Michigan
Blitz-heavy DC Martindale vows to ‘find the right mix’ at Michigan
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — They may share the same first name, role on the Michigan football coaching staff and desire to blitz.
But new Wolverines defensive coordinator Don “Wink” Martindale has done his best this offseason to quiet the skeptics who suggest he’s just another polished, more successful version of Don Brown.
“It’s ridiculous,” Martindale told reporters Tuesday ahead of training camp. “As I see it, it’s ridiculous. You have defenses that are ranked No. 1 in the NFL, in the top 5 three years in a row, and you come into a new system in New York and you go into the playoffs and what do they want to talk about?
“All they want to talk about is last year, the last year (in Baltimore).”
Martindale was referencing his 2021 season with the Ravens, the low-point of his career as a coordinator in the NFL. Not only did Baltimore fall to 19th in yards allowed per play that season, but did so blitzing at an uncomfortable 31.1 percent rate. Uncomfortable for Martindale, anyway.
In four of his seven seasons as an NFL coordinator, Martindale-led defenses were No. 1 in blitz rates — including three of his four seasons in Baltimore, where the Ravens chased after the quarterback on 39.6 percent of dropbacks in 2018, 54.9 percent in ‘19 and 44.1 percent in ‘20. It wasn’t until his final season, after which head coach John Harbaugh elected to move on from the longtime assistant coach, that he let off the gas.
More: Martindale reassures U-M players upon arrival: ‘I’m the OG of of this system’
“Am I an aggressive playcaller? Yes, I’m an aggressive playcaller,” Martindale, tasked with taking over the No. 1-ranked Michigan defense, conceded. “We’ve won a lot of football games calling games aggressively. When it doesn’t work, that’s when everybody comes out and says, ‘He’s blitzing too much.’ You don’t hear that at all when you win. You hear about how creative you are.”
The task this fall for Martindale, 61, who inked a massive three-year, $7.5 million contract to take over for the departed Jesse Minter. Martindale knows the Michigan defense well for someone who’s been absent from the college ranks for more than two decades; he helped build it in Baltimore, where Michigan’s two previous coordinators (Minter, Mike Macdonald) learned under him.
But the Michigan fanbase still has flashbacks to the Don Brown era circa 2016 to 2020, when the Wolverines owned top-10 defenses through a healthy dose of blitzing that never seemed to work against high-powered offenses. The approach eventually fell apart in 2020 and Brown was dismissed from his post.
His successors, Macdonald and Minter, installed and adapted the Ravens’ scheme in Ann Arbor to the modern complexities of college football, where no-huddle, fast, pass-heavy offenses rule the land. To be successful, it is imperative that a unit be mendable in order to get off the field in a timely fashion. And they did, to great success. Minter was lauded for masterfully mixing up fronts, working in zone coverages on the back end and simulating blitzes to confuse opposing offenses.
Martindale, speaking Tuesday, said he believes in a healthy balance of both — man-coverage from the outside corners, a unit that includes All-American Will Johnson, and safeties who do it all — including bull-rushing the quarterback.
“When you start out teaching the principle of man (coverage), which we’ll do in the first practice, you can play zone to win games,” Martindale said. “Zone teams that play nothing but zone can never play man to win the game. Teams that don’t pressure when they have to pressure, it don’t usually look right because they don’t practice it enough.
“If they know that you’re just going to be a four-man rush coverage team, you don’t have a very high success rate.”
Michigan defensive coordinator Wink Martindale watches during the NCAA college football team’s spring game in Ann Arbor, Mich., Saturday, April 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)AP
During an appearance on the “GM Shuffle” podcast with former NFL general manager Michael Lombardi earlier this summer, Martindale described his defense as “flexible,” “player-friendly” and “position-less football” while acknowledging the different nuances in the college game.
“There’s more simulated pressures that you see watching tape that work just as effectively as sending them all,” Martindale told the podcast. “I think it’s going to be a wait-and-see as we get through fall camp and everything else, but let’s make no mistake about it: I’m more aggressive than probably both of those guys (Macdonald, Minter) — sometimes to a fault.”
Helping matters, Martindale will be armed with a healthy dose of elite playmakers and experience on all three levels of the defense. Defensive tackle Mason Graham is a preseason All-American while his tackle partner, Kenneth Grant, is among one of the best in the Big Ten. Edge rushers Joasiah Stewart and Derrick Moore both saw extended playing time during the Wolverines’ national title run last year. Linebackers Ernest Hausmann and Jaishawn Barham both started games at their previous stops. Throw in Johnson, returning safety Makari Paige and a group of four transfer defensive backs with starting experience elsewhere and Michigan has the needed depth to make it work on the back end.
The situation is primed for Martindale to succeed, even as Michigan is set to play a difficult schedule in the expanded Big Ten. He’s chosen to keep the four “pillars,” or points of emphasis with the players — block destruction, effort, ball disruption and communication — in an effort to boost turnover numbers.
“We’ll find the right mix of pressure and simulated (blitzes) and all that,” Martindale said Tuesday. “We’ll find the right mix. That’s what training camp is for.”
Michigan
Michigan Lottery Daily 3, Daily 4 results for June 29, 2026
Powerball, Mega Millions jackpots: What to know in case you win
Here’s what to know in case you win the Powerball or Mega Millions jackpot.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY
The Michigan Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at June 29, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Daily 3 numbers from June 29 drawing
Midday: 3-0-9
Evening: 4-0-7
Check Daily 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Daily 4 numbers from June 29 drawing
Midday: 0-0-0-7
Evening: 0-7-7-6
Check Daily 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Poker Lotto numbers from June 29 drawing
KS-3C-9D-9H-5S
Check Poker Lotto payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Fantasy 5 numbers from June 29 drawing
05-14-16-21-27
02-11-14-17-30
Check Fantasy 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Daily Keno numbers from June 29 drawing
09-12-13-14-21-22-26-27-30-35-36-38-41-46-55-58-67-70-71-72-76-80
Check Daily Keno payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize
All Michigan Lottery retailers can redeem prizes up to $600. For prizes up to $99,999.99, winners have the option to submit their claim by mail or in person at one of Michigan Lottery’s Regional Offices.
To claim by mail, complete a ticket receipt form, sign your winning ticket, and send it along with original copies of your government-issued photo ID and Social Security card to the address below. Ensure the names on your ID and Social Security card match exactly. Claims should be mailed to:
Michigan Lottery
Attn: Claim Center
101 E. Hillsdale
P.O. Box 30023
Lansing, MI 48909
For prizes over $100,000, winners must claim their prize in person at the Michigan Lottery Headquarters in Lansing located at 101 E. Hillsdale in downtown Lansing. Each winner must present original versions of a valid government-issued photo ID (typically a driver’s license or state ID) and a Social Security card, ensuring that the names on both documents match exactly. To schedule an appointment, please call the Lottery Player Relations office at 844-887-6836, option 2.
If you prefer to claim in person at one of the Michigan Lottery Regional Offices for prizes under $100,000, appointments are required. Until further notice, please call 1-844-917-6325 to schedule an appointment. Regional office locations are as follows:
- Lansing: 101 E. Hillsdale St. Lansing; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Livonia: 33231 Plymouth Road, Livonia; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Sterling Heights: 34700 Dequindre Road, Sterling Heights; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Detroit: Cadillac Place, 3060 W. Grand Blvd., Suite L-600, Detroit; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Grand Rapids: 3391-B Plainfield Ave. NE, Grand Rapids; Phone: 844-917-6325
- Saginaw: Jerome T. Hart State Office Building, 411 E. Genesee Ave., Saginaw; Phone: 844-917-6325
For additional information, downloadable forms, and instructions, visit the Michigan Lottery’s prize claim page.
When are Michigan Lottery drawings held?
- Daily 3 & Daily 4: Midday at 12:59 p.m., Evening at 7:29 p.m.
- Fantasy 5: 7:29 p.m. daily
- Poker Lotto: 7:29 p.m. daily
- Lotto 47: 7:29 p.m. Wednesday and Saturday
- Lucky for Life: 10:38 p.m. daily
- Daily Keno: 7:29 p.m. daily
- Millionaire for Life: 11:15 p.m. daily
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Michigan editor. You can send feedback using this form.
Michigan
60% of traffic restrictions to be lifted in Michigan during Fourth of July travel — what to expect
Governor Gretchen Whitmer has announced 60% of traffic restrictions will be removed for the Fourth of July weekend.
Traffic restriction removal will begin at 3 p.m. Thursday, July 2, and continue until 6 a.m. Monday, July 6.
Restrictions include road and bridge projects statewide.
106 out of 179 MDOT projects statewide will have lane restrictions removed.
For the Fourth of July weekend AAA estimates more than 2.6 million Michiganders will travel at least 50 miles or more from home.
Adjustments are aimed to keep traffic moving smoothly for the busy travel weekend.
While drivers will see suspended operations in most road work zone, equipment and certain temporary traffic shifts or shoulder closures may remain.
“As we celebrate America’s 250th birthday this Fourth of July, we want every Michigander to get where they’re going safely and with fewer delays,” said Governor Whitmer. “That’s why we’re temporarily lifting lane restrictions and removing orange barrels along key routes across the state. But once the holiday weekend ends, we’ll get right back to work fixing the damn roads.”
Here is a list of work zones and their status for the Fourth of July weekend.
Some routes may have detour routes posted at the project location.
All closures are subject to change.
Here is the most up-to-date information on MDOT projects.
Copyright 2026 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
Michigan
Three U.S. House hopefuls in Michigan own million-dollar D.C. homes
U.S. Republicans face gas-price attacks once used on Democrats
Republican Congressional candidates who once tried to harness outrage over high prices are now facing Democratic attacks over soaring fuel costs.
Three first-time Democratic candidates for key Michigan U.S. House districts each own at least one home in Washington, D.C., that’s valued at more than $1 million as they stump for votes in a campaign where the cost of housing has become a prominent issue.
In the 7th Congressional District, anchored by the Lansing area, Democrat Bridget Brink reported in a financial disclosure form having four investment properties in Washington, D.C., though one was sold last year, according to her campaign.
Brink, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, valued two of the four properties between $1 million and $5 million, and, according to Washington, D.C., property tax records, she’s listed as an owner of two homes in the nation’s capital worth more than $1 million.
Another 7th District hopeful, former Navy SEAL Matt Maasdam, reported having an investment property in Washington, D.C., worth between $1 million and $5 million. And Democrat Eric Chung, a former Commerce Department lawyer who’s running in the 10th District, owns a home worth more than $1 million in Washington, D.C., according to property tax records.
The details underscore what some observers see as a growing trend in the battleground state: Congressional hopefuls with ties to Michigan returning to the state to run for Congress there.
“There does seem to be an uptick in the number of such candidacies in recent years,” said Bill Ballenger, a former Republican state lawmaker and longtime political pundit in Michigan.
The ties each candidate has to the area where they are running for Congress could be more scrutinized this year as national Democrats and Republicans both target the 7th and 10th districts in the midterm elections, with Democrats aiming to flip control of the seats.
What Brink, Chung and Maasdam are attempting to do — running for the U.S. House in a Michigan congressional district where they aren’t longtime residents — has precedent.
In 2017, Elissa Slotkin, a former Central Intelligence Agency official who worked for presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, moved back to her family’s farm in Oakland County and beat Republican incumbent Rep. Mike Bishop of Rochester for a seat in the U.S. House, representing what’s now the 7th District. The Holly Democrat is now Michigan’s junior U.S. senator.
Lansing, where Brink and Maasdam are now running for Congress, is more than 500 miles from Washington, D.C., where they own properties and hope to serve constituents. The average home value in Ingham County is $229,189, according to the real estate website Zillow.
The homes that Brink and Maasdam own in Washington, D.C., are worth more than four times that amount. In Macomb County, where Chung is running, the average home is worth $273,000, per Zillow.
“I’m a little taken aback by the opportunism here by people who have relatively little to no ties to a district showing up to run there,” said John Sellek, CEO of the firm Harbor Strategic, who has advised Republican campaigns.
“It’s galling to think that I could pick up and move to Dayton, Ohio, because maybe there’s an open seat there, and I run because they didn’t have another candidate. That’s not great.”
Both Brink and Maasdam are in a three-way Democratic primary race with climate activist Will Lawrence for their party’s nomination to challenge U.S. Rep. Tom Barrett, R-Charlotte, in the general election. Barrett is a former state lawmaker serving his first term in Congress.
Jason Cabel Roe, a consultant who works with Barrett, contended that Brink and Maasdam were both recruited by Democrats in Washington, D.C., to run in the 7th.
“I think it underscores that they have little connection to the districts that they’re running in,” Roe said. “And they’re creatures of D.C.”
Lawrence said the candidates’ ties to the district matter to voters there.
“People want a representative of the district to work for us in D.C.,” Lawrence said. “They don’t want someone hand-selected by D.C. insiders to come out here and tell us what we want.”
Lawrence contended that affordable housing is a huge issue in the race. In some areas of the 7th, new housing hasn’t been built in decades, he added.
Maasdam’s campaign said the D.C. property dates back to the candidate’s time working at the Obama White House and is now a rental property. Maasdam lives in Ann Arbor Township.
The D.C. houses were bought over a quarter-century when Brink, who now lives in Lansing, had overseas assignments in the Foreign Service as well as worked at the State Department and the National Security Council under Obama, Brink’s campaign said. The three houses are now leased out, the campaign said.
The campaign of Chung, who lives in Sterling Heights, refused to answer questions about his D.C. house.
Moving home to run for office
During the 2024 election, neither Brink, Maasdam nor Chung was registered to vote in the districts where they are now running.
Brink bought a house in Lansing in May 2025 before launching her campaign for the 7th District seat a few weeks later. She registered to vote in Michigan in June 2025, according to VoterRecords.com.
Maasdam lives in Ann Arbor Township, outside the 7th District. He registered to vote in 2020 at the Ann Arbor Township address, according to VoterRecords.com, which is located in the 6th District held by Rep. Debbie Dingell, D-Ann Arbor. Congressional candidates are not legally required to live in the district they are running for.
Chung registered to vote in Sterling Heights in April 2025, after previously being registered in D.C., according to VoterRecords.com. He is vying for the Democratic nomination in a three-way contest in the 10th District, which is open as Republican U.S. Rep. John James of Shelby Township runs for governor.
Another congressional candidate in a competitive district, Republican Amir Hassan, also moved from the Washington, D.C. area back to Michigan to run for Congress last year, aiming to challenge Democratic Rep. Kristen McDonald Rivet of Bay City in the 8th District that includes Flint, Saginaw and Midland.
Hassan worked in federal law enforcement for 11 years before moving back to his hometown of Flint in July 2025 and launching a campaign. He and his wife, however, sold their home in Maryland’s Charles County last year, according to local records.
Hassan’s campaign said that, because of the nature of his work, Hassan had to live near where his protectees ― Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and then Secretary Sean Duffy ― were based, which is why he lived in suburban Washington.
Chung’s home in D.C. is also likely from his days working there, though his campaign refused to answer questions about it.
An attorney, Chung spent two years at the Commerce Department in Washington working to implement President Joe Biden’s 2022 law to boost U.S. semiconductor manufacturing. Before that, he was at the law firm Covington & Burling LLP.
Chung has said he quit the Trump administration after President Donald Trump “gutted” the CHIPS Act program. He moved back to Michigan (he grew up in Madison Heights) in April 2025 and launched his campaign for Congress the same month.
“Eric lives in the community he grew up in, in Sterling Heights, and is proud of the grassroots momentum behind his campaign to flip this seat,” Chung spokesperson Taylor Whitsell said in an email.
Chung did not disclose his downtown D.C. property in a financial disclosure in 2025. When a Detroit News reporter visited the home on Thursday, there were cobwebs on the front gate and the door, suggesting no one is currently occupying the row house.
Candidates and members of Congress are not required to disclose personal residences on their financial disclosures, according to ethics guidelines. If a property does not generate rental income, it generally does not need to be reported.
Why Matt Maasdam owns 3 homes
To qualify for office, candidates for the U.S. House are not required to reside in the district that they are seeking to represent. They must, however, live in that state.
Other members of Congress from Michigan have lived outside of the district that they’re elected to represent, including the late Democratic Rep. John Conyers Jr. of Detroit and James, who won the 10th District seat in 2022 while living outside of the district in Farmington Hills. After being elected, James moved to Shelby Township in the district.
But it’s generally considered good form to live among your constituents. Both Reps. John Moolenaar, a Republican, and Debbie Dingell, a Democrat, for instance, moved after the redistricting process in 2022 drew them out of their respective districts.
Owning homes out of state can lead to residency questions that can dog politicians for multiple election cycles, including GOP Senate hopeful Mike Rogers’ $1.7 million home in Cape Coral, Florida, and U.S. Rep. Jack Bergman’s home in St. Francisville, Louisiana.
Calling Rogers a “Florida resident” was a recurring theme among Democrats during his 2024 Senate bid, and Bergman’s home in Louisiana has continued to fuel critics, who claim he doesn’t really live in the remote western Upper Peninsula.
But residency questions and other local issues are increasingly overshadowed by national issues in races like U.S. House contests, thanks in part to social media “outrage” takes, Sellek said.
“The way that politics has been whipped into a frenzy over the last decade means people get mad over policy positions every day on social media,” he said. “Something as quaint as, ‘Are you even from here, do you shop at our stores or your kids go to our schools?’ It doesn’t matter as much.”
Maasdam’s campaign said he intends to move into the 7th District from his home in Ann Arbor Township by the Fourth of July.
In October, he purchased a lake home in Livingston County’s Genoa Township for $725,000. The house is on West Crooked Lake near Brighton.
Maasdam grew up in Nebraska, graduated from the University of Michigan and spent 20 years in the U.S. Navy, deploying to Iraq, Afghanistan, Africa and the Pacific as a SEAL. He later served as Obama’s military aide at the White House, responsible for carrying the “nuclear football.” Maasdam then went into business, working as an executive at Under Armor and then at e-commerce startups.
Maasdam previously told The Detroit News that he moved to Michigan in 2019.
“After their service, he and his wife, Laura, a veteran Navy helicopter pilot, chose to bring their family back to Michigan, because they wanted their two sons to grow up with the values that define this state: family, teamwork, grit, and hard work,” Maasdam spokeswoman Emma Grundhauser said.
In addition to his two homes in Michigan, Maasdam owns a row home in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of D.C., which is valued at $1.1 million in tax records. The average residential home in Washington’s Capitol Hill neighborhood is $922,903, according to Zillow.
The D.C. home dates to Maasdam’s time working at the White House when he wanted to be close enough that he could access the campus quickly in case of an emergency, Grundhauser said.
Since leaving D.C., he has rented that home out to military families in the area, Grundhauser said. The property produces up to $50,000 a year in rental income, according to Maasdam’s financial disclosure.
Maasdam also appears to own a share of a property valued at over $1 million in the area of the ski town of Steamboat Springs, Colorado. The property’s owner is a limited liability company called MBros LLC that’s registered to an address in Lincoln, Nebraska, according to state and county records.
Maasdam’s campaign said this property dates to Maasdam’s great-grandfather, who homesteaded in Colorado in 1904. Maasdam and his brothers have kept the 122-year-old, unwinterized property in the family “as a means of preserving this important part of their family’s history,” Grundhauser said.
The story behind Brink’s D.C. homes
Like Chung, Brink quit the Trump administration last year over disagreements with Trump’s policies.
Brink and her husband purchased four homes in D.C. over the last 25 years, including a six-bedroom, five-bath house purchased in 2010 in the Cleveland Park neighborhood that is valued at an estimated $2.3 million, according to Zillow.
Brink’s campaign said her 28 years in the Foreign Service required her to be “worldwide available,” moving her family every one to three years on U.S. government orders to posts abroad, as well as assignments in Washington with Obama’s National Security Council and at the State Department.
When her assignments required Brink to live in D.C., her family purchased homes that were later rented out after Brink received her next assignment, requiring them to move again, a campaign spokeswoman said.
All three D.C. properties are leased out, and a fourth was sold in April 2025, the campaign said. The combined income from rent and capital gains generated by Brink’s D.C. properties last year was $230,000 to $2.1 million, according to her 2025 financial disclosure.
After 28 years of working for the federal government, Brink left the Foreign Service and moved to Michigan last year. She grew up in west Michigan (outside of the Lansing-based 7th District), raised by a single mom near the Lake Michigan shore in Spring Lake and later in Grand Rapids with her grandparents. That region is represented in the House by two-term Democratic Rep. Hillary Scholten.
In May 2025, Brink and her husband purchased a riverfront home in Lansing for $565,000 and began claiming a homestead exemption, which designates the property as their primary residence. This is where she and her family currently live, Brink said.
“I’m a sixth-generation Michigander and the granddaughter of a Lansing autoworker. As I’ve fought for our rights and freedoms and American democracy, Michigan has always been top of mind for me, and we’re so proud to call Lansing home,” Brink said in a statement last week to The Detroit News.
“I left Michigan to serve my country, and I came home to Michigan to serve my community.”
Asked last year how she would respond to potential carpetbagging attacks, Brink said she would be happy to talk to people about questions about her background.
“I think this election is going to be about the future and what candidate can deliver for the people of my community. … I think I have a proven ability to deliver, and I think that’s what’s going to be important,” she said.
“But I’m so happy to be here. This is my home. I’m delighted to be back and especially now at this really important point for our country and for future generations.”
cmauger@detroitnews.com
mburke@detroitnews.com
gschwab@detroitnews.com
eleblanc@detroitnews.com
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