Semaj Morgan hears pundits saying Michigan will take a step back, using it as fuel

The media expects Ohio State and Oregon to be ahead of Michigan football in 2024. Wolverines WR Semaj Morgan doesn’t believe they will.

DETROIT — Usually when a team wins big, the expectations go through the roof. It doesn’t take a team winning a national championship for pundits and plaudits across college football to suddenly crown a new media darling.

Take Penn State in 2016. After winning the Big Ten — despite losing 49-10 to Michigan earlier in the year — the Nittany Lions became perennially ‘on the verge’ according to many in the media. Yet, they haven’t won the Big Ten again since and have yet to make it to the College Football Playoff.

So, when Michigan football won the national championship this past year, the media jumped on board and started to expect the Wolverines to repeat, right?

Wrong.

The excuse is that Michigan has to replace a lot, but Georgia lost the bulk of its team after winning back-to-back championships, and the Bulldogs were the favorites last year and will likely be the favorite again this year. Ohio State hasn’t won the conference since 2020, but it’s the favorite to win this year — much like it’s been the past three years.

Yes, Michigan has a new head coach in Sherrone Moore, but the expectation is that he’ll run the team like Jim Harbaugh and make the same decisions. However, the Wolverines have not gotten that same respect entering 2024, as many put them on the same level as the aforementioned Penn State Nittany Lions.

And if you think that has gone unnoticed within Schembechler Hall, think again.

“We feel it, but I don’t care for it. I ain’t never care what nobody says,” sophomore wide receiver Semaj Morgan told WolverinesWire. “But I really feel that we use it as fuel because we know everything that’s happening on the outside really don’t matter. Everything we do, everything we do every day, everything we put in, is what we gonna get out of it. So whatever they saying, they can keep saying it because we’re the ones actually there, doing the work, putting it in. believing in ourselves. That’s all it really takes — us believing in ourselves.”

There are two knocks on these Wolverines entering 2024, besides Sherrone Moore taking over for Jim Harbaugh — the unknowns at quarterback and wide receiver.

Though there is a lot of optimism surrounding Alex Orji as the potential starter this upcoming season, with Jack Tuttle and Davis Warren also being in the mix, there are more unknowns at wide receiver with Roman Wilson and Cornelius Johnson gone. But Morgan is confident in what he, Tyler Morris, Fred Moore, Amorion Walker, and C.J. Charleston bring to the table.

Fans might not be able to see it, nor the media, because they don’t get to see practice. But Morgan is sure that once the season comes, the passing game will be sure to impress.

“I believe in us, man. Everybody in the room is hungry, we all want to get better, we all want to win,” Morgan said. “We all got one goal, we all on one track. There’s nowhere else for us to go but up. I feel like it’s going to be special seeing what we can do this year and I love our room because we all hungry.”

It does make sense to doubt in the face of uncertainty, as the national media has. But Michigan was doubted all three years that it won the Big Ten and made the College Football Playoff. And while there may be faces who weren’t starters previously, they were (mostly) a part of the team that did end up just winning a national championship. And that does count for something.