They were in a prior story but I don't recall anybody being this specific, 13 calls of at least 5 minutes in length, and several more calls that were not counted because they were 1 minute or less. If you just do the minimum that means at least 15 calls between Miller and Dawkins, I don't think I ever saw that number in the prior story.
The other part that's pretty clearly new IMO is that the defense tried to submit these calls into the trial that just ended as evidence but the judge denied it. In their submission they said Sean Miller was identified by the FBI as one of the "targets" in their wire tap requests. That doesn't mean TJ isn't right and there's no content in the taps that's bad, but when they submitted the paperwork to get permission to do the wiretaps, Sean Miller was one of the people they identified as a "target". I sure don't recall ever reading that before. They also pointed out for some reason there's many other calls between Miller and Dawkins that were not actually wiretapped, they don't explain why, sounds like some sort of glitch, but the 15 number is only the ones they actually successfully wiretapped, there were more.
Yes lots of coaches probably talked to Dawkins, he was brokering a kid they all wanted, of course they talked to him. But the Scheer(sic) number of calls between Dawkins and Miller has to make you wonder if this is literally a coach saying over and over I really like that player, we can find room for him to get minutes even if Trier comes back, and then finally when asked to pay money to get Bowen, Miller said oh no we don't do that. Miller said after the ESPN story that the only time he ever discussed money with someone for a player was when someone asked him to pay for a kid, he said no, and the kid didn't go to Arizona. Arizona fans insist that kid was Bowen. Everyone likes to point out that nobody has released a tape or transcript of Miller breaking any rules yet, I would also add nobody has released a tape of him being asked to pay Bowen and saying no. That would have been EXTREMELY relevant in the last case if it existed since the defense was trying to prove coaches knew what was going on. The 2 best ways to prove that were have a coach on tape agreeing to pay a kid, or have a coach on tape being asked for money and saying no.
I think it's odd how sunk in ESPN is on this. this story is literally Schlabach's career, it either is the story that pushes his career forward, or gets him fired. He clearly thinks he's right, it's odd he's going to this length but clearly ESPN believes he's right too or they wouldn't be letting him do this. I think they're smart enough to know all the hits from people reading the story won't matter if Schlabach is wrong.
It's going to be fascinating to see how it turns out.