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On Tuesday, the NCAA and its Committee on Infractions declared that they had verified a long list of coaches and players from the University of Michigan football program engaging in illegal recruiting practices.
The Connor Stalions controversy, which tainted the Wolverines’ 2023 College Football Playoff championship run, is unrelated to this situation.
The NCAA disclosed that five members, some of whom are current and some of whom are former, “reached an agreement with NCAA enforcement staff on recruiting violations and coaching activities by noncoaching staff members that occurred within the football program, and the appropriate penalties for those violations.” The release also disclosed that the NCAA’s Committee on Infraction “split” the case and will fully release a formal decision at a later time.
In accordance with NCAA regulation, the report does not name the parties involved, but it does conclude that “the former football head coach failed to meet his responsibility to cooperate with the investigation.”
The personnel’s in-person recruiting efforts, including but not limited to Harbaugh, during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, when the NCAA imposed many moratoriums on in-person recruiting, are at question in this specific investigation into the Wolverines’ wrongdoings under Harbaugh.