It's also definitely weird that Michigan has been completely wrong so far on their "inside" versions of the story
This is one of the most interesting aspects of this story. It is also part of the reason, I think, that the bulk of the Michigan faithful have been so completely reality-detached through this saga. They aren't getting any of the news from "their" people. It is ALL coming from the outside. It wasn't like that with Tattoo-gate. We (tOSU faithful) had at least some inkling from "our" people that this was bad before it became blindingly obvious and undeniable.
Michigan fans generally haven't been getting that. "Their" insiders have been basically doing this:

Michigan fans both out of optimism and out of familiarity have trusted "their" guys and been burned repeatedly.
My honest take on this (trying to be fair):
Let me say upfront that I believe this is BAD for Michigan even if there are no further revelations. The guy who was fired last week was either fired for destroying evidence (the original leak) or for telling people not to cooperate. Either of those is BAD. The saving grace for Michigan is that they (apparently) wasted no time in getting rid of him. But that also just adds to the number of guys terminated so now we are at:
- Weiss: @Mdot21 said this was simply that he tried to access other people's accounts and got fired for it. That doesn't pass the smell test to me for two reasons. First, why would he? Second, that wouldn't take long to investigate and AFAIK the investigation is STILL ongoing.
- Some staffer fired after allegedly being caught buying alcohol ahead of a meeting that he thought was with an underage girl.
- Stallions fired after his sign-stealing ring became undeniable.
- Partridge fired for either destruction of evidence (Yahoo report) or for telling others not to cooperate (some other source, not much better anyway).
- Schembechler's kid fired before even starting for dumbass social media posts.
#1 and #2 aren't even related to the Sign stealing thing (other than that #1 may be the source of the revelations) and by themselves they aren't a good look. Honestly, the guy involved in #2 is REALLY lucky. If it weren't for everything else going on at Michigan right now, all the tOSU fans would be banging the drum about him and keeping his name in the news. He has been very lucky in that the other scandals have taken attention away from his situation.
Like I said, I'm trying to be fair here but this would look like a cluster-f*!k even if it wasn't going on at my schools' biggest rival. I think even the M guys can agree that the above five items are NOT a good look. Something is not right in Ann Arbor. At a minimum it begs the question of who is vetting Michigan's hires?
Then on to the sign-gate saga more specifically:
I said this once before but nobody picked it up (even to disagree) but I think this is a LOT worse than most M fans think in large part because the actual violation was planned, directed, and committed by members of the University of Michigan's football coaching staff. When we look at the Michigan BB scandal or Tattoo-gate, or the Cam Newton situation we tend to say that:
- "Michigan paid their BB players", or
- "Ohio State traded bowl swag for tattoos", or
- "Auburn paid half a million to Cam Newton."
We tend to say those things but in the three situations above the institutions had some distance (or at least tried to appear to have some distance) between themselves and the violations:
- The University of Michigan as an institution didn't pay their BB players, some guy did.
- The Ohio State University as an institution didn't trade bowl swag for tattoos, some tattoo parlor guy did.
- The University of Auburn didn't pay Cam Newton, some boosters made a "contribution" to his dad's church (I think that was the story).
Connor Stalions' sign stealing operation is fundamentally different. The violation wasn't committed by a booster or a kid. The violation was planned, orchestrated, and committed by a paid member of the Institution's Football Coaching Staff.
Even if nothing more comes out, I think that is BAD news for Michigan. This isn't just about some booster and some kid. It is about them and their employees.
Next, there are at least four not altogether unlikely avenues by which this can get WAY worse for Michigan:
First:
Ohio State fans are always going to say that Harbaugh/the staff knew. Michigan fans are always going to say that they didn't. What matters is what the NCAA can prove and what they feel is realistic. It isn't all that unlikely that the NCAA or some other body (US Integrity or the FBI) is going to find some piece of evidence that at least some people above Stalions knew full well that he was breaking rules to get opponent signals or at least knew enough that they should have known or asked.
Second:
As this conspiracy grows so too does the likelihood that at least one member of it used their knowledge of Michigan's sign stealing operation to make a little (or a lot) of money by placing bets on Michigan in the knowledge that Michigan was using impermissible means to gain an advantage. I guess we should ask
@MaximumSam or
@ELA but, IMHO, that is fraud. Furthermore, if they placed those bets online or used a bank (almost impossible not to) it isn't just fraud but the federal crime of wire fraud. That will bring in the FBI. People will go to jail. People facing jail time will sing like canaries. It will get ugly fast.
Three:
There was a rumor at one point that at least one of Stalions' sign stealers was a Michigan Football intern. If that is true, it could be catastrophic for Michigan. Stalions wasn't realistically in a position of sufficient authority to authorize that trip so that means somebody else had to which gets to #1.
Four:
There was a rumor that Michigan provided Tennessee's signs to USCe last year. I couldn't figure this one out. I didn't understand why Michigan would be scared of Tennessee. Now I do see a plausible reason for it. Assuming they did it, maybe it was insurance against a loss to Ohio State. If Michigan instead of Ohio State had finished 11-1 last year they would have made the CFP in part because Tennessee wasn't 11-1. If they actually attempted to manipulate CFP entrance by providing stolen signs to another team that is all kinds of bad. For one thing it will REALLY tick off another fanbase that otherwise wouldn't care and ramp up pressure on the NCAA to HAMMER them. Secondly, Stalions didn't realistically know the people on the USCe staff, but higher ups would have had connections. If this happened it probably wasn't Stalions who sent Michigan's data on Tennessee to USCe, it was someone higher up who thus obviously knew and the NCAA could potentially give USCe some sort of immunity or reduced punishment in return for testimony. This one probably isn't true but, if it is, I think it would be REALLY bad for Michigan.