:18):
And I still can't believe that a team could outrush
a Brett Bielima unit three twelve to two.
Speaker 3 (23:25):
So yeah, well neither could he. We had Illinois last
week and he couldn't believe it either, you know, and
you've seen him since then. You'll play really with Atlanta scrimmage.
I don't know what the health of Illinois is heading
into the game. We had them against Producer Reference and
they were down some key players, like their starting center,
their interior right guard when in and out throughout the game.
(23:48):
So I think I kind of lean to that, like
cause again to Ohio State, the man there's no marginal
hair and they're so talented, they've touched depth, they're so explosive.
Their defense is good at that scene in quite some
time in college football, and their offense is as weapons.
So they'll get the best version of Illinois. It'll be
(24:08):
insane in that environment at Memorial State will be rocking.
And I think for Illinois that they need this one.
They need at least to be really close if they
do lose, because if they have finished ten and two,
that loss to Indiana, of your point is such a
bad look. And I don't know if the committee as
going to say, well, anomaly or they're going to say nope,
(24:29):
that's their truth. And I think this game will have
a huge part of impacting that narrative. OGI.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
There are a lot of teams that need a lot
of games, including the one you're going to be calling tomorrow.
Thanks so much for your time. Hope to see you
tomorrow at the stadium.
Speaker 3 (24:43):
Yeah, coming out, man, We'll be in the press box.
Speaker 4 (24:45):
Dean Transportation is looking for compassionate people to join our
team of school bus drivers and attendants. Visit deanjobs dot
com to see all openings. Dean Transportation provides paid training
to obtain a commercial driver's license, increase starting pay, comprehensive benefits,
and flexible schedules with no weekend shifts, no experience needed.
(25:07):
Apply today at Dean jobs dot com and train for
back to school season. That's da n jobs dot com.
Speaker 1 (25:16):
Jak Kevlin here with my good friend Matt Sloan a
graph of ochemists, big summer air, Matt.
Speaker 2 (25:20):
That's right, Jack. We got the summer savings going on
right now at Graph Nissan and Graph Chevy of Okamists.
Great deals. We're offering zero percent financing on select vehicles
up to sixty months. If you're a Casto member, we
got extra rebates for that. We're getting fresh inventory every day.
It's been a great summer. We got great deals for
you zero percent.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
Can't get my flower than that.
Speaker 2 (25:41):
That's exactly right, Topacy, Matt in.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
The gang here on West Grand riverd okamtz there making friends.
Speaker 5 (25:49):
So it's been a while since you've had your jewelry
clean and inspected?
Speaker 2 (25:53):
Right?
Speaker 5 (25:54):
Where will you go and who will you trust with
your most valuable and treasured heirlooms? At Meadow or Jewelers
for locations in Lansing Ocamists, Jackson and Portage. Jewelry isn't
just our job, it's our passion. Each and every piece
entrusted in our care is thoroughly inspected by our trained
staff against damage or normal wear, and we offer you,
(26:16):
our customer, the highest level of quality on repairs and
custom designs. Whether it's worn out prongs, channels, or shanks,
It's all handled with incredible care. Metow our Jewelers and
Lansing ochemist Jackson and Portage want to help you preserve
your memories and offer you options on creating new ones.
Come in today for the cleaning and inspection of your jewelry.
(26:39):
We continue to work hard every day to earn your
confidence and trust matter.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
Why Jewelers, Game Day and East Lantsing just got taste here.
One North Ktchen the Bar is your go to for
unbeatable tailgate packages, perfect for fueling up before kickoff. Sake
your teeth into juicy burgers, Harty wraps, or warm up
with our famous One North Chili, a fan favorite on
(27:04):
Crisp Paul Days by the Red Seed. Ordering is a
snap just called David at five, one, seven and nine
hundred four MSU to get your crew game ready. Open
at ten am on weekends so you can grab your
spread and go. One North Kitchen and Barn. We're great
food and Spartan spirit collide. Go Green