Michigan hasn't been relevant for more than a decade. Mentioning past championships of that age is pointless to an extent. Currently, Michigan State and OSU are the only two worth mentioning within the Big Ten. Northwestern slipping through the cracks because they didn't even play a decent team. Nebraska will need a couple of seasons to rotate players in to the new coaching regime but have been quiet, (like Penn State) since coming over to the Big Ten. Iowa is always a crap shoot and the rest are filler.
But I merely sit back while most Wolverine fans ignore the present and live in the past. Beating up on Rutgers is pointless when two games a year matter.
The present is great. You are the one focusing on the past.
(By the way, in the other post, I was responding to a guy who said, "Hey, once you've won a national championship, we can talk." Well, they have. He didn't say, "Hey, once you've won a national championship since a time I conveniently pick to include Ohio State but not Michigan, we can talk.")
As for not doing well over the previous 10 years, well, yes -- that was the whole point of getting Harbaugh, which seems to have made a positive change in the present.
MSU and Ohio State being the only two to mention, except that:
-- Michigan is 7-2, where they lost to MSU only by a fluke in the last 10 seconds of the game.
-- Michigan's only other loss was Utah on their very first game, when they weren't playing particularly well compared to today.
-- The shutouts of #22 BYU and #13 Northwestern.
-- Michigan has the #1 ranked defense in the nation currently.
-- Iowa is undefeated and ranked #8.
-- MSU is rated #14 while Michigan is rated #15 right now.
-- Wisconsin and Northwestern are ranked.
-- Wisconsin has lost only to #3 ranked Alabama and unbeaten Iowa.
-- Ohio State so far has played *no* ranked teams.
-- Michigan State so far has played only one ranked team (Michigan).
-- Michigan so far has played three ranked teams, not even counting Utah.
These are all things in the present.