By Matt Baker
The Daily Northwestern
EAST LANSING, Mich. - Giving up 41 points and 287 rushing yards is rarely a sign of a good defensive performance.
But Northwestern's defense came through against Michigan State on Saturday with key stops in the fourth quarter and overtime to clinch NU's first Big Ten victory of the season.
"That's why it's a great program win," coach Pat Fitzgerald said. "It wasn't a Picasso out there today. It was not a thing of beauty. … Maybe against Duke we didn't make those plays at the end of the game. Against Michigan, same thing. And now we have."
Michigan State entered Saturday as the third-best rushing offense in the Big Ten and showed it early against the Wildcats. Junior running back Javon Ringer racked up 185 yards on just 12 carries and scored three touchdowns - including an 80-yarder to tie the game at 34.
Although the Cats gave up another touchdown on a 19-yard pass from quarterback Brian Hoyer to wide-open tight end Eric Andino, they held the Spartans scoreless over the next four possessions and forced Hoyer into four straight incompletions in overtime.
The Spartans had scored on six of their previous 10 drives.
"My mindset was that we're not going to lose," said linebacker Malcolm Arrington, who finished with a team-high nine tackles. "And that's the way everybody played."
GOOD, BAD SPECIAL TEAMS
After making his first 19 kicks of the year, junior placekicker Amado Villarreal struggled Saturday.
He missed the second extra point he attempted against the Spartans and missed a 36-yard field goal wide left at the end of regulation. NU turned the ball over with a chance to kick the go-ahead field goal earlier in the fourth quarter when a low snap forced holder Kyle Daley to roll out and try to throw for a first down.
Despite those low points, the Cats' special teams also shined Saturday. Defensive end Corey Wootton blocked the Spartans' first extra point, and Arrington blocked a punt in the fourth quarter to give NU the ball deep in Michigan State territory.
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