Strange "coincidence" that they made the playoffs in 2021.
From the article:
A low-level staffer with a military background has emerged as one of the linchpins in the
NCAA investigation into
Michigan's alleged sign-stealing operation, sources told ESPN on Thursday.
Connor Stalions, a football analyst with the Wolverines and a retired captain in the United States Marine Corps, is a person of interest in the investigation into whether No. 2-ranked Michigan violated an NCAA rule by scouting future opponents in person at games, sources said. The NCAA prohibited such scouting in 1994.
Sources said the NCAA enforcement staff's level of interest in Stalions is so significant it sought access to his computer as part of its investigation. Sources indicated that the process is underway, although it's uncertain what investigators will find.
Attempts by ESPN to reach Stalions were not returned. Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel did not return a request seeking comment.
A source told ESPN that the Wolverines have used an "elaborate" scouting system to steal signals from future opponents since at least 2021. With the ongoing NCAA investigation into Michigan recruiting and coach Jim Harbaugh potentially facing additional penalties there, this separate investigation could significantly increase his exposure to additional suspension.
Fortuna article is paywall but for the comments in the tweet.
From the tease for the article:
A Michigan staffer had requested a tour of another Big Ten staffer’s stadium a few years ago, saying that he was in charge of the Wolverines’ site visits for the following season. But he had requested to visit the venue on a game day, saying that it would help him better understand the logistics for when Michigan played there.
The recipient’s guard was up, and he informed the Michigan staffer that it would be illegal for him to visit then.
Was that email simply a naive mistake by a low-level staffer? Or is it a sign of just how far — and how long — Michigan would go to bend the rules under ninth-year coach Jim Harbaugh?
The Inside Zone spoke to a half-dozen current and former Big Ten coaches on Thursday after the news broke to get a better understanding of the severity of the situation.
Three of those coaches had already faced Michigan this season. Not one was surprised by the news. The No. 2 Wolverines are 7-0, have been favored by at least 17.5 points in every game and have won each contest by at least 24 points, so any advantage against the crop of competition so far would appear to be minimal, and unnecessary. But that doesn’t mean that it didn’t make a difference.
“We were told a while ago that that’s what they do,” said a coach who faced Michigan this season. “We actually heard they were sending people to games, so what we did is we literally changed everything. We went back to our old signals and things like that. I don’t know if people could see it in the game, but when we would come off the field we would send in the call with the substitution guy, so that we didn’t signal, because we knew that they did that.”