MSU coach Dantonio not thinking about his future

It's the type of question that comes up when a team has spent much of the last four years in mediocrity: Mark Dantonio was asked Tuesday if he spends time thinking about his coaching future at Michigan State.

"No," he said. "I get ready for the next game. I live in the present."

For Dantonio and the Spartans, that means preparing for their biggest rival. Michigan State plays at No. 14 Michigan on Saturday, and if the Spartans are still capable of a last stand, this would be the time for it. Michigan State has lost four games in a row and will finish the regular season with at least five losses for the third time in four years.

It would be a surprise if Dantonio were fired - he's won three Big Ten titles since 2010 - but it's certainly fair to wonder if the 63-year-old coach can return Michigan State (4-5, 2-4 Big Ten) to its heights from earlier in the decade. Before he was asked a follow-up question about his future, he talked about how he handles criticism and speculation about the program.

"What people need to understand out there is that I have as much information as I can to do the job that I'm doing, and I'm going to try and do it with our players in mind," Dantonio said. "We're going to work hard, we're going to always stay positive, we're going to rise above it. That's the only thing that I can do."

Mark Dantonio

One obvious way to change the conversation - at least for a little while - would be to beat Michigan. Dantonio has done that eight times in 12 tries since taking over the Spartans.

"It would put a sweet taste in everyone's mouth and make things feel a lot better than what they are right now," quarterback Brian Lewerke said. "Any win after a four-game losing streak would be big, but this one would be especially big."

Last season's game - a 21-7 Michigan win - was contentious. Before the game, the Spartans walked across the field with linked arms and made contact with Michigan players during warmups. The Big Ten fined Michigan State and reprimanded Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh for his postgame comments about the incident. Michigan linebacker Devin Bush tore up Michigan State's midfield logo with his cleats before the game.

"That's in the past in my mind," Dantonio said. "It's in the past. Those things have taken place, and I said on a radio show this week: 'If you don't like confrontation, this probably isn't a good game to go to.'"

On Monday, Harbaugh referred to Dantonio as a "master motivator" - and Dantonio was asked Tuesday to describe Harbaugh in two words.

"Intense," Dantonio said. "And I would say, intense."

The Spartans blew a 21-point lead in the fourth quarter and lost at home to Illinois last weekend. Lewerke took a hit in the second half of that game and said afterward Saturday: "Definitely rung my bell for a little bit, but I think I was fine."

"We didn't go through any protocol," Dantonio said Tuesday. "We looked at him very quickly. I asked him, and he said he's good, and he motioned that to our trainers as well."

On Tuesday night, however, Michigan State released a statement saying otherwise.

"Upon returning to the sideline late in the fourth quarter with under five minutes remaining in the game, Brian Lewerke was given a symptom assessment by our medical staff. After not showing signs of a concussion, he was cleared to play," said Anthony M. Avellino, Michigan State's assistant provost for student health, wellness and safety. "As a precautionary measure, Brian was given further testing the following day, and was once again determined not to have a concussion."

Avellino said decisions on when an athlete returns to play are made by the medical staff, which does not report to the coaching staff.

Lewerke said Tuesday he felt OK.

"Neck hurts a little bit, but that's normal," he said.

He will not have tight end Matt Dotson as a target: Dotson is out for the season with a torn Achilles tendon.