The Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team is the intercollegiate men's basketball program representing the University of Michigan. The school competes in the Big Ten Conference in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), and play their home games at Crisler Center in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The Wolverines have won one NCAA Championship, three National Invitation Tournaments (NIT), 16 Big Ten regular season titles and four Big Ten tournaments. One NIT title and one Big Ten tournament were later vacated by the NCAA due to sanctions.
Michigan has had 36 All-Americans (1st, 2nd or 3rd team), on 49 total selections. Nine of these have been consensus first-team All-Americans, which are Cazzie Russell (twice), Rickey Green, Gary Grant, Chris Webber, Trey Burke, Yaxel Lendeborg, as well as Harry Kipke, Richard Doyle and Bennie Oosterbaan (twice), who were retroactively selected by the Helms Athletic Foundation. Twelve players have been honored as All-Americans at least twice, including Russell as the only three-time All-American.
Seventy-seven players have been drafted into the National Basketball Association (NBA); thirty-two of those were first round draft picks, including both Cazzie Russell and Chris Webber who were selected first overall. The 1990 NBA draft, in which Rumeal Robinson was selected 10th, Loy Vaught was selected 13th, and Terry Mills was selected 16th made Michigan the third of only ten schools that have ever had three or more players selected in the first round of the same draft. Six players have gone on to become NBA champions for a total of nine times and eight players have become NBA All-Stars a total of 18 times. Rudy Tomjanovich coached both the 1994 and 1995 NBA Finals champions. Glen Rice is one of only thirteen basketball players to have won a high school state championship, NCAA title and NBA championship.
During the 1990s Michigan endured an NCAA violations scandal, described as involving one of the largest amounts of illicit money in NCAA history, when Ed Martin loaned four players a reported total of $616,000. Due to sanctions, records starting in the 1992 Final Four, the 1992âÂÂ93 season, and the 1995âÂÂ96 season through the 1998âÂÂ99 season were vacated by the NCAA. Throughout this article asterisks denote awards, records and honors that have been vacated.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Includes vacated results and accomplishments.
As a result of public and alumni demand for a basketball team, Michigan fielded a team of members of the then-current student body and achieved a 1âÂÂ4 record for the 1908âÂÂ09 season. However, after three years of demanding a basketball program, the student body did not attend the games and the program was terminated due to low attendance. Basketball returned in 1917 in what was considered the inaugural season of varsity basketball. The team was coached by Elmer Mitchell who instituted the intramural sports program at Michigan. The team finished 6âÂÂ12 overall (0âÂÂ10, Big Ten). The following year Mitchell led the team to a 16âÂÂ8 (5âÂÂ5) record.
E. J. Mather coached the team to three Big Ten titles in his nine seasons as coach. After inheriting Mitchell's team, which he led to a 10âÂÂ13 overall (3âÂÂ9, Big Ten) record during the 1919âÂÂ20 season, he led the team to an 18âÂÂ4 overall (8âÂÂ4, Big Ten) record during the 1920âÂÂ21 season. This 1921 team won its first eight and last eight games to tie the Wisconsin Badgers and Purdue Boilermakers for the Big Ten title. The team won back-to-back championships in 1925âÂÂ26 and 1926âÂÂ27. The 1926 squad, which was captained by Richard Doyle who became the team's first All-American, tied with Purdue, the Iowa Hawkeyes and Indiana Hoosiers for the conference championship. The 1927 team had a new All-American, Bennie Oosterbaan, and won the school's first back-to-back championships and first outright championship with a 14âÂÂ3 overall (10âÂÂ2, Big Ten) record. Mather died after a lengthy battle with cancer in August 1928.
George F. Veenker compiled the highest overall and highest Big Ten winning percentages of any coach in school history during his three years as coach. He earned 1st(tied), 3rd and 2nd(tied) finishes during his three seasons, which included the 1928âÂÂ29 conference championship. During Veenker's first season his team compiled a 13âÂÂ3 overall (10âÂÂ2, Big Ten) record to win the conference, and Veenker continues to be the only coach in school history to win a conference championship in his first season. The championship team, which finished tied with Wisconsin, was captained by the school's third All-American Ernie McCoy. Veenker resigned to become the Iowa State Cyclones football head coach.
Franklin Cappon had a long history of association with Michigan athletics starting with his service as a four-time letterman in football and basketball from 1919 to 1923. In 1928, he became assistant football and basketball coach and in 1929 he served as Fielding H. Yost's assistant Athletic Director. Although the highlight of Cappon's tenure as coach was a 16âÂÂ4 (9âÂÂ3) third place 1936âÂÂ37 Big Ten finish, he coached John Townsend who in his 1937âÂÂ38 senior season became last All-American for at least 10 years. The team finished third in two other seasons with less impressive records of 10âÂÂ8 overall (8âÂÂ4, Big Ten) in 1932âÂÂ33 and 15âÂÂ5 overall (7âÂÂ5, Big Ten) 1935âÂÂ36, and Cappon's overall record was 78âÂÂ57 overall (44âÂÂ40, Big Ten). A notable captain during the Cappon era was 1933âÂÂ34 captain Ted Petoskey, a two-time football All-American end and eventual Major League Baseball player.
In 1938 Michigan coaching duties were assumed by one of its greatest athletes. Bennie Oosterbaan had been an All-American in both football and basketball and held various coaching positions at Michigan in both of those sports as well as baseball. In basketball, he implemented a fast-paced attack as coach, and his teams' best overall record was 13âÂÂ7 in 1939âÂÂ40. That season he tied with his final season for his best Big Ten record at 6âÂÂ6. He resigned after eight seasons to concentrate on his football coaching duties.
Under Ozzie Cowles, during the 1947âÂÂ48 season, Michigan ended the longest (19 years) consecutive year period without a conference championship in school history. They also became the first contestants in the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament during Cowles second of two seasons. The 1947âÂÂ48 team posted a 16âÂÂ6 overall (10âÂÂ2, Big Ten) record. This team also posted the first undefeated home performance in school history with a 9âÂÂ0 overall (6âÂÂ0, Big Ten) record.
Ernie McCoy became the second former All-American Wolverine player to coach the team. Like Oosterbaan before him, he became a football and baseball coach at Michigan. He also served as assistant Athletic Director under Fritz Crisler. During his four seasons as basketball coach, Michigan's best finish was during the 1948âÂÂ49 season when they finished 15âÂÂ6 overall (7âÂÂ5, Big Ten) and earned a third place Big Ten Conference finish. He coached Michigan's first All-Big Ten basketball players that season in Pete Elliot and captain Bob Harrison who were both selected to the first team. Harrison returned the following season as the first repeat first-team All-Big Ten basketball player and Elliot was a second-team honoree. McCoy served as a football scout at the same time.
Bill Perigo took over the Michigan coaching job after having served three seasons as Western Michigan basketball coach. Despite previous success as a conference basketball champion coach at Western and subsequent success as a Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA) champion basketball coach, his Michigan teams endured several mediocre seasons. His best Big Ten records came in 1956âÂÂ57 and 1958âÂÂ59 when his teams compiled 8âÂÂ6 conference records. The latter team was tied for second in the conference and was 15âÂÂ7 overall (8âÂÂ6, Big Ten). It also had Perigo's only first-team All-Big Ten athlete in M. C. Burton. Team captain and two-time football consensus All-American Ron Kramer was third-team All-Big Ten in 1957 after being second-team All-Big Ten in both 1955 and 1956.
Dave Strack, a former team 1945âÂÂ46 captain, had become the freshman basketball team coach in 1948 and later had become a variety assistant to Perigo. He led the team to three consecutive Big Ten Championships from 1963 to 1966 and a third-place finish in the 1964 NCAA tournament. During 1964âÂÂ65 the team compiled a 24âÂÂ4 overall (13âÂÂ1, Big Ten) record while completing an undefeated 11âÂÂ0 overall (7âÂÂ0, Big Ten) home season and was the national runner-up, falling to John Wooden's UCLA in the 1965 championship game. Strack earned United Press International (UPI) National Coach of the Year honors. The team ended the season listed number one in both the UPI and Associated Press (AP) national rankings. He recruited All-Americans Russell and Buntin to anchor his mid-1960s teams. Tomjanovich also became a Wolverine at the end of Strack's career and became second team All-Big Ten in 1968 subsequent later stardom. The 1964 team, which went 23âÂÂ5 overall (11âÂÂ3, Big Ten), tied with Ohio State with sophomore Russell and junior Buntin. In 1965, Buntin became the first Wolverine to be drafted by the NBA. In 1966, Russell led the team to its third straight conference championship and NCAA selection on his way to National Player of the Year honors.
In Johnny Orr's twelve seasons, he twice (1973âÂÂ74 and 1976âÂÂ77) earned Big Ten Coach of the Year honors with Big Ten championships. His teams earned four consecutive NCAA selections from 1974 to 1977. The 25âÂÂ7 overall (14âÂÂ4, Big Ten) 1976 team lost to an undefeated Indiana team in the NCAA championship game and Orr earned National Association of Basketball Coaches Coach of the Year honors that season. The 26âÂÂ4 overall (16âÂÂ2, Big Ten) 1977 team finished first in both the AP and UPI national rankings, and Orr won Basketball Weekly National Coach of the Year honors. During Orr's tenure, six players earned a total of seven All-American recognitions, which is the most of any Michigan coach. Steve Grote became Michigan's only three-time first-team Academic All-American from 1975 to 1977 and with a second team All Big Ten as well as three honorable mentions was the first four-time All-Big Ten honoree.
Bill Frieder, who had been an assistant coach for seven years, took over from Orr in 1980. He coached the school's first post-season basketball champions during the 1983âÂÂ84 season and the following two teams were back-to-back conference champions. The 1983âÂÂ84 team compiled a 24âÂÂ9 overall (11âÂÂ7, Big Ten) record on their way to a NIT championship victory over Notre Dame. The 1984âÂÂ85 team went 26âÂÂ4 overall (16âÂÂ2, Big Ten), which earned Frieder Big Ten and AP National Coach of the Year honors. The 1985âÂÂ86 team, which finished 28âÂÂ5 overall (14âÂÂ4, Big Ten), started the season with 16 victories to make a total of 33 consecutive regular season victories. Frieder earned five of Michigan's six consecutive NCAA births from 1985 to 1990, currently the longest streak in program history. Roy Tarpley led the 1985 team as Big Ten MVP. After the 1988âÂÂ89 season, Frieder accepted the head coach's job at Arizona State, but wanted to remain at Michigan for the NCAA tournament. However, when Frieder told athletic director Bo Schembechler of his intentions, Schembechler ordered him to leave immediately, telling him, "I don't want someone from Arizona State coaching the Michigan team. A Michigan man is going to coach Michigan."
Frieder's top assistant, Steve Fisher, was named interim coach immediately before the 1989 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament and led the team to six straight victories and the championship. Following the victory, Michigan dropped the "interim" tag from Fisher's title. Two years later, Fisher signed the famous recruiting class known as the Fab Five (Chris Webber, Juwan Howard, Jalen Rose, Jimmy King and Ray Jackson). He would take these players to the NCAA championship game as Freshmen and Sophomores. Fisher also won the 1997 NIT tournament with a team that compiled a 25âÂÂ9 overall (11âÂÂ5) record. Many of Fisher's and the basketball team's accomplishments were tarnished by significant NCAA sanctions. He left the job due to the University of Michigan basketball scandal.
Brian Ellerbe assumed the title of interim coach less than five months after becoming an assistant coach. He was named full-time coach following the 25âÂÂ9 (11âÂÂ5) 1997âÂÂ98 season in which he led the team to victories over Iowa, Minnesota and Purdue to capture the Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament championship. His subsequent teams never finished better than seventh in the conference.
Tommy Amaker inherited a team that imposed sanctions on itself after his first year at the helm of the program. Nonetheless, he coached the team to the postseason three times including both an NIT championship in 2004 and a runner-up finish in 2006. During the 2005âÂÂ06, when the team compiled a 22âÂÂ11 overall (8âÂÂ8, Big Ten) record, he led them to their first national ranking in eight years when they reached No. 20 in the AP poll. Despite his successes, the team never won a Big Ten Championship and never made the NCAA tournament, which led to his firing after six seasons.
John Beilein's 10âÂÂ22 overall (5âÂÂ13 Big Ten) in his inaugural season featured the second most losses in Michigan basketball history. The Wolverines improved in Beilein's second season and posted impressive non-conference victories over top-five ranked opponents UCLA and Duke. Beilein led Michigan to the 2009 NCAA tournament, its first appearance since 1998 and the first that was not vacated since 1995. After upsetting Clemson in the first round, the Wolverines were eliminated by Oklahoma in the round of 32 by a final score of 73âÂÂ63.
Following a disappointing 15âÂÂ17 season in 2009âÂÂ10, the Wolverines bounced back to return to the NCAA tournament in 2011, advancing to the round of 32 before losing to top-seeded Duke, 73âÂÂ71. The 2010âÂÂ11 Wolverines, who swept rival Michigan State for the first time since 1997, finished the season 21âÂÂ14. In the 2011âÂÂ12 season, Michigan split the season series between Ohio State and Michigan State, and was the co-Big Ten champions along with the Buckeyes and Spartans. It was the program's first Big Ten title since 1986. The Wolverines finished the season 24âÂÂ10 and 13âÂÂ5 in conference play, losing in the opening round of the 2012 NCAA tournament.
The 2012âÂÂ13 Michigan team earned a No. 1 ranking in the AP poll on January 28, 2013, marking the first time since November 30, 1992 that Michigan held that position. The team also made program history for the best season start, at 21âÂÂ2. On March 31, The Wolverines defeated Florida by a score of 79âÂÂ59 to make their first Final Four appearance since the 1992âÂÂ93 season. The Wolverines then defeated Syracuse by a score of 61âÂÂ56 in the Final Four. In the 2013 NCAA tournament national championship game, the Wolverines lost against Louisville by the score of 82âÂÂ76. On February 20, 2018, NCAA confirmed and upheld penalties against Louisville for "arranging striptease dances and sex acts for prospects, student-athletes and others." Louisville had to vacate its 2013 national championship, but the NCAA does not retroactively award vacated championships to default winners.
The 2013âÂÂ14 team had another strong season, winning Michigan's first outright Big Ten championship since 1986 and advancing to the Elite Eight of the 2014 NCAA tournament, where it lost to Kentucky 75âÂÂ72. With the departure of several key players to NBA draft, as well as injuries to Caris LeVert and Derrick Walton, the 2014âÂÂ15 team ended the season with a 16âÂÂ16 record and a quarterfinals appearance at the Big Ten tournament, but did not make the 2015 NCAA tournament. Despite several injuries before and during the season, the 2015âÂÂ16 team compiled a 23âÂÂ13 record and made it to the semifinals of the Big Ten tournament. The team also qualified as a First Four team for the 2016 NCAA tournament, but eventually lost in the round of 64.
During the 2016âÂÂ17 season, Beilein became the winningest coach in school history, passing Johnny Orr with his 210th win on March 9, with a 75âÂÂ55 win over Illinois in the opening round of the 2017 Big Ten tournament. Michigan went on to win the tournament, its first since the vacated 1998 title, winning four games in four days as the No. 8 seed and capping it off with a 71âÂÂ56 championship victory over Wisconsin. It was the first time that a No. 8 seed had won the Big Ten tournament. Michigan made the 2017 NCAA tournament as a No. 7 seed, defeating Oklahoma State and Louisville to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. Michigan went on to lose to Oregon in the round and finished the season with a 26-12 record.
During the 2017âÂÂ18 season, Beilein's Wolverines again won four games in four days to win back-to-back Big Ten tournament championships for the first time in school history. The team went on to win the West regional title and advance to the Final Four following its win over Florida State, 58âÂÂ54. The win improved the team's record to 32âÂÂ7, marking a new school record for victories. Following a Final Four victory over a rising Loyola-Chicago team, Michigan moved on to face Villanova in the 2018 NCAA tournament national championship game. The Wolverines fell short by a score of 79âÂÂ62, and this brought MichiganâÂÂs record in a national championship game to 1âÂÂ6, the worst record among teams that have previously won a title.
The 2018âÂÂ19 team started the season on the best run in program history, winning their first 17 games before losing to Wisconsin on the road. The Wolverines finished the regular season third in the Big Ten and earned a No. 2 seed in the 2019 NCAA tournament, despite losing three starters from the previous season's team. The team made it to the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA tournament for a third straight season before losing to No. 3 seed Texas Tech.
On May 13, 2019, in a surprising move, Beilein signed a five-year contract to become the head coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers. Beilein led Michigan to a 278âÂÂ150 record with nine NCAA tournament appearances, including two finishes as the national runner-up. Beilein advocated for a system similar to college football, where a committed player needed to stay in school for at least three years. It was speculated that the rise of "one-and-done" and early NBA Draft entries, which resulted in a trend of more time spent on recruiting and higher turnover of players, contributed to BeileinâÂÂs decision to depart from college basketball. Beilein's departure from Michigan was widely regarded as a loss for college basketball.
On May 22, 2019, Fab Five member Juwan Howard was named the head basketball coach of the Wolverines, agreeing on a five-year contract. Despite losing three of their leading scorers from the 2018âÂÂ19 team to the NBA draft, Howard led an unranked Wolverines to a 7âÂÂ0 start, including back-to-back wins over No. 6 UNC, 73âÂÂ64, and No. 8 Gonzaga, 82âÂÂ64, capturing the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament title. Following the strong performance, Michigan jumped from unranked to No. 4 in the AP poll, becoming only the second team after the 1989âÂÂ90 Kansas Jayhawks to achieve the feat in the 70-year history of the poll. In their first Big Ten game under Howard, the Wolverines defeated Iowa 103âÂÂ91 and scored their most points in a Big Ten game since 1998 (112 against Indiana). They achieved the No. 9 seed in the 2020 Big Ten tournament, but their first game, against No. 8 seed Rutgers, was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
On March 4, 2021, the 2020âÂÂ21 Wolverines clinched the regular season Big Ten title with a 69âÂÂ50 victory over instate rival Michigan State. Michigan ended the regular season with a 23âÂÂ5 overall record and a 14âÂÂ3 conference record (.823 conference winning percentage). Michigan's Big Ten regular season championship was their first since 2014. The Wolverines received an at-large bid to the 2021 NCAA tournament as the No. 1 seed in the East region, where they defeated No. 16 Texas Southern and No. 8 LSU to advance to their fourth straight Sweet Sixteen. They then defeated No. 4 Florida State before being upset by No. 11 UCLA in the Elite Eight.
The 2021âÂÂ22 Wolverines finished the regular season with a 17âÂÂ13 overall record (11âÂÂ9 Big Ten) and lost their first game of the Big Ten tournament to Indiana. Michigan managed to make the 2022 NCAA tournament as a No. 11 seed, beating No. 6 Colorado State and No. 3 Tennessee to advance to the Sweet Sixteen for a fifth consecutive season. In the round Michigan lost to Villanova to end their tournament.
In each of the following two seasons, the Wolverines failed to make the NCAA tournament with Howard. It was the first time Michigan did not make the NCAA tournament in back-to-back years since the 2007âÂÂ08 team. On March 15, 2024, after losing a program record 24 games, the university announced it was parting ways with Howard after five years.
On March 23, 2024, Dusty May was named the head basketball coach at the University of Michigan. In his first month, he led the 2024âÂÂ25 Wolverines to being the Fort Myers Tip-Off champions, and ranked inside the top 15 of the AP poll for the first time since November 2021. Michigan finished the regular season tied for second place at 14âÂÂ6 in the conference and earned the No. 3 seed in the 2025 Big Ten tournament. On March 16, the Wolverines won the Big Ten tournament against Wisconsin, their first tournament title since 2018. May became the first officially recognized conference coach to win the Big Ten tournament title in their first season, with the only other being Brian Ellerbe in MichiganâÂÂs first win in 1998; though that season was later vacated by the NCAA. May also won the most total games and conference games in program history for a first-year head coach. Michigan received an automatic bid to the 2025 NCAA tournament as the No. 5 seed in the South Region. On March 20, the Wolverines defeated No. 12 seed UC San Diego, 68âÂÂ65, in the First Round. With 26 wins, May became the winningest first-year head coach in program history. On March 22, Michigan defeated No. 4 seed Texas A&M in the Second Round 91âÂÂ79, winning a fifth consecutive postseason game. No team in NCAA history has ever lost as many games the season before and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen the next year (since introduced in 1975). On March 28, Michigan lost to the No. 1 overall seed Auburn in the regional semifinal, 65âÂÂ78. The Wolverines finished the year 27âÂÂ10, an increase of 19 wins from the previous season.
In May's second season, the 2025âÂÂ26 Wolverines won the 2025 Players Era Festival Championship in late November. In the tournament, No. 7 Michigan defeated San Diego State by 40 points, No. 21 Auburn by 30 points and No. 12 Gonzaga by 40 points in the championship game. The win against Gonzaga marked the highest margin of victory against an AP ranked opponent in program history, and was the first time in NCAA history that any team outscored AP ranked opponents by 30 or more points in consecutive games. On December 8, Michigan was ranked No. 1 in the Coaches poll for the first time since the Fab Five led 1992âÂÂ93 Wolverines, and on February 16, Michigan moved to No. 1 in the AP poll for the first time since the 2012âÂÂ13 Wolverines. Michigan would improve to a program-record 25âÂÂ1 before a second loss. On February 24, Michigan clinched a share of the 2026 Big Ten regular season championship with a win against Minnesota, and secured the outright Big Ten championship against No. 10 Illinois on February 27. It was the Wolverines first since the 2021 Big Ten regular season championship. Michigan finished the regular season 29âÂÂ2 and 19âÂÂ1 in the conference. The 29 regular season wins are a program record and the 19 conference wins set a Big Ten record, surpassing the program record of 16 wins set by the 1976âÂÂ77 and 1984âÂÂ85 Wolverines, and the Big Ten record set by the 1974âÂÂ75 and 1975âÂÂ76 Indiana Hoosiers (18âÂÂ0). Michigan is the only Big Ten team to have ever won all ten conference road games, and the first to finish undefeated on the road since the 1975âÂÂ76 Indiana Hoosiers.
+ Conference co-champions
Totals through March 15, 2026.
The Fab Five, the 1991 recruiting class of five freshman starters, were Chris Webber, Juwan Howard, Jalen Rose, Jimmy King, and Ray Jackson. They were notable for having gone to the championship game of the 1992 and 1993 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament as freshmen and sophomores, for having started the trend of wearing baggy gym shorts, which was later popularized by Michael Jordan, and for wearing black athletic socks. Due to the issues found with WebberâÂÂs eligibility in the Ed Martin scandal, the records from their 1992 Final Four appearance and the entire following season have been vacated. Although Webber was the only member of the Fab Five officially implicated with the scandal, the reputation of the whole group has been tarnished. Webber (1993), Howard (1994) and Rose (1992, 1994) were college basketball All-Americans. and both King (1995 3rd team and 1993 & 1994 honorable mention) and Jackson (1995 2nd team & 1994 honorable mention) achieved All-Big Ten honors. All but Jackson played in the NBA. They were the subject of Mitch Albom's book, Fab Five: Basketball, Trash Talk, the American Dream, which at one point was under development by Fox Television as a made-for-television movie. In March 2011 ESPN broadcast a documentary, Fab Five, that was the network's highest-rated in its history.
During the University of Michigan basketball scandal the Big Ten Conference, National Collegiate Athletic Association, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Internal Revenue Service, and United States Department of Justice investigated the relationship between the University of Michigan, its men's basketball teams and basketball team booster Ed Martin. The program was punished for NCAA rules violations, principally involving payments booster Martin made to several players to launder money from an illegal gambling operation. It is one of the largest incidents involving payments to college athletes in American collegiate history. It was described as one of the three or four worst violations of NCAA bylaws in history up to that time by the NCAA infractions committee chairman and the largest athlete payment scandal ever by ESPN.
The case began when the investigation of an automobile rollover accident during Mateen Cleaves' 1996 Michigan Wolverines recruiting trip revealed a curious relationship between Martin and the team. Several Michigan basketball players were implicated over the next few years and by 1999 several were called before a federal grand jury. Four eventual professional basketball players (Chris Webber, Maurice Taylor, Robert Traylor and Louis Bullock) were discovered to have borrowed a total of $616,000 from Martin. During the investigation, Webber claimed not to have had any financial relationship with Martin. Eventually he confessed to having accepted some of the money he was charged with having borrowed. For his perjury during a federal grand jury investigation, he was both fined in the legal system and briefly suspended by National Basketball Association after performing public service.
In 2002, the university punished itself when it became apparent that its players were guilty by declaring itself ineligible for post season play immediately, returning post season play monetary rewards, vacating five seasons of games, removing commemorative banners, and placing itself on a two-year probation. The following year, the NCAA accepted these punishments, doubled both the probation period and the post-season ineligibility, penalized the school one scholarship for four seasons, and ordered disassociation from the four guilty players until 2012. The disassociation formally ended on May 8, 2013. The additional year of post-season ineligibility was overturned on appeal.
The punishment cost the 2002âÂÂ03 team its post-season eligibility, cost past teams the 1997 National Invitation Tournament and the 1998 Big Ten tournament championships as well as 1992 and 1993 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament Final Four recognition. It cost Traylor his MVP awards in the 1997 NIT and 1998 Big Ten tournament, as well as Bullock's standing as the school's third all-time leading scorer and all-time leader in 3-point field goals. Steve Fisher lost his job as Michigan head coach as a result of the scandal.
Below are lists of important players and coaches in the history of Michigan Wolverines men's basketball. It includes lists of major awards and retired numbers. The honors include: Helms Foundation Player of the Year, UPI Player of the Year, Sporting News Player of the Year, Naismith Trophy, Wooden Award, Associated Press Player of the Year, NABC Player of the Year, Oscar Robertson Trophy, NCAA tournament MOP, National Invitation tournament MVP, Big Ten tournament MVP, Chicago Tribune Silver Basketball, Big Ten Player of the Year, All-America, Wayman Tisdale Award, Bob Cousy Award, UPI Coach of the Year, Henry Iba Award, NABC Coach of the Year, AP Coach of the Year.
The program has officially retired one number only:
Jerseys honored but numbers still active:
National Player of the Year
Wayman Tisdale Award
Bob Cousy Award
NCAA tournament MOP
National Invitation Tournament MVP
Big Ten tournament MVP
Chicago Tribune Silver Basketball
Big Ten Player of the Year
Big Ten Freshman of the Year
Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year
Big Ten Sixth Man of the Year
All-Americans
<small># (consensus)</small>
National Coach of the Year
Big Ten Coach of the Year
Two former Wolverines have been inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
Updated as of February 2026.
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The University of Michigan has an all-time 72âÂÂ31* (65âÂÂ27) record overall and 1âÂÂ6* (1âÂÂ4) championship game record in the NCAA tournaments in 33* (30) appearances. Glen Rice holds the NCAA single-tournament scoring record with 184 points in 1989. The 1992 Final Four and all 1993, 1996, & 1998 games have been vacated due to NCAA sanctions.
The NCAA began seeding the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament with the 1979 edition. The 64-team field started in 1985, which guaranteed that a championship team had to win six games.
In 11* (10) National Invitation Tournament appearances, Michigan is 26*âÂÂ8 (21âÂÂ8) overall all-time and 3*âÂÂ1 (2âÂÂ1) in the championship game. 17*âÂÂ0 (15âÂÂ0) at Crisler Arena and 8*âÂÂ2 (6âÂÂ2) at Madison Square Garden. The 1997 tournament was forfeited due to NCAA sanctions.
Michigan teams have spent a total of 23 weeks ranked No. 1, with the last occurrence in 2026. Two Michigan teams have defeated the No. 1 ranked team: against Wichita State on December 14, 1964 and Duke on December 13, 1997.
The following table summarizes MichiganâÂÂs history in the AP poll: