Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore is expected to be suspended two games during the 2025 season as part of self-imposed sanctions by the university for the sign-stealing scandal centered around former staffer Connor Stalions. A person with knowledge of the situation but not permitted to speak publicly on the manner confirmed the news Monday to the Free Press.
ESPN’s Dan Wetzel and Pete Thamel report the suspensions will take place in Week 3 and 4 — home against Central Michigan and on the road at Nebraska — during which time Moore will held out of any team-related activities.
Michigan hosts New Mexico on Aug. 30 to open the 2025 season, Moore’s second as coach, then visits Oklahoma on Sept. 6 in Week 2.
Moore is a repeat offender, having been suspended for the 2023 regular-season opener by the school for his role in contacting recruits during a COVID-19 recruiting dead period.
THE SEASON: Michigan has the juice in all 3 phrases. Add it up and this is a 2025 CFP team
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
The report also states Moore is expected to receive more penalties related to recruiting violations, which comes shortly after former staffers Jesse Minter and Steve Clinkscale each accepted separate show causes from the NCAA’s Division I Committee on Infractions for their recruiting transgressions during their tenure.
Per ESPN, Moore could receive additional recruiting-related penalties, while the NCAA could further punish him as well beyond the school-imposed sanction.
“As you know, we will not comment on an active NCAA case,” program spokesman Dave Ablauf said in a message to the Free Press.
Moore was one of seven staffers from Michigan’s 2023 national championship team accused last August of violating NCAA rules. He was Michigan’s offensive coordinator that season, and served as gameday head coach for four of the six games coach Jim Harbaugh was suspended for.
Moore reportedly deleted 52 text messages with Stalions, the former Wolverines analyst, a Level II violation, on the same day in October 2023 that media reports indicated Stalions was the man behind an illegal off-field sign-stealing operation.
Moore’s deleted texts were recovered through a “device imaging” and he “subsequently produced them to enforcement staff,” according to the NCAA’s Notice of Allegations draft last year, reported by ESPN.
In an unrelated move, university president Santa Ono revealed Sunday he will be leaving Michigan to become president at the University of Florida.
THE QB: Sherrone Moore shares when he plans to make starting QB decision
This is a breaking news story and will be updated.
Tony Garcia is the Michigan Wolverines beat writer for the Detroit Free Press. Email him at [email protected] and follow him on X at @RealTonyGarcia.
Make “Hail Yes!” your go-to Michigan Wolverines podcast, available anywhere you listen to podcasts (Apple, Spotify).