The remainder of the bracket is going to be tough for the Michigan Wolverines, including Sunday’s tilt against the Tennessee Volunteers, but of the two options for the Elite Eight, this was the preferrable opponent. Analytics believe this squad is underseeded (No. 11 overall per Kenpom), but compared to the swarming defense of Iowa State, the Wolverines have to feel great about their chances of advancing to the Final Four.
Michigan
Hey Hondo! Answering Your Michigan State Football Questions: Smith, Tucker, Cousins
The Spartan Nation is fortunate to have one of the most storied college football programs.
With multiple national titles and single-handedly breaking the color barrier, along with a lineage of players who are genuinely the who’s who of the sport, the heritage is fantastic.
So today, I set out to answer some of your questions regarding the football program.
Hondo, I remember watching the Michigan State basketball game (I think it was Indiana), and shortly after, you broke that the Spartans had hired Mel Tucker. You said he was at least the fifth choice. Can you tell us what happened? Cory B. Mason, Mi
Michigan State’s then-AD Bill Beekman essentially hired a search firm to help select the next coach. I can understand a firm doing background checks since that is private, but to hand the process over the way they did was a joke, in my opinion. If an AD needs that much assistance at one of his most important jobs, get a new one.
By the way, I am not blaming Beekman; I am squarely blaming the MSU leadership above him. Beekman was put in an impossible position.
Pat Narduzzi, former DC at Michigan State and now Pittsburgh Panthers coach, was offered the job twice—yes, twice, before and after signing day. He turned it down twice; additionally, others were considered and could have had the job.
Michigan State was woefully unprepared for the lack of interest in the job and overpaid to finally get a yes; from what I saw, it was an unprepared candidate.
Additionally, it was an Illinois game in Champaign, and I was in the press room when I broke it.
Hondo, I’m glad you’re answering MSU questions now. I know you broke the Mel Tucker story, but you said it was a bad hire at the time. What did you see? Sam W. Detroit, MI
He had a losing record as only a one-year coach. Certain schools, MSU being one, are not where guys go to learn how to be a head coach. He moved around consistently, and what I heard when making calls was far from impressive. What I learned in a few phone calls was certainly what a prepared Michigan State should have gotten.
Hondo, my man, can’t say enough to have you answering the q and a of Spartan Nation. Mad props dog. Great to see your career skyrocket, and when you Tweeted out your love for Jonathan Smith and all the repping you did on Twitter, I knew he was our guy. Tell me what you think of the new guy so far. Jesse T.
Jonathan Smith was not the most prominent name available, but he was, in my opinion, and I said before they hired him, the best coach. He is a great man, teacher, coach, leader, and guy. MSU hit a homerun by hiring him, and he is the best hire since Nick Saban. Unfortunately, college football is not the same game it was then, and other things hamper and foster winning than just that. Coaching in college and Michigan State at this time is significantly more complicated than it was for Nick, and I believe he would tell you that.
Are you buying or selling on MSU football and Smith using the Las Vegas term Hondo? Larry N.
I’m buying for sure, but as mentioned above, college football is dramatically different now. As one head coach told me, “It used to matter that you were a good coach, had good facilities, and could recruit. Now, bad coaches, bad facilities, and the ability to recruit don’t matter as much.” I want Smith to succeed, and he is good enough. The biggest question is if Spartan Nation wants to be a dominant program.
Hondo, I know you have been an outspoken supporter of Jonathan Smith; what will be the biggest key to his success in East Lansing? Shawn B. Grand Rapids, MI
Money for NIL. Great man with excellent facilities and a terrific staff. He has already proven he can get and develop players. Once they emerge, keeping them will hinge on NIL paying them. He can do all the right things, but he has to have the NIL to keep them here; if not, he becomes the minor leagues for teams with money to let him develop them, and then they swoop in and buy them.
Hondo, what do you think of the Spartans’ new QB? Is he the real deal? Samantha K. Midland, MI
Aidan Chiles is the absolute real deal. He can do it all, and most importantly, he can run it Smith’s way. MSU is fortunate to have him, a terrific player and a better young man.
Hondo, my friends, and I have argued this for years, and you are just the man to settle it. In your opinion, would MSU have done better with Kirk Cousins at quarterback with the Connor Cook teams? Like winning a national title? Kenny L.
No. I respect and love Kirk. Connor had the personality and mental makeup that was needed. I do not think Kirk would have done some of the intangibles that made Cook great for that team.
If I had been an NFL team selecting either, I would have taken Kirk every time, but on those teams no. In my opinion, the Spartans won despite their offensive coaching leadership, not because of it. Cook overcame them. Kirk, more talented, wouldn’t have taken some risks like Cook and would have adhered more.
Hondo, I love listening to you on the Radio. Now that you are taking MSU football questions, this one is about the Big Ten. Because of NIL or other issues, what team is not being talked about in the Big Ten? Jan A.
No doubt, Nebraska. Great coaching, and they will be an NIL giant in the coming years.
If you have a question regarding Michigan State football, basketball, or the athletic program in general, please send it to, and when you do, put in the subject line MSU Q & A
Don’t forget to follow the official Spartan Nation Page on Facebook Spartan Nation WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE, and be a part of our vibrant community group Go Green Go White as well WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE.
Michigan
OL coach Jim Harding gets first recruiting commitment for Michigan Football
Jim Harding has landed his first commitment on the recruiting trail as offensive line coach in Ann Arbor, as 2027 four-star Sidney Rouleau announced on Sunday night that he will be playing college football for at Michigan.
Rouleau — a native of Canada but now playing high school football at The Brook Hill School in Bullard, Texas — is coming off an unofficial visit to Michigan this weekend. That was his third time in Ann Arbor, as he also visited for the Purdue game last fall and another time a couple summers ago.
Understandably so, Rouleau had great things to say after his most recent trip.
“My visit to Michigan was awesome,” Rouleau told Rivals’ Steve Wiltfong ($). “The energy around the program is contagious, and I really connected with the coaches and players. What excites me most about playing for coach (Kyle) Whittingham and the Wolverines is the chance to be part of building something special. Their vision for the future, combined with the tradition and passion of the fanbase, makes it an opportunity I couldn’t pass up. I’m excited to contribute to their success and also being able to play for coach Harding!”
Rouleau is listed at 6-foot-5 and 240 pounds, per Rivals, but 247Sports has him listed at 6-foot-7 and 269 pounds, so he may be a bit bigger than Rivals’ last update on him. Regardless, the expectation is that he will eventually play one of the tackle positions at Michigan.
Other than the Wolverines, Rouleau also earned offers from Ohio State, Clemson, Penn State, Oregon, Georgia, USC, Wisconsin, Texas, Alabama, Oklahoma Miami, Washington, Florida, Florida State and many others.
Michigan is now up to six total commitments in the 2027 recruiting class, and three of them are offensive linemen — Rouleau, and three-stars Louis Esposito and Tristan Dare. Rouleau also joins four-star edge rusher Recarder Kitchen, four-star safety Darrell Mattison and three-star safety Maxwell Miles in the class.
Rouleau is ranked No. 300 overall on the Rivals Industry Ranking. Check out some of his junior year highlights down below.
Michigan
How To Watch: Michigan Basketball vs Tennessee in the Elite 8
The Vols lost four of their last six games heading into the NCAA Tournament, though were impressive against Miami (OH), Virginia, and Iowa State. Their defense is solid (11th) while the offense is productive (31st), perhaps making their No. 6 seed a little misleading. Still, Michigan is the better overall team here, and unfortunately the odds of a third straight year of losing to a No. 1 seed in the Elite Eight are quite high for Rick Barnes and company.
Elite Eight: No. 1 Michigan (34-3) vs. No. 6 Tennessee (25-11)
Date & Time: Sunday, March 29, 2:15 p.m. ET
Location: United Center, Chicago, IL
TV/Streaming: CBS
Oddly, this is the fourth Tournament meeting between these schools since 2010-11, with the prior three favoring the maize and blue. That first contest was a 30-point First Round blowout, followed by a narrow Michigan win in the 2013-14 Sweet Sixteen. The most recent edition was also a close one, with Hunter Dickinson and Eli Brooks each topping 20 points as the No. 11 Wolverines upset No. 3 Tennessee in the Second Round in 2021-22.
Tennessee 2PT Defense: 49.0% (63rd)
The most obvious path to victory for Michigan over Alabama was using its huge size advantage in the paint, yet both Aday Mara and Morez Johnson had games to forget. The bigs will get their chance for redemption on Sunday against a Tennessee defense that is much better than its SEC rival’s, yet is beatable down low. Weak hands and poor finishing will not work against this frontcourt, but the Wolverines have proven they can win physical battles all year.
As fun as March Roddy (Gayle) is, or the rapid emergence of Trey McKenney, Michigan will not win a national championship if it does not get substantial production from the Mara-Johnson duo. Enough others contributed against the Tide to still claim the win, and perhaps that could be possible again in the Elite Eight, but it would give a lot more confidence heading into the final weekend if these two could bounce back in a big way. The Vols have had issues fouling too, so being aggressive at the rim is a must.
Tennessee Offensive Rebounding: 45.1% (1st)
Yes, that is correct — Tennessee grabs nearly half of its own misses. With an effective field goal rate around 140th, this is less extreme than the Texas A&M gameplan last year, but surely no one will be caught sleeping after witnessing the Vols collect 53.3% (!!) of their opportunities against the Cyclones on Friday. Without basically any outside shooting, second-chance points are the only way this offense scores enough to keep it close.
However, since the Duke and Illinois games, the Wolverines have been pretty solid on the defensive glass and should feel capable of at least reducing the impact of Tennessee’s rebounding. The Michigan frontcourt can match up body-to-body, and this is another way Mara and Johnson can make huge contributions. Like Saint Louis and Alabama hitting threes, there will be frustrating stretches of elongated possessions, but the key is just getting enough rebounds to stop any torrent.
Tennessee Defensive 3PT Rate: 44.7% (33oth)
Few teams see more opposing three-point attempts than the Vols do, yet this rarely seems to burn them, as opponents connect on just 30.3% of their shots, which is 11th-best nationally. This resilience is going to be really tested by a Michigan offense that is making 47.3% of its threes in the Tournament thus far after a cold Big Ten Tournament. The touch could certainly cool off on Sunday, but is that a bet Tennessee really wants to take?
If the Wolverines can stay disciplined and keep taking the high-percentage looks, this should be a huge factor on Sunday. While I still would like to see the offense attack the paint, there are too many good shooters on the roster to not take advantage when the defense is passive. Should Barnes choose to start closing out on shooters, there will be paths open to the hoop. Though the metrics consider this a strong defense, it feels like there is an easy way Michigan blows this game open.
Tennessee Adj. Offense: 31st
As a whole, the Tennessee offense appears fine, but the analytics are actually kind of sour on most of the parts. Bad free throw shooting (286th) on modest attempts (103rd), too many turnovers (233rd), limited three-point attempts (329th), and a slow tempo (290th) make me wonder how anything actually happens aside from getting good second-chance looks on offensive rebounds.
Clearly that strategy has worked this year — and over the past two weekends — but the 24-point loss to Florida (with a 17.1% OReb rate) might tell the story of what happens against defenses with size. The best actual shooter is Ja’Kobi Gillespie, who has improved since his combined 6-for-22 effort in two games against Michigan last season, but aside from him and Nate Ament, there is little outside threat.
I do think there will be enough offensive rebounds and tough makes to avoid an instant blowout (though not off the table for the final score), and maybe the Vols’ three-point defense is real, but the ways Michigan can win are so much more numerous than the ways it can lose. Trust the better team to take care of business and move on to Indianapolis next weekend.
Michigan
Trey McKenney to return to Michigan Basketball next season, per report
In the middle of what’s been an incredible season for the Michigan men’s basketball team, Dusty May and the program are now confirmed to be bringing back a big contributor for next season. According to a report from Tony Garcia of the Detroit Free Press, freshman guard Trey McKenney is set to be back with the Wolverines next year.
“We’re going to have a really talented team next year,” McKenney told Garcia. “I came in with a role this year and I think my role would definitely expand next year, so I’m definitely looking forward to coming back.”
McKenney joined the program this offseason as a prized five-star recruit in the Wolverines’ 2025 recruiting class. So far he’s lived up to the billing, coming off the bench to average 9.7 points per game, but shooting an impressive 38.5 percent from three-point range this year. He has already asserted himself as one of the team’s best shooters.
In addition to his offensive game, he’s gotten after it on the defensive end as well and has been regularly on the floor to close games this season. We’ve seen McKenney’s role slowly grow, especially in the absence of fellow guard L.J. Cason, who has missed the last month and is set to miss all of next season with an ACL tear.
By cementing his status with the program, McKenney is a great foundation for what the team hopes to build next season. He’ll likely step into a starting role as the Michigan’s shooting guard, while May and company also look to get players like Elliot Cadeau, Morez Johnson Jr. and Aday Mara back in the fold.
Michigan will get a shot to fill out the rest of its roster when the transfer portal opens up on April 7, just one day after the National Championship.
For now though, McKenney and the Wolverines will focus on punching their ticket to the Final Four for the first time since 2018 by defeating Tennessee on Sunday afternoon.
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