Michigan’s spring game gave fans a fresh look at Tommy Carr, but the backup quarterback race for 2026 may still tilt toward the more seasoned option.
Carr, a true freshman and three-star prospect, made the most of his extended run in the Wolverines’ 2026 spring game. With sophomore Bryce Underwood limited to the first quarter, Carr handled the rest of the afternoon and finished 21-of-30 for 143 yards while adding 67 rushing yards.
He had already been turning heads in spring practice, but the spring game was the first real chance for everyone else to see why. The grandson of legendary coach Lloyd Carr suddenly looked like a much bigger part of Michigan’s future than many expected.
Still, Carr’s breakout moment came with one important caveat: transfer quarterback Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi wasn’t on campus yet.
Fowler-Nicolosi brings a very different resume. The former Colorado State quarterback has been around the college game for a while, with 6,938 passing yards and 38 touchdowns in his career, most of that production coming in 2023 and 2024.
He was benched after just three starts in 2025, but his experience and arm talent still make him a strong candidate to be a dependable backup at a Power 4 program. Michigan should also be able to get more out of him with better coaching.
His name is already familiar to college football fans for reasons beyond the box score. In 2024, before Colorado State faced Colorado, Fowler-Nicolosi said the Buffaloes were in for a “rude awakening.” After Colorado won, Shedeur Sanders did not shake his hand.
Michigan has been down this road before. Last season, the Wolverines believed they had a similar safety net in Mikey Keene, an experienced quarterback who could back up Underwood.
Injuries took him out of the picture, and that may have influenced how aggressively Michigan handled Underwood during the year. This time, the staff appears to have two healthy options with real upside in Carr and Fowler-Nicolosi.
Carr has the momentum of the spring game on his side. He looked poised, moved through his reads smoothly, and showed he could throw on time and on target while also taking off and running when needed.
At points, he looked like the quarterback with a year of college experience already behind him. That said, the setting mattered.
The spring game was controlled, calm, and largely played against second-, third-, and fourth-string defenders. There’s still no way to know how he’ll hold up when the speed and pressure ramp up.
Fowler-Nicolosi, meanwhile, has already logged 28 career starts. Even with a rough finish in 2025, he has been productive before and has the kind of track record that usually matters most if the starter has to miss time. If Underwood is unavailable, Michigan likely can’t afford to gamble on someone less proven.
Carr may have done enough to change the conversation around his future in Ann Arbor, and he could be a bigger part of the program’s long-term plans than many realized. For 2026, though, the safer bet is that he keeps developing as the No. 3 quarterback while Fowler-Nicolosi handles backup duties behind Underwood.
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