September 19, 2024

Opinion: Jim Harbaugh, Michigan Deserve College Football’s Death Penalty

Opinion: Jim Harbaugh, Michigan Deserve College Football's Death Penalty - Sports Illustrated Ohio State Buckeyes News, Analysis and More

Opinion: He Deserve a Death Penalty and…..

I don’t believe Harbaugh should be allowed to continue leading the Michigan Wolverines.

Jim Harbaugh and the Michigan Wolverines have found themselves at the centre of an unfathomable cheating scandal.

Without having seen the evidence, I’m assuming what several credible reporters at major national publications have reported is correct. The harm done to the University of Michigan and college football in general by the alleged cheating scandal is irreparable, and I believe the Wolverines and coach Harbaugh should face the harshest penalty in college football history.

Is sign-stealing illegal? No. Is it safe to assume that most teams are looking to gain a competitive advantage, which includes trying to decipher what play their opponent might be signaling in from the sidelines? Of course. Is major college football a hyper-competitive environment, perhaps now more than ever? You bet. Do some programs – including Michigan’s arch-rivals in Columbus – hold themselves to a standard of excellence that is almost impossible to routinely attain? Absolutely … and that ratchets up the pressure to win at all costs.

None of this is important. Ends never justify means in moral terms.

Cheating is still cheating. Either you follow the rules or you don’t. There is no room for ambiguity.

It makes no difference whether you think certain rules are stupid or outdated. It makes no difference that the rule requiring in-person scouting and the use of electronics to record signals was enacted as a cost-cutting measure. Over the last week, I’ve heard and read every possible excuse.

If you’re making those arguments in favor of Michigan, you’re missing the point.

There are still so many things that need to be brought to the surface. But if what’s been reported by the Washington Post, ESPN and Yahoo! Sports is indeed true, there is only one acceptable outcome here.

And it needs to happen quickly.

Personally, given the breadth and depth of this scandal, I don’t think Michigan should be allowed to compete the rest of this season. Might that seem harsh? Too bad, actions have consequences.

I think it needs to be made abundantly clear that altering the integrity of the game is the worst possible offense a program could commit. Whether that punishment comes from the NCAA, the Big Ten, the College Football Playoff committee or the University of Michigan themselves, I don’t really care.

For what it’s worth, I don’t think the NCAA will act that severely AND that swiftly. There’s too much money to be made on Michigan football and the legal battles that would ensue probably wouldn’t be worth the headache.

The University of Michigan’s Board of Trustees and president Dr. Santa Ono need to send a message they don’t condone what has happened and they need to terminate Jim Harbaugh’s contract. Anything short of that is unacceptable.

There are only two possibilities here: either Harbaugh knew they were cheating, or he didn’t know … and I’m having a hard time deciding which is worse.

If he knew they were cheating – and even if it wasn’t his idea and he never told anyone to do it – he besmirched the integrity of the game and impugned his reputation forever. If what is being reported is true, how is what he did any different than what Pete Rose did in baseball? Being labeled a cheater isn’t something that you just erase.

If he didn’t know … if he was completely and totally 100 percent in the dark … how in the world could Michigan (or any NFL franchise) trust him to run a program/lead a team ever again? How can something so egregious happen under your watch without your knowledge? It’s quite literally your job to know. If that’s true, what an incredible condemnation of his ability to lead.

And even if he didn’t think that the sign-stealing information they acquired was done so illegally, did it never occur to him that they must have the best intel on sign stealing in the history of college football?

Opinion: Jim Harbaugh, Michigan Deserve College Football's Death Penalty - Sports Illustrated Ohio State Buckeyes News, Analysis and More

Forget the actual X’s and O’s part of the job for a moment. When you’re a football coach, you have a responsibility to mold young men. You’re supposed to teach the values of teamwork, sacrifice and integrity by living them in your daily life. You’re supposed to lead by example, because now more than ever, actions speak louder than words. Any coach worth their weight would tell you that being called coach is sacred, no matter what level of football you’re coaching. A man’s integrity is everything, even more so when he occupies a leadership role.

Let’s not forget that Harbaugh already lied to the NCAA earlier this year about a minor recruiting violation. He doesn’t have a leg to stand on here. If he lied about something as minor as buying food for recruits during a dead period, why should we believe him about something this important?

I don’t know of any other program in America who has someone in Connor Stalions’ position with that kind of access to the coordinators on game day and who is that involved in the game plan. He’s been on staff for several years. It’s not like this has only been going on for a couple months this season. The Washington Post, ESPN and Yahoo! Sports have all claimed there is evidence available suggesting this has been going on for multiple seasons.

I can’t comprehend some of the arguments I’ve read or listened to from Michigan fans over the past week. There is no turning back here. There is absolutely no way that Michigan’s administration should allow coach Harbaugh and his staff to continue leading this program. Nothing could justify that.

 

 

 

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