Ohio State fans have found a fresh offseason rabbit hole, and it centers on Michigan quarterback Bryce Underwood.
The latest theory making the rounds says the Wolverines are already looking past Underwood and eyeing Utah senior Devon Dampier for 2027. The speculation ties into a proposed five-in-five rule change from the Division I Cabinet, which could give Dampier a fifth year of eligibility.
According to the rumor, former Utah and current TTUN play-caller Jason Beck told Dampier’s father to have his son apply for that extra year and then transfer to Ann Arbor. The claim was posted by Message Board Geniuses and may not have any truth to it at all.
Still, the idea has taken hold because the connections are there. Beck and Kyle Whittingham have a relationship with Dampier after winning 11 games together in the 2025 season in Salt Lake City. Michigan’s tie to Underwood is much shakier, especially since he was brought in before the last Wolverines offensive coordinator, Chip Lindsey, was even hired.
That’s why the rumor feels just plausible enough to keep spinning. Underwood’s spring game only added fuel to the fire, with the quarterback finishing 8-for-18 for 63 yards and an interception. It wasn’t the kind of outing that calms anyone down, and for Michigan, it only sharpened the questions hanging over the offense.
None of this guarantees disaster for the Maize and Blue, but the warning signs are easy to spot. Quarterbacks and coaching staffs do not always click, and when that happens, the whole plan can start to wobble fast.
For Ohio State, the timing could make all of this even more interesting. When the Buckeyes host Michigan at the “Shoe,” they may have a chance to push Underwood’s run in Ann Arbor toward an ugly ending.
By Week 13, the Wolverines could be staring at a one-win miss on the CFP if they lose to Ohio State. If things unravel sooner, the damage could be even worse.
And if Underwood is still out there by the time “The Game” arrives, the Buckeyes could make life miserable again with a second straight pounding. That would leave Underwood looking for answers, and maybe looking elsewhere. The article even points to the LSU Tigers as a more appealing destination under Lane Kiffin, while also raising the possibility of a battle with fellow 2025 recruit Husan Longstreet for the starting job.
For now, though, the bigger story is the growing sense that Underwood’s Michigan tenure could end with more noise than celebration. Instead of a Heisman push in his sophomore year, the conversation is drifting toward rumors and doubt.
Ohio State, meanwhile, feels steady. Michigan does not. The Buckeyes have little reason to worry about an intimidating rival in 2026, and that’s exactly why this conspiracy is landing so well in Columbus.
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