
Wolves rally from 19 down to win wild Game 2
Timberwolves come back from 19 down to win Game 2 vs. Nuggets!
Pat Fitzgerald has returned to coaching at Michigan State after Jonathan Smith's firing. He is tasked with rebuilding the Spartans following four consecutive losing seasons.
Mentioned in this story
East Lansing ā There Alessio Milivojevic stood at a junior day event for Northwesternās football team. Head coach Pat Fitzgerald came up to him and shook the Wheaton St. Francis quarterbackās hand. Little did they know that handshake was the foreshadow of what was to come just a few wild years later.
After Jonathan Smithās staff flipped Milivojevic right before signing day in 2023, and after Smithās firing ushered Fitzgerald back to the sidelines, now at Michigan State, in December, the two are at the forefront of Michigan Stateās rebuild after four losing seasons.
āItās really crazy. Really crazy,ā Milivojevic said.
Pat Fitzgerald is entering his first season as Michigan State's head football coach.
A couple of Chicago guys, and that wonāt change in the future at Michigan State, because Fitzgerald plans to recruit the area frequently alongside the other fertile grounds his mentor and Spartan icon, Mark Dantonio, used to harvest.
āDeveloping players, developing a program, developing recruiting is all about relationships,ā Fitzgerald said Feb. 4. āAnd I think itās huge. Itās going to be an area, again, when we leave the state of Michigan, weāre going to be in Ohio. Weāre going to be in Indiana, be in Pennsylvania, weāre going to be in Illinois, focused in Chicago. And the reception was awesome in all those areas.ā
Homecomings, in a way, for both Fitzgerald and Michigan State.
āWhen I was in Cleveland, one of the coaches said to me, where you been? And I said, high school,ā Fitzgerald said. āNo, he goes, where's the Spartans been?ā
Pat Fitzgerald was hired after Jonathan Smith was fired, marking his return to coaching at Michigan State.
Michigan State has experienced four consecutive losing seasons prior to Pat Fitzgerald's hiring.
Alessio Milivojevic is a quarterback who was initially recruited by Fitzgerald at Northwestern before flipping to Michigan State.
Fitzgerald's Chicago roots may enhance his recruiting efforts and connection to local talent as he rebuilds the Michigan State program.

Timberwolves come back from 19 down to win Game 2 vs. Nuggets!

Wolves face relegation to the Championship after a dismal season.
Yankees' Cam Schlittler has a message for Red Sox fans before the series!
Insider says Dolphins' De'Von Achane likely to stay amid trade rumors
Bears could face Lions in race for Keldric Faulk in NFL Draft
Shedeur Sanders likely safe if Browns draft Ty Simpson
See every story in Sports ā including breaking news and analysis.
Fitzgeraldās years in the Big Ten as a player, assistant and head coach give him plenty of connections around the Midwest. Nowhere is he more connected than Chicago. Even Milivojevic knew that growing up.
āBeing from the Chicago area, everyone knows who Coach Fitz is,ā the quarterback said. āHeās pretty renowned around there. So everyone has great things to say.ā
From 2006 to 2023 before his firing amid a hazing scandal (he settled a lawsuit for wrongful termination out of court), Fitzgerald recruited 428 freshmen. And 108 of them came from Illinois with a focus on Chicago. Seven of those players came from Loyola Academy alone, where he spent the past three seasons as an offensive analyst helping a new coach, Beau Desherow, set up his program after years as an assistant under John Holocek.
āI had heard, I think through mutual friends, that he might be interested in volunteering, and he actually called me and asked if I could use his help,ā Desherow told The Detroit News. āAnd you know, this is my 22nd year at Loyola, but that first year was my first year as head coach, and I definitely welcomed the opportunity to have him come help us out.ā
Fitzgerald jumped right in to coach the scout team offense ā āthe least glamorous roleā says Desherow ā and immediately gelled with the players. Two of them were his sons, so yeah there was some familiarity there. But Fitzgerald also gave a āmaster class in footballā whenever asked by his fellow coaches. He just stayed busy, even unloading trailers of equipment and picking up trash on the sidelines.
āJust a very humble person, you know, just kind of a salt-of-the-earth type of guy,ā Desherow said. āHis passion for the game of football and his passion for educating young people through the game of football is second to none. Iāve never been around someone that has his energy, itās infectious.ā
āIf youāre going to go on a sabbatical and you get the opportunity to be with two of your boys,ā Fitzgerald said at his introductory press conference in December, āwhile they go through back-to-back state championships. One is a quarterback, goes 25-1, and all those kids, it was awesome. I became a much better teacher.ā
And every game Loyola Academy played, Fitzgerald ran into someone he knew. Whether that was conference games or playoff runs during back-to-back 8A Illinois state championships.
āHe knew every single head coach and had some form of relationship with those coaches,ā Desherow said. āAnd it was just really remarkable to see just his recall on kids ā maybe kids that he didn't even recruit or maybe he did recruit, or kids that he had.ā
Fitzgerald only had a few short weeks in December and early January to finish early signing day, put together his coaching staff, handle the transfer portal and start recruiting players for the next cycle. And when he got to step four, he started back in familiar stomping grounds in Chicago.
One of his early targets was quarterback Israel Abrams, who committed to Miami (Florida) earlier this month. Fitzgerald went to Montini Catholic himself to make the connection at a program heād picked up five commitments from in the past.
āOne of the interesting things about that is only one of them was offered a scholarship out of high school, and four of them walked on and subsequently earned scholarship,ā Montini coach Mike Bukovsky told The Detroit News. āSo his word has always been golden to us, and he's just a high-character person, and I think he's one of the better guys in this game, to be honest with you.ā
One of those walk-ons Michigan State fans may remember: Joe Spivak, who was a two-star defensive lineman Mark Dantonio recruited in the 2017 cycle. He turned down a Michigan State offer for the chance to play for Fitzgerald, notching 31 tackles and 1½ sacks over four seasons. He wore the No. 1 jersey as a senior captain in 2021. Now, heās on the WWE NXT circuit as the wrestler Tank Ledger, part of the tag team Hank and Tank with former Atlanta Falcons offensive lineman Hank Walker. That had Bukovsky and Fitzgerald joking about their own tag team.
āWe were laughing about that,ā Bukovsky said. āAnd Joe was just an unbelievable ball of energy and a great, great young man. Great leader.ā
So is Fitzgerald. Bukovsky remembers going to one clinic and Fitzgerald had a bunch of his teeth replaced. Heād had a mishap in practice:
āHe jumped in to show one of his receivers something on the JUGS machine, and boof, got biffed right in the mouth with a football. He was talking about it and laughing about it.ā
What made Fitzgerald so endearing to players was his blunt honesty ā a guiding principle found in the assistant coaches he brought on to his staff at Michigan State, too.
āHe was a man of his word, and he didnāt use people, he didnāt lie to people,ā Bukovsky said. āHe didnāt oversell people. He said, listen, this is where weāre at right now. Weāre interested in you. We love you as a player, and obviously, as a person. You do your job here, and youāll get an opportunity and we will take care of you in the future.ā
Fitzgerald isnāt a salesman, and that makes pitches resonate. Coaches around the Chicago area, who had many of the same players as young men, share a feeling Fitzgerald squeezes a lot of football out of his guys, and he makes them the best players they can be. Thatās why he could win so many games at Northwestern, going 110-101 with five bowl wins in 17 years (he was 4-20 his final two seasons coming off a top-10 finish in 2020).
āI think heās going to have, really, an opportunity to be successful,ā Bukovsky said. āBecause I think heās smart enough to continue to exploit some of these areas here, and get in here and still influence kids.ā
Michigan State quarterback Alessio Milivojevic was a quarterback at Wheaton St. Francis in Illinois when Pat Fitzgerald was the head coach at Northwestern.
Itās evident Chicago will remain a priority in Michigan Stateās recruitment map, though it hasnāt been represented yet in Michigan Stateās first five commitments. So far, two are from Michigan, two are from Ohio and one is from New Jersey. Give it time through the spring recruitment window.
This class of recruits will be an important one for Fitzgerald, beyond simply being his first at-bat. In an era of the transfer portal, Fitzgerald wants to build a solid foundation of high school recruits whoāll stay with the program. Thatās the synthesis of observations he drew in those three seasons at Loyola Academy, his ālearning sabbatical.ā
This winter, Michigan State didnāt have a choice but to draw 31 transfers in order to fill a roster. Itās going to take some time to build a stable, but he feels that the era of Dantonio ā whoās around the program more than he was Fitzgeraldās predecessor ā is a good example of what his program may look like.
āWhen you look back at when this program was where it should be, thatās a top-10 football program,ā Fitzgerald said. āCoach D ā obviously I studied intimately when I was competing against him ā and how he built his rosters. Itās not going to be too far removed from that model. And obviously weāll go anywhere to get players that fit us and want to be here. But really thatās kind of going to be our focus here, especially here in this class.ā
@ConnorEaregood
This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Pat Fitzgerald keeping Chicago roots as Michigan State Spartans coach