Michigan’s 2026 freshman class has plenty of names that already have fans buzzing, but one of the quieter additions could end up forcing his way into the conversation fast.
Five-star signees Savion Hiter and Carter Meadows are the obvious headliners among the freshmen expected to matter right away. Hiter stood out in spring ball, looked sharp in the spring game, and has already earned strong praise from Michigan football head coach Kyle Whittingham. Meadows, who arrived this summer, is already nearly 270 pounds and looks like a rare kind of edge rusher, the sort of player who could become one of the Wolverines’ best pass rushers since Aidan Hutchinson.
But freshman defensive lineman Titan Davis has a chance to carve out a bigger role than people might expect.
Davis, a 6-foot-4, 275-pound lineman, picked Michigan over Alabama after a high school career in St. Louis that produced 27.5 tackles for loss and 18.5 sacks. He may not draw the same attention as Hiter, Meadows, or even receiver Salesi Moa, but his path to early playing time looks real.
Michigan has depth inside with Trey Pierce, Enow Etta, and Jonah Lea'ea, the Utah transfer expected to be one of the team’s top interior defensive linemen. Deyvid Palepale is another name who could emerge this season. Even with that group in place, Davis has the kind of disruptive ability that can be hard to keep off the field.
He comes in as the No. 95 overall recruit in the 2026 class, and that kind of backfield disruption doesn’t always show up immediately in college. Still, the comparison point is there: players like Mason Graham and Kenneth Grant made that leap early, and Davis has the traits to follow a similar path, even if he isn’t at that level right away.
With Meadows, McHale Blade, and Alister Vallejo also in the mix, Michigan’s 2026 defensive line class could leave a mark quickly. The Wolverines need another high-end player to develop up front, and Davis looks like a strong candidate to become that guy.
CBS Sports also highlighted Davis as one of Michigan’s freshmen to watch, and the description was hard to miss:
"One of the most instinctive bullies in this 2026 class for the Wolverines, Davis has the frame, athleticism, and football IQ to contribute earlier than most freshmen, especially from a rotational sense. However, being a summer enrollee may alter that timeline a bit. The Wolverines won't need him to be a star immediately, but his blend of toughness and athletic upside could earn him meaningful snaps in Year 1."
In Other News...
Michigan May Have Finally Found The Instant Impact Receiver It Needed
Michigan spent the spring looking for a receiver who could change the feel of the offense, and Salesi Moa has quickly become the name to watch. The five-star prospect arrived after initially signing with Utah, then finding a new path to Ann Arbor when his situation changed, and the Wolverines are treating him like a player who can help sooner rather than later. Coaches have been upbeat about what he brings, and the expectation is that he will line up at wide receiver and factor into the offense this season.
The intriguing part for Michigan is where Moa fits in a room that already has established options ahead of him. Depth chart projections have him behind two starters, but still in position to be a meaningful target and push for a bigger role as the season unfolds. For a team that has been searching for more instant impact at receiver, Moa is the kind of addition that can make the rest of the offense look a little more dangerous, even before the full picture of his role comes into focus. [Read more 🡒]
Former Michigan Forward Will Tschetter Just Got A Huge NBA Chance
Will Tschetters next step comes with a real NBA opening attached, as the former Michigan forward has landed a Summer League contract with the Portland Trail Blazers. The move gives him a chance to get on the floor in Las Vegas and show why his shooting and steady approach made him such a useful piece in Ann Arbor, where he grew from a redshirt prospect into a dependable rotation player.
For Tschetter, this is the kind of opportunity that can change the conversation quickly. Portland sees him as a possible stretch-four who can help with spacing and depth, and now he gets his first formal shot to make a case for more than just a summer look, with a roster spot or camp invitation potentially in play if he can translate his game to the pro level. [Read more 🡒]
