Michigan football 2025 begins with six new captains and a home opener against New Mexico. Built on leadership and chemistry, the Wolverines enter the season chasing another Big Ten crown.
A handful of schools got their start in Week Zero, but August 30 is the real beginning. New Mexico comes to the Big House for a primetime slot on NBC and Peacock. Nobody is pretending it’s a playoff preview, but fans will still pack the place. Think of it as a live tune-up before Penn State’s whiteout, Oregon’s speed, and, of course, The Game.
The Wolverines’ 2025 season will lean on something familiar: the run game. Jordan Marshall looks ready for more carries, while Justice Haynes arrives from Alabama with fresh energy and speed.
And then there’s Max Bredeson. He doesn’t get the headlines as a tight end that serves as a Fullback, but he might set the tone more than anyone. His blocking, his leadership — teammates notice. Coaches say the backs operate more like a brotherhood than a position group. That matters when you’re trying to grind out wins in November.
Michigan named six captains this year: Max Bredeson, Rod Moore, Giovanni El-Hadi, Ernest Hausmann, Marlin Klein, and Derrick Moore.
Bredeson and Rod Moore join rare company as two-time captains. Moore, coming back from a knee injury, earned that respect by staying engaged when he couldn’t play. Hausmann, the Nebraska transfer, is just the second outsider ever to earn a Michigan “C.” That tells you plenty.
Add in El-Hadi on the line, Klein in the tight end room, and Derrick Moore off the edge, and you’ve got every corner of the roster covered. Honestly, it feels like the most balanced captain group since 2021.
The Michigan season outlook depends on whether the wideouts can finally catch up to the run game. Tyler Morris and Darrius Clemons have had moments, but moments aren’t enough. Coaches are drilling the same thing: win contested catches, play fast, demand the ball.
This is also year one with new play-callers. Chip Lindsey (Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks) brings tempo and creativity. Steve Casula (Co-Offensive Coordinator/Tight Ends) provides continuity. Together, they want defenses to guess more often.
If it works, the Wolverines’ offense won’t just bludgeon opponents on the ground. It’ll stretch them. That’s the kind of balance Michigan hasn’t consistently shown in years.
The opener against New Mexico isn’t about the scoreboard. It’s about the details. Are there false starts? Missed assignments? Bad tackling? If so, it’ll be a long fall.
The Wolverines’ 2025 campaign will be judged in October and November. Oregon, Penn State, Washington, Ohio State — those games define the season. But this first glimpse will tell us whether the extra bye week was a blessing or wasted time.
Ask anyone in Ann Arbor what really matters, and they’ll tell you the same thing: November. That won’t change in 2025.
Still, this team looks built for another run. The backfield trusts each other. The captain group is as steady as it’s been in years. And the offense, finally, feels like it has a few surprises.
The Wolverines’ season story won’t be written against New Mexico. But it starts there — under the lights, in front of 100,000 at the Big House, with the rest of the Big Ten watching.
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