
Judge grants Oklahoma LB Heinecke extra year
Oklahoma linebacker Owen Heinecke granted an extra year of eligibility for 2026 after court ruling.
John McNulty, Michigan State's new quarterbacks coach, discusses the challenges of transitioning from left-handed to right-handed quarterbacks. He emphasizes the differences in how the ball is thrown and caught.
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East Lansing â Jimmy Smith was absolutely gone. The five-time Pro Bowler with the Jacksonville Jaguars broke free on a go ball. He stretched out his hands, fingers gracing pigskin.
And then he dropped it.
That never happened, at least not frequently, for Detroit-born Smith in a 1999 season he led the NFL with 116 catches. But after four seasons catching passes from left-handed quarterback Mark Brunell â now quarterbacks coach with the Detroit Lions â Smith was trying to catch a pass from right-handed quarterback Jay Fiedler. Different hands throw the ball a different way.
âIt curls a different way. It spins a different way,â said John McNulty, who coached with Jacksonville from 1998 to 2002 as part of a 35-year coaching career that has taken him to 14 different stops, counting his current gig as quarterbacks coach for Michigan State. He was hired in February after Mike Bajakian left two months into his tenure with Pat Fitzgerald's first MSU staff for a job with the Cleveland Browns.
Quarterback Cam Fancher arrives at Michigan State after previous stops at Marshall, Florida Atlantic and Central Florida.
McNulty has seen a lot in his day, and yes that includes a left-handed quarterback like Michigan State backup Cam Fancher. But handedness is the least of McNultyâs worries when it comes to his players. Donât overthink it.
Quarterbacks may struggle with the ball's spin and curl, which can affect catching and throwing accuracy.
John McNulty is the quarterbacks coach for Michigan State, hired in February after Mike Bajakian left for the Cleveland Browns.
Jimmy Smith, a five-time Pro Bowler, noted difficulties catching passes from right-handed Jay Fiedler after playing with left-handed Mark Brunell.
John McNulty has a 35-year coaching career that includes 14 different stops, with his current position at Michigan State.

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âItâs weird, Iâll try to demonstrate something for them, and then Iâll be like, âOK, hang on. Let me do it as a righty first, and then Iâll try to do it as a lefty.ââ McNulty said. âBut you know what Iâm saying? Like, it is weird. But thatâs the only thing I think is a little bit different.â
Alessio Milivojevic is the clear QB1 for the Spartans after starting the final four games of last season and throwing for 1,267 yards and 10 touchdowns on the year amid a 4-8 season. Fancher, after three stops including Florida Atlantic and Central Florida, is a veteran backup. Leo Hannan is the apparent third-string and Kayd Coffman, freshman, is learning the ropes.
A settled hierarchy, at least on top, helps assuage some of the rifts that a position battle can cause. It helps Milivojevic is a tireless worker who McNulty says has âexceeded any expectationsâ as a leader.
âI think itâs always good for the team to have that kind of vision of thatâs the guy thatâs leading us here,â McNulty said. â⊠Could there be a role for Cam? Certainly, you know, the guyâs got a different skill set. Leo and Kayd, theyâre close with âLess, theyâre very supportive there. I think they know at any point in this business, they could be the next guy up.â
For the wider offense, there may be different plays run for a right-handed quarterback versus the left-handed Fancher, if he comes into a game. At least thatâs what offensive coordinator Nick Sheridan, who overlapped with McNulty recently at Alabama, suggested.
âThereâs certainly certain plays that you would favor the quarterbackâs hand,â said Sheridan, who coached the Atlanta Falconsâ southpaw Michael Penix Jr. at Indiana and Washington. âBut other than that â and fortunately, Iâve had experience coaching left-hander â it doesnât alter it that much.â
Sheridanâs offense is all about putting positionless playmakers in position to make plays. And yes, that includes the big tight ends who can wreck a game in multiple ways.
Michigan State lost its top two tight ends, Michael Masunas (transfer) and Jack Velling (graduation), but tight ends coach Brian Wozniak is working with a dynamic group this spring.
Ferris State transfer Carson Gulker is a multitool player who can run, throw, block and catch â the kind of guy you read about from footballâs antiquity. Brennan Parachek is a physical blocker, as is Kai Rios. Jayden Savoury flashed potential as a dynamic athlete while redshirting last season. And freshman Eddie Whiting, 6-foot-6 from the plains of South Dakota, is a hard-to-miss target already making an impression 14 practices into spring ball.
There are a lot of ways to mix and match those personnel, and it helps to do so that Sheridan once coached the position group himself.
âHe understands that position really well,â Wozniak said. âHe wonât ever say it, but heâs biased towards that position, similar to me, you know. I played it, I coach it, and Iâm biased towards it. So you see enough 12 (personnel) out there, that makes you pretty fired up as a young tight end to see that run around.â
Wozniak and wide receivers coach Courtney Hawkins were holdovers from the previous staff who stayed in East Lansing. For Wozniak, a great deal had to do with his family, but it also had to do with Fitzgerald, who once recruited Wozniak before he sided with Wisconsin.
âBeing able to work with him is exciting. Being able to stay in the Big Ten is absolutely exciting,â Wozniak said. âTo stay in Michigan, we love it here. Family was stoked.â
And getting to work with this group of tight ends? A blast, because a lot of young and underutilized talent has made big strides in the spring.
âWhat's fun about this group is the opportunity of growth is huge,â Wozniak said. âThatâs whatâs been fun about the room this spring is just every practice, itâs like, man, we made huge gains here.â
In Sheridanâs offense, Wozniak tells his players they canât be one-trick ponies. Theyâll block the C gap and stretch the field on passing plays. It helps to have a player like Gulker, who could even throw if necessary.
âWeâre trying to make the DCâs brain spin a little bit,â Wozniak said.
Harlon Barnett recruited Khalil Majeed as a walk-on in the class of 2021 â and he hadnât been on the football field in two seasons.
You see, a torn ACL wiped out his junior year, and the defensive back who also played lacrosse lost his senior season to the pandemic. He had a little bit of practice tape, but Barnett mostly looked over 10th grade film.
When Majeed took the field for a kickoff in the 2021 Peach Bowl, that was his first real play in more than two seasons. He redshirted that year before appearing in 13 games combined in 2022 and 2023. He stayed through the coaching change to Jonathan Smith, then tore his MCL in the 2024 season opener against Florida Atlantic. Last season, he played 86 snaps on defense and 162 on special teams in his first 12-game season. Then he went through another coaching change.
Safe to say heâs due for some good luck?
âI do feel like Iâm due for good luck, but itâs whatever God has planned for me,â Majeed said.
In his sixth season at Michigan State, Majeed stood behind a podium as an elder statesman. Heâs got his degree in criminal justice and is finishing a masterâs in cybersecurity. Barnett is now at Northwestern. Fitzgerald, the former face of that program, is now at Michigan State. And Majeed says he wasnât going anywhere amid all the changes.
âPeople in this program have shown me love,â Majeed said. âSo thereâs no point in running.â
Majeed is repping a little bit at nickelback this spring, where transfer Michael Richard is the presumed starter and redshirt freshman Deuce Edwards is in the mix. Majeed understands that at this stage in his career, his major impact may be on special teams. Heâs ready for that.
âItâs a very useful feeling,â Majeed said. âSo I feel like I can play anywhere on special teams, offense or defense. Honestly, just put me in, Coach.â
So far, Majeed has played strong end on punts, and he plans to play on both sides of kicks and punts. Wherever he can be useful, to a place that has stuck with him.
@ConnorEaregood
This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Michigan State Spartans football: Lefty QB no big deal to John McNulty