Michigan just landed a monster in the transfer portal.
The Wolverines secured one of the biggest defensive prizes available, adding a proven disruptor of an edge rusher coming off a breakout season.
Michigan’s Latest Portal Addition Had Breakout 2025
Utah edge rusher John Henry Daley is on his way to Michigan. He follows his longtime coach Kyle Whittingham to Ann Arbor, a move that immediately sent shockwaves through the college football world and gave Michigan fans plenty to celebrate.
On3 Sports analyst, Pete Nakos, broke the news on Thursday night regarding the star defender. If dominance had a middle name, it would be John Henry Daley.
BREAKING: Utah star transfer EDGE John Henry Daley has committed to Michigan, @PeteNakos reports〽️https://t.co/U31NaOwVgy pic.twitter.com/nqFLdW9LL4
— On3 (@On3sports) January 9, 2026
In his first year as a full-time starter, Daley was nothing short of relentless. He finished the season with 12.5 sacks, ranking fourth among all edge defenders nationally.
According to PFSN, Daley ranked sixth in splash plays, sixth in quarterback hits, and second in Edge Impact Grade with an elite 89.0 mark, trailing only Texas Tech’s David Bailey, a projected first-round pick in the upcoming NFL Draft.
For a player in his first season as a starter, Daley’s production and efficiency were nothing short of eye-opening.
A Perfect Reunion in Ann Arbor
The fit between Daley and Michigan felt natural from the start. Daley has been a vocal admirer of Whittingham, reposting Utah Football’s message thanking the coach after it was announced he would not be returning.
Daley replied simply yet powerfully, calling Whittingham “one of the greatest to ever do it.”
At the time, no one knew Whittingham would coach again, never mind take the Michigan job. However, once the news broke of his move to Ann Arbor, and Daley soon entered the transfer portal, the pieces fell together seamlessly. The reunion was inevitable.
Daley now arrives with momentum and unfinished business, looking to carry his 2025 breakout into the 2026 season for a Michigan defense that was good, but not up to its usual elite standard. The Wolverines graded out at an 81.6 PFSN Defensive Impact Grade, ranking only seventh in the Big Ten, a number Whittingham expects to see rise quickly.
An immediate impact is expected, and Michigan fans are already dreaming big. Many hope Daley can become the next Aidan Hutchinson, a relentless edge presence capable of wrecking game plans and dominating opposing backfields.
Put Daley in Hutchinson’s signature eye black and the resemblance might be uncanny, both in appearance and in havoc-wreaking ability.
One thing is certain: Michigan got a good one.
