Michigan’s 2026 season has plenty of moving parts, but few players carry more uncertainty than Rod Moore.
That’s why the sixth-year senior safety lands at No. 17 in the Wolverines’ annual countdown of the most important players for the upcoming fall. Moore’s case is simple enough: if he gets back to something close to his old form, Michigan could have one of its most valuable defenders back in the mix. If not, the Wolverines will keep moving without him.
Moore’s 2025 season was a brief one. After missing all of 2024 while rehabbing multiple knee surgeries, he returned for three games and 86 snaps, making one start.
He finished with six tackles and one interception, while also missing two tackles and giving up two catches for 35 yards on three targets in coverage. He then shut things down again to preserve a redshirt and had an operation in January to remove scar tissue.
He did not take part in spring practices.
The optimism around Moore is real, though it comes with obvious caution. Moore said last month that he feels the "best I've felt since March 27, 2024.
That's the exact day I tore my ACL." Safeties coach Tyler Stockton was even more direct: "My expectation of Rod is being one of the best safeties in the country.
We're going to fight day in and day out to make sure he is healthy, which he's been doing an unbelievable job (of)."
Michigan appears to believe Moore will be cleared well before fall camp, which would at least give him a normal runway instead of trying to catch up in the middle of the season. That’s a better setup than last summer, when the expectations were far less defined.
Still, nobody is pretending this is a sure thing. Moore has gone through three surgeries and played just three games since 2023, and that alone makes him one of the hardest players on the roster to project.
Before the injuries, he was a high-IQ, physical safety with the movement skills to handle himself in coverage, and he was regarded as one of the best safeties in the country. Even if he never fully gets back to that exact version of himself, there’s still a path for him to matter in a safety room that includes Mason Curtis, Chris Bracy and others.
That uncertainty is what kept Moore from climbing higher in the rankings. If he returns healthy and wins a starting job, he probably belongs well above No.
- He has the experience, the versatility and the captaincy to matter, and he was a starter for most of Michigan’s 40-3 run from 2021-23 for a reason.
But the gap between possibility and proof is still wide enough to keep him outside the top 15.
The fan vote reflected that split. Moore finished 15th among subscribers, but the range was all over the map: four top-three votes, a spot on exactly one-third of ballots’ top 10s, and no mention at all on 41.7 percent of ballots. He was one of the most polarizing players in the entire exercise.
Some voters were all-in. "To me, Rod Moore is the only contender for that #1 spot," wrote Ap6766, who placed him second.
"Last season, playing at 75% he was head and shoulders our best safety on the field. His first 3 years, He was legendary status good.
Now let's see if he still is…I know I'm not overlooking this man who has been overlooked his entire life."
Others were far more guarded. Jim, who had Moore at 25th, wrote: "Likelihood to start or play significant minutes was the main factor along with physical abilities and chances the player will be able to fulfill those aspirations.
Since Rod Moore is only a hopeful, he was placed at #25. UM has lived without him for so long, he would be a highly welcomed luxury, at this point."
For now, Moore sits in the middle of Michigan’s 2026 picture: potentially huge, definitely uncertain, and impossible to ignore.
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