Michigan’s path back into the College Football Playoff conversation is anything but gentle, and FOX analyst Joel Klatt highlighted two games that could help define the season. But the Wolverines’ schedule has another heavyweight that belongs in the same conversation.
Klatt, on Monday, laid out 10 games that will shape college football in 2026, and Michigan showed up twice. That makes sense, because the Wolverines are staring at a brutal slate: a non-conference meeting with Oklahoma, plus what could be the top three teams in the Big Ten, with two of those games coming away from home.
The first big checkpoint comes fast. Michigan opens with Western Michigan at home, a game it should handle comfortably. Then Week 2 brings the kind of matchup that can tell you a lot in a hurry, as Oklahoma visits Ann Arbor after beating Michigan in Norman last season.
“I think a win in this game for either of these programs would do the exact same thing that it did for Oklahoma a year ago," Klatt said. "So that's why this is one of the games that will shape the year.This is the first big game for Kyle Whittingham, like I said, and it's going to be an indication of whether Michigan is going to be back in playoff form.
Are they going to compete for a Big Ten title? We're going to find out really quickly Week 2 on September 12th.”
That game carries plenty of pressure on both sides, but especially for Michigan, which will be trying to answer questions from last season. The Wolverines struggled to stop John Mateer on the ground a year ago, and that will be a key focus under new defensive coordinator Jay Hill. Bryce Underwood also had a rough outing in his first road game of his career.
If Michigan is going to reach the playoff, home games like the Oklahoma matchup have to turn into wins.
Klatt’s second Michigan mention was the obvious one: Ohio State. It’s the biggest rivalry in sports, and it can still swing the season even when the rest of the schedule is already loaded. Depending on how the year plays out, the game could be massive for both teams - or it could mean very little in the playoff race.
For Ohio State, the Buckeyes should be in the playoff mix, but the question could be whether they need to beat Michigan to reach the Big Ten Championship Game. For Michigan, it may be the same math in reverse: beat the Buckeyes and the Wolverines could punch a ticket to the playoff, just like they were positioned to do last year.
“Meanwhile, Michigan also not an easy schedule," said Klatt. "They've got that game that I opened with against Oklahoma.
They've got some other tough games as well. Can they be in a position where if they beat Ohio State, they go to the college football playoff?
Ohio State dominated at the line of scrimmage for the first time in a long time last year. They snapped that four-game losing streak to Michigan.”
Ohio State still hasn’t won in The 'Shoe against Michigan since 2018, and the Wolverines will be trying to stop the Buckeyes’ one-game winning streak in the series. That said, Michigan will need to generate pressure on Julian Sayin, and Bryce Underwood has to be much better than the 63 yards he threw for in that earlier outing.
Then there’s the game that should have been on Klatt’s list: Indiana at Michigan. Before that home date, the Wolverines are set to host Oklahoma, Iowa, and Penn State - a run of games that could easily define the season. Michigan likely needs to win all of them, or at worst drop only one, if it wants a real shot at getting back into the playoff.
Indiana’s visit matters too, and not just because of the opponent. For the Hoosiers, it comes right after they host Ohio State the week before, and Curt Cignetti won’t want his team taking a second straight loss. That two-week stretch should reveal a lot about where Indiana stands, and the Big House will be part of that test.
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