Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel didn’t just hand the men’s basketball job to Mike Boynton Jr. because the timing made sense. He did it because he believes Boynton has already shown enough to deserve the shot - and enough left to prove he should keep it.
Manuel promoted Boynton Jr. to replace Dusty May on a two-year deal earlier this month, turning to an internal option after Boynton spent the previous two seasons as an assistant under May. The 44-year-old arrives with head-coaching mileage, too: he went 119-109 over seven seasons at Oklahoma State.
On Tuesday, Manuel told The Michigan Insider that the short contract is designed to give Boynton a runway to prove himself.
The goal, Manuel said, is to let Boynton "show what he can do, given what he did at Oklahoma State in terms of record" and "earn that extra year, and maybe another contract."
That experience mattered to Manuel, especially because Boynton has already been through plenty in a head chair. Manuel pointed to the challenges Boynton faced at Oklahoma State, including an FBI investigation into the program that started before his tenure.
"He recruits the No. 1 player in the country, who happens to be down the street with the Pistons, Cade Cunningham. And then COVID hits in that season," Manuel recounted.
"And so all of this, you look at it and you say, he's got that experience, he's sat in that seat. We have him here."
Manuel also drew a direct line to a move he once made at UConn. When longtime coach Jim Calhoun retired in 2012, Manuel elevated assistant Kevin Ollie to the top job on a one-year deal. UConn went on to win the 2013-14 NCAA title under Ollie, who later received a long-term extension.
"I believe in Mike, and the contract was written in a way to show that I believe in Mike, but to also showcase his ability to earn it long-term, and not just sort of step into the seat," Manuel said. "And I believe he will, personally."
Boynton’s case wasn’t built only on résumé lines or contract structure. Manuel said Dusty May and several Michigan players made their support clear before the hire was finalized.
When May left for the Dallas Mavericks job, he told Manuel about Boynton Jr.s' "input and his involvement in the success of this team, and how great he was to have on his staff and how great of a commitment he made to making Michigan great."
The players echoed that message. Manuel said he heard from four of them directly, along with a couple of texts from others, and the feedback was overwhelmingly positive.
"To a person, the players loved him. And I spoke with four of them directly, had a couple of texts from different players.
And just were effusive about him - about the staff, but specifically about him," Manuel said. "And then it shows up in the commitments that they made.
First starting with Trey [McKenney], and then Elliot [Cadeau], and then on down the line, the commitments that they have made to want to stay and play for him."
That support has already shown up in the roster picture. Michigan brought in the nation's No. 2-ranked incoming class this offseason, and all nine members have re-committed to the program under Boynton Jr. As of Tuesday, only guard LJ Cason planned to enter the Transfer Portal after May’s departure.
Boynton’s promotion gives Michigan an internal answer, but Manuel’s comments made clear the hire is about more than continuity. It’s a bet on a coach who has already been tested, already earned trust inside the building, and now gets the chance to turn that trust into something longer term.
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The timing made his comments especially combustible because this is not just about one coaching change. Fans have been upset about the handling of Mays situation, including the extension that was announced after the season but never signed, and Manuels public defense of himself only adds another layer to the tension. For a fan base already looking for answers, the interview did little to calm the temperature. [Read more 🡒]
