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Connor Stalions, accused in Michigan sign-stealing scandal, gets job at Detroit high school

FILE - Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh, front left, watches against Rutgers as analytics assistant Connor Stalions, right, looks on during an NCAA college football game in Ann Arbor, Mich., Sept. 23, 2023. Stalions is set to share his side of the story from an alleged sign-stealing scheme within Michigans football team before it went on to win the national championship. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File) (Paul Sancya, Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

DETROIT – Connor Stalions, the former low-level recruiting staffer at Michigan who was at the center of a sign-stealing scandal, is running the defense at a Detroit high school.

“I got the most hated man in college football right now, Connor Stalions. He’s my defensive coordinator," Mumford coach William McMichael told The Detroit News.

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Stalions is accused of running an advance-scouting scheme for more than two years at Michigan. He sent people to games involving the Wolverines' future opponents to digitally record signals that could be used to steal signs. In-person scouting and recording of signs are against NCAA rules.

Michigan is expected to receive a notice of allegations from the NCAA soon, though it will likely take months to resolve the matter. Jim Harbaugh, who coached the Wolverines and won a national title last season before jumping to the NFL, has denied having any knowledge of what Stalions was doing.

Stalions hasn't made any public remarks since leaving Michigan last November. He didn't speak to the newspaper about his job at Mumford, a public school in northwestern Detroit that has a 2-16 record since 2022.

“What happened with the NCAA doesn’t concern us here at Mumford,” McMichael said. “He comes here every day and gives 120 percent, and the kids all love him and we’re all learning from him.”

McMichael said he met Stalions when Michigan was recruiting his son.

“He can help prepare the kids for college,” the coach said. “They are learning the lingo, how they practice college and how they break down film, so it gives the kids an advantage.”


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