Big Ten suggests to NCAA that Michigan has been punished enough for sign-stealing, AP sources sayNew Foto - Big Ten suggests to NCAA that Michigan has been punished enough for sign-stealing, AP sources say

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti sent a letter to theNCAACommittee on Infractions suggesting that Michigan's football program should not face more sanctions stemming from asign-stealing scheme, according to two people familiar with the situation. They spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Monday because no one is authorized to comment on an ongoing NCAA investigation. Petitti's letter was shared during last month's hearing because he was unable to attend while recovering from hip surgery, Big Ten Deputy Commissioner Diane Dietz said. ESPN was first to report some details of Petitti's letter. The NCAA alleged last year in a notice relating to its sign-stealing investigation that current coach Sherrone Moore violated rules as an assistant under former coach JimHarbaugh, who served a three-game suspension in exchange for the conference dropping its own investigation into the allegations after the two ended up in court. After winning the 2023 national championship, Harbaugh left to lead the Los Angeles Chargers. Moore also was accused of deleting text messages with sign-stealer Connor Stalions before they were recovered and provided to the NCAA. Moore has said he has and will continue to cooperate with the NCAA's investigation. The NCAA investigation surfaced early in the 2023 season amid allegations that Michigan used a robust in-person scouting and sign-stealing operation conducted by Stalions, a former a low-level staffer. He was suspended by the school and laterresigned. Stalions, who did not participate in the NCAA investigation, recently said he knew almost every signal opponents used in seven games over two seasons. Michigan is prepared to suspend Moore for two games during the coming season. The NCAA will decide if that self-imposed sanction is enough to address allegations that Moore failed to cooperate in an investigation. The governing body takes three months on average for contested cases to make a final decision. The Wolverines open the season on Aug. 30 at home against New Mexico State and at Oklahoma, where Moore was an offensive lineman, on Sept. 6. Harbaugh was suspendedby the Big Ten, three weeks after an investigation by the NCAA into the allegations began. Hours later, Michigan asked a court for an injunction and temporary restraining order and the two sides narrowly avoided a court hearing. Harbaugh has repeatedly denied any involvement with Stalions' apparent scheme. The NCAAdoes not have rules against stealing signs, but does prohibit schools from sending scouts to the games of future opponents and using electronic equipment to record another team's signals. Multiple Big Ten schools had records showing ticket purchases under Stalions' name and video surveillance footage of people in those seats with cell phones pointed toward the field. Big Ten coaches and athletic directors previouslypushed Petitti to punish Harbaughbefore the NCAA concluded its investigation. When the Big Ten did suspend Harbaugh, Michigan claimed the commissioner overstepped his authority and acted outside the conference's bylaws. Athletic director Warde Manuel released a scathing statement just before Michigan kicked off at Penn State and won 24-15 without Harbaugh on the sideline. "Not liking someone or another university or believing without any evidence that they knew or saying someone should have known without an investigation is not grounds to remove someone from their position before the NCAA process has reached a conclusion through a full NCAA investigative process," Manuel said then. The NCAA previously put Michigan on three years of probation, fined the school and implemented recruiting limits after reaching a negotiated resolution in a recruiting case and banned Harbaugh from coaching college football for four years. ___ AP college football:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-football

Big Ten suggests to NCAA that Michigan has been punished enough for sign-stealing, AP sources say

Big Ten suggests to NCAA that Michigan has been punished enough for sign-stealing, AP sources say ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Big Ten Commission...
MLB goes full NASCAR with Braves, Reds uniforms for Speedway Classic at BristolNew Foto - MLB goes full NASCAR with Braves, Reds uniforms for Speedway Classic at Bristol

In an effort to host more baseball games in more unique locations, theCincinnati RedsandAtlanta Bravesare set to play a game at Bristol Motor Speedway, the legendary auto racing track in Bristol, Tennessee, on August 2nd. This will be the first-everMLBgame played at a NASCAR track, and the teams involved are going all-out for their part in league history. On Monday, July 21, theCincinnati Reds unveiled the uniformsthey plan to wear for the contest: white jerseys equipped with classic checkered flag patterns and numbers in the same style seen on drivers' cars. TheBravesalso revealed their jerseys, which will feature similar NASCAR-inspired numbers, as well as a new ballcap designed by New Era with hod rod flames across the brim. View this post on Instagram A post shared by MLB ⚾ (@mlb) The Aug. 2 game will count as a Reds home game and will be proceeded by games against the Braves at Cincinnati's Great American Ball Park on July 31 and Aug. 1. The game will be held a little more than a month before the speedway, know as "The Last Great Colosseum," hosts NASCAR's annual Bristol Night Race on Saturday, Sept. 13. The baseball field will be set in the middle of the track's infield. GUARDIANS:Why did Cleveland change baseball team name? Origins of decades-long controversy Rawlings has designed new batting helmets directly modeled after racing helmets for this game. Furthermore, Reds' catcher Tyler Stephenson has already revealed a custom chest plate for the game, modeled after the movie 'Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby.' One of the best things I've seen in awhile. Check out Tyler Stephenson's gear for the Speedway Classic as he goes full Ricky Bobby and Talladega Nights. Shake and Bake!@EvoShield#Reds#MLB#ATOBTTRpic.twitter.com/x4vB8AWCeF — Jim Day (@JimDayTV)July 6, 2025 The straps on the back of the protector include the famous line from the movie: "If you ain't first, you're last." Bristol Motor Speedway anually hosts two NASCAR weekends a year – one in the spring and one in late summer or early fall. The speedway hosted a college football gamebetween the Tennessee Volunteers and Virginia Tech Hokies in 2016, which had almost 157,000 fans in attendance. The Bristol Motor Speedway ballpark as well as the Reds' and Braves' specialty uniforms are expected to be available to play with in the popular baseball video gameMLB: The Show 25. There will be a pregame concert headlined by Tim McGraw, Pitbull, and Jake Owen. Owen will host a full day of musical sets in a dedicated fan zone at the venue, perBristol Motor Speedway. The Commissioner's Trophy is also expected to make an appearance, giving fans a once in a lifetime opportunity to take photographs with baseball's most coveted trophy. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:MLB Speedway Classic uniforms: What Braves, Reds will wear at Bristol

MLB goes full NASCAR with Braves, Reds uniforms for Speedway Classic at Bristol

MLB goes full NASCAR with Braves, Reds uniforms for Speedway Classic at Bristol In an effort to host more baseball games in more unique loca...
Bob Hammel, legendary Indiana sports writer and friend of Bob Knight, dies at 88New Foto - Bob Hammel, legendary Indiana sports writer and friend of Bob Knight, dies at 88

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Bob Hammel, who covered 23 NCAA Final Fours and 29 Indiana high school basketball tournament championships during a 52-year sports writing career that included a close friendship with late Hall of Fame coach Bob Knight, has died. He was 88. Hammel died Sunday at Bell Trace, a senior living community in Bloomington, according to an obituary in The Herald-Times, his longtime employer. No cause of death was given. The lifelong Indiana resident spent 40 years with the Bloomington Herald-Telephone and later Herald-Times, including 30 as sports editor. Hammel was a member of several halls of fame, including the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, Football Writers Association of America, Indiana Journalism and Indiana University Athletics. He served terms as president of the Basketball and Football Writers associations. He received the Curt Gowdy Media Award from the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Bert McGrane Award from the Football Writers Association. Hammel won the Indiana Sportswriter of the Year award 21 times. He authored or co-authored 14 books, including the 2002 autobiography of Knight, the fiery IU basketball coach who died in 2023. They also teamed in 2012 for a book titled "The Power of Negative Thinking." Upon retiring as Big Ten Conference commissioner in 2020, Jim Delany said, "Bob Hammel is simply the most important Big Ten writer in the last 50 years." Hammel, a native of Huntington, Indiana, attended Indiana University for a year. He took a summer job as sports editor of his hometown paper and instead of returning to school that fall, he stayed on at the paper for eight years. He worked at papers in Peru, Fort Wayne, Kokomo and Indianapolis before being hired as sports editor of the Herald-Telephone in 1966. His career included covering five Olympics before he retired from sports writing in 1996. He is survived by Julie, his wife of 67 years, son Richard Hammel and daughter Jane Priest. ___ AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll

Bob Hammel, legendary Indiana sports writer and friend of Bob Knight, dies at 88

Bob Hammel, legendary Indiana sports writer and friend of Bob Knight, dies at 88 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Bob Hammel, who covered 23 NCAA Fi...
Hunter Biden suggests Joe Biden's disastrous debate was due to AmbienNew Foto - Hunter Biden suggests Joe Biden's disastrous debate was due to Ambien

By Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Former President Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden, said his father's disastrous debate performance against President Donald Trump that led to the Democrat stepping aside as presidential candidate was the result of him taking Ambien due to his travel. "And I'll tell you what, I know exactly what happened in that debate. He (Joe Biden) flew around the world, basically the mileage he could have flown around the world three times. He's 81 years old. He's tired as shit," the former president's son said in an interview released on Monday with YouTube creator Andrew Callaghan. "They give him Ambien to be able to sleep. He gets up on the stage and he looks like he's a deer in the headlights," Hunter Biden added. Ambien is a medication used for short-term treatment of sleeping problems. Joe Biden's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment late on Monday. The former president prepared at Camp David with his aides for several days for the debate. Prior to being at Camp David, the Democrat took two European trips and was on the U.S. West Coast for a fundraiser. The former president's debate performance against then-Republican presidential candidate Trump, in which the Democrat regularly struggled to finish his thoughts, triggered a backlash against Biden's candidacy for the 2024 elections. Less than a month after that June 27, 2024, debate, Biden stepped aside as presidential candidate after having trailed Trump in the polls. Former Vice President Kamala Harris then became the candidate for the Democrats and went on to lose to Trump in the November elections. In the days after the debate, the former president blamed his debate performance on jet lag after two overseas trips earlier that month. In the interview released on Monday, Hunter Biden also expressed frustration with Democratic voices, strategists and lawmakers who abandoned his father's candidacy following the debate. (Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Paul Thomasch and Stephen Coates)

Hunter Biden suggests Joe Biden's disastrous debate was due to Ambien

Hunter Biden suggests Joe Biden's disastrous debate was due to Ambien By Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Former President Joe Bide...
Hunter Biden suggests Ambien might be to blame for father's disastrous debateNew Foto - Hunter Biden suggests Ambien might be to blame for father's disastrous debate

Hunter Biden, during aninterviewwith YouTube host Andrew Callaghan released on Monday, said his father, former PresidentJoe Biden, was taking the sleep aid Ambien and suggested that could have been to blame for his disastrous debate againstDonald Trumpthat ultimately resulted in him stepping away from his re-election bid. "I'll tell you what, I know exactly what happened in that debate. He flew around the world, basically, and the mileage that he could have flown around the world three times. He's 81 years old. He's tired as s***. They give him Ambien to be able to sleep. He gets up on stage and he looks like he's a deer in the headlights. And it feeds into f****** story that anybody wants to tell," Hunter Biden said on the YouTube show "Channel 5 with Andrew Callaghan." Hunter Biden later told ABC News' Jonathan Karl he was not saying that his father was taking Ambien immediately before the debate -- he was making a point about his travel schedule in the weeks before the debate. "I have no idea whether or not he used Ambien while traveling through multiple times zones in the weeks leading up to the debate. My point was that his debate performance was completely out of character then and now, he said." The former president's team declined to comment to ABC News. Hunter Biden continued to forcefully push back on any assertion that there was some sort of cover-up of his father's condition, and said that progressives rushed to his father's side to laud his agenda in the fallout of that debate. He claimed that, at first, Nancy Pelosi was the lone voice doubting Joe Biden's place on the Democratic ticket. "If this was a conspiracy … somehow the entirety of a White House in which you literally living on top of each other has kept their mouth shut, about, you know…and what's the conspiracy? That Joe Biden got old? Yeah, he got old. He got old before our eyes," Hunter Biden said. He continued: "The people that came out against him were who? Nobody, except Speaker Pelosi, emeritus. Speaker Emeritus Pelosi did not give a full-throated endorsement, which allowed everyone else to go 'Ok.' Except who came out full-throated? Progressives, AOC, Bernie, the entire progressive wing. Ro Khanna. The entire progressive side of the Democratic Party said Joe Biden has got more of our agenda accomplished in four years than any president in history." Pelosi's office declined to comment to ABC News. MORE: Biden falters in high-stakes debate, Trump spews falsehoods Along with discussing his father's debate performance, Hunter Biden also denied that the bag of cocaine found in the White House complex back in 2023 belonged to him. A suspectwas never identifiedby the Secret Service. "There's this conflation people have. I mean, I think they're opening up an investigation to cocaine that was found in a cubby outside the West Wing of the White House," Hunter Biden said. Hunter Biden said that since the incident occurred while his father was president, he was immediately targeted. "They're literally going to do an FBI -- another congressional investigation because they're convinced themselves that it had to be me. That there was a little tiny … I guess my point of view on bringing it up is that, no, I have been clean and sober since June of 2019, and I have not touched a drop of alcohol or drug and I'm incredibly proud of that," Hunter Biden said. He denied that the drugs were his. MORE: Photos show cocaine found inside White House complex in July "Why would I bring cocaine to the White House, stick it into a cubby outside the situation room in the West Wing? When I wasn't there anyway. I mean, who the f*** knows?" Hunter Biden said. Hunter Biden then said he found it ironic that he was questioned about his drug and alcohol addiction by former Rep. Matt Gaetz during closed-door dispositions on Capitol Hill, as Gaetz wasalso embroiledin drug and sex scandals. "I demanded that they do it in public, and they refused .... Matt Gaetz, of all people, was giving me s*** about my drug use. I said, 'Really? All the people at this table, you're going to talk to me about my addiction and my alcoholism?'" Hunter Biden said. In a statement to ABC News, Gaetz responded, "It is a real shame that the Republican Congress never issued a subpoena to Hunter Biden for live testimony in public. It's also still troubling to me that Republicans in congress allowed Hunter to testify absent the video recording we usually make of witnesses. These would have been great moments for the country to see. The transcripts don't do them justice. Hunter tried to use references to his drug use to avoid accountability for his international shake down business. I hope he's enjoying his pardon." Hunter Biden spoke with Callaghan for over three hours in a wide-ranging conversation. -ABC News' Will Steakin contributed to this report.

Hunter Biden suggests Ambien might be to blame for father's disastrous debate

Hunter Biden suggests Ambien might be to blame for father's disastrous debate Hunter Biden, during aninterviewwith YouTube host Andrew C...

 

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