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Michigan football hit with fines, suspensions for sign-stealing scandal
Michigan football hit with fines, suspensions for sign-stealing scandal

Washington Post

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • Washington Post

Michigan football hit with fines, suspensions for sign-stealing scandal

The giant and storied Michigan football program received a hefty array of fines and penalties from the NCAA Committee on Infractions on Friday as a result of the signal-stealing operation that surfaced during its national championship season in 2023-24. It did not receive a postseason ban or any removal of victories from the record. Michigan received a base fine of $50,000, plus 10 percent of the football program's budget, an additional fine equivalent to the loss of all postseason revenue sharing associated with the next two seasons, and an additional fine equivalent to the cost of 10 percent of its football scholarships awarded for this season. Coach Sherrone Moore was suspended three games, adding an additional game to the self-imposed two-game suspension Michigan handed Moore this year. The NCAA's announcement Friday marked the conclusion of a nearly two-year process that began when news broke during the 2023 season that Connor Stalions, then a low-level member of then-coach Jim Harbaugh's staff, allegedly coordinated an in-person scouting and sign-stealing operation against future Michigan opponents that violated NCAA rules. The penalties echoed at least somewhat the punishment doled to Tennessee in July 2023, when the NCAA Committee on Infractions refrained from imposing a postseason ban, upholding its recent-years trend in that sense, while fining the Volunteers $8 million for more than 200 rules violations committed under a former coach, Jeremy Pruitt. The Michigan case crashed into a bustling midseason on Oct. 19, 2023, with Yahoo Sports's initial report, and percolated clear into the season's closing night in January (and beyond). It emerged when Michigan stood at 7-0 and loomed through Michigan's finish at 15-0 with a national championship, its first in 26 years. As it bloomed into a national discussion, it decorated that season with some of sports' timeless pastimes, from moralizing (from opposing fans) to rationalizing (from Michigan fans) to lampooning (from fans and memes). Eventually the NCAA pinpointed 11 violations — including six of the uppermost Level I severity — from the evidence in a lavish scheme that brought notoriety to then-28-year-old Stalions, the native Michigander and staff member who was the alleged ringleader of skulduggery that included buying tickets to the games of a slew of future Michigan opponents. Stalions resigned quickly from his role as 'analyst,' a familiar college football job describing someone who helps a coaching staff but doesn't coach players, and had become a hushed subject of widespread curiosity who by 2024 appeared in a Netflix documentary titled 'Untold: Sign Stealer.' Stalions recently said he knew almost every signal opponents used in seven games over two seasons. The games Michigan had scouted dated to 2021, the first of three consecutive seasons during which Michigan reached the four-team College Football Playoff, even as Michigan did play the most challenging portion of its historic 2023 season after the case surfaced. The NCAA alleged that Moore had broken rules while an assistant to head coach Jim Harbaugh, the former Michigan quarterback who departed for the Los Angeles Chargers about two weeks after the confetti rained in January 2024. Michigan had appeared before the Committee on Infractions during two days in June 2025. It had imposed its own two-game suspension on Moore, the offensive coordinator in 2023 and current head coach, in part for his deletion of 52 text messages with Stalions. The spying violated an NCAA rule because it involved advance trips to decipher the signs of future opponents rather than just the traditional art of stealing signs from across the field or the stands during games. The Big Ten suspended then-coach Harbaugh for the closing three regular season games in 2023, wins at Penn State, at Maryland and against Ohio State. That suspension bookended the three-game sidelining Harbaugh had served to begin the season — home games with East Carolina, UNLV and Bowling Green — for his role in Michigan's violations of pandemic-era restrictions against contacting recruits. The rule in question would be NCAA bylaw 11.6.1, a 31-year-old standard that passed quietly and emphatically — by a vote of 112-2 — at the NCAA convention of January 1994, well before the heyday of mobile phones and everyday videography. The bylaw fit the spirit of that convention — cost-cutting and economic balance among programs — because it aimed to shut off the edge the larger-budget programs might gain from scouting travel. It sought a level field by recommending that all programs scout by watching videotape. This is a developing story and will be updated.

Fran Brown puts community first in push for NIL support
Fran Brown puts community first in push for NIL support

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Fran Brown puts community first in push for NIL support

GEDDES, N.Y. (WSYR) — Bellevue Country Club was packed all day long on Monday as the Syracuse Football NIL Golf Outing started early and finished up with a dinner and auction to raise money for the football NIL fund. For Head Coach Fran Brown, however, the support he wants from the community is genuine support. He wants people to come to the games in the fall and want to give to the program in order to bring back the tradition it once had. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Real Madrid Foundation launches in Joburg
Real Madrid Foundation launches in Joburg

The Citizen

time05-06-2025

  • Sport
  • The Citizen

Real Madrid Foundation launches in Joburg

'In the context of high youth unemployment in South Africa and significant gaps in access to quality education, programs like this are essential,' said Jevron Epstein, Executive Director of Generation Schools. The Real Madrid Foundation has presented its Educational Football Program in South Africa in collaboration with Generation Schools. The project was launched at the beginning of the year and caters for 100 young people at the centres in Sunningdale and Imhoff in the Western Cape. There are a further 50 participants in the centre based in Johannesburg, which aims to take over 300 children by the end of the year. Real Madrid collaboration The collaboration between the Real Madrid Foundation and Generation Schools combines high quality coaching with personal development, with structured mentorship programs, value education and socio-emotional growth support. To date, Generation Schools has awarded seven full scholarships, six of which include accommodation, and 20 semi-scholarships to young people from low-income communities in Cape Town. These scholarships provide recipients with access to independent education, board and active participation in the program, offering a stable and nurturing environment in which students can excel academically, socially and physically. The Generation Schools and Real Madrid Foundation program also supports the communities around the centres. Every Friday, the sports team offers coaching in vulnerable areas such as Masiphumelele, nearby Imhoff, leading sessions for some 150 children from low-income backgrounds. 'Education and personal growth' 'In the context of high youth unemployment in South Africa and significant gaps in access to quality education, programs like this are essential. We use football as a tool to create real opportunities for education and personal growth, assisting young people in developing their futures in sport, in the classroom and in their communities,' said Jevron Epstein, Executive Director of Generation Schools. The Johannesburg event, held on May 28, was attended by the Spanish ambassador to South Africa, José Manuel Pascual; Andrés Muntaner, director of Campus and Clinics at the Real Madrid Foundation; Jevron Epstein, Executive Director of Generation Schools; and more than 900 families interested in learning more about the program.

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