Previously: Podcast 15.0A, 15.0B, 15.0C. The Story. Quarterback. Running Back. Wide Receiver. Tight End. Interior OL. Defensive Interior. Edge. LINEBACKER: LINEBACKING IS HARD Not a Depth Chart Middle Linebacker Yr. Weakside Linebacker Yr. Junior Colson Jr. Michael Barrett Sr.** Jimmy Rolder So. Ernest Hausmann So. Micah Pollard So. Jaydon Hood So.* It's a fair bet the plurality of position-specific praying in 2022 was for the linebackers. Michigan went into the season with two playable options, one of those a true sophomore who could explode in any direction, and lost the other to a thigh injury for the whole of it. Options past Colson and NHG were Don Brown viper Michael Barrett, RB-ish Brown recruit whom Notre Dame, Wisconsin, and everybody at Michigan's spring game thought better left at RB Kalel Mullings, and freshmen. By the bowl game they were asking a former starting safety to move down. And now? Different story. The twitching ball of azidoazide azide has reached the age of draftability. The viper used the opportunity to turn himself into a bona fide WLB. The thigh guy was sent down to Charlotte to make room for the top free agent in the portal. Last year's semi-playable freshman is now a playable sophomore trying to hold off a Don Brown doom squirrel we were getting ready to write off this time in 2022. The guy everyone wanted to play running back? He actually gets to play running back! Depending on what happens with the immigrant infante's irises, this unit is headed towards something between pretty good and 12-15 Christmases. SHADY'S BACK It may or may not make a difference beyond recruiting, but the guy who rivaled Santa in gifts he's brought to Michigan reputably also knows his way around the second level. You said five, so I'm here for five. [Barron] Once and future Chris Partridge returned to Michigan this offseason after a rocky attempt to coordinate a defense at Ole Miss. The top recruiter among all the Harbaugh lieutenants who've come through Ann Arbor, Partridge was also the linebacking coach during the position's best years in the history of our charting. Granted, they had Devin Bush Jr. (a Partridge recruit) for most of those years. Events not related to Bush: Jabrill Peppers (a Partridge player in HS) was a Heisman candidate as a Viper. Ben Gedeon developed into a solid starter. Mike McCray hit his ceiling. Devin Gil became a serviceable Big Ten player. Josh Ross had an extremely promising early career. Khaleke Hudson did too. Things got a lot worse in the years after Partridge. One reason to think they might take a leap forward is there isn't another LBs coach in the MGoBlog era with that kind of track record. Another is they have an elite athlete on hand who's badly in need of coaching. [After THE JUMP: Back again.]