Some huge news regarding college athletics. The last several years in college athletics have been quite the whirlwind as fanbases and programs have had to navigate the transfer portal as well as the new NIL rules.
Huge news for college sports, and its future, came on Thursday. The NCAA and the five power conferences have agreed to let schools pay players directly — a first in college sports history.
Information just keeps piling up for the Wolverines. Initially, it was about Michigan staffer Connor Stalions sign-stealing. Later on came the amount of tickets he has purchased for people to attend college football games.
Another “damning” report about Michigan football came out from ESPN. However, it was much ado about nothing. There was another revelation in the Michigan football sign-stealing investigation on Friday night as ESPN put out another report relating to Connor Stalions.
A former Division III football player and head coach claims he scouted Big Ten teams as part of Michigan’s alleged sign-stealing scheme, ESPN’s Dan Murphy reported Friday.
Someone has come forward, sort of, to admit that he was paid by Michigan staffer Connor Stalions to record the signals of an upcoming Wolverines opponent.
On Friday, ESPN’s Dan Murphy reported that suspended Michigan staffer Connor Stallions compensated at least one person to record future opponents with “a couple of hundred dollars and a ticket to a Michigan home game”.
Former Michigan State football coach Mel Tucker is planning to file a wrongful termination lawsuit against the university, according to ESPN's Dan Murphy and…
Michigan State coach Mel Tucker is the subject of a sexual harassment investigation by the university, according to a report early Sunday morning from Dan Murphy of ESPN.
Michigan State football coach Mel Tucker is under university investigation for alleged sexual harassment, according to ESPN's Dan Murphy. The investigation…
NCAA president Mark Emmert was paid nearly $3 million in the 2019-20 fiscal year despite a 50 percent drop in revenue due to COVID-19. NCAA president Mark Emmert was paid $2.9 million during the 2019-20 fiscal year despite a drop in revenue of over 50 percent, according to ESPN's Dan Murphy.