Michigan’s passing game is getting a makeover in 2026, and fans already have a pretty clear favorite for who will finish on top in receiving yards.
With new head coach Kyle Whittingham and company adding help around Bryce Underwood, the Wolverines have more options than they did a year ago. Andrew Marsh is back, and Michigan also brought in JJ Buchanan and Salesi Moa from Utah, along with Jaime Ffrench from Texas through the transfer portal. That gives the offense a deeper receiver room, but in the minds of most fans, one name still stands above the rest.
Sophomore wideout Andrew Marsh ran away with Monday’s poll, pulling in 80 percent of the vote. After the way he finished last season, that reaction makes sense.
Marsh played in 13 games and posted 45 catches for 651 yards and four touchdowns. He didn’t start fast, but by the end of the year, he had become the receiver everyone was talking about.
SonicsAaron put it bluntly: “The answer is obvious. It’s Marsh. No one else will come close to his production, I assure you.”
GideonC was just as confident: “Marsh 🥇 WR1 … until proven otherwise.”
Buchanan finished second in the voting at 11 percent, and he brings a résumé that suggests he can be a dependable piece of the offense. In his freshman season at Utah in 2025, he caught 26 passes for 427 yards and five touchdowns. Even if most fans don’t see him as the yards leader, there’s still a belief he can become one of Underwood’s most trusted targets in 2026.
MIandTRUMBULL saw it that way too: “Marsh in yards but Buchanan in TD Recs. I think we’ll pass more in the Red Zone and JJ is a prime target. Passing game will be more explosive and better schemed, but I don’t think that necessarily means a lot more attempts.”
Ffrench drew five percent of the vote, and his case is a different one. At Texas, he played in four games and caught one pass for six yards, so the production isn’t there yet.
But he arrived with elite recruiting credentials and is still expected to chip in this season. If defenses focus on Marsh and Buchanan, that could create room for Ffrench to work into the mix.
Spinsynco explained the appeal this way: “…I thought and voted French because of his TE qualities to get open in space short yardage but will probably be a third down and td threat. More so than deep yardage or long routes.”
Moa got the fewest votes, landing at four percent, but the long-term upside is obvious. A freshman and a Top 50 player nationally, he was also the No. 1 player in Utah in this recruiting class. The talent is there for him to become a major part of Michigan’s passing game down the road, just not enough people expect that leap to happen this fall.
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