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Freshman Bryce Underwood ready for big stage at Michigan: ‘He came here to be that guy’

ANN ARBOR — Michigan senior Max Bredeson, a two-time captain who has made a name for himself as a violent blocker, pregame motivator and leader, went to head coach Sherrone Moore before the start of preseason camp and made a request.

Moore was pairing up teammates to room together during camp and figured Bredeson, a fullback/tight end, would enjoy spending time with tight end Marlin Klein. Bredeson had a different plan. He was aiming to room with highly touted freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood, who on Monday was named the team’s starter. He is the fourth true freshman quarterback to start for the Wolverines.

“He’s like, ‘I want to be with Bryce,’” Moore told reporters on Monday, adding he asked why Bredeson wanted that roommate assignment. “He’s like, ‘Yeah, let’s get that done,’ (and) I was like, ‘OK, cool. You’re the captain. We can do that.’”

For the duration of camp, Underwood, who turned 18 this month, and Bredeson roomed together. They found out, among other things, that they both enjoy Cheez-It Grooves crackers.

“That was fun,” Bredeson said of rooming with Underwood. “A lot of great things (happened), like obviously getting to see him play football. It’s cool to see that stuff, but the way he talks to people, the way he interacts in the building, I think that’s really special.

“I got to be around him every day for a month straight and you get to see what someone’s really like after you go back to a hotel room after a three-hour practice, you can see the real version of them, and the real version is as good as could be.”

Moore initially found himself wondering why Bredeson would make that request but realized it was about messaging and what an experienced senior could share with a freshman. And not just any freshman, but one of the most talked about in college football entering this season.

Bredeson said he doesn’t know exactly what he hoped to get out of the experience but instinctively felt it was a good plan.

“I just knew it could help the team being around each other every day,” Bredeson said. “Everybody wants to have a positive impact on everybody. I got a lot out of it from him, too. So it wasn’t all about me trying to be around him. A lot of good things came for me from being around him, too.”

Bredeson wanted to use the opportunity to impart some of his well-earned football wisdom. He also knows what it’s like to be a freshman and trying to find your voice within a team. Underwood, because of the nature of his position, has to be in control of the offense and has to command respect. That’s not easy to earn or develop.

“He’s definitely been able to grow in that role and kind of settle in,” Bredeson said.

Underwood hasn’t had a lot of media interaction, but when he has, he has made clear he’s confident in his abilities. He told Big Ten Network last week, for instance, that he wants to “shock” the world.

“They’ve seen a lot of freshmen, but nobody’s seen a freshman like me,” Underwood said on BTN.

During an interview with The Detroit News in April, he was asked his best on-field traits.

“What I feel like I do best, I lead and I’m an honest-to-God game-changer,” he said.

In an interview with Rich Eisen earlier this year, he said he plans to win “a couple Heismans and at least one natty.”

Bold talk but no one seems to mind. Perhaps that’s his media persona, because the players and coaches have said they’ve seen nothing but a young quarterback who wants to learn, one who stays late to work on his game and study film.

“Bryce is a very even-keel kid,” Moore said. “Doesn’t get up too high, too low, but he was very excited about the opportunity (to start). He said that’s why he came here, to be that guy.”

Now that he is that guy, Moore made clear that while he considers Underwood “mature beyond his years,” people need to understand he will make mistakes. He called it a journey and said the entire team is along for the ride.

The coaches have always leaned toward Underwood during preseason interviews about the quarterback competition, which is why the announcement Monday was anticlimactic. Offensive coordinator Chip Lindsey described the starting quarterback as requiring the right mindset to own the key leadership position. The best guys he said he’s coached have not been the loudest but those who can motivate.

“Whoever affects the other 10 guys the best,” Lindsey said during camp about what he looks for in a starting quarterback. “Whoever can manage the whole offense. Communication, getting us in and out of the right plays, making sure we’re in the right protection and so forth. Who has that ability to affect the others?”

Underwood and the receivers will work this season to revive a pass game that struggled last season. Junior receiver Semaj Morgan, who attended West Bloomfield and knew Underwood from the 7-on-7 circuit, said the receivers and Underwood have developed chemistry.

“Since I already knew Bryce, he already knew what I can do and believes in me,” Morgan said.

Senior left guard Gio El-Hadi said it doesn’t matter that Underwood is only 18. He has the attention of his teammates.

”He’s very confident,” El-Hadi said. “He has that natural leadership. He’s loud, he calls something he’s confident in. You gotta be confident to be a quarterback. Not cocky but confident, and I really love that about him. He’s (18) years old playing with 21-, 22-, maybe 25-year-olds, but he just has that ability to lead us and the ability to talk through stuff just like all the other quarterbacks. And for him to do that at a young age is so impressive.”

Now, Underwood must navigate the pressure that comes with being the starting quarterback.

Not a problem. Moore said the freshman embraces it.

“I think he kind of likes it, and I think he also turns it into fuel,” Moore said. “I asked him a question, like, what’s his goal, and it was just me and him. He said, ‘Do everything I can to help my team win.’ That’s it. That’s all you want to hear. And all those other things, I think everybody has individual goals, and they should have them, but ultimately you should be about the team.

“He definitely is about the team and wants to make sure the team is at their best. So there is hype, but that’s what happens when you’re the starting quarterback at Michigan.”

True freshman Bryce Underwood (19) is entering the season as Michigan’s starting quarterback. (DAVID GURALNICK — The Detroit News)

Michigan freshman OT Andrew Babalola suffers potential season-ending knee injury

Michigan could be without one of its top freshmen, five-star offensive tackle Andrew Babalola, this season.

Babalola, who had been turning heads during preseason camp in the competition for the starting left tackle spot, has suffered a knee injury that could be season-ending, CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz reported Monday.

Michigan is in its final week of camp before the team begins game-week preparations for the season opener on Aug. 30 against New Mexico, and this is when the coaches begin to finalize the depth chart.

Redshirt sophomore Evan Link, who made 10 starts at right tackle last year during the regular season and then started at left tackle in the ReliaQuest Bowl, is expected to start the season opener. Redshirt freshman Blake Frazier has been practicing at both tackle spots and is in the mix at left tackle.

Babalola had been praised all camp for his football IQ with how quickly he had adapted to the college game and learned the playbook.

“Babs is amazing,” veteran offensive lineman Gio El-Hadi, the starting left guard, told reporters recently. “He’s a really good freshman. So smart. I was not that smart when I was a freshman. It took me a lot longer to learn the playbook, and he already knows it. Just with the natural abilities he has, he’s going to be a superstar.”

Andrew Babalola (65) of the Michigan Wolverines competes during the third quarter of the Maize vs Blue spring football game at Michigan Stadium on April 19, 2025 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. (MIKE MULHOLLAND — Getty Images)

Michigan tight end Marlin Klein emerges from ‘the jungle’ ready to prove his potential

ANN ARBOR — When asked who the player is to watch this season on their side of the ball, most players often take a few moments to consider the question before formulating an answer.

Max Bredeson, a Michigan captain last season and a fullback/tight end, did not hesitate with his response when the question was posed to him late last month before Big Ten media days and the start of preseason camp.

“I mean, it shouldn’t be a surprise you, but I’ll put all my chips in for Marlin Klein,” Bredeson said of the tight end who is the heir apparent to first-round NFL Draft pick Colston Loveland. “That’s my guy. I’m excited for him to go do it.

“At Michigan, we’ve always had the tight end, and Marlin and Colston came in the same class. Marlin’s ready to go. He’s heard so many times how much talent he has. This is a guy who’s done hearing that, and he’s all about wanting to go do it.”

Klein has heard plenty about his talent and potential, and perhaps that’s because the German native started the game so late. He was a fine soccer and basketball player, but when he decided to move from Germany to Georgia to play at Rabun Gap-Nacoochee, that potential was all everyone was banking on.

Now, the 6-foot-6, 250-pound junior has developed that potential and is expected to pick up where Loveland left off. Klein recently made Bruce Feldman’s “Freaks List” at No. 35, an improvement from No. 90 the year before. Feldman noted Klein’s speed and agility.

“Oh, that’s cool, but winning every game this season is more important to me,” Klein told reporters on Friday of his appearance on Feldman’s list. “But yes, it’s cool. A national championship will be even cooler.”

Loveland, who led the team in receiving last year, was asked the previous two seasons to be more of a pass-catcher. He could block, but that’s not how he was needed in the offense.

Chip Lindsey, in his first season as Michigan’s offensive coordinator, believes he has a complete tight end in Klein and likes the fact that he has been an important part of the offense in terms of mixing it up and being physical.

“He’s one of the best blockers in the country, in my opinion,” Lindsey said this week. “But what’s surprising is he’s got really good speed. He can get vertical quick. Big, rangy target. You like that as a quarterback, where obviously it’s a lot easier if a guy is covered and throw it to the spot and let him go get it.

“But the guy is kind of a dirty work, lunch-pail kind of guy, or a blue-collar guy. Love his attitude and approach. He likes the physicality of the position. And I think that’s probably why him and Max play off each other so well. They’re both wired the same way. A really talented kid. I’m excited to coach him, and hopefully he’ll have a big role in our offense.”

Klein knew that if he was ever going to find his way onto the field, he’d have to develop as a blocker.

“Coming in here from high school, like I never blocked (a) soul in high school,” Klein said with a laugh.

He credits former Michigan tight ends for teaching him the all-around nature of the position, guys like Luke Schoonmaker, Joel Honigford, AJ Barner and Loveland.

“You want to chase the best, compete with the best each and every single day, and I was able to learn from (them),” Klein said. “But it really took a lot of hard work, a lot of steps for me.”

Bredeson is known for his tenacious blocking. Klein said much Bredeson’s selflessness in terms of playing the game has rubbed off on him the last few seasons.

“I don’t think I had that same approach when I came in, in 2022. Being able to learn from him and (his) almost kind of psycho mentality about the game of football, it’s just been so much fun for me,” Klein said. “When I first got here, I was like, this might be a little crazy. But hanging around him and just really seeing how much he actually loves the game of football, that’s why he is the way he is, and that’s why he is the best at what he does in the country.”

Klein said he has always felt like he belonged in the college game; it simply took him a little bit longer to reach the level of his teammates who had played for years. He knew it would be a challenge, but it’s one he sought.

Last spring, with the help of tight ends coach Steve Casula, who’s now also a co-offensive coordinator, Klein said he began to realize he’s much more than just potential.

“We went to the jungle,” Klein said.

The jungle, as Klein described it, involved only the two of them and it was run-game specific.

“It was really the most critical time of my life,” Klein said. “And it was never good enough, but that was really just because he tried to push me to my best. He helped me to (reach) the standard, which is the Michigan standard, and the Michigan standard is a championship standard. So that equals the best.”

The jungle was not a fun place to be in real time. But looking back, it was game-changing for Klein.

“The way (Casula) describes the jungle is really like we’re locked in,” Klein said. “He was the most critical person on me, but it wasn’t a personal thing. I knew he wanted the best for me. Each and every single day, the meetings weren’t the most fun for me, (but) I have to get better now. He pushed me every single day. It was the biggest blessing that ever happened to me, and that took my game to the next level.”

Michigan tight end Marlin Klein (17) had 13 catches for 108 yards last season. (DAVID GURALNICK — The Detroit News)
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