San Diego Union-Tribune

MICHIGAN SITS STAFFER IN PROBE OF SIGN-STEALING

- U-T NEWS SERVICES

No. 2 Michigan announced Friday it has suspended a low-level football program employee a day after disclosing it is under NCAA investigat­ion for allegedly stealing the play-calling signals used by Wolverines opponents.

Athletic Director Warde Manuel issued a one-sentence statement saying that analytics assistant Connor Stalions had been suspended with pay pending the conclusion of the investigat­ion. Stalions had not been previously identified by the school, but was named in an ESPN report alleging he is a key figure in the probe.

A person who has been briefed on the allegation­s against Michigan confirmed to The Associated Press that the investigat­ion is focused on Stalions and whether he was involved in sending people to the games of Michigan’s opponents to take videos of teams using sideline signals. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because no one was authorized to speak publicly about the NCAA’s investigat­ion.

Stalions is a retired captain in the Marine Corps and a graduate of the Naval Academy, ESPN reported. He was hired as an off-field analyst at Michigan in May 2022, according to a bio on his LinkedIn account that has since been deleted.

The Wolverines (7-0), who started their season with coach Jim Harbaugh serving a university-imposed threegame suspension for a still unresolved NCAA infraction­s case, play at Michigan State on Saturday. Harbaugh denied any knowledge or involvemen­t in plotting to steal signs.

“I do not have any knowledge or informatio­n regarding the University of Michigan football program illegally stealing signals, nor have I directed any staff member or others to participat­e in an off-campus scouting assignment,” Harbaugh said Thursday. “I have no awareness of anyone on our staff having done that or having directed that action.”

NCAA rules do not directly ban the stealing of signs. There are rules against using electronic equipment to record an opponent’s signals, but what’s mostly at issue with Michigan is NCAA Bylaw 11.6.1: “Off-campus, inperson scouting of future opponents (in the same season) is prohibited.” There are also bylaws prohibitin­g unsportsma­nlike or unethical activities by coaches, and NCAA rules place an onus on a head coach to be responsibl­e for violations that occur under his watch.

The Big Ten notified all of Michigan’s remaining opponents of the investigat­ion.

“As we look forward to the football game this Saturday, we are chagrined by the news of the NCAA investigat­ion and we echo the Big Ten Conference’s commitment to integrity,” interim Michigan State President Teresa Woodruff said in a statement. “The allegation­s are concerning., but will be handled through the NCAA’s process.”

The accusation­s harken back to the Spygate scandals involving the New England Patriots. While NFL teams are permitted to do in-person advance scouting of opponents, the Patriots were fined and stripped of a firstround draft pick by the NFL after they were found to have had a staffer video an opponent’s sideline signals in 2007 — two years after they had won a Super Bowl.

Notable

A U.S. District Judge has dismissed former Baylor football coach Art Briles and former Athletic Director Ian McCaw from a federal Title IX lawsuit, ruling no reasonable jury could find them negligent in the domestic violence assaults of a former Baylor student by a former Baylor football player. In his ruling Friday, Judge Robert Pitman also threw out gross negligence claims against the university. But he will allow the jury to decide if the university was negligent and violated Title IX gender discrimina­tion requiremen­ts.

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