After a whirlwind season that culminated in a national championship, Michigan’s basketball program now turns its attention to the work ahead.
Embracing Change
The Wolverines will enter next season with a dramatically altered lineup, welcoming four newcomers while retaining only point guard Elliot Cadeau from the previous starting five. Trey McKenney is slated to step into the starting lineup, and three transfers are expected to add depth.
Coach Dusty May, who succeeded Juwan Howard, stresses that the team’s identity will remain rooted in a process‑oriented approach, with an emphasis on attention to detail and daily improvement.
May acknowledges the heightened demands on his time and family, but remains confident that the talent on the roster can contend, even as the squad will be younger and require careful development.
The ultimate aim stays the same: a return to the Final Four in Detroit, a milestone that feels both symbolic and practical for a program eager to sustain its momentum.
Fans can expect an exciting brand of basketball as the team blends fresh talent with the proven culture that helped secure the championship, and the university community rallies behind a vision that blends ambition with disciplined execution.