Michigan 34, New Mexico 17

Tag: New Mexico


1Sep 2025
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Michigan 34, New Mexico 17

Bryce Underwood (image via Toledo Blade)

The team the team the team. I’m not going to start off talking about He Who Shall Not Be Named in the First Paragraph because I want to take a more holistic look at Michigan’s 2025 team. But this looks like a complete team. I don’t think it’s a championship team, but it’s a complete team in that there are no glaring weaknesses or players who are obviously overmatched. Now some might say “Meh, it’s New Mexico and they were 5-7 last year and lost their coach and brought in a bunch of new players,” but it’s a team that had a mindset of running the ball last year (#2 in the country in 2024) and it’s one that seems to have taken on the attitude of its coach. I heard good things about Jason Eck a few years ago on the coaching clinic circuit, and the team played with some swagger, which you have to do coming into Michigan Stadium as a giant underdog. Michigan looks like a pro team in the sense that there are no easy days against pro teams. If you have an injury on your 53-man roster in the NFL, you bring in another guy who looks like a pro, because he’s been a backup or he’s a veteran who played for ten years but maybe didn’t have the right contract situation. I mentioned before that this is the deepest Michigan team I’ve seen (perhaps not the best, but the deepest), and I think that showed on Saturday night.

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29Aug 2025
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Preview: Michigan vs. New Mexico

Scottre Humphrey (image via X)

New Mexico is coached by Jason Eck, who comes to UNM from FCS Idaho. Eck is a former Wisconsin offensive lineman under Barry Alvarez. Eck went 23-16 in three seasons at Idaho and replaces former BYU and Virginia head coach Bronco Mendenhall, who took the head coaching job at Utah State.

RUSH OFFENSE vs. NEW MEXICO RUSH DEFENSE
Last year’s rushing offense wasn’t great. But it’s also not back. Kalel Mullings (948 yards, 12 TD) and Donovan Edwards (589 yards, 4 TD) are gone, and so are four offensive linemen who started games: Myles Hinton, Josh Priebe, Dominic Giudice, and Andrew Gentry. (Gentry will start at right tackle for BYU, former backup Jeff Persi will start at left tackle for Pitt, and Giudice will start at left guard for Missouri.) Meanwhile, 23 of Jordan Marshall’s 31 carries came in the ReliaQuest Bowl, and Alabama transfer Justice Haynes ran for 448 total yards in 2024. Michigan’s offensive line will be redshirt sophomore Evan Link, fifth year senior Giovanni El-Hadi, fifth year senior Greg Crippen, redshirt sophomore Brady Norton, and redshirt freshman Andrew Sprague from left to right. New Mexico has a new head coach in former Idaho head man Jason Eck, but the New Mexicans finished #126 in rushing yards allowed per game last year (212.9) and #129 in yards allowed per carry (5.42). Things got better down the stretch, but they let four teams average more than 6.7 yards per carry, including FCS Montana State in the 2024 season opener, who ran for 362 yards on 7.7 yards per attempt. They have 53 new players on the roster, including 16 new names in the defensive two-deep, so this is a new team. But still. They have 245 lb. defensive ends, a 265 lb. defensive tackle, and then a nose tackle who’s 6’3″, 325 lbs. but played for Texas Southern last year. The top returning tackler is weakside linebacker Randolph Kpai (6’3″, 221), a fifth year senior. Fifth year senior edge Gabriel Lopez (6’3″, 246) finished fourth on the team with 5 tackles for loss. Even with Michigan’s revamped offense, this should be a major advantage for the Wolverines.
Advantage: Michigan

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