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Michigan hit with major fine for sign-stealing scheme, Jim Harbaugh's NCAA exile extended 10 years

Michigan hit with major fine for sign-stealing scheme, Jim Harbaugh's NCAA exile extended 10 years

Yahoo13 hours ago
Two years after a sign-stealing scandal at the University of Michigan rocked college football, the NCAA on Friday increased sanctions the Wolverines had self-imposed but refrained from handing down the most severe punishments.
Michigan won't be subject to a postseason ban and won't be required to vacate victories — especially important because the Wolverines won the national championship in 2023, the last of three seasons they were accused of improperly stealing signals that opposing coaches used to communicate with players on the field.
However, they were fined approximately $30 million and the program was placed on four years of probation. Also, the suspension of head coach Sherrone Moore was increased from the self-imposed two games to three. In addition to the third and fourth games of the 2025 season, Moore also will miss the 2026 opener.
Jim Harbaugh, the Michigan head coach from 2015-2023 who now is coach of the Los Angeles Chargers, will have a 10-year show cause penalty tacked onto the current four-year show cause that resulted from scouting and recruiting violations in 2021-2022.
Connor Stalions, the staff member who carried out the sign-stealing scheme, was handed an eight-year show cause penalty and former assistant Denard Robinson was hit with a three-year show cause sanction for recruiting violations and failing to attend an NCAA hearing on the matter.
Read more: Commentary: In Michigan sign-stealing saga, NCAA calling a play USC should recognize
As long as Harbaugh remains in the NFL, the penalty will have no real impact on him. However, the sanction could make him unwelcome in the college ranks for more than a decade.
The show cause sanction effectively makes it difficult for the person to secure employment at an NCAA school because it requires a school attempting to make the hire to "show cause" to the NCAA why it shouldn't also be penalized for giving the person a job.
The NCAA had charged Michigan with 11 rule violations, six of them the most serious Level 1 variety, after an investigation revealed that Stalions had carried out a scheme to shoot video of the signals opposing coaches used to communicate with players on the field.
Stalions, a retired captain in the U.S. Marine Corps and graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, was paid $55,000 a year as an off-field defensive analyst at Michigan. He is alleged to have arranged for people to attend the games of upcoming Michigan opponents and film the sideline signals from 2021 to 2023, when the scheme was uncovered and Stalions resigned.
The NCAA does not prohibit stealing signs during games, but since 1994 schools are not allowed to scout upcoming opponents in person. The rule was designed to prevent well-funded programs from gaining an advantage by sending scouts to opponents' games when programs with smaller budgets couldn't afford such scouting.
According to the NCAA notice of allegations, Stalions was accused of arranging the scouting of at least 13 future opponents on 58 occasions. He purchased tickets at nearly every Big Ten school.
Read more: Why USC is not in the AP Top 25 preseason poll
The fine imposed by the NCAA Committee on Infractions includes a $50,000 initial fine, 10 percent of the football budget, 10 percent of the cost of football scholarships for the 2025 season and the loss of all postseason-competition revenue sharing for the 2025 and 2026 seasons. Added up, it should exceed $30 million.
Moore improperly deleted a thread of 52 text messages with Stalions when the scandal became public. However, the NCAA was able to retrieve the texts, but Moore was not charged with having knowledge of the sign stealing.
Harbaugh was suspended for the last three games of the 2023 regular season despite his adamant denial that he knew anything about the sign stealing. Michigan won all three games anyway and went on to capture the national championship.
While preparing the Chargers for his first season at the helm in August 2024, Harbaugh reiterated that he was "not aware nor complicit" in the sign stealing at Michigan. He felt compelled to address the situation because Moore — his replacement as head coach — was one of seven staffers from the 2023 championship Michigan team under investigation.
Read more: UCLA Unlocked: A live bear mascot and other fun suggestions to fill Rose Bowl
'Never lie. Never cheat. Never steal," Harbaugh said in a statement in 2024. "I was raised with that lesson. I have raised my family on that lesson. I have preached that lesson to the teams that I've coached. No one's perfect. If you stumble, you apologize and you make it right.
'Today, I do not apologize. I did not participate, was not aware nor complicit in those said allegations. So for me, it's back to work and attacking with an enthusiasm unknown to mankind.'
Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti became an unlikely Michigan advocate in pushing the NCAA to keep sanctions to a minimum, suggesting to the NCAA Committee on Infractions that Michigan deserved no further punishment.
This was the same Petitti who suspended Harbaugh in a Nov. 10, 2023, letter to Michigan athletics director Warde Manual that appeared to question the integrity of the Wolverines program.
The school sought an emergency temporary restraining order against the Big Ten to allow Harbaugh continue coaching, saying due process had not been followed and asserting that Harbaugh had no knowledge of Stalions' sign stealing.
Michigan eventually withdrew the restraining order request, but the relationship between the school and the commissioner remained contentious as Harbaugh served the suspension and the Wolverines turned the episode into a rallying cry.
This season, Michigan will visit USC on Oct. 11 but does not play UCLA.
Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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