Why Michigan should embrace sign-stealing villain role - ESPN
There has to be a bad guy.
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With the Big Ten's ruling on whether Michigan violated the league's sportsmanship policy expected to arrive in the near future, the focus of the college football season's most high-profile standoff could shift to the courtroom.
Week 11 has arrived and with it a ranked opponent for Michigan. The Wolverines put their perfect season — on the field anyway — on the line at one-loss Penn State.
As the college football world turns their attention to Michigan, former Florida star Danny Wuerffel speaks highly of Steve Spurrier.
Justyn Knight was so focused on his comeback from Achilles tendon surgery and having fun with new teammates that the rate Bowerman Track Club was losing professional athletes didn't cross his mind.
The thing about what the Houston Astros did, which cost their manager and GM their jobs, was they took something everyone in baseball does — stealing signs — and used video to elevate it to a place that was unacceptable.
It's Week 11 of the season, and we might finally get to see how good the No. 3 Michigan Wolverines are, as they will be playing their first ranked opponent in the No. 10 Penn State Nittany Lions. Every other team in the top four of the College Football Playoff rankings has played at least two ranked opponents already. (The No. 2 Georgia Bulldogs will play their third ranked team this weekend.)
When Brent Pry was coaching the defense at Louisiana-Lafayette nearly 20 years ago, he had a habit of printing out an early draft of his game plan, scribbling notes and changes by hand, then making the needed changes to the documents. After he printed out the finished product, he'd tear up his first draft and toss it in his office garbage can.