Updated Dec. 13, 2025, 4:03 p.m. ET
Who will be the next Michigan football coach?
Sherrone Moore’s firing and arrest have cast the Wolverines’ program into disarray. Biff Poggi will serve as interim coach and lead Michigan in the Citrus Bowl against Texas. Who takes over after that (and who gets to make that call) remains unclear.
Nearly all of the coaching vacancies have been filled, but a job as big as Michigan shouldn’t be affected by the calendar — though ideally you’d want a new coach in before the transfer portal opens Jan. 2.
Here’s the latest news and rumored candidates for the job:
HIT REFRESH FOR UPDATES.
Kenny Dillingham
You can cross Kenny Dillingham’s name off the list.
The Arizona State coach announced after Saturday bowl practice he will be staying in Tempe. He had been linked as a potential candidate to fill the job at Michigan.
“This place is just — it’s a special place to me,” Dillingham said, according to The Arizona Republic, adding his agent is having discussions with university officials on an extension.
The Michigan opportunity “will be good for somebody,” Dillingham said, just not him.
Dillingham, 35, is in his third season as ASU’s coach and has a 22-16 record, but most notably took the Sun Devils to the College Football Playoff last year and had Texas on the brink of an upset.
Kalen DeBoer
Most pundits say Michigan’s first call should be to Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer.
But according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel, there’s “no indication” DeBoer has interest in taking the job in Ann Arbor.
His players were asked about rumors as a distraction ahead of the Crimson Tide’s College Football Playoff first round game at Oklahoma on Dec. 19.
“At the end of the day, (DeBoer) serves us 100%,” Alabama star receiver Ryan Williams said. “That’s our coach, so we’re going to play for him. External noise is external noise, so we’re going to focus on the internal.”
DeBoer was also linked with the Penn State job before the Nittany Lions hired Matt Campbell.
“We are extremely happy at Alabama. … We are extremely happy here,” DeBoer said Dec. 4. “Love the grind, love this place. There’s never been any link, there’s never been any conversation, there’s never been any interest either way. And so I’m glad we can put that to bed right now.”
Jedd Fisch
Fisch previously spent two years as Jim Harbaugh’s quarterbacks coach from 2015-16, did an outstanding job rebuilding Arizona over his three seasons and won eight games in his second year with the Huskies.
“We haven’t spent any time focused in on what people are saying in the outside noise regarding me or other coaches on our staff,” Fisch said Friday ahead of Washington’s LA Bowl. “We know that’s the world we’re in right now. We know our players are being talked about or talked to from other teams, and we really just have to stay focused on the task at hand, which is a great game tomorrow. … It’s not a distraction that I’m talking about (with the team).”
Fisch, a Florida grad, was linked to the Gators job that went to Jon Sumrall, and has stated he’s happy in Seattle.
“Those lists are made by people who have no idea what’s going on, honestly. They don’t know what’s happening in our program,” Fisch said last month. “They have no idea how excited I am about the youth in our program. … We love coaching at the University of Washington.”
Kyle Whittingham
After 21 years leading Utah, Whittingham announced Friday he was stepping down as Utes coach after the Las Vegas Bowl. The Athletic’s Stewart Mandel reported the 66-year-old Whittingham “is not retiring, and could seek other coaching opportunities.”
Whittingham went 177-88 in his two decades in Salt Lake City. A BYU grad, Whittingham has spent his entire career coaching out West beyond the Continental Divide but would be a capable pair of hands to guide the Michigan program out of this mess.
Jeff Brohm
Brohm was connected to the Penn State search before stepping away to recommit to Louisville. While he’s settled into a very secure situation with the Cardinals, Brohm was at the very least interested in the vacancy with the Nittany Lions and would seemingly be receptive to Michigan’s overtures.
USA TODAY columnist Blake Toppmeyer writes Brohm has the big-game pedigree and Big Ten know-how the Wolverines could be looking for.
“Consider, a mere two weeks ago, Moore’s Wolverines mustered nine points against Ohio State, despite starting a five-star quarterback,” Toppmeyer writes.
“Think Brohm could do better? I know he could. In 2018, he shocked Urban Meyer’s Buckeyes, while coaching Purdue. Purdue. As in, the program that lost to Ohio State by 56 points the last time it faced the Buckeyes before hiring Brohm.
“… I keep coming back to Brohm. He has Big Ten experience, and he won at Purdue in a way no one has since Joe Tiller’s retirement.
“I don’t know whether Michigan could persuade Brohm to leave his hometown and his alma mater, but I don’t know that it could do any better than him.”
Tommy Rees
Michigan is reportedly interested in talking to Rees, according to Cleveland.com, who starred as a quarterback at Notre Dame. He moved up the coaching ranks fast, getting his big break as offensive coordinator with Notre Dame in 2020, where he served in the role for three years before moving to Alabama to be the offensive coordinator for the Crimson Tide in Nick Saban’s last year. He has spent the last two years with the Browns, first as a passing game specialist and then as offensive coordinator this year.
Rees also reportedly talked to Penn State before the Nittany Lions landed on Iowa State coach Matt Campbell.
Jesse Minter
Tapping into Harbaugh’s coaching tree to hire Moore didn’t work out well for Michigan. That may lead to some queasiness over hiring Minter, who was the defensive coordinator for the Wolverines from 2022-23 and then followed Harbaugh to the Los Angeles Chargers. But Michigan has historically placed intense value on connections to the program. That makes Minter a strong candidate, though he is also under consideration for NFL openings.


