Tom Brady. He came to Michigan in 1995 as a true freshman out of California as a lightly regarded recruit and was the 7th guy on the depth chart and had to bide his time and earn his way up the depth chart. Scott Dreisbach was one of the prized recruits in the entire nation in 1994, and Michigan stole him right out of Notre Dame's own backyard. After a year of redshirting in 1994, he was the guy in 1995. He was basically just handed the keys to the ferrari as a RS Frosh in 1995, there wasn't a real battle. After starting off hot in '95, Dreisbach got hurt, missed just over half the season that year and Brian Griese filled in while Tom Brady took a redshirt as a true frosh. So 1996 starts off and Scott Dreisbach is back from injury and his job as the starter for the entire season, was basically handed right back to him, and he doesn't miss a game. Griese and Brady barely play in 1996 except in garbage time.
Flash forward to 1997, Dreisbach gets injured again before the season starts, and the starting QB job is open for battle in 1997. Griese was a fifth year senior and Brady a RS Soph, it was a neck and neck battle in fall camp but Lloyd Carr picks Griese over Brady. Brady almost transfers, but decides to stick it out and stay and be the back-up. Michigan goes on to a 12-0 season and wins a MNC. Hard to argue with the choice of Griese after a season like that. 1998 rolls around, Scott Dreisbach is healthy enough to play again but has to compete with a RS Jr. Tom Brady and incoming phenom Drew Henson who was the #1 QB in all of high school and maybe even the #1 MLB prospect in high school- a true phenom that was on the cover of Sports Illustrated. Brady wins the starting job in 1998, he goes on to lead the team to a 10-3 record and #12 final rankings and complete 62% of his passes for 2,427 yards and throw 14 TD passes vs 10 INT's. Virtually same completion % as Griese in '97, same exact TD numbers but 400+ more yards and also 4 more INT's
1999 starts and instead of naming your returning 5th year senior returning starter QB that was named team captain for the upcoming 1999 season by his teammates, who had been the back-up in your 1997 MNC season and then go onto lead you to a 10-3 record and #12 ranking in 1998 as a starter- what does Lloyd Carr do? He decides to not name a starter and say there's a QB competition and that Drew Henson will play. Tom Brady starts every single game in 1999, but for the first 5 weeks of that season, Michigan goes 5-0 with Lloyd Carr deciding to yank Brady and insert Drew Henson- almost at completely random- and then give Henson long stretches of playing time and re-insert Brady or at times even let Henson finish games. In the 6th game of that season- on the road in East Lansing vs Michigan State- Michigan got down by 17 points playing the QB musical chair game. Carr did the first smart thing he had done all season and left Brady in to finish the final 18 minutes of play. Brady threw for 241 yards in those final 18 minutes and nearly brought Michigan back. Michigan lost 34-31 on the road. Maybe that's a game they win if Brady is getting 100% of the snaps. You'd think that would've put an end to Lloyd Carr's stupid ass musical chair QB system- but it didn't. The very next week vs Illinois they were doing it again- only for Brady to throw for 307 yards in a 6 point loss. After that game, Carr wised up and it ended. Brady was the starter of every offensive snap, no more Drew Henson except for a gadget play here or there. And Michigan never lost a game again after that. They went 5-0 from then on, with Brady having an epic 4th QTR comeback win vs then ranked #6 Penn State in Happy Valley, a win vs Ohio State, and then an epic game in the Orange Bowl vs Alabama where he lead two 14 point comebacks in the same game to win the game 35-34. Brady lead Michigan to a 10-2 season that year and a #5 final ranking. For his career he went 20-5 as a starter, threw for 4,773 passing yards, completed 62% of his passes, and threw 30 TD's vs 16 INT's (basically 2:1 TD INT RATIO).
The way Brady was disrespected by Lloyd Carr as a 5th year senior and then going in the 6th round put a massive giant sized chip on his shoulder and propelled him into becoming the greatest QB ever. And it might've cost Michigan a shot at playing for the title in 1999. And although I said it's hard to argue with Griese getting the nod in 1997 after the results- that team wasn't an offensive juggernaut by any stretch- the offense actually kind of stunk- and as long as Brady wasn't a turnover machine they probably win a share of the 1997 MNC if he's the starter too.
All things considered, Brady was pretty damn good at Michigan and underappreciated. Even his #'s at the time were inline for some of the best ever at Michigan- at the time. They just didn't throw the ball that much back in the 80s and 90s, and no QB has ever put up earth shattering numbers at Michigan. Ever. John Navarre's 2003 season in which he put up 3,331 passing yards is still the single season passing yards record at Michigan. Chad Henne's 2004 season in which he threw for 25 passing TD's is still the single season TD pass record at Michigan. Shea Patterson's 2019 season of 3,061 passing yards is the 2nd most ever in a single season. And his 23 TD passes in the 3rd most ever in a Michigan single season. This is pathetic. Michigan football- particularly it's passing offense needs to get with the times and into the 21st century. But that's a topic for another discussion entirely.