Michigan football had a loaded running backs room on paper, but it’s continuing to thin out a bit in between the end of the regular season and the offseason.
The Wolverines will lose Donovan Edwards and Kalel Mullings as their eligibility runs out, and Tavierre Dunlap and Cole Cabana both entered the transfer portal following the 13-10 win over Ohio State. Cabana, who hails from nearby Dexter, Michigan, has been oft injured in his short tenure as a Wolverine, and it turns out he’s looking to get fresh new life with another Big Ten program.
According to 247Sports, Cabana will continue to pursue his career after transferring to Minnesota.
Cabana has not played any meaningful snaps in his Michigan career. Despite having been on the roster for two years, he’ll have at least three years of eligibility with the Gophers and could potentially receive four, depending on if he looks to seek to reclaim one of the years with a medical redshirt.
The transfer portal opened on Monday with a flurry of activity. Here are the biggest transfer announcements from day seven of the 2025 transfer portal cycle.
Penn State is preparing for a College Football Playoff run but the Nittany Lions are going to have to make their way without Pribula. The Pennsylvania native wasn’t a normal backup quarterback. Pribula played in almost every game over the past two seasons despite Drew Allar’s strong grip on the starting role. Pribula was viewed as more of a running threat instead of a passer and the stats back that up. In two years he had 10 rushing touchdowns on 6.4 yards per carry versus 37 completions for 424 passing yards and nine touchdowns through the air. Pribula’s immediate departure from Penn State eliminates an important dimension of their offense at the worst possible time on the calendar.
Penn State is preparing for a College Football Playoff run but the Nittany Lions are going to have to make their way without Pribula. The Pennsylvania native wasn’t a normal backup quarterback. Pribula played in almost every game over the past two seasons despite Drew Allar’s strong grip on the starting role. Pribula was viewed as more of a running threat instead of a passer and the stats back that up. In two years he had 10 rushing touchdowns on 6.4 yards per carry versus 37 completions for 424 passing yards and nine touchdowns through the air. Pribula’s immediate departure from Penn State eliminates an important dimension of their offense at the worst possible time on the calendar.