Michigan Wolverines Football "Modern Iconography" Statistical Poster
Sports art doesn’t need to be in-your-face. It can be elegant, stylish, even thought-provoking. These large-scale modern-style prints can certainly fit in a garage or man cave, but they’re most at home in a dining or living room adorned by thoughtful interior design. Created using visual iconography and showcasing historical and statistical data (updated for the 2024 season), these posters tell an elaborate story of the legacy of the Wolverines in a design-forward manner and will undoubtedly enhance any space you choose to display it in.
Michigan Football is as synonymous with college football as any singular team is to their sport. Established back in 1879, the Wolverines began play twenty years before the turn of the 20th century in what amounts to an eternity ago. Michigan would rise to power for the first time in the very early 1900’s behind the coaching of Fielding Yost. Yost would join the team in 1901 and immediately rattle off four straight National Championships for Blue — 1901, 1902, 1903 & 1904. Michigan would go a Godly 41-0-1 during this stretch, and to this day that may be the single greatest run in the history of all of college football. Yost would grab two more titles towards the end of his 25 year tenure — 1918, and then again in 1923. Harry Kipke would soon follow Yost upon his retirement, and Kipke himself would taste success, gaining a National Championship in 1933. The final National Championship would arrive in Michigan prior to the modern Big Ten era in 1948, as Bennie Oosterbaan would lead a 9-0 team to the promised land. The team would join the Big Ten in 1953, and everything would begin to change — for both the Wolverines as well as all of college football — with the advent of the power conference era. Bo Schembechler would climb aboard in 1969, and he would be responsible for ushering a new standard of greatness in Ann Arbor. Though Schembechler would never win a title, he would create a high standard of greatness that Michigan holds itself to this very day. Great seasons in the 1990’s led by Lloyd Carr would eventually lead to a title in 1997 after a truly great 12-0 performance that year. A tumultuous (though wildly successful by many team’s standards) run would befall the team into the 2000’s, as Rich Rodriguez and Brady Hoke would land in Michigan and fail to reach the ultimate heights they were hired for. But in 2015 the team hired Jim Harbaugh away from the San Francisco 49ers, and after many great seasons without the two important things (beating Ohio State and winning titles), Harbaugh would finally break through in 2023 with an incredible 15-0 season. Harbaugh would bolt immediately following his title run, but Michigan is back on the map, and alongside their lofty standards it’s clear that they are one of the true goliaths of the sport.
Free Shipping on All Items — The price you see is what you spend.
Printed on 10.3 mil (0.26 mm) matte paper. Framed options include mounting hardware.
Sports art doesn’t need to be in-your-face. It can be elegant, stylish, even thought-provoking. These large-scale modern-style prints can certainly fit in a garage or man cave, but they’re most at home in a dining or living room adorned by thoughtful interior design. Created using visual iconography and showcasing historical and statistical data (updated for the 2024 season), these posters tell an elaborate story of the legacy of the Wolverines in a design-forward manner and will undoubtedly enhance any space you choose to display it in.
Michigan Football is as synonymous with college football as any singular team is to their sport. Established back in 1879, the Wolverines began play twenty years before the turn of the 20th century in what amounts to an eternity ago. Michigan would rise to power for the first time in the very early 1900’s behind the coaching of Fielding Yost. Yost would join the team in 1901 and immediately rattle off four straight National Championships for Blue — 1901, 1902, 1903 & 1904. Michigan would go a Godly 41-0-1 during this stretch, and to this day that may be the single greatest run in the history of all of college football. Yost would grab two more titles towards the end of his 25 year tenure — 1918, and then again in 1923. Harry Kipke would soon follow Yost upon his retirement, and Kipke himself would taste success, gaining a National Championship in 1933. The final National Championship would arrive in Michigan prior to the modern Big Ten era in 1948, as Bennie Oosterbaan would lead a 9-0 team to the promised land. The team would join the Big Ten in 1953, and everything would begin to change — for both the Wolverines as well as all of college football — with the advent of the power conference era. Bo Schembechler would climb aboard in 1969, and he would be responsible for ushering a new standard of greatness in Ann Arbor. Though Schembechler would never win a title, he would create a high standard of greatness that Michigan holds itself to this very day. Great seasons in the 1990’s led by Lloyd Carr would eventually lead to a title in 1997 after a truly great 12-0 performance that year. A tumultuous (though wildly successful by many team’s standards) run would befall the team into the 2000’s, as Rich Rodriguez and Brady Hoke would land in Michigan and fail to reach the ultimate heights they were hired for. But in 2015 the team hired Jim Harbaugh away from the San Francisco 49ers, and after many great seasons without the two important things (beating Ohio State and winning titles), Harbaugh would finally break through in 2023 with an incredible 15-0 season. Harbaugh would bolt immediately following his title run, but Michigan is back on the map, and alongside their lofty standards it’s clear that they are one of the true goliaths of the sport.
Free Shipping on All Items — The price you see is what you spend.
Printed on 10.3 mil (0.26 mm) matte paper. Framed options include mounting hardware.
Sports art doesn’t need to be in-your-face. It can be elegant, stylish, even thought-provoking. These large-scale modern-style prints can certainly fit in a garage or man cave, but they’re most at home in a dining or living room adorned by thoughtful interior design. Created using visual iconography and showcasing historical and statistical data (updated for the 2024 season), these posters tell an elaborate story of the legacy of the Wolverines in a design-forward manner and will undoubtedly enhance any space you choose to display it in.
Michigan Football is as synonymous with college football as any singular team is to their sport. Established back in 1879, the Wolverines began play twenty years before the turn of the 20th century in what amounts to an eternity ago. Michigan would rise to power for the first time in the very early 1900’s behind the coaching of Fielding Yost. Yost would join the team in 1901 and immediately rattle off four straight National Championships for Blue — 1901, 1902, 1903 & 1904. Michigan would go a Godly 41-0-1 during this stretch, and to this day that may be the single greatest run in the history of all of college football. Yost would grab two more titles towards the end of his 25 year tenure — 1918, and then again in 1923. Harry Kipke would soon follow Yost upon his retirement, and Kipke himself would taste success, gaining a National Championship in 1933. The final National Championship would arrive in Michigan prior to the modern Big Ten era in 1948, as Bennie Oosterbaan would lead a 9-0 team to the promised land. The team would join the Big Ten in 1953, and everything would begin to change — for both the Wolverines as well as all of college football — with the advent of the power conference era. Bo Schembechler would climb aboard in 1969, and he would be responsible for ushering a new standard of greatness in Ann Arbor. Though Schembechler would never win a title, he would create a high standard of greatness that Michigan holds itself to this very day. Great seasons in the 1990’s led by Lloyd Carr would eventually lead to a title in 1997 after a truly great 12-0 performance that year. A tumultuous (though wildly successful by many team’s standards) run would befall the team into the 2000’s, as Rich Rodriguez and Brady Hoke would land in Michigan and fail to reach the ultimate heights they were hired for. But in 2015 the team hired Jim Harbaugh away from the San Francisco 49ers, and after many great seasons without the two important things (beating Ohio State and winning titles), Harbaugh would finally break through in 2023 with an incredible 15-0 season. Harbaugh would bolt immediately following his title run, but Michigan is back on the map, and alongside their lofty standards it’s clear that they are one of the true goliaths of the sport.
Free Shipping on All Items — The price you see is what you spend.
Printed on 10.3 mil (0.26 mm) matte paper. Framed options include mounting hardware.