This is where we are in this country right now with the ongoing scandal at Michigan.
The alleged sign-stealing case surrounding suspended Michigan analyst Connor Stalions continues to grow. It has been widely reported that Stalions purchased tickets to multiple games involving most of Michigan’s Big Ten rivals over the past three years and he also bought tickets to the games of several potential College Football Playoff opponents.
Michigan has won the Big Ten and played in the CFP each of the last two seasons amid this sign-stealing investigation.
Head coach Jim Harbaugh has already publicly stated he had no knowledge of what was going on but many are calling for him to lose his job.
Well, an adult model by the name of Mia Sorety is on his side and calling out these allegations as she defends the university and Harbaugh.
“Why don’t you break a REAL story. Start with Nick Saban paying players and their families the last 15 years. Even his ex assistant coaches have snitched him out yet nobody cares,” she responded to ESPN reporter Pete Thamel last week.
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“It actually has NOT grown. The infraction has always been and still is ADVANCED SCOUTING. Which is a low level violation. NCAA had meetings in 2021 about doing away with the rule, their findings in the meeting were that advanced scouting had no significant competitive advantage,” she said.
She continued as she defended Harbaugh.
“He has turned around 3 college football programs. Has taken a team to the Superbowl. He is an elite coach & he isn’t even done yet could still coach 10-15 more years. Dan marino is one of the best QBs of all time just doesn’t have the rings, rings alone isn’t the only metric that matters to being great,” she said.
No word on what connection she has to Michigan or if she just likes the school and is defending them like any blind fan would.
In the meantime, Michigan announced that Stalions would be suspended with pay on Oct. 20 as the NCAA conducts its investigation. NCAA rules don’t prohibit teams from stealing signs. However, there are rules against using electronic equipment to record an opponent’s signals.
Here’s a closer look at Mia: