Michigan Wolverines Interim Head Coach Biff Poggi Unloads On State Of Program
If you were expecting standard, buttoned-up coach-speak from Ann Arbor this week, you don’t know Biff Poggi. The interim head coach, stepping in after the firing of Sherrone Moore, isn’t interested in sugarcoating the state of Michigan football. In fact, he’s tearing the band-aid right off.
During a press conference that felt more like a therapy session for a battered fanbase, Poggi labeled the Michigan program exactly what it has looked like to the outside world for the last half-decade: a “malfunctioning organization.”
A Culture Of Constant Scandal
Between sign-stealing fiascos, recruiting violations during dead periods, and now the legal troubles and inappropriate conduct allegations surrounding Moore, the headlines coming out of Schembechler Hall have been exhausting.
“It has been five years of, let’s just call what it is, a malfunctioning organization where there’s something every year,” Poggi said. He noted that Athletic Director Warde Manuel has made it clear he “doesn’t want any more of that.”
This isn’t just about bad PR; it’s about the human toll. Poggi admitted the locker room is hurting. He described the players as feeling “betrayed” by the recent leadership collapse. He’s been spending his days on Zoom calls with concerned parents and trying to keep a fractured roster from hitting the transfer portal en masse before their Citrus Bowl matchup against Texas.
The “Maize and Blue Batman”
So, who fixes a mess this big? Poggi thinks he’s the guy, and he’s bringing his unique brand of humor and hedge-fund-manager intensity to the interview process.
“I would like a Maize & Blue Batman suit for me to wear to the office every day,” Poggi said, before getting serious about what a Poggi regime at Michigan would look like. He didn’t shy away from the need for a total overhaul. If he gets the permanent gig, he promised a massive “self-examination” of the entire building—from the coaching staff and analysts down to nutrition and strength conditioning.
Poggi, who has served multiple stints at Michigan and previously coached at Charlotte, insists he has the CEO-like skillset required for modern college football. “I know what the hell I’m doing,” he said. “This place is really important to me… It’s one of the things I want to fix before I go smoke myself to death with cigars.”
The Clock Is Ticking On a Decision
While Poggi prepares the team for Texas, the administration is moving fast. Poggi revealed that Manuel addressed the team, stating his hope to have the next head coach hired before the bowl game on December 31.
Poggi confirmed he has interviewed for the job multiple times. Whether the brass hands the keys to the candid interim coach or looks outside the program, one thing is certain: the “malfunctioning” days have to end. The Michigan faithful are tired of the drama, and frankly, so is Poggi.
