Michigan football will go as far as this position takes them in 2025 season

Sherrone Moore, Michigan football's head coach, is a former offensive lineman.

He's also a former offensive line coach. It's not too difficult to figure out what he wants as the identity of the team.

"We tell our guys from coach Moore on down, 'the team will go as the lines go,'" offensive line coach Grant Newsome said Monday afternoon in Schembechler Hall. "The offensive line and defensive line, that's any good team, gotta dominate up front ... that's something that's never lost on me or on our offensive line."

Michigan offensive line coach Grant Newsome talks to Blue Team players during the second half of the spring game at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor on Saturday, April 20, 2024.

The standard was set for the position to be elite during the Wolverines' incredible three-year run from 2021-23, which saw U-M go 40-3, win three consecutive Big Ten championships and culminated in a national championship.

In both 2021 and 2022, when Moore was leading the unit, Michigan was named the Joe Moore Award winners as the best offensive line in the country. Though the group didn't earn the honor in its national title year, it was still a semifinalist.

Last season was different. The Wolverines lost their six leading players on the unit going into the 2024 season including a pair of experienced guards in Trevor Keegan and Zak Zinter as well as starting center Drake Nugent, and three rotational tackles in LaDarius Henderson, Karsen Barnhart and Trente Jones.

Michigan offensive lineman Giovanni El-Hadi (58), left, and offensive lineman Dominick Giudice (56) pray together before kickoff against Oregon at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor on Saturday, Nov. 2, 2024.

Players like Gio El-Hadi said U-M had "a standard to uphold" but the unit came up well short. The pass blocking was below average, as U-M's aerial attack (129.1 yards per game) was No. 130 out of 133 teams in the Football Bowl Subdivision, ahead of only the three military academies — Army, Navy and Air Force — each of whom run triple-option attacks.

But the real concern was in the rushing game. U-M was middling, not the usual top-10 rate in the country it had become accustomed to, checking in at No. 73 (157.2 yards per game) nationally. While there were issues with personnel, Newsome cited something else he wants to fix first.

"We just got to have fun," Newsome said about what has to be different in 2025. "It had been a while since anyone had lost more than a game in a season. So all of a sudden it can get to a snowball effect where you're searching for answers, let's try this or let's try this, instead of taking a breath and just enjoying it.

"At the end of the day, you have to have fun playing this game and I think there were times last year where I didn't do a good enough of a job of letting them do that."

That's goal No. 1 for a group that once again went through some change over the offseason.

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