I know there are a lot of PSU articles, but I thought this was a great piece by Reilly that was worthy of sharing.
Rick Reilly: Joe Paterno's True Legacy - ESPN
Rick Reilly: Joe Paterno's True Legacy - ESPN
I have a question and will repeat it until I get an answer.
What was it about Jerry Sandusky that Joe PA and the all powerful at Penn State covered up for him and even allowed him to roam around the football facilities?
Was it because he was this defensive coordinating genius that contributed to all of the wins... couldn't be re-placed?
Was it because he snowed eveyrbody (obviously he did) about his charity and his almost 24/7 care and concern for young boys?
Still have no clue.
How in the hell did he get the greatest all term retirement package for a serial sexual predator to allow him to continue?
The more I read about this situation, the more I am starting think the only thing that can save PSU is for the NCAA to give them the death penalty. No way the boosters are going to let them do what needs to be done to heal and fix the toxic environment.
I have a question and will repeat it until I get an answer.
What was it about Jerry Sandusky that Joe PA and the all powerful at Penn State covered up for him and even allowed him to roam around the football facilities?
Was it because he was this defensive coordinating genius that contributed to all of the wins... couldn't be re-placed?
Was it because he snowed eveyrbody (obviously he did) about his charity and his almost 24/7 care and concern for young boys?
Still have no clue.
How in the hell did he get the greatest all term retirement package for a serial sexual predator to allow him to continue?
Bingo...this is exactly right. This is a very proud fan base and I think most would give them a pass on this with minimal sanctions. The University system failed in an epic way and the level of criminal behavior is beyond a self imposed penalty.
http://www.journalgazette.net/article/20120714/SPORTS02/307149945/1085/SPORTS03The departures of Paterno, Curley, Schultz, and Spanier were necessary but not sufficient. Consider that after Sandusky was indicted on sex crimes charges, Penn State’s general counsel Cynthia Baldwin advised Spanier that it was a bad idea to appoint a body to investigate the school’s athletic programs. “If we do this, we will never get rid of this group,” Baldwin said. Even after it became clear that athletic department officials allowed Sandusky’s predation to continue, the school’s top legal mind was worried that Penn State’s sports teams would be subject to too much oversight.
That shocking attitude – we sheltered a child molester for a decade, but that doesn’t mean we should answer to anyone – makes it seem like benching football is the only way to help Penn State help itself. On Twitter on Thursday, Penn State alum Jason Fagone listed reasons why the football team shouldn’t get obliterated: It would destroy every other athletic team football finances, it could force Penn State to drop out of the Big Ten, it could decrease state appropriations. Considering Penn State had its second-best fundraising year ever in 2011-12 ($209 million), I don’t believe those predictions would come to pass. But in the worst world, Penn State would do itself a favor by figuring out how to survive without football.
If Penn State did decide to have the football team take a few years off, they would still be morally obligated to honor the players’ scholarships if they chose to stay. They would also likely be compelled to the NCAA to allow them to transfer without penalty. And the Nittany Lions’ program would be forced to rebuild itself from the ground up.
Shuttering Beaver Stadium for two years would take Penn State football down a peg. It would also punish loads of hard-working athletes who have done nothing wrong, as well as all the fans. But that will be a far better than allowing a pedophile-sheltering athletic department that was bent on self-preservation to have itself preserved. If Penn State football carries on this fall, then the worldviews of Curley and Schultz and Spanier and Paterno will prevail. Though all four men lost their jobs, their mission to protect Penn State football at all costs will win out in the end.