2024 Michigan Wolverines

Phall

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Since 2005, Michigan has started 8, 7, 8, 9, 8, 9, 9, 8, 12, 11, 10, 10, 8, 7, 6, 5, 7, 5, and 8 white players. They project to start 7 this season, although a racial QB battle will continue throughout the year. In the past twelve months, the Wolverines program has seen its head coach suspended, reinstated on appeal, re-suspended, won the Big Ten with the assistant on the sidelines, won the national championship, replaced its head coach, and saw 13 players get drafted, including their starting quarterback, running back, and entire offensive line. The 2024 season will be a reset in many ways.

Coaching: Sherrone Moore becomes Michigan football’s first ever Black African American Head Coach. Moore called the plays as Co-OC last season and won consecutive Joe Moore awards in 2021 and 2022 as OL coach (starting 9 of 10 whites those years). Moore earned some infamy during last year's Penn State game by calling thirty straight running plays, so that can be safely assumed as the preferred playbook. He has a white wife and talks a lot about “family” and “culture” as part of his brand.

New offensive coordinator Kirk Campbell is on the fast track as an internal promotion from QB coach. The new defensive coordinator, certifiable fat bastard Wink Martindale, is a 20-year NFL veteran who is credited with the coaching tree that produced Michigan’s two previous DCs (Mike McDonald and Jesse Minter, both now back in the NFL). Martindale worked for ten seasons with John Harbaugh’s Ravens and continues that particular tradition of cross-pollination between Michigan and Baltimore.

Quarterback: Michigan enters the season with five backup quarterbacks. Because JJ McCarthy waited until the eleventh hour to declare for the NFL (Michigan was still playing in January), the Wolverines weren’t really able to bid on the top transfer mercenaries. There will most likely be shared snaps, unique packages, and a benching or two throughout the season. I’ll split this position into two groups:

Blacks: Alex Orji was playing meaningful snaps down the stretch last season, running the ball 15 times while throwing no passes. He is described with every fawning adjective in the DWF vocabulary, tiptoeing around the issue that he doesn’t throw the ball very well. If you think of Alabama’s Jalen Milroe as a poor man’s Tim Tebow, consider Alex Orji to be a pauper’s Jalen Milroe. Next up, Jayden Denegal plays like a quarterback but seems to be a clear fourth man in the pecking order. Orji and Denegal were signed as “project” recruits three years ago (by departed black QB fetishist Matt Weiss) because McCarthy was an entrenched projected starter. Incoming freshman QB Jadyn Davis will redshirt. Davis was originally a 5-star recruit but has lost a bit of bloom from his high school hype. He was a local kid with strong interest, at which point you pretty much have to take him. I don’t feel he’s guaranteed to be a multi-year starter anymore.

Whites: A traditional redshirt, two transfers, a medical redshirt, and a Covid hoax year are the combination of circumstances that bring Jack Tuttle to fall camp for a seventh season. Tuttle falls into the stereotype of the safe, checkdown-throwing game manager, although he is an adept scrambler (converting a 3rd and 17 last year). He was JJ McCarthy’s backup last season and has played the most non-wildcat snaps in terms of experience. Former walk-on Davis Warren was hurt last season but was McCarthy’s primary backup in 2022. He is allegedly the fastest sprinter in the QB room. While Tuttle represents high-floor/low-ceiling, Orji is thought to represent the opposite, and Warren is somewhere in between.

Carter Smith and Brady Hart are both four-star (white QB) signees from the 2025 and 2026 class, which gives an idea how Sherrone Moore’s staff is recruiting the position going forward.

I predict that Tuttle gets the nod, at least for Week One. Orji will play at some point and attempt his first pass, and we’ll go from there. I would personally like to see Davis Warren, if only because Michigan hasn’t started a walk-on at QB in almost 20 years and he seems to have the right tools.

Running back: The big and only name to follow is redshirt freshman Cole Cabana. Cabana was a high school track star with a 4.34 camp 40 time (10.55 sec 100m, similar to recent 1st round WR Xavier Worthy) and a 4-star recruiting ranking. He’s in a crowded running back room for one more year, but Michigan’s 3rd running back has averaged 42 carries over the past 3 seasons. Cabana is a bit of a unicorn at 6’0 198 lbs: the only non-midget rusher in the NFL with a sub-200 lbs frame is Buffalo’s James Hall (who just had a very good season). **Cabana weighed into fall camp at 204 lbs last week**

This is a tired cliche, but here’s how I’d describe Michigan’s running backs, sorted by class:

senior: Donovan Edwards (speed) 6'1 212 lbs
RS junior Kalel Mullings (power) 6'2 233 lbs
RS junior Tavierre Dunlap (power) 6'0 229 lbs
RS freshman Benjamin Hall (power) 5'11 235 lbs
RS freshman Cole Cabana (speed) 6'0 204 lbs
freshman Jordan Marshall (mix) 5'11 210 lbs
freshman Micah Ka’apana (speed) 5'11 190

In 2025, the Wolverines will have an All-American sized hole for a “speed”-centered running back. Cabana has a window for some touches this year and would be well-served by catching swing passes with space in front of him, which Michigan/Moore has not historically called much. Something worth noting is that Cabana was recruited by former RB coach (and RB) Mike Hart, who left the program last year. New RB coach Tony Alford might not be so “open-minded” to a white running back. If the true freshman backs (especially Ka’apana) start seeing carries, it’s a strong sign that Cabana is getting jerked.

Tight Ends: Idaho’s finest Colston Loveland will be on some pre-season All-American lists and remains a focal point of the passing game. Max Bredeson, brother of NFL guard Ben, mostly just blocks and will likely play starter’s snaps as an “H-back.” Marlin Klein will have a decent campaign as the second pass-catching tight end as a prelude to an eventual pro career, and there are a few more white underclassmen behind these guys.

I’ll add a line here that walk-on wide receiver Peyton O’Leary didn’t see much of the field last year despite being a Spring Game breakout star. He’s limited by the run-heavy offense, but I’ll hold out hope that he gets more action with another year under his belt.

Offensive Line: Michigan drops to three white starters this season. Josh Priebe joins the team via transfer from Northwestern, Greg Crippen gets his overdue promotion at center, and Andrew Gentry will probably get the shot to become a future three-year starter at tackle. I decided not to include Giovanni El-Hadi with the whites, as he’s half-Greek half-Mohammedan. Jeffrey Persi is the probable plug-in sixth lineman. Recruits are still mostly white and project to a 4/5 future average.

Defense: Mason Graham is the team’s best player while lining up as a 3-tech DT. He will be a sack machine once again and will mostly likely be a mid-first round draft pick. Graham is the only white starter on the defense. (Hmm, they should have found some more!)

At LB, Jimmy Rolder was hurt much of last year after getting playing time as a true freshman. He’s still a backup this season but should get some important rotational snaps. True freshman Cole Sullivan has a lot of spring practice buzz. Brooks Bahr, walk-on Joey Klunder, and true freshman Owen Wafle may get snaps on the defensive line, but they’re not likely to be featured heavily.

Michigan has no white edges to continue the Chase Winovich - Aidan Hutchinson - Braiden McGregor pipeline. In fact, the Wolverines have been shoehorning their white defenders into two positions: defensive tackle and inside linebacker. Six of the nine white defenders on the scholarship roster who aren’t Mason Graham are technically backups to Mason Graham. I hope they develop a little bit of versatility as the season progresses.

Overall, this is a pretty standard “caste” team, with one white potential All-American on either side of the ball.

Starters:
QB: Jack Tuttle
TE: Colston Loveland
H-Back: Max Bredeson
OL: Josh Priebe, Alan Gentry, Greg Crippen

DT: Mason Graham

Backups:
QB: Davis Warren

WR: Peyton O’Leary
TE: Marlin Klein, Deakon Tonielli, Brady Prieskorn, Hogan Hansen
OL: Jeffrey Persi, Tristan Bounds, Dominic Giudice, Connor Jones, Evan Link, Luke Hamilton, Ben Roebuck, Jake Guarnera

DL: Joey Klunder, Brooks Bahr, Alessandro Lorenzetti, Owen Wafle, Ted Hammond, Manuel Beigel
LB: Jimmy Rolder, Christian Boivin, Cole Sullivan
 
Great write up! Will be an interesting team to follow this season
 
Great write-up as always. I think Michigan is in for a 7-5 type season just due to all the pieces lost. Disappointed to see Cabana not in the running for more touches this year. QB situation is a bit unsettling but it’s nice to see that in the future they have some White recruits in the pipeline. I do appreciate Michigan’s commitment to the run game though in a sport where it’s now all about spreading the ball. It would be nice if other big ten teams went back to their roots of physical football and controlling the line of scrimmage. It certainly proved to be an effective antidote to the spread teams UM faced last year during their championship run.
 
Great write-up as always Phall!! Glad to see you again, as your insight and wit have been sorely missed.
 
won't take long for sherrone moore and his uncle tom persona to bring Michigan back to the pack and be a 8 to 9 win team this year, followed by a 7ish win team next year. That is if he makes it that long and doesn't pull a Mel Tucker. Tom Iron Rule says its a safe bet that moore will be in the news sooner than later.
 
Michigan "technically" started 8 whites amongst the 22 tonight, although it's not any big deal against the preview post.

Peyton O'Leary took the first snap at WR2, but that was probably because the WR1 (Semaj Morgan) is also on kick return duty. I've ranted for O'Leary for awhile now after he's won a couple of intra-squad spring games. Unfortunately, he left Week One with just a single missed target. But, he might be Michigan's legitimate WR3.

Max Bredeson is near a full-time starter as "H-back" where he's too short to be a true in-line tight end but isn't a threat to run, so they just put him in front of the RB and let him smash. He's mostly an inline TE, though.

Davis Warren got the provisional Week One job. All the press articles about him focus on his leukemia in grade school and his covid high school. His black competitor Alex Orji gets press about what an incredible, unbelievable athlete he is. Warren won the job for Week One, which tells me that either they're both awesome or they both suck! Allegedly, Warren beats Orji in the 40 dash....
 
Michigan "technically" started 8 whites amongst the 22 tonight, although it's not any big deal against the preview post.

Peyton O'Leary took the first snap at WR2, but that was probably because the WR1 (Semaj Morgan) is also on kick return duty. I've ranted for O'Leary for awhile now after he's won a couple of intra-squad spring games. Unfortunately, he left Week One with just a single missed target. But, he might be Michigan's legitimate WR3.

Max Bredeson is near a full-time starter as "H-back" where he's too short to be a true in-line tight end but isn't a threat to run, so they just put him in front of the RB and let him smash. He's mostly an inline TE, though.

Davis Warren got the provisional Week One job. All the press articles about him focus on his leukemia in grade school and his covid high school. His black competitor Alex Orji gets press about what an incredible, unbelievable athlete he is. Warren won the job for Week One, which tells me that either they're both awesome or they both suck! Allegedly, Warren beats Orji in the 40 dash....

It was funny seeing the DWFs unable to comprehend why Warren got the starting job. Many just ran out the same old trope that Orji should start because he can run forgetting the fact that he has deficiencies actually passing the ball.
 
I was at the game and there were some yells for Orji, but they magically stopped when Orji skipped an 8 yard pass that a 9th grader could make with his eyes closed.
 
I was at the game and there were some yells for Orji, but they magically stopped when Orji skipped an 8 yard pass that a 9th grader could make with his eyes closed.

LOL. Thanks for the report back from the game.
 
Michigan "technically" started 8 whites amongst the 22 tonight, although it's not any big deal against the preview post.

Peyton O'Leary took the first snap at WR2, but that was probably because the WR1 (Semaj Morgan) is also on kick return duty. I've ranted for O'Leary for awhile now after he's won a couple of intra-squad spring games. Unfortunately, he left Week One with just a single missed target. But, he might be Michigan's legitimate WR3.

Max Bredeson is near a full-time starter as "H-back" where he's too short to be a true in-line tight end but isn't a threat to run, so they just put him in front of the RB and let him smash. He's mostly an inline TE, though.

Davis Warren got the provisional Week One job. All the press articles about him focus on his leukemia in grade school and his covid high school. His black competitor Alex Orji gets press about what an incredible, unbelievable athlete he is. Warren won the job for Week One, which tells me that either they're both awesome or they both suck! Allegedly, Warren beats Orji in the 40 dash....
Glad to see your back, I always enjoy your posts.

This article indicates that Bredeson Is one of the biggest fastest and most intimidating players on the team, but his best trait is to “block”. There’s no doubt my mind he would be a threat to run if they actually would give him the ball, but he is stuck blocking for inferior black running backs. https://www.on3.com/teams/michigan-...physical-specimen-thats-mysterious-and-scary/
 
On the eve of facing Ohio State as the biggest underdog in modern era series history (+20.5), Michigan is also projected to finish 6-6 after winning a national championship.

There were always some growing pains to be expected after Harbaugh left late in the offseason cycle. McCarthy declared late, the top six offensive linemen graduated, the star running back and a total of 16 players were either drafted or signed to camp tryouts. Harbaugh took his defensive coordinator with him along with the mainstay S&C coach (rather unheard of in the NFL, where so many players employ their own personal trainers). The running backs coach stepped away from football, the ST coach and lead recruiter left for the pros, an analyst resigned after an offseason DUI. Michigan started replacing key player and coaching personnel well-after the transfer and hiring carousels had begun.

All things considered, Michigan's ceiling really never included reaching the expanded playoffs, as they proved to be a clear standard deviation (or more) below Texas, Oregon, and presumably Ohio State. Therefore, it seems pointless to bellyache that better coaching could have turned the tables against Washington, Illinois, and Indiana. The absolute floor for a season has been set by Florida State, and the Wolverines are nowhere near that nadir. However, black first-time head coach Sherrone Moore has done little to justify his hiring after a rather non-existent search by an athletic director with a famously-long leash. There have been egregious clock management blunders, uninspired playcalling, and head-scratching depth chart decisions (at quarterback, running back, center, right tackle, among others and in no particular order).

Davis Warren won the QB job but was pulled after 2.5 games. After starting and yanking the next two quarterbacks behind him, Warren will finish the season as an unpolished product. Could he have improved with the continuity and experience? Who knows. He might be starting his last game as a Wolverine tomorrow, depending on whether or not he wants to play again. All the fanfare is on the prized black 17-yr old recruit Bryce Underwood, who apparently will be paid $10+ million over the course of his Michigan career. The Wolverines will still target a transfer QB, with Underwood's blessing, to at least start the 2025 season. Make no mistake: Underwood will be the starter sooner than later. Trailing only the head coach in annual pay, he has the leverage and opportunity to walk away at will without any of the pressure to succeed. The mega-donor class that foots this bill directly will also have an outsized voice about starting their shiny new toys. In the current 'Wild West' era of NIL and revolving door transfer portal, this isn't something extreme or unexpected.

(By the way, Underwood's Belleville (Detroit) team of urban youths has lost twice in-state this season, including one against this group of Exciting Whites with no D1 offers)

Shifting more explicitly toward race, Moore and Michigan are trending away from the "white-enough Wolverines" national champions of 2023. Their two white quarterback commitments, Brady Hart (Texas A&M) and Carter Smith (Wisconsin), both jumped ship post-Underwood. The offensive line has a couple new sumo commitments for 2025. This might seem like petty quibbling except that the white replacement at these historical positions isn't compensated for elsewhere on the field.

Linebacker Jimmy Rolder will probably step up next year and be Michigan's new lone white defensive starter. Maybe fellow LB Cole Sullivan will force his way onto the field. The white defensive linemen on scholarship are still all currently underclassman projects with no guarantees of any playing time.

Former 4-star speedster Cole Cabana did not receive any touches during the Senior Day blowout of Northwestern, although six other running backs did, including the two freshmen. He wasn't on the injury report, so the only bellwether says the staff doesn't even care to keep him happy. (Former?) walk-on receiver Peyton O'Leary has a pair of touchdowns this year but isn't even a box score staple considering Michigan's passing woes. That's all that comes to mind for the caste-busters on the roster.

Anyway, this is a lot of words to say that Michigan has regressed toward the mean in terms of skill (average) and race (BLM George Floyd activism). It's not much fun to watch or follow.
 
On the eve of facing Ohio State as the biggest underdog in modern era series history (+20.5), Michigan is also projected to finish 6-6 after winning a national championship.

There were always some growing pains to be expected after Harbaugh left late in the offseason cycle. McCarthy declared late, the top six offensive linemen graduated, the star running back and a total of 16 players were either drafted or signed to camp tryouts. Harbaugh took his defensive coordinator with him along with the mainstay S&C coach (rather unheard of in the NFL, where so many players employ their own personal trainers). The running backs coach stepped away from football, the ST coach and lead recruiter left for the pros, an analyst resigned after an offseason DUI. Michigan started replacing key player and coaching personnel well-after the transfer and hiring carousels had begun.

All things considered, Michigan's ceiling really never included reaching the expanded playoffs, as they proved to be a clear standard deviation (or more) below Texas, Oregon, and presumably Ohio State. Therefore, it seems pointless to bellyache that better coaching could have turned the tables against Washington, Illinois, and Indiana. The absolute floor for a season has been set by Florida State, and the Wolverines are nowhere near that nadir. However, black first-time head coach Sherrone Moore has done little to justify his hiring after a rather non-existent search by an athletic director with a famously-long leash. There have been egregious clock management blunders, uninspired playcalling, and head-scratching depth chart decisions (at quarterback, running back, center, right tackle, among others and in no particular order).

Davis Warren won the QB job but was pulled after 2.5 games. After starting and yanking the next two quarterbacks behind him, Warren will finish the season as an unpolished product. Could he have improved with the continuity and experience? Who knows. He might be starting his last game as a Wolverine tomorrow, depending on whether or not he wants to play again. All the fanfare is on the prized black 17-yr old recruit Bryce Underwood, who apparently will be paid $10+ million over the course of his Michigan career. The Wolverines will still target a transfer QB, with Underwood's blessing, to at least start the 2025 season. Make no mistake: Underwood will be the starter sooner than later. Trailing only the head coach in annual pay, he has the leverage and opportunity to walk away at will without any of the pressure to succeed. The mega-donor class that foots this bill directly will also have an outsized voice about starting their shiny new toys. In the current 'Wild West' era of NIL and revolving door transfer portal, this isn't something extreme or unexpected.

(By the way, Underwood's Belleville (Detroit) team of urban youths has lost twice in-state this season, including one against this group of Exciting Whites with no D1 offers)

Shifting more explicitly toward race, Moore and Michigan are trending away from the "white-enough Wolverines" national champions of 2023. Their two white quarterback commitments, Brady Hart (Texas A&M) and Carter Smith (Wisconsin), both jumped ship post-Underwood. The offensive line has a couple new sumo commitments for 2025. This might seem like petty quibbling except that the white replacement at these historical positions isn't compensated for elsewhere on the field.

Linebacker Jimmy Rolder will probably step up next year and be Michigan's new lone white defensive starter. Maybe fellow LB Cole Sullivan will force his way onto the field. The white defensive linemen on scholarship are still all currently underclassman projects with no guarantees of any playing time.

Former 4-star speedster Cole Cabana did not receive any touches during the Senior Day blowout of Northwestern, although six other running backs did, including the two freshmen. He wasn't on the injury report, so the only bellwether says the staff doesn't even care to keep him happy. (Former?) walk-on receiver Peyton O'Leary has a pair of touchdowns this year but isn't even a box score staple considering Michigan's passing woes. That's all that comes to mind for the caste-busters on the roster.

Anyway, this is a lot of words to say that Michigan has regressed toward the mean in terms of skill (average) and race (BLM George Floyd activism). It's not much fun to watch or follow.

Fine example of the caste system in a nutshell. Moore is obviously not a great recruiter (NIL is the only reason they got the prized black quarterback) and his coaching has not been "elite". I give him a pass because they lost so much prior to the season but I am rooting for NIL to absolutely blow up the UM program. It will be interesting to see if NIL even gets regulated or if the current path continues unchallenged. Anyway Michigan will not be a team it seems I will have much vested interest in once Graham and Loveland leave for the NFL.
 
Despicable the way they are treating 4-star White running back Cabana. He needs to get the hell out of there before he wastes another peak year. Look at all the White RBs succeeding across the landscape and transfer to one of those programs.
 
Michigan fired OC Kirk Campbell yesterday. Somewhat by necessity, the Wolverines staff featured many internal promotions this season. Looking backwards at his resume, Campbell at OC was a pretty big reach. JJ McCarthy liked him as a QB coach last year. Hey, Brian Ferentz was the best TE coach in the country for awhile at Iowa before he got Peter Principle'd into a punchline.

The next Wolverines OC will make less money than Bryce Underwood next year. Underwood's development and centralization will obviously be a key performance indicator for the new guy. Should they just ask Bryce who to hire?
 
Michigan fired OC Kirk Campbell yesterday. Somewhat by necessity, the Wolverines staff featured many internal promotions this season. Looking backwards at his resume, Campbell at OC was a pretty big reach. JJ McCarthy liked him as a QB coach last year. Hey, Brian Ferentz was the best TE coach in the country for awhile at Iowa before he got Peter Principle'd into a punchline.

The next Wolverines OC will make less money than Bryce Underwood next year. Underwood's development and centralization will obviously be a key performance indicator for the new guy. Should they just ask Bryce who to hire?
Yes. His high school HC or maybe his Pop Warner coach should be made OC to implement his ideal offense. Then the same promotions as he becomes the #1 pick in the NFL draft whether or not he does anything at Michigan of note. Dat Upside!!
 
As long as it is someone Bryce can relate to. Michigan should go and get Byron Leftwich or RG knee as OC.
 
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