Wisconsin recruiting comparison: Michigan

Recruiting relative to Michigan

National Signing Day has come and gone and the Wisconsin Badgers have put together a fairly decent class compared to the rest of the Big Ten. In the spirit of looking at recruiting classes compared to the rest of the conference, Badgers Wire is taking a look at Wisconsin’s class on a national level and a conference level. We’ll be including their national rankings and their conference rankings. Second on the Badgers Wire list is a look at one of the conference’s other premier programs, the Michigan Wolverines. 

A solid though not spectacular standard of recruiting has been established by the Michigan Wolverines. That said, the program has a lot to sell (albeit not from the past 12 years). The Wolverines have more wins than any other team in the history of college football. They also have 11 national titles, five unclaimed titles, and 83 consensus All-Americans. To say that they’re part of college football’s royalty would not be an understatement. This year Michigan grabbed the nation’s No. 14 recruiting class and the Big Ten’s second-best recruiting class, second only to the Ohio State Buckeyes. The Wisconsin Badgers, by comparison, had the nation’s 25th-ranked recruiting class and the Big Ten’s fifth-best recruiting class. 

The crown in this class for the Wolverines was Braiden McGregor, the No. 5 strongside defensive end in the country and the second-best player in the State of Michigan. While the Badgers had a bit of a gap between the recruiting ranking of their top player and that of Ohio State, no such claim can be made by the Wolverines. McGregor’s .9472 value is .0068 lower than Wisconsin’s top recruit, offensive tackle Jack Nelson. 

The average rating per player for the Badgers was .8782 and .9035 for the Wolverines. That’s a difference of .0253, much better than their gap against Ohio State. It improves a little for the Badgers next year in terms of their overall ranking (No. 6) and conference ranking (No. 2), but their average rating deficit against Michigan almost quadruples (.0967) and that’s with the Wolverines having the 25th-best class right now and the Badgers having the sixth-best recruiting class for 2021. 

The position both classes compare at is outside linebacker. The Badgers signed Nick Herbig (.9360 24/7 composite), a 6-foot-2, 215-pound player out of St. Louis High School in Honolulu, Hawaii. He’s the No. 9 player at his position in the nation and the second-best player coming out of Hawaii. The Wolverines signed Kalel Mullings. At 6-foot-1, and 220-pounds, Mullings (.9333) is the nation’s tenth-best outside linebacker and the top player in the state of Massachusetts. Both of these players seem likely to come in and make a quick impact, perhaps more so with Herbig than Mullings at a really deep program such as Michigan under coordinator Don Brown’s defense.  

Great Wisconsin moments of the 2010s: 2017 Michigan

2017 Michigan-Wisconsin

The 2017 Wisconsin football season was the winningest season in the history of the program. The Badgers went 13-1 and had one possession late in the fourth quarter against Ohio State to win the Big Ten and make the College Football Playoff. The 1993 and 1998 Wisconsin teams reached great heights. Those teams won the Rose Bowl and fulfilled the childhood dreams of Badger fans everywhere. The 2017 team, though, has “13-1,” a standard worthy of an elite program, a top-tier program, a program which takes a back seat to no one. In 2017, the pieces all came together — and fit together — for Wisconsin. The whole season was a joyride. Even the loss to Ohio State represented a game in which the Badgers played at or above expectations. They didn’t play below expectations in that game.

Several highlights emerge from that season. One of the more prominent ones was the Michigan game.

Remember that in 2016, Michigan came very close to beating Ohio State, winning the Big Ten East, and playing Wisconsin for the Big Ten title. Michigan didn’t look like a dominant team — it never has under Jim Harbaugh — but it was very close to achieving all of its goals. Michigan was showing signs of becoming what many people thought it would become under Harbaugh: The 1-B to Ohio State’s 1-A, the second-best program in the Big Ten.

No, Michigan never attained that standard, but at the end of 2016, it was plausible that it could happen. Enter the 2017 Michigan game.

If the 2017 season achieved something for Wisconsin beyond the boatload of wins, another Big Ten West title, the New Year’s Six bowl bid, and the win over Miami in the Orange Bowl, it was this: Wisconsin established itself as the second-best Big Ten program of the decade. It rose above not just Michigan, but also Penn State, which had won the Big Ten a year earlier but did not have the steady record of performance Wisconsin had. Wisconsin was a better team than Penn State this year, in 2019, and the Badgers deserved to beat out the Nittany Lions for the Rose Bowl bid against Oregon.

In 2017, Wisconsin didn’t pulverize Michigan the way the 2019 team did, but in some ways, the Badgers were MORE impressive, not less. Wisconsin took some strong punches from Michigan in the first one and a half quarters of this game two years ago, but they fought back and were dominant in the second half. Wisconsin established unquestioned physical superiority and left no doubt that it was the better team with a stronger program and a more hopeful future.

Nothing suggested or indicated by this 24-10 butt-kicking of Harbaugh has proved to be inaccurate or misguided in the two years since. Wisconsin has maintained the upper hand over Michigan… and Penn State… and every other Big Ten school not named Ohio State. The 2017 Wisconsin season was a dream, and Michigan endured a nightmare at the hands of one of the best Badger teams of all time.