Michigan's Jim Harbaugh Plans To Return To NFL: Report

By Jason Hall

February 2, 2022

Playoff Semifinal at the Capital One Orange Bowl - Georgia v Michigan
Photo: Getty Images

Jim Harbaugh is reportedly planning to leave the University of Michigan and accept the head coaching position with the Minnesota Vikings.

Multiple sources confirmed Harbaugh's second interview with the Vikings scheduled for Wednesday (February 2) is a formality and a precursor to becoming the franchise's new head coach, TheWolverine.com senior editor Chris Balas reports.

Balas reports the former NFC champion plans to sign a deal during the interview.

Balas reports Harbaugh was not at his office at Schembechler Hall on the University of Michigan's campus and sources told TheWolverine.com that he didn't address the team, but did say some "goodbyes" and "thank yous" on Monday (January 31).

On Saturday (December 29), a source told ESPN's Pete Thamel that the Vikings have requested permission from the University of Michigan to speak with Harbaugh.

Harbaugh spent four seasons (2011-14) coaching the San Francisco 49ers before returning to his alma mater in 2015 and is reported to have developed a strong relationship with new Vikings general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, who spent seven seasons in San Francisco, including two during Harbaugh's tenure.

A source told ESPN's Courtney Cronin -- who covers the Vikings -- that the relationship between Adofo-Mensah and Harbaugh is a primary driver in Minnesota's interest in Harbaugh, who was the 2011 NFL Coach of the Year and led San Francisco to playoff appearances during each of his first three seasons, all of which resulted in NFC Championship Game appearances and a Super Bowl XLVII berth in 2013.

Harbaugh enjoyed his best season at Michigan in 2021, finishing with an 11-2 record, a Big Ten title, defeating arch rival Ohio State for the first time and earning a College Football Playoff berth before losing to eventual national champion Georgia in the semifinal.

The former NFL quarterback took a pay cut ahead of the 2021 season after the Wolverines finished with a 2-4 during a limited 2020 season.

Michigan has yet to formalize a new agreement with Harbaugh, which is even more likely to be offered given the Vikings' reported interest.

Harbaugh has a 44-19-1 record as an NFL head coach and a 119-51 record as a collegiate head coach, which includes Michigan (61-24 (41-17 Big Ten)), Stanford (29-21 (21-15 Pac-12)) and San Diego (29-6 (14-1)).

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