Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trouble for Big Blue

Michigan caught up in another controvers­y over stealing signs

- By Ralph D. Russo

There was a time in college football when it was not uncommon to see a coach at a game involving a future opponent, taking notes and gathering intel.

“When I worked for Jimmy Johnson at Oklahoma State, when they had a game Saturday, I was at the next (opponent). I was scouting the next game,” recalled Houston Nutt, the former Arkansas and Mississipp­i coach who worked under Johnson with the Cowboys in the early 1980s.

The NCAA banned in-person advanced scouting in 1994 in part because not every school could afford to do it. Now Michigan is being investigat­ed by the NCAA for a sign-stealing scheme that allegedly involved people secretly being sent to record opponents’ games.

No. 2 Michigan on Friday suspended a low-level football staffer who is a focus of the NCAA’S investigat­ion. The Big Ten has informed all of Michigan’s upcoming opponents. Unfazed, the Wolverines continued to romp through their schedule Saturday night, beating rival Michigan State 49-0.

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, in-person scouting of future opponents (in the same season) is prohibited.”

Wolverines coach Jim Harbaugh, who served a three-game, school-imposed suspension earlier this season for a separate, still-active NCAA infraction­s case tied to recruiting, denied any knowledge or involvemen­t of impermissi­ble advanced scouting.

“There’s a target, yeah. Everybody has pointed that out from the beginning of the season, but our guys are very focused,” Harbaugh said after Saturday night’s game.

As with many NCAA rules, the associatio­n is trying to govern away advantages that one school might have over another based on budget sizes. Programs such as Michigan, Ohio State, Texas and Alabama have annual athletic budgets that surpass $200 million, almost double some of those even in their own Power Five conference­s.

Go outside the Power Five and even the biggest-spending major college football schools have budgets closer to $50 million than $100 million.

David Ridpath, a professor at Ohio University and former compliance director at Colorado State and Marshall, said he remembers former Tennessee coach Phillip Fulmer, back when he was an assistant, attending a CSU game in Fort Collins to scout the Rams in the late 1980s during an off week for the Volunteers.

A few years later, responding to complaints from coaches and administra­tors, the NCAA decided to put a stop to it.

“And it really was a financial thing because you had all these coaches that were going out, and honestly the coaches even didn’t want to do it anymore. Plus, technology was changing at that time, too,” Ridpath said.

Every game is recorded for self-scouting purposes by the home team, but a long time has passed since actual film was exchanged between opposing teams. Access to digital recordings of games is readily available through online exchange programs.

The way the game is played now also has put more of an emphasis on signs, and in turn sign-stealing.

For most of Nutt’s career, which started as a graduate assistant at Oklahoma State in 1981, teams would mostly methodical­ly huddle in between snaps, with plays sent in via player substituti­on.

As offenses began to abandon the huddle for an up-tempo approach in the 2000s, signaling both offensive and defensive plays from the sideline became more of a necessity. And with that, teams started trying to decipher each others’ signs.

Player-to-coach communicat­ion has been a persistent topic in college football, where the rules have to cover hundreds of schools with vastly different resources. Much like with in-person scouting, concerns about creating a competitiv­e advantage based upon resources and a lack of consistenc­y in implementa­tion have been a stumbling block.

Still, this year during bowl season, the NCAA will allow teams to use coach-to-player communicat­ion technology during postseason games if both sides agree.

Steve Shaw, the national coordinato­r of football officials and secretary rules editor for the NCAA, said that instead of trying to standardiz­e the technology and force every team to use the same setup, teams will be permitted to use whatever they want.

Shaw said he hopes it’s a step toward coach-player technology becoming the norm in college football.

“If we can get to a world with no signals,” Shaw said, “that’s just one less thing to worry about.”

 ?? Abbie Parr The Associated Press ?? Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh missed three games at the start of the season over a recruiting issue. Now the program is at the center of another controvers­y.
Abbie Parr The Associated Press Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh missed three games at the start of the season over a recruiting issue. Now the program is at the center of another controvers­y.

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