Michigan
Michigan women’s gymnastics KO’d, won’t repeat as national champions
The Michigan girls’s gymnastics staff gained’t get the prospect to defend its 2021 nationwide championship after being eradicated within the nationwide semifinals on Thursday night time in Fort Value, Texas.
The Wolverines, who gained their regional on April 3 to make the ultimate eight groups, completed fourth on Thursday, 0.9125 factors behind Missouri. The Tigers have been additionally eradicated. Florida (197.975) and Auburn (197.8375) completed first and second, respectively, and advance to Saturday’s last. Within the first semifinal Thursday, Oklahoma and Utah superior to Saturday’s last, with the Sooners topping 198 factors for the fourth consecutive time.
THE REGIONAL:Michigan girls win regional, headed to NCAA match semifinals
The Wolverines sat in second place midway by Thursday’s semifinal, however a fall within the fourth rotation price Michigan a return to the ultimate.
Michigan began out robust on the ground train, the primary rotation, as 4 Wolverines — senior Abby Heiskell (9.9), senior Natalike Wojcik (9.9125), junior Sierra Brooks (9.9) and junior Gabby Wilson (9.9125) — led the best way with near-perfect scores. U-M’s mixed rating of 49.4875 gave the Wolverines a slim 0.0125-point lead going into the vault.
The Wolverines weren’t fairly as clear within the second rotation; Brooks hit a 9.9 rating, however no different U-M gymnast was capable of prime her, and the Wolverines fell into second, at 98.9125 factors, 0.1375 factors behind Auburn.
On the third rotation, Abby Heiskell opened with a 9.9125 on the uneven bars and Brooks topped that with a 9.95 to spring the Wolverines to a powerful begin. However the Gators turned in a scorching 49.5125 factors to leap into second place, and Michigan fell to fourth with one rotation remaining, although they trailed first-place Auburn by lower than some extent.
Contact Ryan Ford at rford@freepress.com. Observe him on Twitter @theford.
Michigan
Michigan lands No. 3 transfer RB Haynes from Tide
Alabama transfer running back Justice Haynes has signed with Michigan, the school announced Friday.
Haynes, the No. 3 running back in ESPN’s transfer rankings, finished as Alabama’s third-leading rusher with 448 yards on 5.7 yards per carry and 7 touchdowns as a sophomore. He’ll have two more seasons of eligibility with the Wolverines.
The 5-foot-11, 210-pound back from Buford, Georgia, started six games in his second year with the Crimson Tide after rushing for 168 yards and two scores as a freshman. Haynes was the No. 24 overall player in the ESPN 300 for 2023.
He’ll join a Michigan backfield that must replace the production of seniors Kalel Mullings and Donovan Edwards, who combined for 1,537 rushing yards and 16 touchdowns in 2024.
Michigan does return freshman back Jordan Marshall, who rushed for 100 yards on 23 carries in the Wolverines’ 19-13 victory over Alabama in the Reliaquest Bowl on Dec. 31. Haynes did not play for either team in the bowl game.
Michigan has added eight transfer signees following its 8-5 season under first-year coach Sherrone Moore. The Wolverines are also bringing in quarterback Mikey Keene (Fresno State), wide receiver Donaven McCulley (Indiana) and offensive lineman Brady Norton (Cal Poly) to help bolster an offense that averaged 22 points per game this season, which ranks 113th in FBS.
Michigan
Central Michigan men arrested after police chase through multiple counties
Two central Michigan men — one of whom allegedly fled to Texas and Mexico after an armed robbery — were arrested after leading police on a car chase through multiple counties, officials said.
A detective with the Ionia County Sheriff’s Office at about 11 p.m. Monday received a tip the wanted suspect had returned to the county, authorities said. A tipster told the detective the suspect was driving a GMC Yukon and provided him with the license plate number, they said.
Investigators believed the suspect was traveling to his mother’s home in Ionia and sheriff’s deputies positioned themselves to intercept the SUV, police said. They spotted the vehicle on East Lincoln Avenue and tried to pull the Yukon over. However, the suspect driver fled through the city of Ionia and onto a highway to Montcalm County.
Additional law enforcement officers joined the chase on various back roads, they said. The Yukon then traveled toward Greenville where the city’s police department took over the pursuit, officials said.
They followed the suspect vehicle into Kent County where local sheriff’s deputies deployed devices near Northland Drive to puncture the Yukon’s tires. The devices were effective, the vehicle stopped and several people exited the Yukon and ran away, police said.
Authorities searched the area on foot and used a drone to find and arrest everyone who was in the Yukon, they said.
During questioning, the SUV’s driver admitted he knew one of his passengers was wanted for armed robbery, police said. He also told investigators he was a parolee himself and was afraid of being arrested for associating with a crime suspect, they said.
Officials said three other passengers in the Yukon, a 19-year-old woman, a 17-year-old male, and a 22-year-old man, are not being charged. The three are Ionia residents. Police also said all the people who were in the Yukon are related to each other.
Police said the SUV’s driver, Diego Luis Bowerman, 21, of Ionia, was charged with fleeing and eluding police and parole violation. He was arraigned Tuesday in 64-A District Court in Ionia on a charge of third-degree fleeing and eluding police, according to court records.
A judge set his bond at $30,000 and scheduled his next court hearing for Jan. 13, 2025. Officials said he is currently being held at the Ionia County Jail.
Police said the passenger wanted on an armed robbery warrant from Kent County, Enrique Vazquez, 22, also of Ionia, has yet to be formally charged. He was taken to the Kent County Jail.
cramirez@detroitnews.com
X: @CharlesERamirez
Michigan
Oregon coach Dan Lanning shades Ohio State after Rose Bowl defeat
After a Rose Bowl blowout, in which his top-ranked Oregon Ducks were blitzed off the field, head coach Dan Lanning had an interesting quote. Still stinging from the fact that his team was completely outmatched on the field he invoked the Michigan Wolverines during his post-game presser. Surely, he knew this would draw the ire of Buckeye fans who are still stinging from the manhandling they endured at the hands of the Wolverines to end their regular season. Having lost “The Granddaddy of them all” , I suppose Lanning saw it as a chance to take a final parting shot at the team from Columbus.
While many CFP pundits believe his Oregon team got the shaft in their seeding this year, eventually you have to beat the good teams to win a Natty either way. Having to face an Ohio State team that is suddenly more motivated than ever, in the second round is not really a reward for winning the toughest conference in football though. Consider that Penn State, a team Oregon also beat in the regular season along with Ohio State, has had to play SMU and Boise State to stay alive in the playoff. We are just happy to give Lanning a final barb to toss at the Buckeyes on his way out of Pasadena.
– Enjoy more Michigan Wolverines coverage on Michigan Wolverines On SI –
For additional coverage of University of Michigan athletics:
-
Business1 week ago
On a quest for global domination, Chinese EV makers are upending Thailand's auto industry
-
Health6 days ago
New Year life lessons from country star: 'Never forget where you came from'
-
Technology6 days ago
Meta’s ‘software update issue’ has been breaking Quest headsets for weeks
-
World1 week ago
Passenger plane crashes in Kazakhstan: Emergencies ministry
-
Politics1 week ago
It's official: Biden signs new law, designates bald eagle as 'national bird'
-
Business3 days ago
These are the top 7 issues facing the struggling restaurant industry in 2025
-
Politics1 week ago
'Politics is bad for business.' Why Disney's Bob Iger is trying to avoid hot buttons
-
Culture3 days ago
The 25 worst losses in college football history, including Baylor’s 2024 entry at Colorado