The Arizona Republic

Michigan penalized for recruiting violations

- Andrew Birkle

Michigan has been placed on probation for the next three years and will face other penalties from the NCAA due to violations during a COVID-19 dead period and for having non-coaching staff members participat­e in impermissi­ble roles under former football coach Jim Harbaugh.

The penalties, which also include a fine for Michigan and recruiting penalties, were part of a deal between the NCAA enforcemen­t staff, the University of Michigan, and “five individual­s who currently or previously worked for its football program.”

According to the release from the NCAA, one former coach did not participat­e in the agreement, and “that portion of the case will be considered separately by the Committee on Infraction­s.” The coach who did not participat­e is not named by the NCAA.

Harbaugh served a self-imposed three-game suspension at the start of the 2023 season because of these violations, which are separate from the sign-stealing saga involving Connor Stalions, which broke in the second half of the year.

“Today’s joint resolution pertains to the University of Michigan Athletic Department and several former and current employees,” Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel said in a statement. “We are pleased to reach a resolution on this matter so that our student-athletes and our football program can move forward. We have no additional informatio­n and cannot comment further on other aspects of the NCAA’s inquiries.”

Michigan appeared to have a resolution in place with the NCAA last summer that would’ve suspended Harbaugh for four games, along with new head coach Sherrone Moore and new offensive line coach Grant Newsome for one game, but the deal fell apart in August just before the 2023 season.

Michigan first received a draft notice of allegation­s related to recruiting violations and coaching activities by noncoachin­g staff members in January 2023. The violations included in-person recruiting contacts and tryouts during the NCAA-mandated COVID-19 dead period and exceeding the number of allowed coaches participat­ing in both “onand off-field coaching activities,” according to the NCAA.

The violations were labeled as Level II violations which are defined as actions deemed “more than a minimal but less than a substantia­l or extensive recruiting, competitiv­e or other advantage” according to a descriptio­n adopted in 2019.

An additional Level I violation was brought against Harbaugh, who told the NCAA he had no recollecti­on of the Level II violations, which the NCAA determined as misleading. A Level I violation is defined as a “severe breach of conduct” that “seriously undermine or threaten the integrity of college sports.”

When the official notice of allegation­s was sent in December, just ahead of the Wolverines’ third consecutiv­e trip to the College Football Playoff, multiple people told the Free Press Michigan acknowledg­ed the Level II violations while Harbaugh maintained his innocence in the Level I violation.

The Wolverines won the first three games of the season without Harbaugh, who then returned for the next six games before being suspended again by the Big Ten for a different scandal, causing him to miss the final three games of the regular season.

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