An Entity of Type: national collegiate athletic association team season, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

The 1989 Michigan State Spartans football team represented Michigan State University in the 1989 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Spartans played their home games at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Michigan and were coached by George Perles. The team finished the season 8–4 overall and 6–2 in conference play. The Spartans were invited to the 1989 Aloha Bowl where they defeated Hawaii, 33–13. The Spartans were ranked No. 16 in the final AP Poll and Coaches Poll. The Spartans were coming off a six-win season and a bowl loss in 1988.

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dbo:abstract
  • The 1989 Michigan State Spartans football team represented Michigan State University in the 1989 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Spartans played their home games at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Michigan and were coached by George Perles. The team finished the season 8–4 overall and 6–2 in conference play. The Spartans were invited to the 1989 Aloha Bowl where they defeated Hawaii, 33–13. The Spartans were ranked No. 16 in the final AP Poll and Coaches Poll. The Spartans were coming off a six-win season and a bowl loss in 1988. (en)
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  • W 33–13 vs. Hawaii (en)
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  • Harlon Barnett, Bob Kula, Steve Montgomery (en)
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  • Aloha Bowl champion (en)
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  • Langeloh 46-yard field goal (en)
  • Hoard 1-yard run (en)
  • Carlson 35-yard field goal (en)
  • Carroll 5-yard pass from Torretta (en)
  • Enos 19-yard run (en)
  • Harlon Barnett 35-yard interception return (en)
  • Hawkins 4-yard pass from Enos (en)
  • Huerta 27-yard field goal (en)
  • Huerta 32-yard field goal (en)
  • Huerta 52-yard field goal (en)
  • Johnson 38-yard run (en)
  • Langeloh 27-yard field goal (en)
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  • MICH 7-0 (en)
  • Tied 3–3 (en)
  • MIA 17–10 (en)
  • MIA 20–10 (en)
  • MIA 20–13 (en)
  • MIA 3–0 (en)
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  • MICH 10-7 (en)
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  • MIA 23–20 (en)
  • MSU 10–3 (en)
  • Tied 20–20 (en)
dbp:scoring
  • First quarter *ND – Ricky Watters 2-yard run , 4:54. Notre Dame 7–0. Drive: 14 plays, 72 yards, 6:16. Second quarter *ND – Ricky Watters 53-yard run , 9:10. Notre Dame 14–0. *MSU – John Langeloh 36-yard field goal, 2:54. Notre Dame 14–3. *MSU – John Langeloh 38-yard field goal, 0:00. Notre Dame 14–6. Third quarter *MSU – James Bradley 30-yard pass from Dan Enos , 6:36. Notre Dame 14–13. Fourth quarter *ND – Anthony Johnson 1-yard run , 8:16. Notre Dame 21–13. Drive: 9 plays, 62 yards.''' (en)
dbp:shortConf
  • Big Ten (en)
dbp:sport
  • football (en)
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dbp:state
  • collapsed (en)
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  • ;Top passers *MSU – Dan Enos – 18/28, 200 yards, TD *ND – Tony Rice – 8/15, 90 yards ;Top rushers *MSU – Hyland Hickson – 26 rushes, 84 yards *ND – Ricky Watters – 16 rushes, 89 yards, 2 TD ;Top receivers *MSU – Courtney Hawkins – 6 receptions, 83 yards *ND – Raghib Ismail – 2 receptions, 27 yards (en)
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  • Michigan State Spartans (en)
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dbp:title
  • Michigan State Spartans at #1 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (en)
  • #2 Miami at Michigan State (en)
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  • 1989 (xsd:integer)
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  • The 1989 Michigan State Spartans football team represented Michigan State University in the 1989 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Spartans played their home games at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Michigan and were coached by George Perles. The team finished the season 8–4 overall and 6–2 in conference play. The Spartans were invited to the 1989 Aloha Bowl where they defeated Hawaii, 33–13. The Spartans were ranked No. 16 in the final AP Poll and Coaches Poll. The Spartans were coming off a six-win season and a bowl loss in 1988. (en)
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  • 1989 Michigan State Spartans football team (en)
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