Every offseason brings a fresh wave of buzz, and Michigan is loaded with players heading into 2026 who have a real chance to turn that hype into production. Some names come with more noise than substance. These five Wolverines feel different.
Savion Hiter sits at the top of that list. It’s a lot to call any true freshman close to a lock before he’s played a collegiate snap, but everything coming out of Ann Arbor has pointed in one direction.
Kyle Whittingham has praised Hiter’s size, contact balance, vision, receiving ability and willingness to pick up blitzes, and he has gone as far as saying Hiter will have a “major role” from the opening game. That kind of language matters.
So does the roster setup around him. Jordan Marshall is already established as the lead back, which should let Hiter ease into a complementary role instead of being asked to carry the load right away.
The result could be a freshman who becomes an immediate difference-maker and one of the Big Ten’s most productive newcomers.
John Henry Daley is a different kind of hype case, because the question isn’t talent so much as health. The former Utah star spent much of the offseason recovering from an Achilles injury, and that naturally raises the issue of what he’ll look like once the season starts.
But the confidence around him is real. Whittingham recruited and coached Daley, so he knows exactly what he’s getting when Daley is right.
Michigan doesn’t need a perfect replica of the 11.5-sack season he posted a year ago, but if he’s close to that level, the Wolverines get the edge presence they badly need and the ceiling of the defensive line climbs with him.
J.J. Buchanan may not be drawing the loudest offseason chatter, but he has a strong case to become one of Michigan’s most productive pass catchers.
The former Utah receiver put up 427 yards and five touchdowns last season as a true freshman, and he did it while playing a smaller role than the one he should have in Ann Arbor. He also already knows Jason Beck’s offense, which gives him a built-in advantage over the rest of the receiver room.
Bryce Underwood and Andrew Marsh have taken much of the attention, but Buchanan has the skill set to settle in as an excellent No. 2 option.
Salesi Moa has been one of the biggest freshman talking points all offseason, and for good reason. His one-handed spring game grab turned heads, but the praise hasn’t stopped there.
Position coach Micah Simon has already said Moa will see the field this season, and Whittingham has continued to talk up his upside. Michigan’s receiver room is deep, but Moa still looks ready to claim a real role, which says plenty about how the staff views him.
Jyaire Hill rounds out the group, and he might be the most intriguing name of all. His sophomore season wasn’t clean.
There were stretches against top competition where he struggled, and he didn’t always match the expectations that followed him into last year. Still, he finished with an interception, five pass breakups and a completion percentage allowed just above 53 percent.
The signs of growth are there, too. Hill has landed on multiple preseason watchlists, and advanced metrics continue to show him as one of the Big Ten’s steadier corners.
Add in another year of experience, a new defensive staff and more talent around him in the secondary, and he looks set up to put everything together. By the end of the season, he could be mentioned among the conference’s best cornerbacks.
In Other News...
Michigan Just Pulled Off A Pro Pipeline Feat No School Could Match
Michigans latest pro pipeline snapshot says plenty about how wide the schools reach has become. In the same year, Wolverines were taken in the NFL, NBA and NHL drafts, with six football players hearing their names called, three basketball players going in the top 12 and three more skating into the NHL draft mix across multiple rounds.
It comes in a year of sharp contrasts across Ann Arbor, where the basketball program celebrated a national title and the hockey team added a Big Ten crown before its NCAA Tournament run ended in double overtime against Denver. Even with the upheaval around the program, Michigan keeps sending talent to the next level in a way few schools can touch, and the only real question now is how long this kind of across-the-board momentum can last. [Read more 🡒]
Michigan Just Landed A Recruiting Win Fans Will Absolutely Love
Michigans latest recruiting surge brought in a pair of defenders who fit the programs identity in different ways, starting with four-star Cincinnati cornerback Monsanna Torbert. His commitment adds another talented piece to the secondary and gives the Wolverines a win on a board where relationships and fit clearly mattered, with Torbert pointing to the people around the program and the environment in Ann Arbor as major factors in his decision.
Weston Ports pledge adds another layer to the day, since the three-star linebacker had already been through a winding recruiting path before Michigan got involved. Alex Whittinghams outreach helped reopen the conversation, and the Wolverines saw enough in Port to keep pressing for a player they believe can help in the middle of the defense, leaving Michigan with a class that keeps trending in a direction fans will notice. [Read more 🡒]
Micah Simon Faces Huge Pressure To Fix Michigans Passing Game
Micah Simon arrives at Michigan with a background that should matter to a program trying to sharpen its passing game. A former professional wide receiver who has coached at New Mexico and Utah, Simon brings both the viewpoint of a player and the habits of a teacher, and the Wolverines are counting on that blend as he takes over a receiver room that needs more consistency and more production.
His first major assignments are already clear: helping Andrew Marsh clean up the details that separate good routes from dependable ones, while finding the best way to deploy JJ Buchanan, the Utah transfer with the size and flexibility to create problems in a few different spots. Simons track record suggests he can develop talent, but Michigan still has to see whether that experience translates quickly enough to give the passing game the lift it has been missing. [Read more 🡒]
