45. P Hudson Hollenbeck (RS Jr.): The 6'2", 206-pounder filled in well for Tommy Doman last season after Doman decided to transfer. He punted 6 times for 277 yards (46.2 yards/punt), put two of those punts inside the 20-yard line, and also served as the holder for Dominic Zvada at times. I wouldn't have been too surprised if Michigan went into 2025 with Hollenbeck as the punter, but they brought in Missouri starter Luke Bauer. I have to believe Bauer is the frontrunner for the job, but Hollenbeck is a good all-around backup who can punt, hold, and kick off. Last year's rank: #44a.
44. TE Jalen Hoffman (RS Jr.): Hoffman played in all thirteen games last year, including two on offense. He was backing up Max Bredeson, so there's a reason he didn't play much. But Hoffman burst onto the scene this spring, catching an 88-yard touchdown from Bryce Underwood on his way to 7 catches for 148 yards overall. Maybe Hoffman is one of those guys who flashes in the spring game and doesn't do much beyond that, but he looks like a legitimate receiving option out of the backfield. Last year's rank: #72.
43. DT Enow Etta (RS So.): Etta spent the 2023 season playing edge before bulking up to play inside last year. The experiment didn't go that well in 2024: he started one game but was largely ineffective and made just 4 tackles, 0.5 sacks, and 1 pass breakup overall across ten games. Word coming from the coaches suggests Etta has taken the next step in his development. It would be nice to get some pass rush from the interior, where Rayshaun Benny does well to get after the quarterback but not many other guys do. Etta should be a key backup and stays right here at #43, the same spot he was last season. Last year's rank: #43.
42. CB Shamari Earls (Fr.): Earls (4-star, #13 CB, #88 overall) is the rare young cornerback who looks not only physically ready to play, but perhaps more developed than many veteran college corners. Listed at 6'2" and 203 lbs., he appeared in the spring game and physically looked like Will Johnson. Earls's recruiting rankings might be a little depressed because he missed his senior season due to injury, but he should step in and play pretty early. While he probably won't begin the season as a starter, he may progress to that point throughout the year. Jyaire Hill and Zeke Berry should be the starting corners, but with Berry's ability to play other positions, the coaching staff could do some position switching if Earls is ready.
41. WR Peyton O'Leary (RS Sr.): O'Leary has progressed throughout his career from walk-on to a six-game starter in 2024, when he was in his fourth year in the program. He caught 10 passes for 102 yards and notched his second career touchdown. At 6'3" and 203 lbs., O'Leary provided/provides some of the size that was largely lacking at the receiver position, but Michigan address that issue with signing Indiana transfer Donaven McCulley this off-season. O'Leary's upside is limited, but he should still be heavily in the rotation. Last year's rank: #60.
opposite sides of the ball, but I'm looking forward to seeing guys like Earls make an impact, and less of guys like OLeary consuming snaps
ReplyDeleteEtta surpassed Iwunnah by the end of the year (more snaps vs Alabama) so he is rightfully ranked ahead.
ReplyDeleteO'Leary is a vet at this point. Low-ceiling but he is reliable. I see McCulley replacing Loveland as the primary downfield threat so O'Leary should keep a prominent role in the WR rotation.
Hoffman - underrated last year but probably overrated this year. Bredeson should eat up all the meaningful H-back snaps. I know Hoffman is also getting talk in the TE rotation but I doubt he's very high on the pecking order there.
Earls -- I'm a little more skeptical than Thunder. I think Anderson and Edmond are more likely just because of experience. BUT -- there's something to be said for passing the eye test in terms of coaches (especially guys like Martindale hardwired to think in terms of NFL size).
Hollenback is tough to rank so this is good middle-ground.