Michigan
Recruiting Roundup: Michigan pursuing four-star top-100 safety with ties to current player
While college football recruiting is currently in the late-winter dead period, there is still plenty of Michigan football recruiting news to get to.
In today’s edition of the Recruiting Roundup, we’ll dive into the pursuit of a top-100 safety with ties to a current player on the roster, a Miami commit interested in the Wolverines, and one of the best players in Arkansas having Michigan high on his list despite the coach he was recruited by the most heading to the NFL.
2025 top-100 safety talks Michigan being a top school
In a recent interview with The Wolverine’s EJ Holland ($), Jadyn Hudson, one of the best safeties in the 2025 class, said the Wolverines have been pursuing him.
“Before they won the national championship, they were recruiting me really hard,” Hudson said. “They are a great program overall. They had a great defense. I feel like I could play the free or the strong safety. I could see myself fitting in well in that defense.”
Hudson had Michigan in his top-10 that he released this fall. Something that may give Michigan a leg up in this recruitment is the fact he is familiar with current Michigan defensive back Zeke Berry, who shared some praise regarding Michigan being a great place to improve as a player.
“Zeke went to De La Salle, but he grew up in Pittsburg like me,” Hudson said. “He has told me some really good things about Michigan. He said the work that you put in is beneficial. He said that you’ll learn a lot there and really get developed.”
Hudson is hoping to get back on campus this offseason. He hasn’t been to Ann Arbor since last year, so this would be a return trip for him.
“They have a great environment,” Hudson said. “I went there at the beginning of last spring. I liked the strength and conditioning program. They do a great job with the athletes and transform their bodies. I definitely will make another visit. I just want to see more from a player’s point of view like school life.”
He has offers from Georgia, Ohio State, LSU and Miami, among others, and 247Sports has two Crystal Ball predictions for him to head to Oregon. He is rated on the 247Sports composite as the 96th-best prospect in his class, the eighth-best safety and the 10th-best recruit from the state of California.
2025 four-star Miami LB commit discusses interest in Michigan
Linebackers coach Brian Jean-Mary is reportedly one of the newest editions to Michigan’s coaching staff, and he brings recruiting connections with more than a few top linebackers. This includes Elijah Melendez, a top-150 linebacker who committed to Miami in December.
Melendez expanded on his relationship with the new Michigan coach with Brice Marich from The Michigan Insider ($). Jean-Mary recruited Melendez back when he was coaching at Tennessee.
“Michigan has always stayed in contact with me and the staff has been very real. I love Michigan,” Melendez said. “Coach BJ is real and he’s from around the same area as me, so we click really well. I have always viewed Michigan as a top contender for me. I always loved Michigan and now adding coach BJ, I just hope they recruit me hard because it’s been a few months without a linebacker coach and Michigan was still in my top-three. Now we’ll see what they can do with one.”
Melendez spoke highly of Michigan’s culture and winning ways. He seems excited to get back on campus a few more times, which could possibly sway his decision.
“Yes, I’m supposed to go (to Michigan) this spring for unofficial and then another time for an official then possibly another unofficial really close to signing day,” Melendez said.
The fact Melendez is wanting to get back to Michigan three times is truly telling, especially considering his current pledge to Miami. The Wolverines were recruiting him heavily before he made his commitment, and it doesn’t appear they are taking their foot off the gas pedal anytime soon, especially with Jean-Mary in town.
Three-star S discusses conversation with Sherrone Moore
Michigan has been in pursuit of 2025 three-star defensive back Marcus Wimberly, one of the top players from the state of Arkansas rated just outside the top 500 on the composite. However, with the departure of Jay Harbaugh — his lead recruiter — to the NFL, it’s fair for Michigan fans to question if his interest in the program is still legitimate.
Well, we have some answers now, as Wimberly discussed a recent conversation he had with new head coach Sherrone Moore to The Michigan Insider’s Marich ($).
“I have (been in contact with Michigan),” Wimberly said. “Coach Moore actually just called me the other day just to check up and see how I was doing and let me know he’s excited to get me back up there! I’ve been in steady contact with (assistant director of recruiting) coach Popper as well.”
Wimberly was one of several recruits in Ann Arbor for the Ohio State game, and he announced his decommitment from Arkansas on Dec. 1. While Oklahoma appears to be a favorite for him based off four recent Crystal Ball predictions, Michigan still appears to be high on his list for now.
“They’re still a top-three school in my recruitment right now for sure,” Wimberly said. “You can’t get any better than Michigan. So, yeah man, they are still very high for me and I think I’ll be back this spring if we can.”
Michigan
Man arrested for firing shots outside Michigan domestic violence center
Michigan
I discovered anti-Zionism at the University of Michigan. I’m glad it lives on there
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather for a mock trial against the University of Michigan’s Board of Regents on the university’s campus in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on April 21, 2025. Photo by Jeff Kowalsky / AFP / Getty Images
At the University of Michigan’s recent commencement ceremony, history professor Derek Peterson delivered a five-minute speech in which he celebrated all those who have fought for justice at the university, my alma mater. Invoking our legendary sports-focused fight song, he asked the crowd to “sing” for suffragist Sarah Burger, who battled to get women admitted as students; for Moritz Levi, Michigan’s first Jewish professor; for all the students who fought for racial justice at Michigan as part of the Black Action Movement; and for the “pro-Palestinian student activists, who have over these past two years opened our hearts to the injustice and inhumanity of Israel’s war in Gaza.”
Peterson’s address was a historian’s invitation to every student and parent in the Ann Arbor stadium to recognize that the fight for Palestinian rights shares roots with our greatest movements for justice, including the struggle against antisemitism.
The backlash, predictably, was swift. The university’s president apologized; the speech was condemned by pro-Israel Jewish organizations and outlets; and I know it upset many college parents, my Gen X peers — we who were raised to believe with all our hearts that Jewish identity and Zionist identity are inextricable.
But to me, Peterson’s speech was a reminder of one of the most important lessons I took away from my time at the University of Michigan: that questioning Zionism is a necessary part of any Jewish life that aims to center justice.
I graduated from Michigan in 1989, and spent much of my last year in Ann Arbor ensconced at Hillel, where I edited a magazine for Jewish students. I’d grown up going to Young Judaea summer camps and had spent a college semester in Israel, where I’d witnessed the beginning of the first Intifada. I returned to find a shanty in the middle of campus that had been erected, a student organizer told our magazine, “to bring the uprising to the community. It is to show the conditions of the Palestinians and the brutal oppression of the Israeli army.”
The shanty evoked those then prevalent on campuses everywhere to symbolize the struggle of Black South Africans against settler colonialism and apartheid. The new shanty on our campus asserted that these words also applied to Israel.
While I was strongly against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza — where Israel would not remove any settlements until 2005 — I was distressed and confused by the shanty’s silent, everpresent message about Israel’s past and present. Is Israel an apartheid state, I wondered?
So I put that question on the cover of our magazine.
The Hillel director called me into his office and somberly expressed his concern. But Hillel International had not yet officially clamped down on student activities that question Israel and Zionism.
So our cover story ran and we dropped our magazine in bundles across campus. At the time, I thought of myself as a liberal Zionist, and I secretly rooted for the student who tried to disprove the devastating charge. But as young journalists, my fellow magazine staffers and I were committed to exploring the views of those who erected the shanty, no matter their hostility to Zionism. We didn’t code the hostility as danger. No one thought we should report our ideological opponents — the kids who fell asleep on their books in the library just like we did — to the dean or to the government for arrest or deportation.
Over my time as an undergraduate, I’d come to recognize in these kaffiyeh-clad Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim students the same history-minded, righteous hope that animated me.
Decades later, in the spring of 2024, we all watched as pro-Palestinian student activists — including many Jewish students — set up campus encampments around the country to protest Israel’s assault on Gaza. At Michigan, the encampment was set up on the Diag, the university’s public square, where on the day of my own graduation I’d protested the university’s military research. As the mother of a recent college grad, I was humbled by the determination of these kids, who put up tents, organized teach-ins, and then suffered as police turned off their bodycams and used pepper spray against them. They were lawfully protesting for the university to divest from Israel as it bombed the people of Gaza, the children of Gaza — which is now home to the largest number of child amputees in modern history.
What I understand, and Professor Peterson understands, is that the student activists that he lauded at the commencement are fighting not against Jewish life but for Palestinians’ right to survive daily, as people, and as a people. These activists have asked us to understand, finally, that Zionism is what it does.
“It has been hard work to examine my own mind,” Tzvia Thier, a Jewish Israeli mother, wrote in an essay in the 2021 collection A Land With A People: Palestinians and Jews Confront Zionism. As a child, Thier immigrated to Israel from Romania in the wake of the Holocaust. In 2009, Thier accompanied her daughter to “protect” her while she joined an action to fight the evictions of Palestinians from their homes in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah. Thier was 65, and realized that it was the first time in her life that she had had conversations with Palestinians. She understood then that “it was not my daughter who needed to be protected, but the Palestinians.”
“Many questions leave me wondering how I could have not thought about them before,” she wrote. “My solid identity was shaken and then broken. I have been an eyewitness to the systematic oppression, humiliation, racism, cruelty, and hatred by ‘my’ people toward the ‘others.’ And what you finally see, you can no longer unsee.”
When that shanty went up on Michigan’s campus in the late ’80s, I began to question all that I’d learned about Israel’s founding. I began to question the very idea of an ethnostate — in the name of any people, anywhere — that enshrines the supremacy of one group of people over another.
By the time I became a mother, I’d become anti-Zionist. I understood — with a grief that does not abate — that, as Jews, our history of oppression has become an alibi for Israel’s oppression of the Palestinian people.
We must reject the bad faith accusations of antisemitism that have emptied the word of meaning and enabled authoritarian repression. When students on campuses today charge Israel with apartheid and genocide, they are echoing reports from B’Tselem, Israel’s leading human rights organization. I ask the parents of my generation to read these reports and do as Thier did — to allow themselves to see what we have not wanted to see.
I stand with the more than 2,000 University of Michigan faculty, staff, students and alumni who have condemned the university’s response to the commencement address heard round the world.
For the sake of all of our children, I ask that we each do all we can to open our community’s heart to Palestinian history and humanity. That we each join the urgent struggle for the liberation of the Palestinian people.
This is the way that our Jewish college kids will find the deep and true safety of community: by leaving hatred, fear, and isolation behind; by honoring Jewish history by standing in solidarity with all who are oppressed; and by roaring in a stadium for freedom and justice, along with their entire generation.
You are surely a friend of the Forward if you’re reading this. And so it’s with excitement and awe — of all that the Forward is, was, and will be — that I introduce myself to you as the Forward’s newest editor-in-chief.
And what a time to step into the leadership of this storied Jewish institution! For 129 years, the Forward has shaped and told the American Jewish story. I’m stepping in at an intense time for Jews the world over. We urgently need the Forward’s courageous, unflinching journalism — not only as a source of reliable information, but to provide inspiration, healing and hope.
Support our mission to tell the Jewish story fully and fairly.

Michigan
Thumb Coast Electric earns Michigan 50 Companies to Watch honor
Thumb Coast Electric has been named a 2026 Michigan 50 Companies to Watch Award recipient, according to a community announcement recognizing high‑growth, second‑stage businesses across the state.
The Port Huron‑based electrical contractor was honored April 22 during the 22nd annual Michigan Celebrates Small Business Gala, where company representatives were recognized onstage alongside other awardees before an audience of more than 800 business owners and supporters.
The award is presented by Michigan Celebrates Small Business, which annually recognizes companies that demonstrate strong growth potential, sustainable competitive advantages and a commitment to their communities. Thumb Coast Electric is listed among the 2026 honorees in the Michigan 50 Companies to Watch category.
Recognizing second‑stage growth
The Michigan 50 Companies to Watch Award honors second‑stage companies — defined as businesses with six to 99 full‑time‑equivalent employees and annual revenue or working capital between $750,000 and $50 million — that are privately held and headquartered in Michigan.
“These companies represent the future of Michigan’s economy,” said Brian Calley, president and CEO of the Small Business Association of Michigan, which partners in the awards program. He said the designation recognizes businesses that combine consistent growth with strong workplace culture and community impact.
Judges from economic and entrepreneurship development organizations across the state select winners based on employee or sales growth, sustainable competitive advantage and other indicators of long‑term success. Award finalists also undergo a due‑diligence review before final selections are made.
Community and company culture
Thumb Coast Electric representative Erica Chisholm said the recognition reflects both employee dedication and community support.
“Receiving the Michigan 50 Companies to Watch award is a huge honor because it reflects the hard work our team puts in every day and the support we’ve had from our community,” Chisholm said, according to the announcement. She said the company has focused on sustainable growth, investing in its workforce and maintaining quality standards as it expands.
Michigan Celebrates Small Business launched the 50 Companies to Watch program in 2004 and has honored more than 1,200 businesses statewide over the past two decades.
This story was created by Dave DeMille, ddemille@gannett.com, with the assistance of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Journalists were involved in every step of the information gathering, review, editing and publishing process. Learn more at cm.usatoday.com/ethical-conduct.
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