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No, the problem is you are basing your entire theory off a conspiracy theory -- an unsupported rumor that makes no sense a year later.Well he was lined up as a TE, not a wideout, as he was lined up directly next to the LT. Again, you can't deduce tendencies from a play that's never been run out of a formation that has never been used without knowing ahead of time what it is.
Also, in the statement you linked, I see nothing at all stating they didn't find anything football-related on his computer. It simply states that investigation was unrelated, which is true because that specific investigation was initiated because he was committing cybercrimes.
Problem here is you've called everything you don't like a conspiracy or something along those lines. Remember when you said Stallions on the CMU sidelines was a conspiracy? The NCAA has evidence it's true. Remember when you said Stallions acted as a "lone wolf" and nobody else knew? The NCAA has evidence that multiple team interns and at least one staff member knew about it. Also if this idea that they had our practice footage is so outrageous, why did Stallions remove servers from the team's offices in 2023? What could have possibly been on those servers? But sure, alleging that the offensive coordinator who was found guilty of cybercrimes related to hacking could have never hacked OSU's practice film. That's just insane. Just like every other thing that has turned out to be true, right?
There is a legitimate explanation for this and it's simple -- Michigan made a good play and scouted Ohio State well.
Yes, a lot of this came out and came out quick. And some of it seemed silly to start. But we're a year out. If Michigan was hacking Ohio State this wouldn't be sealed still.