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Here’s what Utes AD Mark Harlan said about Kyle Whittingham’s exit from Utah

Whittingham signed a five-year deal with the Michigan Wolverines on Dec. 26.

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) University of Utah athletic director Mark Harlan answers questions during a news conference to introduce head football coach Morgan Scalley at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2026.

Kyle Whittingham clearly believes he has a lot left in the tank.

But the new Michigan football coach, who just signed a five-year deal with the Wolverines, did not ask Utah officials for an extension before stepping down last month, U. athletic director Mark Harlan said Tuesday.

“We talked about everything related to the program,” Harlan said when asked about Whittingham’s exit from Salt Lake City. “He was already on his final few more years of his contract. It was more about where the program is and what he wanted to do.

“We didn’t change his contract, or certainly [he] never asked for an extension. It was just more about what was his feeling about coming back.”

According to the latest version of Whittingham’s contract, the former Utes coach’s deal ran through the 2027 season.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham checks the scoreboard as the Utes close the lead late in the game in their win over the Kansas State Wildcats in Big-2 Football action at Rice-Eccles Stadium, on Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025.

In his final media availability before leaving, the former Ute head coach also said he “didn’t want to be that hanger-on-er that people just got sick of. I just feel that I didn’t want to be that guy.”

He also added in his introductory news conference with Michigan: “I made a mistake in Utah. They started asking me about retirement, and I started answering questions and giving my own thing. I don’t think I’m that old. I’m 66, but it’s not that old. I feel like I got enough energy and juice to see this through.”

Harlan said there was no miscommunication between Whittingham and Utah’s athletic administration about the coach’s future.

The Utah athletic director said their conversations were similar to how previous negotiations went with Whittingham in years past.

“I go back to last year where he was seriously contemplating it,” Harlan said. “We talked about it [then], and he really was passionate about coming back and fixing it. What he said publicly is exactly what he told me privately, that he didn’t want to leave it that way.

“It was similar to this following cycle where — I can’t get in his head, and I don’t think anybody but him could really say [what he wanted to do] — but I just think he felt it was the time was right to do that. I will say that he did not want to use the word retirement. And I understood what that meant."