The NCAA handed down one of the most severe penalties in recent memory to former Michigan football coach Jim Harbaugh, issuing a 10-year show-cause order that begins in 2028 after the completion of a separate four-year show-cause from a previous case. The ruling stems from a lengthy investigation into an off-campus, in-person scouting scheme orchestrated by former staffer Connor Stalions, along with other violations involving impermissible recruiting inducements, communications and repeated failures to cooperate with NCAA investigators.
A show-cause penalty is one of the NCAA’s harshest punishments. It requires any NCAA school that wants to hire the penalized coach to formally demonstrate that they can do so without violating NCAA rules. In practice, it effectively bars the coach from returning to college football for the duration of the penalty, since most schools are unwilling to take on the compliance risk.
Harbaugh’s attorney wasted no time mocking the NCAA’s latest ruling against his client. In comments to CBS Sports’ John Talty, Tom Mars quipped, “I don’t know how Jim feels about it, but I know how upset I would be if I got banned from appearing in traffic court.”
Mars followed it up with another zinger: “That show-cause makes me think Jim must’ve thrown a Subway sandwich at the COI when I wasn’t looking.”
The show-cause order is part of a sweeping set of penalties for the Michigan football program, which the Division I Committee on Infractions said had a “contentious relationship” with its compliance office, leading coaches and staff to act “with disregard for the rules.”
Harbaugh, who left Michigan to become head coach of the Los Angeles Chargers after leading the Wolverines to the 2023 national championship, is largely insulated from the immediate impact of the NCAA’s ruling. Yet the 10-year show-cause would remain a major barrier should he attempt a return to college football.
The NCAA further noted that Harbaugh repeatedly declined to cooperate at any stage of the nearly two-year investigation, a pattern emphasized by COI chair Kay Norton and public member Norman Bay, and a key factor in the panel’s decision to impose such a lengthy penalty.
The NCAA’s decision also highlighted a breakdown in Michigan’s internal oversight. “Compliance efforts were a one-way street,” the panel wrote, pointing to repeated instances where the football program either ignored or dismissed warnings from the school’s compliance staff.
In addition to Harbaugh and Stalions, several assistants were cited for violations, including current coach Sherrone Moore, defensive coordinator Jesse Minter and former director of player personnel Denard Robinson. The panel described Stalions’ behavior as “some of the worst the COI has ever seen,” citing destroyed materials, deleted messages and misleading statements.
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