2026 Michigan State Spartans Calendars
2026 Michigan State Spartans Calendars
Stand tall for Spartan pride in 2026 with the Michigan State Spartans calendar collection! NCAA‑licensed calendars are available in wall, mini, desk pad, and trivia formats—featuring the iconic green‑and‑white, player action shots, and full Big Ten schedules. Perfect for die‑hard Spartans fans from East Lansing and beyond.
Overview
The 2026 Michigan State Spartans calendar collection offers wall, mini, desk pad, and trivia desk formats each filled with Big Ten imagery, scheduling details, and plenty of space to plan your year with green and white pride.
Product Line Descriptions
Wall Calendar
- 12″ × 12″ wall calendar (opens to 12″ × 24″)
- Poster-sized monthly action photography featuring players and team imagery
- Includes professional athlete bios and updated team-themed graphics
- Bonus pages with additional months and Super Bowl history
- Includes major U.S. holidays
Desk Pad Calendar (Small)
- Dimensions: 17″ × 11″
- Desk pad format with spacious monthly grids
- Ideal for everyday planning and note-taking
- Includes major U.S. holidays
Daily Desk Calendar
- Compact desktop cube format
- 365 daily facts, trivia, or images
- Flip-top stand for easy daily viewing
Pocket Planner
- Compact pocket size (3.5″ × 6.25″ closed; 7″ × 6.25″ open)
- 17-month planner (August 2025 – December 2026)
- Stapled binding with monthly planning grids
- Includes U.S. holidays and special dates
Easel Desk Calendar
- Compact desktop calendar with built-in easel stand
- Monthly pages designed for desks and countertops
- Includes major U.S. holidays
Short History of the Michigan State Spartans
Michigan State's football program began in 1896 and joined the Big Ten in 1953. Known for dominant run in the 1950s and 1960s under coaches "Biggie" Munn and Duffy Daugherty, the Spartans claim six national championships (1951, ’52, ’55, ’57, ’65, ’66), along with 11 conference titles. Spartan history includes bowl wins (Rose Bowl titles in 1954, 1956, 1988, 2014), and the electrifying 1966 “Game of the Century” versus Notre Dame. Today they play at Spartan Stadium, backed by a devoted fan base.