The following year, Michigan repeated as National Champions for its sixth NCAA men's gymnastics team championship.
The Michigan Wolverines men's gymnastics team has had five coaches in 65 years of competition: Wilbur West (1931–1933); Newt Loken (1948–1983); Bob Darden (1984–1996); and Kurt Golder (1997–2022), Yuan Xiao (2022–present).
[3] In 1947, the athletic board awarded varsity status to men's gymnastics, and Loken was named the head coach.
[3] Loken remained the coach of Michigan's men's gymnastics team for 36 years and compiled a record of 250–72–1.
[7] Loken produced more trampoline champions and world medal winners than any other collegiate coach.
During Darden's tenure as head coach, the Wolverines compiled a record of 76–111–1 and had no Big Ten championships or NCAA tournament berths.
[12] The 2010 Wolverines won the NCAA men's gymnastics national championship, defeating the second place team from Stanford University by 0.7 points.
The highlight of this season was freshman Sam Mikulak who won both the Big Ten and NCAA all-around titles.
[14] On April 20, 2013, behind Sam Mikulak's second career NCAA all-around crown and a runner-up performance from Adrian de los Angeles, the team claimed the program's fifth national title.
[15] The 2014 Wolverines captured their 17th Big Ten Championship to become the first back-to-back conference champions since the 1999–2000 team.
[16] Twenty of the thirty competed routines qualified into the individual event finals the following day, a record breaking number.
Gymnasts that qualified included: Syque Caesar (vault, parallel bars, high bar), Sam Mikulak (all six events), Paul Rizkalla Jr. (vault), Tristian Perez-Rivera (vault, floor), Konner Ackerman (vault), Jordan Gaarenstroom (parallel bars, still rings), Nicholas Hunter (parallel bars, pommel horse), Colin Mahar (still rings), Alex Bubnov (still rings), Nolan Novak (pommel horse) and Matt Freeman (pommel horse).
Senior Cameron Bock tied for the all-around title and won pommel horse and still rings.
Junior Paul Juda won the all-around competition with a cumulative score of 85.350, while teammate Jacob Moore took third.