Zak Zinter injury update: Michigan lineman broke tibia, fibula in horrific injury vs. OSU
Michigan vs. Ohio State took a devastating turn on Saturday, as 2022 second-team All-American and prospective first-team All-America offensive lineman Zak Zinter was carted off the field in the third quarter with a gruesome leg injury.
Zinter, the anchor of one of the best offensive lines in college football, was taken off while pumping his fist to raucous cheers from the Michigan crowd as quarterback J.J. McCarthy hugged Zinter’s parents.
In an almost cosmic set of circumstances, Blake Corum scored from 22 yards out on the very next play behind Michigan’s offensive line, giving Michigan a 24-17 lead. Corum’s celebration included holding up the numbers “6-5” in recognition of Zinter.
Per Ohio State’s radio broadcast, Ohio State coach Ryan Day also went up the tunnel to talk to and console Zinter’s parents.
Zak Zinter injury update
Zinter suffered a serious left leg injury when an Ohio State player was blocked into him while he was engaged in a block.
He went down and was attended to by the staff while the Michigan football team stood on the field. Spatters of “let’s go Zak” chants came down from the Michigan crowd. Zinter was almost immediately confirmed out for the game, but it’s unknown what the extent of the injury is.
Following Michigan’s win, interim coach Sherrone Moore did not offer a full status update, but he did say he had spoken to Zinter’s mom and gotten “positive news.” There was no implication Zinter would return for next week’s Big Ten championship game against Iowa next week or a potential postseason game, but Moore said he expects Zinter to eventually recover.
Update (Nov. 25): Zinter’s mother, Tiffany Cosmar Zinter, posted that her son suffered both a broken tibia and fibula as a result of the play, adding that he was going into surgery. She added that Michigan players FaceTimed him from the locker room while he was in the emergency room.
Update (Nov. 25): Zinter posted to X, formerly Twitter, that the surgery was a success, and that he is looking forward to seeing the team in Indianapolis for the Big Ten Championship Game.
Zak Zinter NFL draft projection
Zinter is recognized as one of the top offensive linemen in the country but, as a guard rather than a tackle, his stock is somewhat affected.
Prior to his injury, Zinter was a possible fringe first-round pick, with The Athletic’s Diante Lee predicting Zinter to the 49ers at No. 32 last month. How viable that remains will likely depend on the extent of his injury, but a team with the ability to invest in him may still take him in the early rounds if the injury is as bad as feared.
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‘From devastated to unified’: How Michigan fans galvanized team after Zak Zinter injury
Joel Klatt describes how fans at Michigan Stadium lifted team ‘up off the mat’
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – A college football analyst broke down a magical moment during the Michigan-Ohio State game when fans at the Big House galvanized the Wolverines after a devastating injury to Zak Zinter.
The two teams were tied at 17 with 5:35 remaining in the third quarter when J.J. McCarthy completed a pass to tight end A.J. Barner for an 18-yard gain.
Michigan was threatening to regain the lead in a game between two undefeated rivals. It was the biggest game of the college football season, and one of the most impactful chapters in the history of the Michigan-Ohio State rivalry.
But in that moment, the stadium went silent as Zinter, a team captain and star player, remained down on the turf.
“This was a moment that’s not a play in the game, but it’s a moment in the game that kind of changed the whole outlook of the game,” Fox analyst Joel Klatt said.
Klatt posted an extensive breakdown of the game on his YouTube channel, including a 10-minute anecdote specifically about the Zinter injury. It’s excellent, and you can listen to it by clicking here (the Zinter story begins at the 31:37 mark).
“This is, in a lot of ways, the heart and soul of the offensive line, of the offense, of the program, in some ways,” Klatt said. “This guy is a senior. He comes back to play this year. Could have gone to the NFL last year. He’s started 41 games. He’s started since he was a true freshman. … He has the respect of the defensive players. He has the respect of the offensive players.”
Zinter is one of the players whose decision to return for one more season snowballed into many others doing the same. He’s a key reason each of the past two offensive lines won the Joe Moore award as the best in the nation.
But on Saturday, his final game at Michigan Stadium, Zinter broke his tibia and fibula and had to be taken to the hospital for surgery. It was a devastating moment for a player who came back for another shot at the national championship and has a promising NFL future.
“When he went down, we didn’t show it to you because it was — we knew he pretty clearly broke his leg,” Klatt said. “They were out there immediately with the cart. They were out there immediately with the air cast. The players that saw him immediately on the ground, they knew it.
“Let me just take you through the moment. So he goes down and the air leaves the building, and it is quiet. You can hear a pin drop, and there’s a lot of emotion from his teammates.”
Klatt’s recollection is accurate. It was jarring how fast the crowd at Michigan Stadium went from celebrating Barner’s big play to worrying about Zinter. It didn’t take long for the cart to come out, and that’s when everyone knew the injury was serious.
“When it’s quiet and he’s initially down and they’re pumping up the air cast before he’s on the cart, the team wasn’t out on the field yet,” Klatt said. “There was just an outpouring of emotion. (Trevor) Keegan was hitting the ground with his helmet, crying. Other guys, crying. You can just see state of shock. Even when we came back from break, you could still see that state of shock on their face
This wasn’t a normal-length injury break. Zinter was probably down on the field for close to 10 minutes. Players from both teams stood on their sidelines, helmets in hand.
“Then something happened that I’ve never experienced before calling games — never experienced it before,” Klatt said. “Full disclosure, I’ve tried to tell this story in preparation for this podcast twice today, once to my wife and another to my neighbor, and I didn’t get through it without crying.
“I’m emotional when it comes to college football because I know how much goes into it for these guys. So every time a guy goes down and I know it’s an ACL or an achilles or a broken leg and it’s, like, ‘Hey, season’s done’ — in particular when it’s a senior or a guy that I know is not going to play college football again like Zak Zinter — I get emotional. I get really emotional. Maybe it’s just that I’m uniquely aware of — I have a lot of empathy towards what they go through, what the teammates go through with them.
“If you’re Trevor Keegan, you’ve roomed with Zak Zinter. You live with him. You know where he came from. You know his struggles. You know what he went through to be here. You know what his hopes and dreams are. And now you see him on the ground and his leg is broken right in front of your face.
“So it’s an emotional time, and I get emotional when I see that stuff. So I’m in the booth, and during the commercial, I’m like, ‘Oh my gosh.’ I’m devastated. It sucks. I hate it, regardless of the team, anywhere, I hate it. I don’t like to see injuries.”
That’s when the chant started. I heard it first from the student section.
“And then something happens,” Klatt said. “Through my headset — I have my headset on during the timeout, and it’s hard to hear the crowd unless the sound from the game is happening. In commercial, we kind of lose that natural sound. So it’s hard for me to kind of hear what’s going on in the stadium during commercial.
“Even though my headset’s on, I hear the stadium start to come alive. They’re pumping up the air cast, the team is devastated, and the Big House starts chanting — if I get emotional, I’m sorry — ‘Let’s go Zak! Let’s go Zak!’ And it’s not just one section. It’s not just one area. It was the whole stadium. It was loud. It was so loud I took my headset off to hear it, and I was blown away.
“I’ve never heard a stadium that loud in a commercial break, ever. Ever. Save for, like, the Jump Around for Wisconsin or something where it’s a manufactured song. This was completely human element driven. No music. No band. No PA announcer.
“The Michigan fans just start chanting for him. I got emotional in the booth, and right then, here’s what happens: The team goes from devastated to unified when this tsunami of emotion from the fans pours out onto the field. It was freaking loud. Again, I’ve never experienced anything like this, and what I hate is that you didn’t experience it at home. Like, you can’t experience that. And anybody that was there will tell you what I’m telling you. That crowd, with no music or anything, lifted — I’m telling you this was wild. This team was devastated and lifeless for a moment watching one of their leaders get his leg put in an air cast.
“Once that chant started in Michigan Stadium — and it was loud, and the energy was palpable — the team rose up, they stood up, and they walked out onto the field. So when you come back from commercial, that’s what you see. You see all the players, and now they’re up. And now they’re standing there, so this is after the chant, and the chant, I’m telling you, that crowd at Michigan Stadium lifted Michigan up off the mat. They did. The team did not have it during that break until that chant. And then you can see them start to get resilient.”