
The Curious Case of Denham Wojcik
Why the Spartans’ most debated player is quietly one of their most important – and exactly what Tom Izzo wants
When Denham Wojcik checks into the game, the reaction across Spartan Nation is split.
Some hold their breath, counting down the seconds until Jeremy Fears catches his breath and gets back in the game. Others see it the way Tom Izzo sees it - Wojcik is going to come in, make very few mistakes, and head back to the bench, grateful for the opportunity to fulfill a small niche role for the school he loves.
Photo credit: Marvin Hall/Spartans Illustrated
There are players you notice immediately, and there are players you only understand if you’re willing to slow down and really watch. Denham Wojcik falls squarely into the second category, and in a lot of ways, he represents something very specific inside Michigan State’s program – a role that exists by design, not by accident.
Because Wojcik's story isn’t just about a third point guard getting a few minutes each half.
This is about how Tom Izzo builds a roster, how every spot has intention, and how certain players are brought in not to star, but to stabilize. Wojcik is one of those players, a piece that only really makes sense when you zoom out and look at the whole machine.
And - all season long - the reaction to him has been hard to miss.
In group texts. From anonymous accounts on social media. Even slipping, at times, into analysis from people who usually dig deeper than that.
The criticism has been consistent, and in my view, consistently overblown.
It’s the kind of surface-level evaluation that happens when you measure a role player against the wrong expectations.
Wojcik is not here to be something he’s not. And Michigan State didn’t bring him here by accident.
What he is, at first glance, is simple. He is the third point guard – or at least, that’s what he was brought in to be. When Michigan State lost Divine Ugochukwu to a season-ending injury, though, Wojcik was elevated into that second point guard role behind Jeremy Fears, and the expectations around him shifted a bit.
His job, though, didn’t change.
He spells Fears for a few minutes each half, keeps things steady, doesn’t try to do too much, and hands the keys back without disruption. That’s the job description, and if you’re only watching the stat sheet, it’s easy to miss everything else.
But if you watch the game the way Tom Izzo watches it – possessions, decisions, control, defense – then you start to see why he’s out there.
He doesn’t take bad shots. That sounds basic, almost too basic, but it matters more than people realize. Michigan State’s offensive efficiency this year is built as much on what they don’t do as what they do, and Wojcik fits directly into that. He understands tempo, spacing, and when to get the ball out of his hands. He doesn’t hijack possessions. He doesn’t freelance. He keeps the machine running. He won’t go 0/10 in a game, ever.
And that, for a third point guard, is everything. It also directly counters the criticism.
Because most of the frustration that shows up comes from what he isn’t doing – he’s not hunting shots, he’s not breaking defenders down one-on-one, he’s not creating highlights. But that’s not the assignment. In fact, doing those things would probably get him pulled.
He’s doing exactly what he’s being asked to do. And the fact that he continues to see the floor should tell you everything you need to know about how the staff views that execution.
There’s also a toughness to him that doesn’t get talked about enough. You don’t wear KT tape on your shoulder for aesthetics. You wear it because you've been through it, and if you trace his path back even a couple of years, you start to understand that this isn’t just a guy filling a roster spot. This is a player who has had to fight his way back physically just to be in position to contribute at this level.
It might sound cliche, but that matters in March (and April).
It also explains the trust. Because Izzo doesn’t hand out minutes in the NCAA Tournament to guys he doesn’t trust, especially not at the point guard position.
And yet, there are moments in games where Wojcik is on the floor, specifically for defense, specifically because the staff knows exactly what they’re going to get.
He’s going to guard. He’s going to be in the right place. He’s going to execute the plan.
No surprises.
And that’s really the point of all of this. Wojcik is not here to surprise you or impress you. He’s here to eliminate surprises.
It was good coaching to get Wojcik minutes early in the season. It’s paying off now as the calendar turns and the games start to matter more, because those early reps were an investment in moments like this, when the margin for error disappears.
We’ve reached a point in college basketball where roster construction has tilted heavily toward star-chasing, toward assembling as much top-end talent as possible and figuring the rest out later.
Michigan State has never operated that way under Izzo, and Wojcik is a reminder of that philosophy. Every roster spot at MSU has a purpose. Every role is intentional.
Because here’s the real question that doesn’t get asked enough – who are you going to get to come to Michigan State to play that role?
A third point guard. A low-minute guard at that. A player who knows going in that his job is to steady things, defend, take care of the ball, and then step back out without complaint. That’s not a role you can just buy from the transfer portal. That’s a role that requires buy-in, humility, and a very specific wiring.
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