The Brutal Truth Michigan Must Face Even If It Wins National Championship

 

HOUSTON — There are a lot of adjectives that have been used to describe Michigan.

Gritty. Physical. Resilient. Dominant. Balanced.

Here’s another: Controversial cheaters.

With a win Monday night over Washington at NRG Stadium in Houston, Michigan would win the school’s first national championship since 1997, ending over 25 years of frustration, capping a three-year run in which Jim Harbaugh flipped his own personal script leading his alma mater.

The first six seasons Harbaugh was in charge, Michigan was underwhelming, failing to win the big game. Lately, it has been the opposite, beating Ohio State three straight times and finally breaking through in the College Football Playoff after disappointing one-and-done trips the previous two years.

But, as much as a victory would return the Wolverines to the top of the college football mountaintop, the sign-stealing, in-game scouting scandal that rocked the sports world will be a part of this team’s story, and could result in NCAA sanctions down the road.

Just like the Florida champions of 2008 are in part remembered for their many off-the-field problems, highlighted by the late Aaron Hernandez. Just like the 2017 World Series champion Houston Astros are derided for their intricate sign-stealing scandal of banging a garbage can to notify hitters of what pitches were coming. Those blights don’t vanish.

A low-level staff member, Connor Stalions, was allegedly running an elaborate system of scouting and sign stealing. Stalions purchased tickets to games involving other Big Ten teams and potential playoff opponents. He reportedly bought tickets to more than 35 games at 17 different stadiums around the country through third-party vendors and had a network of at least three people who were given tickets to attend games. He was seen on videotape recording the sidelines of future Michigan opponents.

There is still so much we don’t know, and a lot that probably won’t ever become clear. How much of an advantage did Michigan gain? Did it know what plays the opponent was running? Was this scandal a part of the recent dominance? Knowing the NCAA, by the time a ruling comes down, there won’t be an NCAA anymore.

Jim Harbaugh celebrates with quarterback J.J. McCarthy after Michigan's overtime win over Alabama in their College Football Playoff semifinal win at the Rose Bowl.

If there was no advantage, it’s unlikely Michigan would have kept doing it. Then again, once word spread of the controversy, and Harbaugh was suspended for the final three games of the regular season by the Big Ten and Stalions resigned amid an NCAA investigation, it’s hard to believe the Wolverines kept on doing it. They still beat Ohio State again. They pulled out a gutty overtime win over Alabama in the playoff, the team most experts pegged as the favorite to win it all.

Since the scandal was uncovered, Michigan has won seven straight games. The Wolverines’ play hasn’t been diminished at all. If anything, it has created an us-against-the-world mindset, using the criticism as fuel.

“It’s almost been an unfair advantage,” Harbaugh said after the thrilling Rose Bowl victory.

Considering how well Michigan performed once the news broke in mid-October, an argument can be made that the sign-stealing wasn’t a major factor. At least that’s what Michigan supporters would like everyone to believe. Asked recently about the potential of wins being vacated by the NCAA, Harbaugh scoffed at the notion.

“I guess you want to live in the world of rumorville and speculation,” he said. “We don’t have any time to be doing that right now.”

His quarterback, J.J. McCarthy, believes that 80 percent of teams in college football steal signs, that rival Ohio State was stealing Michigan’s signs back in “2020 or 2019,” and the Wolverines had to “get up to that level they were at.” He later clarified his statement that Michigan had to take more precautions to protect its signs. It wasn’t an admission of guilt, as some took his quote.

 

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