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Michigan Recruiting Violations Announced by NCAA After Probe into Jim Harbaugh Era

Doric Sam

The NCAA announced Tuesday that an investigation into the Michigan football program during Jim Harbaugh's tenure as head coach has resulted in the discovery of recruiting violations.

The announcement stated that the university accepted the violations and agreed to penalties of "three years of probation for the school, a fine and recruiting restrictions in alignment with the Level I-Mitigated classification for the school."

Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel released a statement reacting to the announcement:

It was noted that "five individuals who currently or previously worked for its football program" agreed to the violations and penalties. However, the announcement added, "One former coach did not participate in the agreement, and that portion of the case will be considered separately by the Committee on Infractions, after which the committee will release its full decision."

Harbaugh wasn't named explicitly in the announcement, instead being referred to as "the former football head coach." As part of the resolution, the university agreed that "the underlying violations demonstrated a head coach responsibility violation," and Harbaugh "failed to meet his responsibility to cooperate with the investigation."

Harbaugh's attorney also released a statement, claiming that his client's participation in the case should have concluded when he filed "a lengthy response" to the notice of allegations:

Harbaugh coached Michigan for nine seasons and led the team to three conference titles and the 2023 national championship, which was the program's first title since 1997. After the 2023 campaign, he returned to the NFL after accepting a head coaching position with the Los Angeles Chargers.

The announcement revealed that the violations included "impermissible in-person recruiting contacts during a COVID-19 dead period, impermissible tryouts, and the program exceeding the number of allowed countable coaches when noncoaching staff members engaged in on- and off-field coaching activities."

The coaches who participated in the agreement can immediately begin serving their penalties, which include "one-year show-cause orders consistent with the Level II-Standard and Level II-Mitigated classifications of their respective violations." However, potential violations and penalties for Harbaugh are still pending.

   

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