Michigan Fans Will Hate This Bryce Underwood Pressure Narrative

As national media ramps up the pressure on freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood, it's crucial to remember that his career trajectory is still in its early stages despite high expectations and speculation.

Michigan quarterback Bryce Underwood knows what comes with the spotlight. When you arrive as a five-star, flip from LSU to sign with the Wolverines, and get treated like the next big thing, the noise starts before you ever take a snap.

Underwood added to that buzz himself, saying he was going to be the best freshman college football has ever seen. The reality of his first season looked a lot more like a young quarterback learning on the fly.

He averaged 218 total yards per game and finished with 11 touchdown passes, 17 total touchdowns and nine interceptions. There were moments that showed why the hype followed him, but there were plenty of growing pains, too.

That shouldn’t be surprising when you remember he had just turned 18 last season. A comparison to Dante Moore makes that point pretty clearly. Moore spent a season on the bench before eventually emerging as Oregon’s starter and a top NFL draft prospect.

Underwood doesn’t get that kind of runway. Michigan needs him on the field now, and it also brought in a new offensive coordinator in Jason Beck, who has a reputation as a QB guru. Underwood still has the kind of physical tools that make people believe he can become special.

That’s why USA Today Sports put his 2026 season on the make-or-break list, and it did the same for Beck. Underwood was listed behind Josh Hoover of Indiana and Sam Leavitt of LSU, even though his situation is different from both. He’s only entering his second season as a starter.

There’s no question 2026 matters for him. Michigan’s push for the College Football Playoff likely depends on Underwood making a real leap.

But calling it make-or-break already goes too far. He’s not draft eligible yet, and one uneven season does not decide his future.

Beck’s track record gives Michigan reason to believe the next step is coming. He did a stellar job developing Devon Dampier at Utah and also at New Mexico, though Dampier didn’t really break through until their second season together.

One change that should help is that Underwood is expected to run more in 2026. That should open up the offense and make life easier for him as a passer, too. Last season, Michigan tried to keep him in a box instead of letting him roam and make plays.

Beck will need to unlock that part of his game. The ranking makes sense in that light.

Underwood has to play well if Michigan wants to reach the Playoff. But if he doesn’t make a huge leap right away, that doesn’t mean the story is over.

He could improve a little in 2026, then take a big jump in 2027 as a junior. That kind of arc is hardly impossible. Arch Manning is the example being floated, with the idea that he struggled some in 2025 before looking ready for a breakout in 2026.

That’s the part national media often seems unwilling to sit with: quarterback development doesn’t move in a straight line.

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Michigans recruiting work in the Big Ten is sitting at No. 11 for now, but the broader takeaway is that the Wolverines no longer look like a team merely hoping to get in the mix for top corners. With a highly rated defensive back class already taking shape, there is a clear path for the group to keep climbing if the next wave of blue-chip commitments breaks the right way. [Read more 🡒]