John Henry Daley’s rise has been fast, violent and impossible to miss. A player who once spent two years on a church mission, redshirted at BYU and managed just four tackles in his first season at Utah is now walking into Michigan as one of the most important defenders in college football heading into 2026.
That leap came in a hurry. In 2025, the 6-foot-4, 255-pound edge rusher led the nation in tackles for loss before an Achilles rupture ended his season in late November.
He finished tied for the FBS lead with 17.5 tackles for loss, was second nationally with 11.5 sacks, and added 48 tackles along with two forced fumbles. The Walter Camp Football Foundation still named him a first-team All-American, and his numbers were elite even by national standards: 1.59 tackles for loss per game ranked third in the country, while his 1.05 sacks per game trailed only one player nationally.
Both marks led all returning FBS players for 2026.
The move to Michigan followed the coaching change that sent Kyle Whittingham from Utah to Ann Arbor after 21 seasons. Daley committed to the Wolverines on Jan. 8, reuniting with Whittingham, defensive coordinator Jay Hill and edge coach Lewis Powell. For Daley, the fit was obvious.
"You know what you get with Coach Whittingham, right? You know that you get discipline, you know that you get hard work, and we expect to win games. And that's something that I love," Daley said in March.
The only real question around Daley was the injury, and even that has sounded better and better as the offseason has gone on. He told reporters in the spring that he was aiming for June 1 to be a full participant in team activities.
"Physically, upper body-wise, I'm probably the best I've ever been in my life. Obviously, with regards to my injury, I'm coming along really well," Daley said.
"I'm starting to jog and run right now. I'm feeling fantastic, and everybody's very optimistic about it."
Whittingham later backed up that timeline in June. "He has attacked the rehab just like we expected him to," the Michigan coach said.
"That's just how he lives his life. He attacks everything."
Daley’s profile has only grown since then. ESPN put him on its way-too-early All-America team in February, and Whittingham explained why in simple terms.
"He's as hard a worker as you'll find," Whittingham said. "What makes him so good is his get-off. That's the No. 1 factor in becoming a great edge rusher."
Michigan is counting on that burst in a big way. The Wolverines went 9-4 in a chaotic 2025 that ended with Sherrone Moore’s firing and a 41-27 Citrus Bowl loss to Texas.
Then the defensive line took another hit when Derrick Moore, Jaishawn Barham and Rayshaun Benny left for the NFL Draft. Moore’s 10 sacks led the team, and nobody back on the roster comes close to matching that production.
Daley’s 11.5 sacks from last season are already one of the best single-season totals in Michigan history. Only three players in program history have posted more, and Aidan Hutchinson’s 14 in 2021 is the most recent benchmark above him.
That’s why Daley matters so much in Ann Arbor. If he plays anywhere near the level he showed at Utah, he becomes the centerpiece of Jay Hill’s aggressive defense and the most established defender on a roster that has to help protect sophomore quarterback Bryce Underwood through a brutal schedule that includes Oklahoma, Penn State, defending champion Indiana, road trips to Oregon and Ohio State, and a home game against Iowa.
Daley himself sounds like he’s treating 2025 as the baseline, not the peak.
"Obviously I had a great year last year, but I feel like that's really the floor, not the ceiling," he said. "And I plan on doing a lot better things going forward."
Michigan opens Whittingham’s first season against Western Michigan on Sept. 5 at 7:30 p.m. ET on NBC, and Daley is expected to be fully ready when fall camp begins.
In Other News...
BYU Just Got A Big 12 Reality Check Before The Season
The Big 12s decision to scrap its official preseason media poll has not stopped the guessing game, and the replacement version still gave the conference plenty to talk about. In an unofficial vote cast by 16 beat writers, Texas Tech came out on top with 14 first-place votes and 254 points, while BYU landed second, a sign that the Cougars are being viewed as one of the leagues early pace-setters even without the conferences formal endorsement.
For Utah fans, the more interesting part may be how these preseason snapshots keep feeding expectations before anyone has taken a snap. Kalani Sitake has long sounded wary of what summer rankings can mean, and he has been clear that the only thing his team can control is how it performs once the season starts, even as the broader College Football Playoff conversation continues to swirl around the Big 12. [Read more 🡒]
ESPN Just Sent BYU A Clear Message About Its 2026 Ceiling
The Big 12s place in the new 12-team College Football Playoff picture is starting to come into focus, and ESPNs Football Power Index paints a league with a couple of clear front-runners but not much margin for error behind them. Texas Tech and BYU sit atop the conference projections, which fits the broader view of a Big 12 that has not produced a national champion since 2014 and still has some ground to make up against the SEC and Big Ten in overall depth.
For Utah, the early read is encouraging enough to keep the playoff conversation alive, but not so strong that anything feels settled this far out. ESPN has the Utes in the mix behind the leagues top two contenders, and their standing underscores how crowded the middle of the Big 12 could be once the season starts to sort itself out. In a conference where the playoff path may be narrower than it looks, every weekly result is likely to matter. [Read more 🡒]
