NCAA, Michigan and postseason ban
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The NCAA said it had "sufficient grounds" to impose a postseason ban on Michigan for the sign-steal scandal, but opted not to hand one.
Michigan football avoided the most serious punishment after the NCAA revealed its verdict for the sign-stealing controversy.
The Michigan Wolverines football program faces a substantial financial penalty after the NCAA uncovered a multi-year sign-stealing scheme led by Connor Stalions.
Michigan did not receive a postseason ban, and its 2023 national championship remained untouched. Here's why, according to the NCAA.
This article was originally published on www.si.com/fannation/college/cfb-hq as NCAA punishes Michigan football, hands Sherrone Moore another ban. The final verdict is in, as the NCAA has revealed its complete punishment for the Michigan football program as it closes the book on the sign-stealing case.
The NCAA said Michigan’s violations were “sufficient grounds” for a multi-year postseason ban but avoided giving one because it would “unfairly penalize student-athletes.”