Reactions to the scandal from opposing fanbases and reporters were mixed. Detroit sports talk radio host Mike Valenti of
97.1 The Ticket’s
The Valenti Show With Rico bashed Michigan and considered the scandal to be one of the worst in sports history. Former
Oklahoma head coach
Bob Stoops heavily criticized Michigan, stating that "If it’s true, oh, absolutely (it is a big deal). That’s ridiculous. Everyone (saying), 'Oh, it happens all the time!' No, it doesn’t. I’ve never heard of that. In all my years of football and every team I’ve ever been on, sure, do we look across the field and if you can see it, that’s your job to do. You know what I’m saying, if I’m able to just in my plain eye look over there and know what they’re doing, I should be doing that. But to video people and to send people to scout and marry up a signal with the play … No, no, no. That’s terrible. It goes against everything we’re about. That’s wrong, if it happened."
The Athletic published an article where they surveyed 50 anonymous college football coaches regarding how serious they felt Stalions' actions were, and revealed that on a scale of 1 to 5, almost half of the coaches polled rated it a 5 in terms of seriousness. Alternatively,
Colin Cowherd of
Fox Sports called the scandal overblown, stating that "So for the record, everybody — just like cannabis and sports gambling — everybody’s stealing signs, they just do it differently; I do not believe that guy in the TV picture is the difference between Michigan and Ohio State. I think it was a better coach, better planning, and more physicality."
Joel Klatt of
Fox Sports also defended Michigan, stating that, "I’m not saying that there weren’t rules broken. I’m not saying that it didn’t happen. I think that the more you really know about the sport, the more you know about football, I think you realize the less of an impact this actually had on the games. But the less you know about football (you likely think it had) more (of an) impact. Do you think it had an impact on every single play? Do you think that it had an impact on every single game and that they don’t win unless that’s not necessarily the case? Not necessarily the case."
ESPN’s
Paul Finebaum did not believe that what Stalions did had a significant impact on the game, saying "I would need evidence to say, 'Okay, because of
Connor Stalions and all this, where was the advantage?' I just never saw it. If it was so obvious in one game or two games that they turned? But most of their games were pretty convincing." In the interview with NCAA officials in the
Netflix documentary, Stalions’ lawyer Brad Beckworth alleged that Stalions’ personal and private data was breached by hackers. When Beckworth asked how the NCAA obtained the information about Stalions, the investigators initially provided no comment. The public infractions decision revealed that Stalions had given multiple football interns access to his Google Drive and calendar, never contacted law enforcement, and did not produce any requested documents. ==Findings and NCAA Punishment==