
Connor Stalions Talks Impact of Michigan's Sign-Stealing, Knew All Signals for 7 Games
Since Connor Stalions' Michigan football exit during the 2023 season, more details about his sign-stealing operation have come to light.
Stalions brought some of his actions to light on his own on Saturday.
He admitted that he knew almost every signal opponents used in seven different games over a two-year span. Stalions made the admission in response to TCU head coach Sonny Dykes saying that Michigan's sign-stealing actually helped the Horned Frogs in their 2022 College Football Playoff matchup.
TOP NEWS

Big Ten Generated Record $1.5B

Top Storylines Coming Out of Spring Games 🗒️

Georgia Lands 5-Star TE 🐶
"There were 7 games in my time at Michigan where I knew almost every signal the whole game: 2021 MSU, 2022 MSU, 2022 PSU, 2022 OSU, 2022 TCU, 2021 Georgia, and 2021 Wisconsin," Stalions wrote on social media. "We lost 3 of those games because we didn't tackle well, and Georgia was historically good. We won the four other games because we dominated the line of scrimmage & tackled well. Blocking, ball security, tackling, run fits & coverage tools.
"That's football. This is not rocket science."
Dykes, who led TCU to the national championship game after his win over Michigan, said that his team intentionally changed some of its signals because it knew the Wolverines had them.
"We got some favorable matchups because of that and, yeah, there was some big plays in the game," Dykes told On3's Brett McMurphy.
In his post, Stalions indicates that even though Michigan had the Horned Frogs' signals, it wasn't the difference between a win and a loss.
The sign-stealing saga surrounding Stalions led to him resigning in November 2023, as well as a three-game suspension for former head coach Jim Harbaugh. While both Stalions and Harbaugh are no longer at Michigan, the ramifications from the scandal are still with the team.
Head coach Sherrone Moore, who took over after Harbaugh's exit, is expected to get a two-game, self-imposed ban for his role in the scandal.






