No1TitansFan Posted September 1 Report Share Posted September 1 (edited) Watched this a couple of nights ago and it was interesting, somewhat self serving since it was Connor Stalions' chance to tell his side of the story, but it did reveal a lot of behind the scense understanding of the process. Kind of ironic that when he volunteered as a student assistant at the Naval Acadamey, they asked him to try and steal signs, a lot of which was legal, and he ran with it. When he interned at UM, he offered to do if for them and it turned out they were one of the few teams that wasn't doing it. In his defense, his system involved setting up a huge database and drawing from it. Interesting point he made was that it wasn't difficult at all to determine which of the sideline guys were decoys and which was the real guy. Everyone was doing it and everyone was pretty much trying to go as close to the line w/o going over it and all the teams were aware that it was being done. The NCAA also still has refused to source who hired the firm that dropped all the UM evidence in their laps. Real answer is the NCAA should have allowed headsets a long time ago. Edited September 3 by No1TitansFan Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.