Michigan State booed off the field and Spartans fans have turned on Jonathan Smith

Rebuilds take time, but Michigan State fans are losing their patience with Jonathan Smith's lack of progress as UCLA takes a big 1st half lead in East Lansing.
Michigan State's head coach Jonathan Smith
Michigan State's head coach Jonathan Smith | Nick King/Lansing State Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Michigan State fans are two years into a rebuild under Jonathan Smith, but the fanbase may already be out on the former Oregon State head coach. The program has started to show some leaks with the loss to Nebraska last week, and in the first half against UCLA, the dam broke. 

The Bruins, coming off an upset win over Penn State, stormed to a 24-7 lead in East Lansing and the homecoming crowd booed the Spartans off the field into halftime. Quarterback Aidan Chiles is just 6-for-14 for 52 yards, but the bigger issues are on the other side of the ball with UCLA QB Nico Iamaleava carving up the Michigan State defense for 145 yards and two touchdowns on 12 of 19 passing. 

MSU fans see firsthand how much better things can get with a coaching change in 1st half vs. UCLA

To make matters worse for Smith, UCLA is a shining example of the spark that firing your head coach can provide. The Bruins moved on from Deshaun Foster, who was also in his second year, after a 35-10 loss to Nex Mexico in Week 3, and have found new life under interim head coach Tim Skipper and first-time play-caller Jerry Neuheisel. 

Neuheisel replaced offensive coordinator Tino Sunseri, who was fired ahead of last week’s win over the Nittany Lions, and has completely reinvigorated his former five-star quarterback. Seeing the impact of a coaching upgrade first half has some Spartans fans jealous and media members questioning whether Smith was the right hire in East Lansing. 

Smith went 5-7 in his first year with a 3-6 record in Big Ten play, but with a loss to the previous hapless Bruins, the Spartans will sink closer to the basement of the 18-team conference with an 0-3 start. 

Smith still has a half of football to win back the trust of the Michigan State fans, at least temporarily, and a half of the season to display meaningful progress heading into his third season. However, if his team doesn't show improvement, he may not see Year 3 of his contract with Michigan State.

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