Michigan Wolverines Preview 2022: Season Prediction, Breakdown, Key Games, Players

Michigan College Football Preview 2022: Team breakdown, season prediction, keys to the campaign, and what you need to know

Michigan Wolverines Preview 2022: Previewing, predicting, and looking ahead to the Michigan season with what you need to know and keys to the season.


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Michigan Wolverines Preview
Head Coach: Jim Harbaugh, 8th year at Michigan, 61-24
16th year overall, 119-51, 2021 Preview
2021 Record: Overall: 12-2, Conference: 8-1
Offense, Defense Breakdown | Keys To The Season
Season Prediction, What Will Happen
Michigan Top 10 Players | Michigan Schedule & Analysis

Michigan Wolverines Preview 2022

It was the right thing to say if you’re Jim Harbaugh and your wonderful breakthrough season just hit a brick wall against the eventual national champion.

The line after losing to Georgia 34-11 in the Orange Bowl was that this was all just the beginning.

Beating Ohio State, winning the Big Ten Championship, going to the College Football Playoff – that’s all supposed to be expected at Michigan, and for a long time that seemed just out of reach.

The 2018 team was right there until Ohio State hung 62 on the board. The 2016 team was in the mix, too, until the Buckeyes had other ideas, and the 2015 version would’ve at least gone into the final weekend against that team from Columbus – forgetting the 42-13 loss – with a shot at big things had the roof not caved in against Michigan State.

So yes and no. 2021 might not have been the beginning because – for what Michigan was able to do – the program has at least seen the base camp near the top of the mountain only to have Ohio State blocking the path. But yes, that has to be the start of Michigan not only doing all of that again, but taking it further.

Last year might have shown what Michigan is capable of, but it also proved that it doesn’t yet have it to be among the Alabamas, and the other seasonal SEC superstars, and the Ohio States as a true annual threat.

Cincinnati got to the College Football Playoff, too.

Yeah, the team had a great no-panic style, amazing defense, tough attitude for the ground game, and an overall even keel, and …

Ohio State was a wee bit down, at least defensively.

Everything has to align perfectly for just about everyone but Alabama to get into the College Football Playoff, but because it’s Michigan, and Harbaugh, and that most self-congratulatory of Leaders and Best programs it’s always going to be under more scrutiny.

Combine all of the factors of being Michigan with the real world reality that Harbaugh would be in the NFL right now if the league didn’t pivot to the lowball cheap for its head coaches, and the team is in more about a refresh than a launching point.

And that’s okay – for now.

Ohio State went from being miserable and grouchy about everything to being miserable and grouchy about everything and ultra-motivated.

The pressure is all on that side, meaning Harbaugh gets a wee bit of a free pass for the first time in his era. He proved he could beat Ohio State, and he proved he could take Michigan to the big-time – he proved it really is possible.

Now it’s his angle to put together another strong team with new coordinators and a whole slew of new parts, all while letting Ohio State press on through the unrelenting weight and 24/7 obsession of having to live with the stain of a loss to That Team Up North.

The Wolverine fan base obviously wants to win every year – and Harbaugh had better beat Michigan State this time around – but for this one season, the program can bask a little bit.

Michigan is in a nice spot. It’s going to be good, the monkeys are off all the backs for the time being, and the schedule works out really, really, really well to gear back up for a relatively-speaking-compared-to-the-other-powers under-the-radar good season.

In other words, whatever. You’re Michigan. Do it again.

Offense, Defense Breakdown | Keys To The Season
Season Prediction, What Will Happen
Michigan Top 10 Players | Michigan Schedule & Analysis

Michigan Wolverines Preview 2022: Offense, Defense Breakdown NEXT

Michigan Wolverines Top 10 Players: College Football Preview 2022

Who are the top 10 Michigan players going into the 2022 college football season?

Michigan Wolverines Preview 2022: Who are the top 10 players going into the season?


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

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Michigan Wolverines Preview
Michigan Preview | Offense, Defense Breakdown
Keys To The Season | Michigan Schedule & Analysis
Season Prediction, What Will Happen 

Michigan Wolverines: CFN College Football Preview 2021

College Football News Preview 2021: Previewing, predicting, and looking ahead to the Michigan season with what you need to know.

College Football News Preview 2021: Previewing, predicting, and looking ahead to the Michigan season with what you need to know.


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

– What You Need To Know: Offense | Defense
Top Players | Keys To The Season
What Will Happen, Win Total Prediction
Michigan Schedule Analysis
– Michigan Wolverines Previews
2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015

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2020 Record: 2-4 overall, 2-4 in Big Ten
Head Coach: Jim Harbaugh, 7th year, 49-22 (78-43 overall)
2020 CFN Final Ranking: 54
2020 CFN Preview Ranking: 10
2019 CFN Final Ranking: 26

Michigan Wolverines College Football Preview 2021: Offense

The O just couldn’t find a groove. It’s been one of the strangest aspects to the Jim Harbaugh era that the guy who came into the gig as a brilliant quarterback coach hasn’t been able to get dominant play out of his passing game – more on that in the Keys To The Season – and last year everything sputtered and coughed.

The passing attack wasn’t awful – it averaged 250 yards per game – but it wasn’t consistent, the O as a whole averaged just 382 yards and 28 points per game, and there wasn’t enough consistent production. It couldn’t move the chains, couldn’t control the clock, and it at times the whole thing just stopped.

However …

The offensive line was a plus. Michigan led the Big Ten with the fewest tackles for loss allowed per game, and the pass protection was more than good enough.

In some configuration, four starters are expected back. There weren’t any top all-stars in the bunch – OT Andrew Stueber received an honorable mention All-Big Ten nod – but that’s going to change this time around. There’s enough depth and versatility to play around with the starting five.

Zach Charbonnet left for UCLA, but 220-pound senior Hassan Haskins was the best back of the bunch averaging over six yards per carry with six touchdowns. The ground game should have a strong rotation with Blake Corum a talented enough back to get the ball more in a variety of ways.

And then there’s …

The quarterback situation. Harbaugh has yet to get this quite right, but once again there are a slew of talented options ready to give it a go.

Joe Milton is a Tennessee Volunteer now, and Dylan McCaffrey is long gone to Northern Colorado. That leaves Cade McNamara as the main man after hitting 61% of his passes for 425 yards and five touchdowns.

However, because it’s Michigan and it’s always complicated, in comes Alan Bowman from Texas Tech. He’s the triggerman who can make the passing game go … when he’s healthy. Staying in one piece was his issue in Lubbock, but if the guy who hit 67% of his throws over three seasons for well over 5,000 yards and 33 touchdowns lights it up in fall camp, this will get fun.

The receivers are fine. They’re experienced – three of the top four wideouts return, only losing 15-catch Giles Jackson to the transfer portal – and they were able to make big things happen when the quarterbacks could actually get them the ball. Ronnie Bell and Cornelius Johnson each averaged over 15 yards per grab.

– What You Need To Know: Defense
Top Players | Keys To The Season
What Will Happen, Win Total Prediction
Michigan Schedule Analysis

NEXT: Michigan Wolverines College Football Preview 2021: Defense