Michigan Faces A Massive Roster Test After Its Coaching Shock

In the wake of coaching changes and attempted recruitment lures, Jalen Reed's commitment to the Wolverines underscores a steadfast belief in Michigan's basketball program.

Michigan’s championship defense just got a major boost, and it came at a time when the Wolverines could have easily started unraveling.

After Dusty May left for the head coaching job with the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, the spotlight in Ann Arbor shifted fast to what might come next: a vacant bench, a possible roster shakeup, and all the uncertainty that comes with the transfer portal. Instead, interim coach Mike Boynton Jr. has helped steady the program, and LSU transfer Jalen Reed is the latest key piece to stay put.

Reed has officially confirmed he will remain with Michigan for the 2026-27 season, despite the coaching change reopening his recruitment window. The 6-foot-10 forward originally committed to Michigan in late April as one of May’s top portal additions, and programs around the country - including Louisville - were reportedly monitoring his situation.

His decision gives Boynton another important win in keeping the Wolverines intact. Reed joins other returning pieces like JP Estrella, Brandon McCoy Jr., and Moustapha Thiam, a sign that Michigan is trying to reload rather than reset after its 2026 National Championship run.

From a basketball standpoint, Reed is exactly the kind of frontcourt player Michigan needed to hold onto. He brings size, mobility, and a scoring touch that fits both inside and on the move. In his redshirt junior season at LSU, he averaged 9.5 points, 5.7 rebounds, and 1.0 assist per game in limited action.

The efficiency jumps off the page, too. Reed shot 57.1% from the field last season, showing a polished touch around the rim and the ability to get up the floor in transition.

His college path has been interrupted by back-to-back season-ending injuries - an ACL tear in 2024 and an Achilles injury in late 2025 - but the upside remains obvious. A former top-100 recruit, Reed has the physical tools to be a difference-maker on both ends, especially in the Big Ten.

With several important pieces from last year’s title team gone, Reed is expected to take on a major role right away. His ability to play as both a low-post option and a face-up forward gives Michigan more flexibility on offense, while Boynton’s emphasis on length, rim protection, and switching lines up neatly with Reed’s 6-foot-10, 245-pound frame.

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Michigan May Not Be Done Fighting For An Elite Corner Yet

Michigans cornerback board may still have some movement left, even after five-star Josh Dobson gave a verbal pledge to South Carolina. Dobson has made it clear his recruitment is not locked in yet, and until he signs officially, schools like Michigan can keep working to change the picture. That leaves the Wolverines with a live shot at one of the classs top defensive backs, even as they continue building elsewhere in the cycle.

There is also some momentum around the corners Michigan already has in the fold. Four-star commitment Monsanna Torbert is now helping the staff with another familiar name, high school teammate and four-star wide receiver Lorenzo McMullen Jr., while the Wolverines are also staying in the mix for Utah edge rusher Major Stokes in the 2028 class. Stokes has already come away impressed by his most recent visit to Ann Arbor, which gives Michigan another reason to keep its foot on the gas as this recruiting stretch keeps unfolding. [Read more 🡒]

Michigans Offensive Line Debate Could Turn On One Veteran

Evan Link is expected back in 2026 with a chance to shape one of Michigans biggest offseason questions up front. The veteran has already shown he can handle both tackle spots, and that kind of flexibility matters on a line still sorting out where everyone fits. His run-blocking ability gives him a real case to stay in the mix, even as the staff weighs how his skill set matches the rest of the group.

Links next move could hinge on how the Wolverines sort out the left side, where the competition is still open and the eventual answer may send one of the candidates inside. Michigan knows it has some pieces in place, but the final alignment remains unsettled, and Link sits right at the center of that debate as a player who could either anchor the edge or slide to guard depending on how the rest of the puzzle comes together. [Read more 🡒]