Mason Curtis Just Teased Something Michigan Fans Will Love At The Big House

Mason Curtis predicts an electrifying home game advantage for Michigan Football in 2026, promising a season of elevated performance and atmosphere at the Big House.

Michigan’s safety room looks like one of the stronger parts of the roster heading into 2026, and Mason Curtis thinks the biggest edge this team can create won’t come on the road. It’ll come inside the Big House.

Curtis, who entered Michigan as the program’s first commitment in the 2024 class, is heading into his third year in Ann Arbor after appearing in 11 games last season and making three starts. With Rod Moore healthy, veteran transfer Chris Bracy expected to step into a starting role alongside him, and Jordan Young back after a strong freshman year, the Wolverines have real depth at safety. Curtis may be the overlooked piece, but he’s part of a group that gives Michigan plenty of options.

When asked on Champ Media what area Michigan would dominate this year, Curtis pointed straight to the home environment.

"Really our home games," said Curtis. "I'll say like the home atmosphere.

We should have a better home atmosphere this year. Wwe got some things coming that probably hasn't happened here when it comes to stuff like that, but we should have a better atmosphere."

Curtis has taken an unusual path to this point. He arrived in Ann Arbor as a four-star linebacker prospect, and at 6'5", he had the frame to stay there.

Michigan also used him at edge before he settled in at safety, where his size and range fit best. At 211 pounds, he sees that versatility as one of his biggest strengths.

"Just being able to play everywhere on the field, like being able to add length, you know, either at nickel or high safety or coming out in a box. Just being able to play different roles for defense," said Curtis.

His production last season backed up that value. In 2025, Curtis finished with 34 tackles, two tackles for loss, and one interception. Looking ahead to 2026, he wants that long frame to do more damage in the passing game and help Michigan create turnovers.

"Ball productivity and being able to disrupt passes and just be able to use my length to affect what the offense has," Curtis said.

Curtis also had plenty to say about new head coach Kyle Whittingham, who he said talks football often and brings the kind of consistency players notice. Whittingham’s work habits have made an impression.

"That's really his personality. Like a hard nose, a grinder for - he's going to put in the work," Curtis said. "He's going to show the players that he's willing to put in the work too, and not just talk about it as a coach.

"And I think the whole staff, from position coaches and to weight room coaches, they're willing to push you mentally and show you like, we're willing to do it with you. You just got to push for what you want. And if your goals are set, you got to push for those goals."

Michigan opens the season against Western Michigan on Sept. 5, and Curtis will be part of the new-look Wolverines taking the field.

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