Michigan State's Keith Nichol, center, and B.J. Cunningham celebrate following a 37-31 win over Wisconsin in an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011, in East Lansing, Mich. Nichol caught the game-winning pass on the final play. (AP Photo/Al Goldis)
Michigan State's Keith Nichol, center, and B.J. Cunningham celebrate following a 37-31 win over Wisconsin in an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011, in East Lansing, Mich. Nichol caught the game-winning pass on the final play. (AP Photo/Al Goldis)
The ball goes up for grabs and into the arms of Michigan State's Keith Nichol, right, after being tipped on a pass on the final play of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011, in East Lansing, Mich. Also seen are Wisconsin's Marcus Cromartie (14), Aaron Henry (7) and Jared Abbrederis (4) and Michigan State's Dion Sims (80) and B.J. Cunningham, left rear. (AP Photo/Al Goldis)
Michigan State quarterback Kirk Cousins (8) celebrates the team's 37-31 win over Wisconsin during an NCAA college football game in East Lansing, Mich., Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
Wisconsin's Philip Welch (18), Kyle French (94) and Jeff Duckworth (15) walk off the field after the team's 37-31 loss to Michigan State in an NCAA college football game in East Lansing, Mich., Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
Michigan State wide receiver Keith Nichol (7), defended by Wisconsin's Jared Abbrederis (4), crosses the goal line for a touchdown on the final play of an NCAA college football game in East Lansing, Mich., Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011. Michigan State won 37-31. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) ? A heave. A carom. A desperate struggle for the last few inches.
And after further review, another extraordinary final play by Michigan State.
The team that shook up the 2010 season with an overtime fake field goal came up with another astonishing way to win Saturday night. Keith Nichol caught a 44-yard pass from Kirk Cousins on the game's last snap for a tiebreaking touchdown, giving the 15th-ranked Spartans a 37-31 victory against No. 4 Wisconsin.
"We knew we had a chance," Cousins said. "There's always a chance."
Nichol scored into the same side of the same end zone as Michigan State's winning touchdown against Notre Dame last year, which came on that fake kick in overtime in another memorable night game at Spartan Stadium.
That play was called Little Giants. This one was Rocket ? and the Spartans were sky high when it actually worked.
With 4 seconds left, Cousins rolled out to his right and threw the ball about as far as he could. It went into the end zone but caromed off Michigan State receiver B.J. Cunningham's facemask back to Nichol, who caught it just outside the end zone, then fought two Wisconsin defenders and just barely broke the goal line.
The former backup quarterback was initially ruled short of the end zone, but officials overturned the call after a review, giving the Spartans (6-1, 3-0 Big Ten) the win and knocking the Badgers (6-1, 2-1) from the ranks of the unbeaten.
"It was just a feeling that I went across the line for a second. I had the ball in my upfield shoulder, and there was no way I felt I could've been denied," Nichol said. "I don't think anybody coming out of high school when they're a quarterback envisions winning the game as a wide receiver."
Russell Wilson had led the Badgers from 14 points down in the fourth quarter to tie the game with 1:26 left on a 2-yard touchdown pass to Montee Ball.
The wild game ? in which both teams blew two-touchdown leads ? featured an even more memorable finish. Wisconsin trailed 31-17 in the fourth quarter before Wilson ran 22 yards for a touchdown and made several spectacular throws on the move to set up the TD pass to Ball to tie it at 31.
Michigan State then survived a harrowing moment when Cousins fumbled deep in his own territory. Offensive lineman Dan France fell on the ball with 42 seconds left.
At that point, Wisconsin was eager to use timeouts, trying to get the ball back, but on second-and-20 from his own 24, Cousins found Cunningham for a 12-yard gain. The Spartans then picked up a first down on an 11-yard shovel pass to Keshawn Martin.
"If we get the ball back with less than 30 seconds we were going to go for a block (punt)," Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema said. "We were going for the win."
Michigan State's last drive appeared to stall at the Wisconsin 44, but the Spartans had time for one more play ? one that will go down in Michigan State history, right next to Little Giants.
Cousins was able to buy enough time for receivers to get down the field. Wisconsin's 6-foot-2 receiver Jared Abbrederis was in on the last play to try to defend against the miracle play, but he jumped a beat too soon and the pass sailed over his outstretched arms.
"It's a play that everybody practices," Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio said. "You never know when it's going to come to fruition."
Cunningham was in the end zone, and the ball bounced off his helmet and into Nichol's arms. After Nichol caught the pass, Michigan State players immediately started spilling onto the field, even though officials ruled that Abbrederis and linebacker Mike Taylor had stopped him short. When the call was reversed and a touchdown was awarded, the celebration began again.
"I kept saying, 'Focus!'" Dantonio said. "But the guys upstairs were saying, 'He's in! He's in!'"
Dantonio had a mild heart attack after last year's thrilling Notre Dame game and ended up having to miss Michigan State's win over Wisconsin two games later. He was on the sideline for this one.
"My heart's racing," Dantonio said after another amazing finish.
Wisconsin had won its first six games of the season, all by at least 31 points. The Badgers entered the game leading the nation in scoring offense, and Michigan State was ranked second in total defense.
Michigan State handed Wisconsin its only loss of the regular season last year, but the Badgers went to the Rose Bowl anyway, emerging from a three-way tiebreaker with the Spartans and Ohio State atop the Big Ten.
Michigan State looked overmatched early on Saturday, allowing a pair of first-quarter touchdowns and struggling to hold off Wisconsin's powerful offensive line. The Spartans turned the game around in the second quarter with some impressive work on special teams.
Mike Sadler's nice punt pinned Wisconsin back at its own 5-yard line, and two plays later, Wilson threw the ball away under pressure in the end zone for an intentional grounding call and a safety that made it 14-2.
Michigan State scored its first touchdown on a slow-developing reverse. Martin avoided a tackler in the backfield and found room to the outside for a 34-yard scoring run.
Wisconsin responded with an impressive drive but ended up settling for a 30-yard field goal attempt on fourth-and-1. Darqueze Dennard blocked it, and the Spartans capitalized with an 80-yard scoring drive. Cousins found Cunningham over the middle on fourth-and-2, and the senior receiver turned the catch into a 35-yard touchdown, giving Michigan State a 16-14 lead with 1:20 left in the half.
The Spartans weren't done. They used timeouts to stop the clock and forced a punt, which Kyler Elsworth blocked. The ball bounced back to the end zone, where Michigan State's Bennie Fowler was credited with the recovery amid a pile of bodies with 37 seconds to play.
After a Wisconsin field goal in the third quarter, Michigan State made it 31-17 when Cousins threw over the middle to Martin, who outran the defense to the sideline and turned up the field to the end zone for a 15-yard touchdown. Cousins then threw to Cunningham for a 2-point conversion.
Wisconsin missed a chance for a big play when Wilson's deep pass was dropped by Abbrederis, but the Badgers later scored when Wilson scrambled to his right, faked out safety Isaiah Lewis with a pump fake and ran up the sideline for a touchdown that made it 31-24.
Michigan State won despite playing without defensive lineman William Gholston, who was suspended for a game after he was shown on video taking a swing at a Michigan player last weekend. The Spartans managed to sack Wilson three times ? he'd been sacked only five times in the first six games.
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