NCAA, Michigan and postseason ban
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The NCAA leveled its punishment against Michigan football Aug. 15, including large fine, Connor Stalions show-cause for sign-stealing scandal.
Harbaugh was given a 10-year show-cause penalty from the NCAA on top of a four-year show-cause he got last year.
The 74-page NCAA report detailed the rift between Jim Harbaugh's football program and the Michigan compliance department.
Michigan learned its fate this week after the NCAA revealed its full punishment for the Wolverines football program in the wake of the sign-stealing controversy
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WolverinesWire on MSNMichigan announces appeal of NCAA sanctions; Manuel, Moore issue statements
Despite the NCAA punishment being 'light' in the eyes of many rivals and media, Michigan is appealing the verdict.
The most painful blow came financially. According to ESPN’s Pete Thamel, Michigan will lose roughly $30 million, with at least $20 million of that tied to a two-year postseason fine. That’s a big number, but Thamel noted the Wolverines could easily offset it with about $25 million in College Football Playoff revenue changes coming in 2026.