Michigan missed on one of the biggest prizes left in the 2027 class on Wednesday, with five-star cornerback Josh Dobson choosing South Carolina over the Wolverines and Texas A&M.
Dobson, a 6-foot-1, 185-pound defensive back from Cornelius, North Carolina, sits at No. 12 overall in the Rivals Industry Rankings, which puts him among the most sought-after players in the cycle no matter the position.
The Wolverines made a real push. Dobson visited Ann Arbor more than once, including an official visit during the weekend of June 12, when he was on campus after LSU was removed from his official visit list. That gave Michigan’s new staff a chance to sell him face-to-face and make its case.
In the end, though, South Carolina appears to have had the strongest financial pitch. According to On3’s Pete Nakos ($), “sources have said the Gamecocks are willing to go as high as $1.5 million to land (Dobson).” Nakos also said he spoke with an SEC front office staffer who told him, “South Carolina has not been messing around (with NIL).”
For Michigan, the loss hurts, but the cornerback room in this class still has plenty of depth. The Wolverines already have commitments from five defensive backs: four-star cornerbacks Monsanna Torbert, Blake Jenkins and Darius Johnson, four-star nickel/safety Tavares Harrington and three-star safety Charles Woodson Jr.
Kyle Whittingham and company will now shift to the remaining targets as the early signing period approaches, though Michigan is still expected to keep after Dobson all the way until he puts pen to paper in December.
In Other News...
Michigan Just Got A New Twist In The Matthew Weiss Case
A federal judge has given Matthew Weiss a partial win in the case that has hovered over Michigan football for months, narrowing what investigators can use as the former coordinator prepares to fight a sprawling set of charges. Weiss is accused of unauthorized access and aggravated identity theft tied to allegations that he hacked into student-athletes accounts, and the case now moves forward with one of the key battlegrounds centered on how the evidence was gathered.
The ruling leaves Michigan waiting to see how much of the broader record will still matter when the case reaches trial. Weiss still faces a serious federal exposure if convicted, and the calendar is already set with a September 22, 2025 start date, giving both sides a long runway before the next major turn in a saga that has already added another uncomfortable chapter for the program. [Read more 🡒]
Michigan Just Sent Indiana A Huge 2026 Message
Michigans 2026 path already looks like one of the leagues toughest, with Oklahoma, Indiana and Ohio State all stacked into a schedule that could shape both the Big Ten race and the broader Playoff picture. For a program that expects to be in the mix every year, that kind of late-season gauntlet leaves little room for a slow start, and it puts even more attention on how Bryce Underwood handles the pressure points that tripped him up in past high-profile matchups.
Indiana sits in the middle of that stretch as the game that could tell the story of Michigans season. If the Wolverines arrive there still in contention, the meeting with the reigning national champions becomes a major test of staying power, especially after a brutal run through Penn State and Oklahoma. And if the Big Ten title market is any indication, Michigan is already being treated like a team with something to prove before the calendar even turns to November. [Read more 🡒]
