Michigan avoid playoff ban but face record NCAA fine over sign-stealing
NCAA fines Michigan over $20m in scouting scandal
Wolverines avoid postseason ban in major case
Moore given three-game suspension, show-cause
The NCAA announced Friday it has hit the University of Michigan with one of the largest financial penalties in college football history for running an illegal in-person scouting and sign-stealing scheme - ordering the school to forfeit more than $20m in postseason revenue - but stopped short of banning the Wolverines from competing in the playoffs.
The financial hit stems from postseason football payouts over the 2025 and 2026 seasons, a figure projected by multiple sources to exceed $20m and potentially surpass $25m based on historical Big Ten and College Football Playoff distributions. Michigan was also fined $50,000, assessed 10% of its football budget, and will lose the financial equivalent of 10% of its football scholarships for 2025-26. Other sanctions include a 25% reduction in official visits for the 2025-26 season, a 14-week ban on recruiting communications, and four years' probation.
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