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1940’S ART RENNER UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN FOOTBALL PHOTO MEASURING 8X10 INCHES Arthur W. Renner (February 14, 1923 – September 14, 1999) was an American football player. He played college football for the University of Michigan from 1942 to 1946. He played on four Michigan teams that were ranked in the top ten in the United States and was the captain of the 1946 Michigan Wolverines football team that was ranked #6 in the United States in the final AP Poll. His college football career was interrupted by service in the United States Marine Corps during World War II. Arthur W. Renner (February 14, 1923 – September 14, 1999) was an American football player. He played college football for the University of Michigan from 1942 to 1946. He played on four Michigan teams that were ranked in the top ten in the United States and was the captain of the 1946 Michigan Wolverines football team that was ranked #6 in the United States in the final AP Poll. His college football career was interrupted by service in the United States Marine Corps during World War II. Contents1Early years2University of Michigan3Later years4References5External linksEarly yearsRenner was born in southwestern Michigan in 1923. His father, Raymond J. Renner, was a Pennsylvania native who worked for a tea company. His mother, Mina A. Renner, was a Michigan native. At the time of the 1930 United States Census, he lived at Three Rivers, Michigan, with his parents and a younger brother, Warren H. Renner.[1] University of MichiganRenner enrolled at the University of Michigan in 1942 and played four years of varsity football for the Michigan Wolverines football team under head coach Fritz Crisler. He played at the end position for Michigan’s freshman team in 1942 and for the varsity from 1943 to 1946. After the 1943 season, the Michiganensian wrote that Renner stood out like a klieg light at the end position.[2] He started all nine games for the 1944 Michigan team that was ranked #8 in the final AP Poll.[3] After the 1944 season, Renner was inducted into the United States Marine Corps,[4] but he was discharged in the fall of 1945 following the end of World War II.[5] He was again a starter for the 1945 team that was ranked No. 6 in the final AP poll.[6] Playing against the legendary 1945 Army Cadets football team (a team that shut out five opponents, won the national championship, and allowed only four touchdowns during the entire year), Renner scored Michigan’s only touchdown on a pass from Walt Teninga.[7] At the end of the 1945 season, Renner was elected by his teammates as the captain of the 1946 Michigan Wolverines football team.[8][9] The 1946 team captained by Renner finished the season ranked No. 6 in the country in the final AP poll.[10] While attending Michigan, he was also a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, the Triangles and the Vulcans.[11] He graduated from Michigan in 1947 with a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering.[12] Later yearsRenner was selected by the Green Bay Packers as the 56th pick in the 1946 NFL Draft, but he chose a career in engineering over professional football. In his later years, Renner lived in Sturgis, Michigan. He died there in 1999 at age 76.[13] The Michigan Wolverines football team represents the University of Michigan in college football at the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision level. Michigan has the most all-time wins in college football history.[2][3] The team is known for its distinctive winged helmet, its fight song, its record-breaking attendance figures at Michigan Stadium,[4] and its many rivalries, particularly its annual, regular season-ending game against Ohio State, known simply as “The Game,” once voted as ESPN’s best sports rivalry.[5] Michigan began competing in intercollegiate football in 1879. The Wolverines joined the Big Ten Conference at its inception in 1896, and other than a hiatus from 1907 to 1916, have been members since. Michigan has won or shared 42 league titles, and, since the inception of the AP Poll in 1936, has finished in the top 10 a total of 38 times. The Wolverines claim 11 national championships, most recently that of the 1997 squad voted atop the final AP Poll. From 1900 to 1989, Michigan was led by a series of nine head coaches, each of whom has been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame either as a player or as a coach. Fielding H. Yost became Michigan’s head coach in 1901 and guided his “Point-a-Minute” squads to a streak of 56 games without a defeat, spanning from his arrival until the season finale in 1905, including a victory in the 1902 Rose Bowl, the first college football bowl game ever played. Fritz Crisler brought his winged helmet from Princeton University in 1938 and led the 1947 Wolverines to a national title and Michigan’s second Rose Bowl win. Bo Schembechler coached the team for 21 seasons (1969–1989) in which he won 13 Big Ten titles and 194 games, a program record. The first decade of his tenure was underscored by a fierce competition with his former mentor, Woody Hayes, whose Ohio State Buckeyes squared off against Schembechler’s Wolverines in a stretch of the Michigan–Ohio State rivalry dubbed the “Ten-Year War”. Following Schembechler’s retirement, the program was coached by two of his former assistants, Gary Moeller and then Lloyd Carr, who maintained the program’s overall success over the next 18 years. However, the program’s fortunes declined under the next two coaches, Rich Rodriguez and Brady Hoke, who were both fired after relatively short tenures. Following Hoke’s dismissal, Michigan hired Jim Harbaugh on December 30, 2014.[6] Harbaugh is a former quarterback of the team, having played for Michigan between 1982 and 1986 under Schembechler. The Michigan Wolverines have featured 83 players that have garnered consensus selection to the College Football All-America Team. Three Wolverines have won the Heisman Trophy: Tom Harmon in 1940, Desmond Howard in 1991, and Charles Woodson in 1997. Gerald Ford, who later became the 38th President of the United States, started at center and was voted most valuable player by his teammates on the 1934 team. Contents1History1.1Early history (1879–1900)1.2Fielding Yost (1901–1926)1.3Tad Wieman (1927–1928)1.4Harry Kipke (1929–1937)1.5Fritz Crisler (1938–1947)1.6Bennie Oosterbaan (1948–1958)1.7Bump Elliott (1959–1968)1.8Bo Schembechler (1969–1989)1.9Gary Moeller (1990–1994)1.10Lloyd Carr (1995–2007)1.11Rich Rodriguez (2008–2010)1.12Brady Hoke (2011–2014)1.13Jim Harbaugh (2015–present)2Conference affiliations3Bowl games4Venues4.1Washtenaw County Fairgrounds (1883–1892)4.2Regents Field (1893–1905)4.3Ferry Field (1906–1926)4.4Michigan Stadium (1927–present)5Rivalries5.1Ohio State5.2Michigan State5.3Minnesota5.4Notre Dame5.5Northwestern6Championships6.1National championships6.2Conference championships6.3Division championships7Program records and achievements7.1Team records8Head coaching history9Individual awards and honors9.1National award winners9.1.1Players9.1.2Coaches9.2Heisman Trophy voting9.3All-Americans9.4Team and conference MVP9.5Big Ten Conference honors9.6Retired numbers10Hall of Fame inductees10.1College Football Hall of Fame10.2Pro Football Hall of Fame10.3Rose Bowl11Alumni in the NFL12Future non-conference opponents13Related books14References15External linksHistorySee also: List of Michigan Wolverines football seasons It has been suggested that portions of this section be split out into another article titled History of Michigan Wolverines football. (Discuss) (September 2019)Early history (1879–1900)Main article: History of Michigan Wolverines football in the early years The 1879 squad, the first team fielded by the UniversityOn May 30, 1879, Michigan played its first intercollegiate football game against Racine College at White Stocking Park in Chicago. The Chicago Tribune called it “the first rugby-football game to be played west of the Alleghenies.”[7] Midway through “the first ‘inning’,”[8] Irving Kane Pond scored the first touchdown for Michigan.[9][10] According to Will Perry’s history of Michigan football, the crowd responded to Pond’s plays with cheers of “Pond Forever.”[7] In 1881, Michigan played against Harvard in Boston. The game that marked the birth of inter-sectional football.[11] On their way to a game in Chicago in 1887, Michigan players stopped in South Bend, Indiana and introduced football to students at the University of Notre Dame. A November 23 contest marked the inception of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish football program and the beginning of the Michigan–Notre Dame rivalry.[12] In 1894, Michigan defeated Cornell, which was the “first time in collegiate football history that a western school defeated an established power from the east.”[13] The 1898 Michigan Wolverines, the first Michigan team to win a conference titleIn 1896, the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives—then commonly known as the Western Conference and later as the Big Ten Conference—was formed by the University of Michigan, the University of Chicago, the University of Illinois, the University of Minnesota, the University of Wisconsin, Northwestern University, and Purdue University.[14] The first Western Conference football season was played in 1896, with Michigan going 9–1, but losing out on the inaugural Western Conference title with a loss to the Chicago Maroons to end the season.[15][16] By 1898 Amos Alonzo Stagg was fast at work at turning the University of Chicago football program into a powerhouse. Before the final game of the 1898 season, Chicago was 9–1–1 and Michigan was 9–0; a game between the two teams in Chicago decided the third Western Conference championship. Michigan won, 12–11, capturing the program’s first conference championship in a game that inspired “The Victors”, which later became the school’s fight song.[17] Michigan went 8–2 and 7–2–1 in 1899 and 1900, results that were considered unsatisfactory relative to the 10–0 season of 1898.[18] Fielding Yost (1901–1926)Main article: History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Yost era This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. Please consider splitting content into sub-articles, condensing it, or adding subheadings. Please discuss this issue on the article’s talk page. (October 2019) Fielding Yost in 1902.After the 1900 season, Charles A. Baird, Michigan’s first athletic director, wrote to Fielding H. Yost, “Our people are greatly roused up over the defeats of the past two years”, and gave Yost an offer to come to Michigan to coach the football team.[19] Upon arriving at Michigan, Yost famously ran up State Street and proclaimed to a reporter, “Michigan isn’t going to lose a game.”[19] Yost certainly delivered, with the 1901 Michigan team demolishing its opponents. In the first season under head coach Yost, a lopsided victory over Buffalo drew national attention and marked the arrival of Yost’s “Point-a-Minute” teams. The Buffalo team beat Ivy League power Columbia earlier in the year and was favored over a Michigan team the Buffalo newspapers had dubbed “Woolly Westerners.”[20] Michigan scored 22 touchdowns in 38 minutes of play, averaging a touchdown every one minute and 43 seconds. Buffalo quit 15 minutes before the game was scheduled to end.[20] The New York Times reported that Michigan’s margin of victory was “one of the most remarkable ever made in the history of football in the important colleges.”[21] At the end of the season, Michigan participated in the inaugural Rose Bowl, the first bowl game in American football history.[22] Michigan dominated the game so thoroughly that Stanford’s captain requested the game be called with eight minutes remaining. Neil Snow scored five touchdowns in the game, which is still the all-time Rose Bowl record.[23] The Tournament of Roses Association held chariot races and other events in lieu of a football game for the next 15 years. The next year, 1902, featured a contest between Michigan and the Wisconsin Badgers. The two teams were undefeated since 1900, and the crowd (20,000–22,000) was the largest in western football history. Michigan won, 6–0, leading the Detroit Free Press to call it “the greatest football game ever played on a western gridiron.”[24] The undefeated 1902 team outscored its opponents 644 to 12 on its way to an 11–0 season. In 1903, Michigan played a game against Minnesota that started the rivalry for the Little Brown Jug, the oldest rivalry trophy in college football. Yost sent a student assistant to purchase a five-gallon water jug from a local store. After the game ended in a tie, Yost forgot the jug in the locker room. Custodian Oscar Munson discovered it and brought it to L. J. Cooke, who painted the jug brown and wrote “Michigan Jug – Captured by Oscar, October 31, 1903. Michigan 6, Minnesota 6.” When Yost requested that the jug be returned, Cooke responded that “if you want it, you’ll have to win it.”[25] The game marked the only time from 1901 to 1904 that Michigan failed to win.[18] Michigan finished the season at 11–0–1. In 1904, Michigan once again went undefeated at 10–0 while recording one of the most lopsided defeats in college football history, a 130–0 defeat of the West Virginia Mountaineers.[16] From 1901 through 1904, Michigan didn’t lose a single game.[18] The streak was finally halted at the end of the 1905 season by Amos Alonzo Stagg’s Chicago Maroons, a team that went on to win two Big 9 (as the Western Conference was now being called with the addition of Iowa and Indiana) titles in the next three years.[15] The game, dubbed “The First Greatest Game of the Century,”[26] broke Michigan’s 56-game unbeaten streak and marked the end of the “Point-a-Minute” years. The 1905 Michigan team had outscored opponents 495–0 in its first 12 games. The game was lost in the final ten minutes of play when Denny Clark was tackled for a safety as he attempted to return a punt from behind the goal line. Michigan tied for another Big 9 title in 1906 before opting to go independent for the 1907 season.[16] The independent years were not as kind to Yost as his years in the Big 9. Michigan suffered one loss in 1907.[18] In 1908, Michigan got battered by Penn (a team that went 11–0–1 that year) in a game in which Michigan center Germany Schulz took such a battering as to have to be dragged off the field.[27] In 1909, Michigan suffered its first loss to Notre Dame, leading Yost to refuse to schedule another game against Notre Dame; the schools did not play again until 1942.[16] In 1910, Michigan played their only undefeated season of the independent years, going 3–0–3.[18] Overall from 1907 to 1916, Michigan lost at least one game every year (with the exception of 1910).[18] Benny Friedman in 1929.Michigan rejoined the Big 9 in 1917, after which it was called the Big Ten. Yost immediately got back to work. In 1918, Michigan played the first game against Stagg’s Chicago Maroons since Chicago ended Michigan’s winning streak in 1905.[16] Michigan defeated the Maroons, 18–0, on the way to a 5–0 record.[16][18] The next three years were lean, with Michigan going 3–4, 5–2, and 5–1–1, in 1919, 1920, and 1921.[18] However, in 1922 Michigan managed to spoil the “Dedication Day” for Ohio Stadium, defeating the Buckeyes 19–0.[16] Legend has it that the rotunda at Ohio Stadium is painted with maize flowers on a blue background due to the outcome of the 1922 dedication game.[28] Michigan went 5–0–1 in 1922, capturing a Big Ten title.[15][18] In 1923, Michigan went 8–0, winning another conference championship.[15][18] The 1924 Wolverines, coached by George Little, saw their 20-game unbeaten streak end at the hands of Red Grange.[16] After the 1924 season, Little left Michigan to accept the head coach and athletic director positions at Wisconsin, returning athletic director Yost to the head coaching position.[29] Although the 1925 and 1926 seasons did not include a conference title, they were memorable due to the presence of the famous “Benny-to-Bennie” combination, a reference to Benny Friedman and Bennie Oosterbaan. The two helped popularize passing the ball in an era when running held dominance. Oosterbaan became a three-time All-American and was selected for the All-Time All-American team in 1951,[30] while Friedman went on to have a Hall of Fame NFL career.[31] Also during 1926, Michigan was retroactively awarded national titles for the 1901 and 1902 seasons via the Houlgate System, the first national titles awarded to the program. Other major selectors[who?] later retroactively awarded Michigan with titles in the 1903, 1904, 1918, 1923, 1925, and 1926 seasons.[citation needed] Michigan claims titles in the 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1918, and 1923 seasons.[32] Yost stepped aside in 1926 to focus on being Michigan’s athletic director, a post he had held since 1921, thus ending the greatest period of success in the history of Michigan football.[33] Under Yost, Michigan posted a 165–29–10 record, winning ten conference championships and six national championships.[15][16][32] One of his main actions as athletic director was to oversee the construction of Michigan Stadium. Michigan began playing football games in Michigan Stadium in the fall of 1927. At the time Michigan Stadium had a capacity of 72,000, although Yost envisioned eventually expanding the stadium to a capacity well beyond 100,000.[34] Michigan Stadium was formally dedicated during a game against the Ohio State Buckeyes that season to the tune of a 21–0 victory.[35] Tad Wieman (1927–1928)Tad Wieman became Michigan’s head coach in 1927. That year, Michigan posted a modest 6–2 record.[18] However, the team ended 1928 with a losing 3–4–1 record and Wieman was fired.[36][37] Harry Kipke (1929–1937)Main article: History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Kipke yearsIn 1929, Harry Kipke, a former player under Yost, took over as head coach.[38] From 1930 to 1933, Kipke returned Michigan to prominence. During that stretch, Michigan won the Big Ten title every year and the national championship in 1932 and 1933.[15][32] In 1932, quarterback and future College Football Hall of Famer Harry Newman was a unanimous first-team All-American, and the recipient of the Douglas Fairbanks Trophy as Outstanding College Player of the Year (predecessor of the Heisman Trophy), and the Helms Athletic Foundation Player of the Year Award, the Chicago Tribune Silver Football trophy as the Most Valuable Player in the Big Ten Conference.[39] During this span Kipke’s teams only lost one game, to Ohio State.[16][18] After 1933, however, Kipke’s teams compiled a 12–22 record from 1934 to 1937.[18] The 1934 Michigan team only won one game, against Georgia Tech in a controversial contest. Georgia Tech coach and athletic director W. A. “Bill” Alexander refused to allow his team to take the field if Willis Ward, an African-American player for Michigan, stepped on the field. Michigan conceded, and the incident reportedly caused Michigan player Gerald R. Ford to consider quitting the team.[40] Overall, Kipke posted a 49–26–4 record at Michigan, winning four conference championships and two national championships.[15][18][32] Fritz Crisler (1938–1947)Main article: History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Crisler yearsIn 1938, Michigan hired Fritz Crisler as Kipke’s successor.[41] Crisler had been head coach of the Princeton Tigers and reportedly wasn’t excited to leave Princeton.[41] Michigan invited him to name his price, and Crisler demanded what he thought would be unacceptable: the position of athletic director when Yost stepped down and the highest salary in college football.[42] Michigan accepted, and Crisler became the new head coach of the Michigan football program.[41] Fritz Crisler in 1948.Upon arriving at Michigan, Crisler introduced the winged football helmet, ostensibly to help his players find the receivers down field.[43] Whatever the reasoning, the winged helmet has since become one of the iconic marks of Michigan football.[44] Michigan debuted the winged helmet in a game against Michigan State in 1938.[45] Two years later in 1940, Tom Harmon led the Wolverines to a 7–1 record on his way to winning the Heisman Trophy.[18][46] Harmon ended the season by scoring three rushing touchdowns, two passing touchdowns, four extra points, intercepting three passes, and punting three times for an average of 50 yards in a game against the Ohio State Buckeyes.[47] The 1943 season included a No. 1 (Notre Dame) vs. No. 2 (Michigan) match-up against Notre Dame, a game the Wolverines lost 35–12.[16] Michigan ended the season at 8–1, winning Crisler’s first Big Ten championship.[15][18] Crisler had reversed the misfortune of the end of the Kipke era and returned Michigan to one and two-loss seasons. From 1938 to 1944, Michigan posted a 48–11–2 record,[48] although the period lacked a national title and only contained one conference title.[18] Yet, Crisler’s biggest mark on the game of football was made in 1945, when Michigan faced a loaded Army squad that featured two Heisman trophy winners, Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis. Crisler didn’t feel that his Michigan team could match up with Army, so he opted to take advantage of a 1941 NCAA rule that allowed players to enter or leave at any point during the game.[42] Crisler divided his team into “offensive” and “defensive” specialists, an act that earned him the nickname “the father of two-platoon football.”[49] Michigan still lost the game with Army 28–7,[16] but Crisler’s use of two-platoon football shaped the way the game was played in the future. Eventually, Crisler’s use of the platoon system propelled his team to a conference championship and a national title in 1947, his final season.[15][16][32] The 1947 team, nicknamed the “Mad Magicians” due to their use of two-platoon football, capped their season with a 49–0 victory over the USC Trojans in the 1948 Rose Bowl.[16] Crisler finished with a 116–32–9 record at Michigan, winning two conference titles and one national title.[15][18][32][48] Bennie Oosterbaan (1948–1958)Main article: History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Oosterbaan yearsCrisler continued as athletic director while Bennie Oosterbaan, the same Bennie that had electrified the world while making connections with Benny Friedman 20 years earlier, took over the football program.[50] Things started off well for Oosterbaan in 1948 with the Wolverines earning a quality mid-season victory over No. 3 Northwestern.[16][50] Michigan finished the season undefeated at 9–0, thus winning another national championship.[18][32] Initially, Oosterbaan continued Crisler’s tradition of on-field success, winning conference titles each year from 1948 to 1950 and the national title in 1948.[15][32] The 1950 season ended in interesting fashion, with Michigan and Ohio State combining for 45 punts in a game that came to be known as the “Snow Bowl.” Michigan won the game 9–3, winning the Big Ten conference and sending the Wolverines off to the 1951 Rose Bowl.[15][16] Subsequently, Michigan’s football team began to decline under Oosterbaan. From 1951 to 1958, Michigan compiled a record of 42–26–2, a far cry from the success under Crisler and Yost.[18] Perhaps more importantly, Oosterbaan posted a 2–5–1 record against Michigan State and a 3–5 record against Ohio State over the same time period.[16] Under mounting pressure, Oosterbaan stepped down after 1958.[50] Bump Elliott (1959–1968)Main article: History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Elliott yearsIn place of Oosterbaan stepped Bump Elliott, a former Michigan player of Crisler’s. Elliott continued many of the struggles that began under Oosterbaan, posting a 51–42–2 record from 1959 through 1968 (including a 2–7–1 record against Michigan State and a 3–7 record against Ohio State).[18] Michigan’s only Big Ten title under Elliott came in 1964, a season that included a win over Oregon State in the 1965 Rose Bowl.[15][16] Following a 50-14 drubbing at the hands of Ohio State in 1968,[16] Elliott resigned, opening the way for Michigan athletic director Don Canham to hire Bo Schembechler. Bo Schembechler (1969–1989) This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. Please consider splitting content into sub-articles, condensing it, or adding subheadings. Please discuss this issue on the article’s talk page. (February 2018) Bo Schembechler in 1975.It took 15 minutes for Don Canham to be sold on Bo Schembechler, resulting in Schembechler becoming the 15th coach in Michigan football history.[51] At the time, Schembechler’s employer, the Miami RedHawks, could have thrown more money at Schembechler, but Canham managed to sell Schembechler on Michigan’s tradition and prestige.[52] Schembechler’s first team got off to a moderate start, losing to rival Michigan State and entering the Ohio State game with a 7–2 record.[18] Ohio State, coached by icon Woody Hayes, entered the game at 8–0 and poised to repeat as national champions.[53] The 1969 Ohio State team was hailed by some as being the “greatest college football team ever assembled” and came into the game favored by 17 points over Michigan.[54] Michigan shocked the Buckeyes, winning 24–12, going to the Rose Bowl, and launching The Ten Year War between Hayes and Schembechler.[16] From 1969 to 1978, one of either Ohio State or Michigan won at least a share of the Big Ten title and represented the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl every season.[15] In 1970 Schembechler failed to repeat on the magic of 1969, that year losing to Ohio State 20–9 and finishing at 9–1.[16] However, in 1971, Schembechler led Michigan to an undefeated regular season, only to lose to the Stanford Indians in the Rose Bowl to finish at 11–1 and miss out on a chance at a national championship.[18] From 1972 to 1975, Michigan failed to win a game against Ohio State (powered by phenom running back Archie Griffin), finishing at 10–1, 10–0–1, 10–1, and 8–2–2.[16] However, Michigan did tie Ohio State in 1973, only missing out on the Rose Bowl due to a controversial vote that sent Ohio State to the Rose Bowl and left Michigan at home.[16] Another notable event occurred during the 1975 season, with the first of Michigan’s record streak of games with more than 100,000 people in attendance occurring during a game against the Purdue Boilermakers. Rick Leach, who played quarterback for Michigan from 1975 through 1978.From 1976 to 1978, Michigan asserted its own dominance of the rivalry, beating Ohio State, going to the Rose Bowl, and posting a 10–2 record every year.[16][18] After the 1978 season, Woody Hayes was fired for punching an opposing player during the 1978 Gator Bowl, thus ending The Ten Year War.[55] Michigan had a slight edge in the war, with Schembechler going 5–4–1 against Hayes. However, while Schembechler successfully placed great emphasis on the rivalry, Michigan’s bowl performances were sub-par. Michigan failed to win their last game of the season every year during The Ten Year War.[16] The only year in which Michigan didn’t lose its last game of the season was the 1973 tie against Ohio State.[16] After the end of the Ten Year War, Michigan’s regular season performance declined, but its post season performance improved. The 1979 season included a memorable game against Indiana that ended with a touchdown pass from John Wangler to Anthony Carter with six seconds left in the game.[56] Michigan went 8–4 on the season, losing to North Carolina in the 1979 Gator Bowl.[16][18] In 1980, Michigan went 10–2 and got their first win in the Rose Bowl under Schembechler, a 23–6 win over Washington.[16][18] Michigan went 9–3 in 1981 to get Schembechler’s second bowl win in the 1981 Bluebonnet Bowl.[16][18] In 1982, Michigan won the Big Ten championship while being led by three-time All-American wide receiver Anthony Carter.[15][57] Michigan fell to UCLA Bruins in the 1983 Rose Bowl.[16] Without Anthony Carter, the Wolverines did not win the Big Ten title in 1983, going 9–3.[18] In 1984, the Wolverines suffered their worst season under Schembechler, going 6–6 with a loss to national champion BYU in the 1984 Holiday Bowl.[16][18] Michigan needed to reverse its fortunes in 1985, and they began doing so with new quarterback Jim Harbaugh.[58] Harbaugh led the Wolverines to a 5–0 record, propelling them to a No. 2 ranking heading into a game with the No. 1 Iowa Hawkeyes.[59] Michigan lost 12–10,[16] but did not lose another game the rest of the season to finish at 10–1–1 with a victory over Tom Osborne’s Nebraska Cornhuskers in the 1986 Fiesta Bowl.[18] In 1986 Michigan won the Big Ten at 11–2, suffering a loss to the Arizona State Sun Devils in the 1987 Rose Bowl.[16][18] The departure of Harbaugh after 1986 once again left Michigan on tough times as Schembechler’s team stumbled to an 8–4 record in 1987.[18] However, Michigan bounced back again in 1988 and 1989, winning the Big Ten title outright both years at 9–2–1 and 10–2 with trips to Rose Bowl.[15][18] From 1981 through 1989, Michigan went 80–27–2, winning four Big Ten titles and going to a bowl game every year (with another Rose Bowl win obtained against USC Trojans after the 1988 season).[16] Bo Schembechler retired after the 1989 season, handing the job over to his offensive coordinator Gary Moeller.[60] Under Schembechler, Michigan posted a 194–48–5 record[61] (11–9–1 against Ohio State), and won 13 Big Ten championships.[61] Gary Moeller (1990–1994)Gary Moeller took over from Schembechler for the 1990 season, becoming the 16th head coach in Michigan football history.[62] Moeller inherited a talented squad that had just played in the 1990 Rose Bowl, including wide receiver Desmond Howard. Moeller led Michigan to a 9–3 record in his first season,[18] tying for the Big Ten championship but losing out on a Rose Bowl bid to Iowa.[15][16] The next two years, Moeller’s teams won the conference outright, setting marks of 10–2 and 9–0–3.[15][18] In 1991, Desmond Howard had a memorable season that propelled him to win the Heisman Trophy, the award given to college football’s most outstanding player.[63] The 1992 team, led by quarterback Elvis Grbac, posted a 9–0–3 record,[18] defeating Washington in the 1993 Rose Bowl.[16] Moeller led Michigan to 8–4 records in both 1993 and 1994.[18] The 1994 season was marked by an early-season loss to Colorado that included a Hail Mary pass from Kordell Stewart to Michael Westbrook to end the game, leading to the game being dubbed “The Miracle at Michigan.”[64] After the 1994 season, Moeller was found intoxicated at a Southfield, MI restaurant in an incident in which Moeller was caught on tape throwing a punch in a police station, which resulted in his firing.[65] Lloyd Carr (1995–2007) This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. Please consider splitting content into sub-articles, condensing it, or adding subheadings. Please discuss this issue on the article’s talk page. (February 2018)Michigan’s athletic director appointed Lloyd Carr, an assistant at Michigan since 1980, as interim head coach for the 1995 season.[66] However, after an 8–2 start, Michigan dropped the interim tag from Carr’s title and named him its 17th head coach, signing Carr to a four-year contract worth $250,000 per year.[67] Michigan finished his first season at 9–4.[18][68] Carr had similar success in his second season, going 8–4 and earning a trip to the 1997 Outback Bowl.[18] Carr returned a strong squad for the 1997 season, led by cornerback and punt returner Charles Woodson.[69] Michigan went undefeated in 1997.[16][18] Overall, the Michigan defense only allowed 9.5 points per game and ended the season ranked No. 1 in the AP Poll, giving Michigan its first national championship since 1948 with a victory in the 1998 Rose Bowl.[70][71][16][32] For his efforts, Woodson won the Heisman Trophy and was selected 4th overall in the 1998 NFL Draft by the Oakland Raiders.[72] With Tom Brady as quarterback, Michigan went 10–3 and repeated as Big Ten champions in 1998, but in 1999 Michigan lost out on the conference championship at 10–2 to the Wisconsin Badgers.[15][18] Drew Henson led Michigan to a 9–3 record and a tie for the Big Ten championship in 2000.[15][18] Ohio State, Michigan’s chief rival, fired their coach John Cooper, who was 2–10–1 against Michigan while at Ohio State, after the 2000 season and replaced him with Jim Tressel.[73][74] Tressel immediately ushered in a new era in the Ohio State-Michigan rivalry, upsetting the Wolverines 26–20 in 2001,[75] his first season at the helm.[16] This came on the heels of another last-second loss in which Michigan State defeated Michigan with a pass in the last second of the game in a controversial finish that led to the game being referred to as “Clockgate.”[76] Despite these setbacks, Michigan’s 2001 squad, led by John Navarre, went 8–4 with an appearance in the 2002 Florida Citrus Bowl.[77][16][18] Again under Navarre in 2002, Michigan compiled a 10–3 record,[78] but included another loss to Ohio State, who went on to win the national championship.[79][16][18] Carr got over the hump against Tressel in 2003 as John Navarre and Doak Walker Award-winning running back Chris Perry led the Wolverines to a 10–3 record,[80] a Big Ten championship, and an appearance in the 2004 Rose Bowl.[15][16][18] 2006 Michigan Wolverines huddle during a game against the Central Michigan Chippewas.For the 2004 season, Carr turned to highly rated recruit Chad Henne to lead the Wolverines at quarterback.[81] Michigan went 9–3 in 2004[82] to tie for another Big Ten championship and earn a trip to the 2005 Rose Bowl, but the season again included a loss to Ohio State,[83] who only went 8–4 on the season.[15][16][18] In 2005, Michigan struggled to make a bowl game, only going 7–5, with the season capped with another loss to Ohio State.[16][18] Expectations were tempered going into the 2006 season; however, a 47–21 blowout of No. 2 Notre Dame and an 11–0 start propelled Michigan to the No. 2 rankings going into “The Game” with No. 1 Ohio State.[84] The 2006 Ohio State-Michigan game was hailed by the media as the “Game of the Century.” The day before the game, Bo Schembechler died, leading Ohio State to honor him with a moment of silence, one of the few Michigan Men to be so honored in Ohio Stadium.[85] The game itself was a back-and-forth affair, with Ohio State winning 42–39 for the right to play in the 2007 BCS National Championship Game.[16] Michigan lost to USC in the 2007 Rose Bowl, ending the season at 11–2.[16][18] Going into 2007, Michigan had high expectations.[86] Standout players Chad Henne, Mike Hart, and Jake Long all opted to return for their senior seasons for one last crack at Ohio State and a chance at a national championship, causing Michigan to be ranked fifth in the preseason polls.[87] However, Michigan’s struggles against the spread offense reared its ugly head again as the Wolverines shockingly lose the opener to the Appalachian State Mountaineers.[88][89][16] The game marked the first win by a Division I-AA team over a team ranked in the Associated Press Poll.[90] The next week, Michigan was blown out by Oregon.[91][16] Despite the early rough start, Michigan won their next eight games and went into the Ohio State game with a chance to win the Big Ten championship.[16] However, Michigan once again fell to the Buckeyes, this time 14–3.[92][16] After the game, Lloyd Carr announced that he would retire as Michigan head coach after the bowl game.[93] In the 2008 Capital One Bowl, Carr’s final game, Michigan defeated the defending national champion Florida Gators, led by Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow, 41–35.[94] Carr’s accomplishments at Michigan included a 122–40 record, five Big Ten championships, and one national championship.[15][16][32] Rich Rodriguez (2008–2010) This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. Please consider splitting content into sub-articles, condensing it, or adding subheadings. Please discuss this issue on the article’s talk page. (October 2019) Rich Rodriguez at Michigan in 2008.Following Carr’s retirement, Michigan launched a coaching search that ultimately saw Rich Rodriguez lured away from his alma mater, West Virginia.[95] Rodriguez’s arrival marked the beginning of major upheaval in the Michigan football program. Rodriguez, a proponent of the spread offense, installed it in place of the pro-style offense that had been used by Carr. The offseason saw significant attrition in Michigan’s roster. The expected starting quarterback Ryan Mallett departed the program, stating that he would be unable to fit in a spread offense. Starting wide receivers Mario Manningham and Adrian Arrington both decided to forgo their senior seasons and enter the NFL Draft.[96] Michigan lost a good deal of its depth and, when the 2008 season began, was forced to start players with very little playing experience. The 2008 season was disappointing for Michigan, finishing at 3–9 and suffering its first losing campaign since 1967. Michigan also missed a bowl game invitation for the first time since 1974. For the 2009 season the team saw many changes from the previous year. A new practice facility replaced Oosterbaan Fieldhouse as Michigan’s indoor practice facility,[97] and two new quarterbacks, Tate Forcier and Denard Robinson, became the focus of the offseason. The week before the season began, however, the Detroit Free Press accused the team of violating the NCAA’s practice time limits.[98] While the NCAA conducted investigations, Michigan won its first four games, including a last second victory against its rival Notre Dame. The season ended in disappointment, however, as Michigan went 1–7 in its last eight games and missed a bowl for the second straight season. Rodriguez’s final season began with new hope in the program, as Robinson was named the starting quarterback over Forcier. Robinson led the Wolverines to a 5–0 start, but after a defeat to Michigan State at home, the Wolverines finished the season 2–5 over their last seven games. Michigan did, however, qualify for a bowl game with a 7–5 record, and clinched its bowl berth in dramatic fashion against Illinois, with Michigan winning 67–65 in three overtime periods. The game was the highest combined scoring game in Michigan history, and saw Michigan’s defense give up the most points in its history.[99] Michigan was invited to the Gator Bowl to face Mississippi State, losing 52–14. The Michigan defense set new school records as the worst defense in Michigan history. In the middle of the season, the NCAA announced its penalties against Michigan for the practice time violations. The program was placed on three of years probation and docked 130 practice hours, which was twice the amount Michigan had exceeded.[100] Rodriguez was fired following the bowl game, with athletic director Dave Brandon citing Rodriguez’s failure to meet expectations as the main reason for his dismissal.[101] Rodriguez left the program winless against rivals Michigan State and Ohio State and compiled a 15–22 record, the worst record of any head coach in Michigan history.[102] Brady Hoke (2011–2014) This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. Please consider splitting content into sub-articles, condensing it, or adding subheadings. Please discuss this issue on the article’s talk page. (October 2019) Athletic director Dave Brandon (left) with head coach Brady Hoke in 2011.Michigan announced the hiring of head coach Brady Hoke on January 11, 2011.[103] He became the 19th head coach in Michigan football history. Hoke had previously been the head coach at his alma mater Ball State and then San Diego State after serving as an assistant at Michigan under Lloyd Carr from 1995 to 2002. In his first season, Hoke led the Wolverines to 11 wins, beating rival Notre Dame with a spectacular comeback in Michigan’s first night game at Michigan Stadium. Despite losing to Iowa and Michigan State, the Wolverines finished with a 10–2 regular season record with their first win over Ohio State in eight years. The Wolverines received an invitation to the Sugar Bowl in which they defeated Virginia Tech, 23–20, in overtime. This was the program’s first bowl win since the season of 2007. Until the streak was broken in 2008, Michigan had appeared in a bowl game each year since the 1975 season. In Hoke’s second season, he led Michigan to an 8–5 record. The Wolverines dropped their season opener to eventual national champions, Alabama in Dallas, Texas. U-M won the next two games at home in non-conference bouts against Air Force and UMass, totaling 94 points over the two games. Michigan then traveled to face eventual national runner-up Notre Dame. In this game, the Wolverines committed six turnovers, including five interceptions, as they fell to the Fighting Irish by a 13–6 final. After back-to-back wins over Purdue and Illinois, they defeated in-state rival Michigan State for the first time since 2007. The win was the 900th in program history, becoming the first program to reach the milestone. U-M finished the season with wins over Minnesota, Northwestern and Iowa as well as losses to Nebraska and Ohio State to finish the regular season. Michigan was selected to participate in the 2013 Outback Bowl, where they fell to South Carolina by a 33–28 score. In the 2013 campaign, Michigan finished with a 7–6 record, including a 3–5 record in Big Ten play and a loss to Kansas State in the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl 31-14.[104] On December 2, 2014, Hoke was fired as the head coach after four seasons following a 5–7 record in 2014. This marked only the third season since 1975 in which Michigan missed a bowl game. Hoke compiled a 31–20 record, including an 18–14 record in Big Ten play.[105] Jim Harbaugh (2015–present)On December 30, 2014, the University of Michigan announced the hiring of Jim Harbaugh as the team’s 20th head coach. Harbaugh, who was starting quarterback in the mid-1980s under Bo Schembechler, had most recently served as head coach of the San Francisco 49ers. In his first season, Harbaugh led Michigan to a 10–3 record, including a 41–7 win over the Florida Gators in the 2016 Citrus Bowl.[106] The squad achieved an identical 10–3 record during the 2016 season, which ended with a 33–32 loss to Florida State in the Orange Bowl on December 30. The team lost many key players on the offensive and defensive side of the ball prior to Harbaugh’s third season. The Wolverines went 8–4 in the regular season losing to their main rivals, Michigan State and Ohio State, and lost to South Carolina in the Outback Bowl, becoming the only team in the Big Ten Conference to lose its bowl game in the 2017-2018 bowl season and dropping the record on the year to 8–5.[107] Harbaugh’s fourth season started with a loss to rival Notre Dame, followed by ten consecutive wins. Wins over ranked Big Ten opponents Michigan State, Wisconsin, Penn State, all of whom beat Michigan the previous year, led to the team rallying around referring to the season as a “revenge tour.”[108] The Wolverines rose to fourth in the College Football Playoff rankings, but the “revenge tour” came to an abrupt end when they were upset by rival Ohio State by a lopsided score of 62–39 to end the regular season. Ohio State’s 62 points set a record for points against Michigan during regulation. A blowout loss to Florida in the Peach Bowl ended the season, and they finished at 10–3 for the third time in Harbaugh’s four years. During his fifth season (2019), the Wolverines lost to Wisconsin 35–14 and to Penn State 28–21, both on the road. Michigan went on to beat rivals Notre Dame 45–14 and Michigan State 44–10, but once again lost to then No. 1 ranked Ohio State by a score of 56–27 to end the regular season. Michigan later lost to Alabama 16–35 in the Citrus Bowl to end the season with a record of 9–4. Conference affiliationsIndependent (1879–1891)Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the Northwest (1892–1893)Independent (1894–1895)Western Conference (1896–1906)Independent (1907–1916)Big Ten Conference (1917–present)Western Conference (1917–1952)Big Ten Conference (1953–present)Bowl gamesMichigan has played in 48 bowl games in its history, compiling a record of 21–27. Before missing a bowl game in 2008, Michigan had made a bowl game 33 years in a row, the second longest streak (as of the end of 2013 season) in college football history.[114] From the 1921 to 1945 seasons, the Big Ten Conference did not allow its teams to participate in bowls. From the 1946 to 1974 seasons, only a conference champion, or a surrogate representative, was allowed to attend a bowl, the Rose Bowl, and no team could go two years in a row until the 1972 Rose Bowl, with the exception of Minnesota in 1961 and 1962. DateBowlOpponentResultJanuary 1, 1902Rose BowlStanfordW 49–0January 1, 1948Rose BowlUSCW 49–0January 1, 1951Rose BowlCaliforniaW 14–6January 1, 1965Rose BowlOregon StateW 34–7January 1, 1970Rose BowlUSCL 3–10January 1, 1972Rose BowlStanfordL 12–13January 1, 1976Orange BowlOklahomaL 6–14January 1, 1977Rose BowlUSCL 6–14January 2, 1978Rose BowlWashingtonL 20–27January 1, 1979Rose BowlUSCL 10–17December 28, 1979Gator BowlNorth CarolinaL 15–17January 1, 1981Rose BowlWashingtonW 23–6December 31, 1981Bluebonnet BowlUCLAW 33–14January 1, 1983Rose BowlUCLAL 14–24January 2, 1984Sugar BowlAuburnL 7–9December 21, 1984Holiday BowlBYUL 17–24January 1, 1986Fiesta BowlNebraskaW 27–23January 1, 1987Rose BowlArizona StateL 15–22January 2, 1988Hall of Fame BowlAlabamaW 28–24January 2, 1989Rose BowlUSCW 22–14January 1, 1990Rose BowlUSCL 10–17January 1, 1991Gator BowlOle MissW 35–3January 1, 1992Rose BowlWashingtonL 14–34January 1, 1993Rose BowlWashingtonW 38–31January 1, 1994Hall of Fame BowlNC StateW 42–7December 30, 1994Holiday BowlColorado StateW 24–14December 28, 1995Alamo BowlTexas A&ML 20–22January 1, 1997Outback BowlAlabamaL 14–17January 1, 1998Rose BowlWashington StateW 21–16January 1, 1999Citrus BowlArkansasW 45–31January 1, 2000Orange BowlAlabamaW 35–34January 1, 2001Citrus BowlAuburnW 31–28January 1, 2002Citrus BowlTennesseeL 17–45January 1, 2003Outback BowlFloridaW 38–30January 1, 2004Rose BowlUSCL 14–28January 1, 2005Rose BowlTexasL 37–38December 28, 2005Alamo BowlNebraskaL 28–32January 1, 2007Rose BowlUSCL 18–32January 1, 2008Capital One BowlFloridaW 41–35January 1, 2011Gator BowlMississippi StateL 14–52January 3, 2012Sugar BowlVirginia TechW 23–20January 1, 2013Outback BowlSouth CarolinaL 28–33December 28, 2013Buffalo Wild Wings BowlKansas StateL 14–31January 1, 2016Citrus BowlFloridaW 41–7December 30, 2016Orange BowlFlorida StateL 32–33January 1, 2018Outback BowlSouth CarolinaL 19–26December 29, 2018Peach BowlFloridaL 15–41January 1, 2020Citrus BowlAlabamaL 16–35Total48 bowl games21–271,128–1,057Bowl record by gameBowl Name#WL%Alamo Bowl202.000Bluebonnet Bowl1101.000Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl101.000Citrus Bowl (Capital One Bowl)642.666Fiesta Bowl1101.000Gator Bowl312.333Holiday Bowl211.500Outback Bowl (Hall of Fame Bowl)633.500Orange Bowl312.333Peach Bowl101.000Rose Bowl20812.400Sugar Bowl211.500VenuesWashtenaw County Fairgrounds (1883–1892)Main article: Washtenaw County FairgroundsIn the early days of Michigan football, Michigan played smaller home games at the Washtenaw County Fairgrounds with larger games being held in Detroit at the Detroit Athletic Club.[115] The Fairgrounds were originally located at the southeast intersection of Hill and Forest, but in 1890 moved to what is now called Burns Park.[115] Regents Field (1893–1905)Main article: Regents Field Regents Field just before kickoff during the 1904 game between Michigan and ChicagoIn 1890, the Board of Regents authorized $3,000 ($78,947.37 in 2014 dollars) for the purchase of a parcel of land along South State Street.[116] In 1891 a further $4,500 ($118,421.05 in 2014 dollars) was authorized “for the purpose of fitting up the athletic field.”[116] Michigan began play on Regents Field in 1893, with capacity being expanded to over 15,000 by the end of the field’s use.[116] Ferry Field (1906–1926)Main article: Ferry FieldBy 1902 Regents Field had grown inadequate for the uses of the football team as a result of the sport’s increasing popularity.[117] Thanks to donations from Dexter M. Ferry, work began on planning the next home stadium for the Michigan football team. Powered by a $30,000 donation from Ferry, Ferry Field was constructed with a maximum temporary capacity of 18,000 for the 1906 season.[117] Ferry Field was expanded to a capacity of 21,000 in 1914 and 42,000 in 1921.[117] However, attendance was often over-capacity with crowds of 48,000 cramming into the small stadium.[117] This prompted athletic director Fielding Yost to contemplate the construction of a much larger stadium. Michigan Stadium (1927–present)Main article: Michigan Stadium Michigan Stadium on September 17, 2011Fielding H. Yost anticipated massive crowds as college football’s popularity increased and wished to build a stadium with a capacity of at least 80,000.[34] Ultimately, the final plans authorized the construction of a stadium with a capacity of 72,000 with footings to be set in place to expand it beyond 100,000 later.[34] Michigan Stadium was dedicated in 1927 during a game against the Ohio State Buckeyes, drawing an over-capacity crowd of 84,401.[118] After World War II, crowd sizes increased, prompting another stadium expansion to a capacity of 93,894 in 1949.[118] Michigan Stadium cracked the 100,000 mark by expanding to 101,001 in 1955.[118] Michigan Stadium temporarily lost the title of “largest stadium” to Neyland Stadium of the Tennessee Volunteers in 1996, but recaptured the title in 1998 with another expansion to 107,501.[119] In 2007, the Board of Regents authorized a $226 million renovation to add a new press box, 83 luxury boxes, and 3,200 club seats.[120] For the 2011 season, lights were installed at Michigan Stadium at the cost of $1.8 million.[121] This allowed Michigan to play its first night game at home against Notre Dame in 2011.[122] RivalriesOhio StateMain article: Michigan–Ohio State football rivalryMichigan and Ohio State first played each other in 1897. Ohio State’s victory in 2010 was vacated. The rivalry was particularly enhanced during The Ten Year War, a period in which Ohio State was coached by Woody Hayes and Michigan was coached by Bo Schembechler. Overall, the Buckeye and Wolverine football programs have combined for 19 national titles, 77 conference titles, and 10 Heisman Trophy winners. Michigan holds a 58–51–6 advantage through the 2019 season.[123] Michigan StateMain article: Michigan–Michigan State football rivalryMichigan and Michigan State first played each other in 1898. Since Michigan State joined the Big Ten Conference in 1953, the two schools have competed annually for the Paul Bunyan – Governor of Michigan Trophy. The winner retains possession of the trophy until the next year’s game. Michigan leads the trophy series 38–28–2. Michigan State is the holder of the trophy following a 2020 upset win over the heavily favored Wolverines, 27-24. Michigan holds a 71–37-5 advantage through the 2020 season.[124] MinnesotaMain article: Michigan–Minnesota football rivalryMichigan plays Minnesota for the Little Brown Jug trophy. The Little Brown Jug is the most regularly exchanged rivalry trophy in college football, the oldest trophy game in FBS college football, and the second oldest rivalry trophy overall.[125] Through the 2017 season, Michigan leads the overall series 75–25–3.[126] Notre DameMain article: Michigan–Notre Dame football rivalryMichigan and Notre Dame began playing each other in 1887 in Notre Dame’s first football game.[127] The rivalry is notable due to the historical success of the football programs. Through the end of the 2017 season, Michigan is ranked No. 1 in wins and all-time winning percentage while Notre Dame is No. 2 in both categories.[128] Both schools also claim 11 national championships.[129] Michigan and Notre Dame have played in 42 contests, with Michigan holding a 25–17–1 advantage through the 2019 season.[130] NorthwesternMain article: George Jewett TrophyMichigan and Northwestern first played each other in 1892. In 2021, the two universities announced the creation of a new rivalry trophy to be awarded to the game’s winner, the George Jewett Trophy. The trophy honors George Jewett, the first African-American player in Big Ten Conference history, who played for both schools. The game is the first FBS rivalry game named for an African-American player. [131] Michigan holds a 58–15–2 advantage in the all-time series through the 2020 season.[132] ChampionshipsNational championshipsThe following is a list of Michigan’s 11 national championships:[133] YearCoachSelectorRecordBowlFinal APFinal Coaches1901Fielding H. YostHelms, Houlgate, NCF[134]11–0Won Rose−−1902Fielding H. YostBillingsley, Helms, Houlgate, NCF, Parke Davis[134]11–0−−1903Fielding H. YostBillingsley, Helms, Houlgate, NCF, Parke Davis[134]11–0–1−−1904Fielding H. YostNCF[134]10–0−−1918Fielding H. YostBillingsley, NCF[134]5–0−−1923Fielding H. YostBillingsley, NCF[134]8–0−−1932Harry G. KipkeDickinson, Parke Davis[134]8–0−−1933Harry G. KipkeBerryman (QPRS), Billingsley, Boand, CFRA, Dickinson, Helms, Houlgate, NCF, Parke Davis, Poling, Sagarin[134]7–0–1−−1947Fritz CrislerBerryman (QPRS), Billingsley, Boand, CFRA, DeVold, Dunkel, Helms, Houlgate, Litkenhous, NCF, Poling, Sagarin[134]10–0Won RoseNo. 2−1948Bennie OosterbaanAP, Berryman (QPRS), Billingsley, CFRA, DeVold, Dunkel, Helms, Houlgate, Litkenhous, NCF, Poling, Sagarin, Williamson[134]9–0No. 1−1997Lloyd CarrAP, Billingsley, FWAA, NCF, NFF, Sporting News[134]12–0Won RoseNo. 1No. 2National championships11Unclaimed national championshipsIn addition to the 11 national championships that Michigan claims, the school has been named national champion by various “major selectors” featured in the NCAA record book for five other seasons.[134] Michigan does not claim national championships for these years. YearCoachSelectorRecordBowl1925Fielding H. YostSagarin7–11926Fielding H. YostSagarin7–11964Bump ElliottDunkel9–1Won Rose1973Bo SchembechlerNCF, Poling10–0–11985Bo SchembechlerMatthews10–1–1Won FiestaOther undefeated seasonsMichigan was also undefeated in 11 other seasons: 1879, 1880, 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887, 1898, 1910, 1922, 1930, 1992. Conference championshipsThe following is a list of Michigan’s 42 conference championships as of 2019. YearCoachOverall recordBig Ten record1898Gustave Ferbert10–03–01901 †Fielding H. Yost11–04–01902Fielding H. Yost11–05–01903 †Fielding H. Yost11–0–13–0–11904 †Fielding H. Yost10–02–01906 †Fielding H. Yost4–11–01918 †Fielding H. Yost5–02–01922 †Fielding H. Yost6–0–14–01923 †Fielding H. Yost8–04–01925Fielding H. Yost7–15–11926 †Fielding H. Yost7–15–01930 †Harry Kipke8–0–15–01931 †Harry Kipke8–1–15–11932 †Harry Kipke8–06–01933 †Harry Kipke7–0–15–0–11943 †Fritz Crisler8–16–01947Fritz Crisler10–06–01948Bennie Oosterbaan9–06–01949 †Bennie Oosterbaan6–2–14–1–11950Bennie Oosterbaan6–3–14–1–11964Bump Elliott9–16–11969 †Bo Schembechler8–36–11971Bo Schembechler11–18–01972 †Bo Schembechler10–17–11973 †Bo Schembechler10–0–17–0–11974 †Bo Schembechler10–17–11976 †Bo Schembechler10–27–11977 †Bo Schembechler10–27–11978 †Bo Schembechler10–27–11980Bo Schembechler10–28–01982Bo Schembechler8–48–11986 †Bo Schembechler11–27–11988Bo Schembechler9–2–17–0–11989Bo Schembechler10–28–01990 †Gary Moeller9–36–21991Gary Moeller10–28–01992Gary Moeller9–0–36–0–21997Lloyd Carr12–08–01998 †Lloyd Carr10–37–12000 †Lloyd Carr9–36–22003Lloyd Carr10–37–12004 †Lloyd Carr9–37–1† Co-champions Division championshipsMichigan has shared one division title.[135][136] YearDivisionCoachOpponentCG result2018 †Big Ten EastJim HarbaughN/A lost tiebreaker to Ohio State† Co-champions Program records and achievementsTeam recordsMost wins in college football history (964)[137]Most winning seasons of any program (120)[138]Most appearances in the final AP Poll (61)[139]Head coaching historyMain article: List of Michigan Wolverines head football coachesIndividual awards and honorsSee also: Michigan Wolverines football statistical leadersNational award winnersPlayersHeisman Trophy1940: Tom Harmon1991: Desmond Howard1997: Charles WoodsonMaxwell Award1940: Tom Harmon1991: Desmond HowardWalter Camp Award1991: Desmond Howard1997: Charles WoodsonChic Harley Award1964: Bob Timberlake1986: Jim Harbaugh1991: Desmond Howard1997: Charles WoodsonDick Butkus Award1991: Erick AndersonJack Lambert Trophy1991: Erick AndersonPaul Warfield Trophy1991: Desmond Howard2004: Braylon EdwardsJim Parker Trophy1991: Greg Skrepenak2000: Steve Hutchinson2007: Jake LongSammy Baugh Trophy1992: Elvis GrbacJack Tatum Trophy1997: Charles WoodsonJim Thorpe Award1997: Charles WoodsonChuck Bednarik Award1997: Charles WoodsonBronko Nagurski Trophy1997: Charles WoodsonDoak Walker Award2003: Chris PerryJim Brown Trophy2003: Chris PerryFred Biletnikoff Award2004: Braylon EdwardsRimington Trophy2004: David Baas2011: David MolkLombardi Award2006: LaMarr WoodleyTed Hendricks Award2006: LaMarr WoodleyOzzie Newsome Award2015: Jake ButtJohn Mackey Award2016: Jake ButtLott IMPACT Trophy2016: Jabrill PeppersPaul Hornung Award2016: Jabrill PeppersCoachesAFCA Coach of the Year1947: Fritz Crisler1948: Bennie Oosterbaan1969: Bo Schembechler1997: Lloyd CarrPaul “Bear” Bryant Award1997: Lloyd CarrEddie Robinson Coach of the Year1969: Bo SchembechlerWalter Camp Coach of the Year Award1969: Bo Schembechler1997: Lloyd CarrBobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award1977: Bo Schembechler2007: Lloyd CarrSporting News Coach of the Year1985: Bo SchembechlerWoody Hayes Trophy1985: Bo Schembechler1997: Lloyd CarrGeorge Munger Award1989: Bo Schembechler1997: Lloyd Carr2011: Brady HokeBroyles Award1997: Jim HerrmannAFCA Assistant Coach of the Year2001: Fred JacksonHeisman Trophy votingTwenty-six Heisman Trophy candidates have played at Michigan. Three have won the award: 1939: Tom Harmon, 2nd1940: Tom Harmon, 1st1941: Bob Westfall, 8th1943: Bill Daley, 7th1947: Bob Chappuis, 2nd1955: Ron Kramer, 8th1956: Ron Kramer, 6th1964: Bob Timberlake, 4th1968: Ron Johnson, 6th1974: Dennis Franklin, 8th1975: Gordon Bell, 8th1976: Rob Lytle, 3rd1977: Rick Leach, 8th1978: Rick Leach, 3rd1980: Anthony Carter, 10th1981: Anthony Carter, 7th1982: Anthony Carter, 4th1986: Jim Harbaugh, 3rd1991: Desmond Howard, 1st1993: Tyrone Wheatley, 8th1994: Tyrone Wheatley, 12th1995: Tim Biakabutuka, 8th1997: Charles Woodson, 1st2003: Chris Perry, 4th2004: Braylon Edwards, 10th2006: Mike Hart, 5th2010: Denard Robinson, 6th2016: Jabrill Peppers, 5thAll-AmericansMain article: List of Michigan Wolverines football All-AmericansTeam and conference MVPMichigan Most Valuable Player Award (1926–1959), Louis B. Hyde Memorial Award (1960–1994),[140] Bo Schembechler Award (1995–present); winners of the Chicago Tribune Silver Football as the Big Ten’s MVP also noted:[141] 1926: Benny Friedman (also Big Ten MVP)1927: Bennie Oosterbaan1928: Otto Pommerening1929: James Simrall1930: Jack Wheeler1931: Bill Hewitt1932: Harry Newman (also Big Ten MVP)1933: Herman Everhardus1934: Gerald Ford1935: William Renner1936: Matt Patanelli1937: Ralph Heikkinen1938: Ralph Heikkinen1939: Tom Harmon1940: Tom Harmon (also Big Ten MVP)1941: Reuben Kelto1942: Albert Wistert1943: Bob Wiese1944: Don Lund1945: Harold Watts1946: Bob Chappuis1947: Bump Elliott (also Big Ten MVP)1948: Dominic Tomasi1949: Dick Kempthorn1950: Don Dufek1951: Don Peterson1952: Ted Topor1953: Tony Branoff1954: Fred Baer1955: Terry Barr1956: Dick Hill1957: Jim Pace (also Big Ten MVP)1958: Bob Ptacek1959: Tony Rio1960: Dennis Fitzgerald1961: John Walker1962: Dave Raimey1963: Tom Keating1964: Bob Timberlake (also Big Ten MVP)1965: Bill Yearby1966: Jack Clancy1967: Ron Johnson1968: Ron Johnson (also Big Ten MVP)1969: Jim Mandich1970: Henry Hill and Don Moorhead1971: Billy Taylor1972: Randy Logan1973: Paul Seal1974: Steve Strinko1975: Gordon Bell1976: Rob Lytle (also Big Ten MVP)1977: Russell Davis1978: Rick Leach (also Big Ten MVP)1979: Ron Simpkins1980: Anthony Carter1981: Butch Woolfolk1982: Anthony Carter (also Big Ten MVP)1983: Steve Smith1984: Mike Mallory1985: Mike Hammerstein1986: Jim Harbaugh (also Big Ten MVP)1987: Jamie Morris1988: Mark Messner1989: Tony Boles1990: Tripp Welborne1991: Desmond Howard (also Big Ten MVP)1992: Chris Hutchinson1993: Buster Stanley1994: Todd Collins1995: Tim Biakabutuka1996: Rod Payne1997: Charles Woodson (also Big Ten MVP)1998: Tai Streets1999: Tom Brady2000: Anthony Thomas2001: Marquise Walker2002: B. J. Askew2003: Chris Perry (also Big Ten MVP)2004: Braylon Edwards (also Big Ten MVP)2005: Jason Avant2006: David Harris and Mike Hart2007: Mike Hart2008: Brandon Graham2009: Brandon Graham (also Big Ten MVP)2010: Denard Robinson (also Big Ten MVP)2011: Denard Robinson2012: Jordan Kovacs2013: Jeremy Gallon2014: Jake Ryan2015: Jehu Chesson2016: Jabrill Peppers2017: Maurice Hurst Jr.2018: Chase Winovich2019: Shea PattersonBig Ten Conference honorsPlayer of the Year1982: Anthony Carter1986: Jim HarbaughGraham–George Offensive Player of the Year1990: Jon Vaughn (coaches)1991: Desmond Howard1992: Tyrone Wheatley2003: Chris Perry2004: Braylon Edwards2010: Denard RobinsonRimington–Pace Offensive Lineman of the Year1991: Greg Skrepenak1998: Jon Jansen2000: Steve Hutchinson2004: David Baas2006: Jake Long2007: Jake Long2011: David Molk2012: Taylor Lewan2013: Taylor LewanNagurski–Woodson Defensive Player of the Year1997: Charles Woodson2001: Larry Foote2006: LaMarr Woodley2016: Jabrill Peppers2018: Devin BushSmith–Brown Defensive Lineman of the Year1985: Mike Hammerstein1988: Mark Messner1992: Chris Hutchinson2006: LaMarr WoodleyThompson–Randle El Freshman of the Year1995: Charles Woodson (coaches)1997: Anthony Thomas (coaches and media)2003: Steve Breaston (coaches)2004: Mike Hart (coaches and media)2015: Jabrill Peppers (coaches and media)Dave McClain / Hayes–Schembechler Coach of the Year1972: Bo Schembechler (media)1976: Bo Schembechler (media)1980: Bo Schembechler (media)1982: Bo Schembechler (coaches)1985: Bo Schembechler (media and coaches)1989: Bo Schembechler (coaches)1991: Gary Moeller (media and coaches)1992: Gary Moeller (media)2011: Brady Hoke (media and coaches)Tatum–Woodson Defensive Back of the Year2016: Jourdan LewisButkus–Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year2016: Jabrill Peppers2018: Devin BushKwalick–Clark Tight End of the Year2013: Devin Funchess2015: Jake Butt2016: Jake ButtEddleman–Fields Punter of the Year2012: Will Hagerup2018: Will HartRodgers-Dwight Return Specialist of the Year2016: Jabrill PeppersRetired numbersThe following jersey numbers have been retired by the program:[142] Michigan Wolverines Retired NumbersNo.PlayerPos.TenureNo. Ret.11Francis WistertAlbert WistertAlvin WistertT1931–19331940–19421947–1949194921Desmond HowardWR1989–1991201547Bennie OosterbaanE1925–1927192748Gerald FordC1932–1934199487Ron KramerE1954–1956195698Tom HarmonHB1938–19401940Beginning in 2011, previously retired numbers of “Michigan Football Legends” were assigned to and worn by players selected by the head coach. The Legends program was discontinued in July 2015, and the numbers again permanently retired.[143][144] Hall of Fame inducteesCollege Football Hall of FameSee also: College Football Hall of FameMichigan inductees into the College Football Hall of Fame as of 2021.[145] Albert BenbrookDave BrownLloyd CarrAnthony CarterBob ChappuisFritz CrislerTom CurtisDan DierdorfBump ElliottPete ElliottBenny FriedmanTom HarmonWillie HestonElroy HirschDesmond HowardRon JohnsonHarry KipkeRon KramerGeorge LittleRob LytleJim MandichJohnny MaulbetschReggie McKenzieBill MorleyDavid M. NelsonHarry NewmanBennie OosterbaanMerv PregulmanHarold R. “Tubby” RaymondBo SchembechlerGermany SchulzNeil SnowErnie VickBob WestfallTad WiemanAlbert WistertAlvin WistertFrancis WistertCharles WoodsonFielding H. YostPro Football Hall of FameMichigan inductees to the Pro Football Hall of Fame as of 2021.[146] NamePositionInductedGeorge AllenCoach2002Dan DierdorfT1996Len FordDE1976Benny FriedmanQB2005Bill HewittEnd1971Elroy HirschHB, End1968Steve HutchinsonG2020Ty LawCB2019Tom MackG1999Ralph WilsonOwner2009Charles WoodsonCB2021Rose BowlThe Rose Bowl Hall of Fame has inducted the following Michigan players and coaches.[147] NamePositionInductedBump ElliottHB1989Neil SnowEnd, FB1990Bob ChappuisHB, QB1992Bo SchembechlerCoach1993Butch WoolfolkHB1998Mel AnthonyFB2002Chuck OrtmannHB2008Brian GrieseQB2012Lloyd CarrCoach2013Tyrone WheatleyRB2015Charles Woodson[148]CB2017Alumni in the NFLUpdated as of May 10, 2021.[149] Ben Braden: Green Bay PackersTom Brady: Tampa Bay BuccaneersBen Bredeson: Baltimore RavensDevin Bush: Pittsburgh SteelersTaco Charlton: Kansas City ChiefsCamaron Cheeseman: Washington Football TeamFrank Clark: Kansas City ChiefsMason Cole: Minnesota VikingsNico Collins: Houston TexansMike Danna: Kansas City ChiefsChris Evans: Cincinnati BengalsNick Eubanks: Dallas CowboysDevin Funchess: Green Bay PackersRashan Gary: Green Bay PackersZach Gentry: Pittsburgh SteelersGraham Glasgow: Denver BroncosRyan Glasgow: New Orleans SaintsJordan Glasgow: Indianapolis ColtsBrandon Graham: Philadelphia EaglesChad Henne: Kansas City ChiefsLano Hill: Seattle SeahawksLavert Hill: Philadelphia EaglesKhaleke Hudson: Washington Football TeamMaurice Hurst: San Francisco 49ersCarlo Kemp: Green Bay Packers
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