Bowl season always comes with an asterisk in the modern era — and the Cheez-It Citrus Bowl is no different. Michigan and Texas are meeting again with identical 9–3 records, but the headline isn’t only the quarterback matchup. It’s also the roster math: who’s suiting up, who’s sitting out, and how that reshapes a game that already lives on thin margins.
The setting is Camping World Stadium in Orlando, with kickoff set for 3 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Dec. 31. Michigan is back in familiar Citrus Bowl territory (seventh appearance), while Texas is making its debut in the game. If you’re looking for the official event details and team context, Michigan’s game primer is a useful reference point. Michigan Athletics has the full bowl page and team notes.
Here’s the clean breakdown of who’s in, who’s out — and what it likely means for the way this matchup plays out.
The core storyline: stars at QB, gaps everywhere else
The game still has a marquee hook: Texas’ Arch Manning vs Michigan’s Bryce Underwood. Even casual fans recognize those names, and bowl games with high-profile quarterbacks tend to draw extra attention — especially when the supporting casts look different than they did in October.
Michigan enters with an interim coaching situation, and Texas is navigating its own late-season churn and roster turnover. That’s why this matchup may feel less like a “best vs best” and more like a stress test of depth, discipline, and who can avoid the kind of mistake that swings a bowl game fast — a tipped pass, a strip sack, a special-teams miscue.
Full opt-out list: Michigan
Michigan’s list is shorter, but it includes impact names — particularly on defense and the offensive line. These are the players reported as opting out:
| Player | Position | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Derrick Moore | EDGE | NFL Draft |
| Jaishawn Barham | LB | NFL Draft |
| Gio El-Hadi | OL | NFL Draft |
| Ernest Hausmann | LB | Personal reasons |
The biggest tactical hit is Moore’s absence. Michigan’s defense has been strong by the numbers, but removing a proven edge presence changes how often the Wolverines can win with four rushers — and how aggressively they can blitz without exposing the back end. Against a quarterback who can punish hesitation, losing a reliable pressure source matters.
Full opt-out list: Texas
Texas’ list is longer and cuts across position groups. Some departures are draft prep, others are transfer portal moves — and the combined effect is less continuity, especially in the secondary and backfield.
| Player | Position | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Anthony Hill Jr. | LB | NFL Draft |
| Michael Taaffe | DB | NFL Draft |
| Malik Muhammad | DB | NFL Draft |
| Jaylon Guilbeau | DB | NFL Draft |
| Ethan Burke | EDGE | NFL Draft |
| Trey Moore | LB/DE | NFL Draft |
| Quintrevion Wisner | RB | Transfer portal |
| CJ Baxter | RB | Transfer portal |
| DeAndre Moore | WR | Transfer portal |
| Trey Owens | QB | Transfer portal |
| Aaron Butler | WR | Transfer portal |
| Santana Wilson | CB | Transfer portal |
| Connor Stroh | OL | Transfer portal |
| Melvin Hills III | DT | Transfer portal |
| Derek Williams Jr. | DB | Transfer portal |
| Liona Lefau | LB | Transfer portal |
| Jerrick Gibson | RB | Transfer portal |
| Will Stone | K | Transfer portal |
The key practical takeaway: Texas may still have top-end talent at quarterback, but continuity across the roster takes a hit when defensive backs and multiple running backs are out. In a bowl environment — with limited prep time and a different emotional rhythm — that can show up in missed fits on defense, communication busts in coverage, or an offense that becomes more one-dimensional than it wants to be.
So who benefits from the opt-outs?
Michigan’s identity has been built around a productive run game and a defense that consistently forces disruption. Team notes indicate Michigan has produced multiple 100-yard rushing games from different backs and has been strong defensively against the run over the season — the kind of profile that travels well when bowl rosters get messy.
Texas, meanwhile, has the advantage of being favored by the market, and the quarterback ceiling with Manning is obvious. But the backfield depletion and defensive turnover raise a simple question: can Texas stay balanced for four quarters, and can its depth in the secondary hold up if Michigan plays aggressively downfield instead of protecting the game?
From a “what fans search right before kickoff” standpoint, the safest expectation is a game where both staffs lean on what still feels stable: ball security, field position, and drives that don’t ask too much from new combinations. That dovetails with the public betting lean many models have pointed toward on the total, but the more important football point is this: opt-outs don’t automatically decide a game — they decide which mistakes become more likely.
Final word before kickoff: the quarterbacks will get the spotlight, but the bowl is often won by the position group nobody talks about at brunch — the second-string defensive backs, the rotation linemen, the special teams, and the ability to stay calm when the game turns weird.
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