Michigan Athletic Director Warde Manuel is set to address a wide range of issues in a sit-down interview with The Michigan Insider on Tuesday morning, with his future at the school among the biggest questions hanging over the conversation.
The interview is scheduled to begin at approximately 9 a.m., and Manuel is expected to discuss the looming end of a third-party investigation into the athletic department, his own status as athletic director, and the promotion of Mike Boynton Jr. to replace Dusty May as men’s basketball coach.
The backdrop is a turbulent stretch for Manuel. Earlier this year, CBS described his run this way: "Warde Manuel has managed more institutional turbulence than most athletic directors see in a career.
A sign-stealing investigation. The arrest and firing of his football coach.
A national basketball championship. A rejected private-equity bid.
An Amazon streaming deal that sparked tensions within the conference."
CBS Sports also reported earlier this week that Manuel "finds his own tenure in jeopardy following an investigation into the culture of the Wolverines' athletics department," a review that was set in motion by U-M’s Board of Regents. The board hired Jenner & Block to conduct an independent investigation after the Sherrone Moore scandal, and University President Domenico Grasso said in a statement that the review would also include "an independent evaluation of culture, conduct and procedures throughout our athletics department."
The findings are expected this week, though it remains unclear how much of the report will be made public. Michigan has a Board of Regents meeting scheduled for Thursday, but neither the investigation nor Manuel’s future is currently listed as a topic on the agenda.
Manuel’s interview will be available on the YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter channels, as well as on thebig1050.com.
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For Michigan, the frustration is less about missing on a random target and more about watching a player it evaluated repeatedly head to a rival program with momentum. Taylors path included a strong previous season, a heavy dose of offseason showcase attention, and a recruiting process that drew visits from several Big Ten schools before Nebraska landed his commitment. The Wolverines have since moved on with their own 2027 quarterback work, but Taylor is the kind of name that can linger if he keeps climbing. [Read more 🡒]
