Interim Michigan coach Biff Poggi: Players feel ‘betrayed’

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Following the firing and arrest of former Michigan coach Sherrone Moore, the players on the Wolverine football team are feeling “betrayed,” interim head coach Biff Poggi told reporters on Monday. 

Poggi has been put in charge of picking up the pieces following the dramatic fall from grace for Moore, who was fired last week for having an inappropriate relationship with a female staffer and was later arrested after forcing entry into the home of the staff member

Moore has since been charged with felony third-degree home invasion and two misdemeanors: stalking in a domestic relationship and breaking and entering.

Poggi was candid while finally addressing the situation with the media for the first time and going through the reaction of No. 18 Michigan’s players since the fallout, as the team has prepared to face Arch Manning and No. 13 Texas in the Citrus Bowl on New Year’s Eve.

Michigan interim head coach Biff Poggi answers a question during an NCAA college football Citrus Bowl news conference in Winter Park, Fla., Monday, Dec. 15, 2025.Michigan interim head coach Biff Poggi answers a question during an NCAA college football Citrus Bowl news conference in Winter Park, Fla., Monday, Dec. 15, 2025. AP

"The kids, quite frankly, feel very betrayed and we're trying to work through that."

Michigan interim head coach Biff Poggi talked at the Cheez-It bowl availability about how the program is trying to move forward after the firing of Sherrone Moore pic.twitter.com/aAUmLcnqMs

— Brandon Green🍀 (@BGreenReports) December 16, 2025

“It has been a tumultuous time,” Poggi said. “A lot of … first disbelief, then anger, then really, what we’re in right now is the kids, quite frankly, feel very betrayed, and we’re trying to work through that.”

Since taking over, Poggi has spent a large chunk of his time speaking with players and distressed parents who have had plenty of questions since the news about Moore came out. 

Michigan has begun to examine its entire athletic department as a result of the scandal and brought in law firm Jenner & Block to investigate the school’s athletic department and its culture.

Biff Poggi watches as his team plays against Nebraska during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Sept. 20, 2025, in Lincoln, Neb. Biff Poggi watches as his team plays against Nebraska during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Sept. 20, 2025, in Lincoln, Neb. AP

In the meantime, Poggi has done what he can to comfort players and put “lots of arms around shoulders.”

“Lot of telling them that you love them, but showing it, because words are cheap, and that takes a lot of time. What it really takes is you being willing to listen,” he said. 

“It’s been complicated. I want to listen to them. I want to understand what the kids are feeling and what their parents are feeling, and so a lot of listening, and there’s been a wide range of emotions, and we are going through those steps,” he added later. 

“They’re not over yet, and I don’t expect them to be over for a while. The mandate that Warde Manuel gave me as the athletic director when he asked me to be the interim coach, was to love and take care of the kids, and so that’s what I’m spending all of my time doing.”

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