Jalen Rose’s place at No. 8 on this list says as much about the scoring model as it does about his Michigan career. The first Fab Five member off the board was the vocal leader of that group, a Detroit native, and still one of the most recognizable faces tied to the University of Michigan and its basketball program.
By the numbers used here, Rose lands at No. 8 with a score of 124.2. But the case for him being higher is easy to make.
His influence at Michigan went well beyond the box score, and the source material makes clear that his support for the program and his philanthropic work in the state only add to his legacy. If this were a ranking of Michigan Men, he might be sitting at No.
The model, though, rewarded stats, individual honors, and team success, and that’s where Rose took the hit. The Fab Five never won a Big Ten championship, the Big Ten Tournament didn’t exist yet, and Rose didn’t start piling up major individual awards until his final season. That combination pushed him down the list despite the size of his impact.
On the floor, Rose was the highest scorer of the Fab Five and a starter for three seasons. As a freshman, he set the then-freshman scoring record with 597 points and averaged 17.6 points per game.
He was at the center of Michigan’s first national title push, putting up 25 points and 11 rebounds against Oklahoma State in the Sweet 16, then following that with 20 points in the overtime Elite Eight win over Ohio State. Michigan fell to Duke in the national championship game, but Rose still earned a spot on the All-Tournament Team.
His sophomore year brought a slight dip in scoring, down to 15.4 points per game, but Michigan kept rolling at 31-4 and became appointment viewing with its baggy uniforms, black socks, and relentless style of play.
One of the defining moments of that run came in the Final Four against Kentucky. The Wildcats had torn through the tournament, winning their first four games by an average of 31 points and each by 20 or more.
Michigan answered with a gritty overtime win, holding Kentucky to a tournament-low 78 points. Rose scored 18 of Michigan’s 81 points and knocked down two crucial free throws after a defensive stop in the final seconds.
The Wolverines still fell short of the title, losing to North Carolina.
With Chris Webber gone, the Fab Five era narrowed to four in 1993-94, and Rose took full advantage of the bigger role. He scored the third-most points in the Big Ten that season, trailing only Shawn Respert of Michigan State and Glenn Robinson of Purdue, whose 30.3 points per game stood as one of the great college seasons of all time. Rose posted career bests of 19.9 points, 5.7 rebounds and 3.9 assists per game, earning All-Big Ten and All-American recognition for the first time.
Rose left Michigan with 1,788 points after three seasons, a total that still placed him No. 8 all-time in the program’s record book despite the shorter career compared with others above him on the list. He helped define the most memorable stretch in Michigan basketball history and gave the program a swagger that still resonates. Even with the scandal attached to that team, the source makes one thing clear: Rose’s place in Michigan history is secure, and his legacy will last a long, long time.
In Other News...
Michigan Hit With Another Lawsuit As Warde Manuel Pressure Boils Over
The latest off-field headache for Michigan comes from former football assistant Chris Partridge, who has filed a lawsuit against the university, athletic director Warde Manuel, president Santa Ono, Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti and the Board of Regents. Partridge says he was wrongfully fired during the 2023 season, a move that came after he was accused of discussing the investigation with a player before being cleared, and the filing adds another legal layer to a program that has already spent months dealing with fallout from the Connor Stalions sign-stealing scandal and the Matt Weiss investigation.
What makes this one especially combustible is the way it keeps the pressure on Manuel at a moment when his future is already under scrutiny. The allegations in the filing have not been proven in court, but they arrive as a Michigan Board of Regents meeting is expected to address Manuels status with the university, turning what might have been a routine governance matter into another flashpoint for a department that has not had much room to breathe. [Read more 🡒]
Michigan Fans Have Every Right To Be Frustrated About Jordan Marshall
Michigans backfield did not get much national respect this offseason, with CBS Sports leaving the Wolverines off its top-10 college football running back groups. That omission is easy enough to argue with after Jordan Marshall emerged as Michigans most productive runner in 2025, leading the team in rushing yards and touchdowns while averaging 6.2 yards per carry and drawing a strong overall grade from PFF.
Marshall still enters 2026 as the clear lead option, but the picture around him is shifting. Freshman Savion Hiter adds another layer of talent to the room, and a new offensive coordinator will help shape how Michigan uses its backs, which makes the next step for Marshall and the offense worth watching even if the national rankings have already moved on. [Read more 🡒]
Michigan May Have Found A Crucial Answer At Linebacker
With Michigan moving on from its top three linebackers, the spring spotlight has shifted quickly to the next wave, and Chase Taylor is right in the middle of it. The sophomore, part of the 2025 recruiting class, already saw the field in 10 games last season, and now he is being talked about as one of the players most likely to help stabilize the position as the Wolverines reshape the defense under Jay Hill.
Taylor has been grouped with Troy Bowles and Nathaniel Owusu-Boateng as one of the top three linebackers on the roster this spring, which says plenty about how fast the picture is changing. For Michigan, the appeal is obvious: Taylor brings the size and athleticism coaches want in the middle of the defense, and the question now is how quickly that promise turns into a bigger role when the games start to matter. [Read more 🡒]
