Sunday, July 29, 2012

The NCAA almost flushed Penn State down the toilet


The NCAA — especially — and Little 12 —by agreeing with the NCAA — nearly flushed Penn State down the toilet. Stopping short of giving them the dreaded Death Penalty ala SMU, both organizations hit the school’s football program where it hurts the most: in the pocket book and in scholarships and probations. Huge fines, no sharing of Little 12 bowl money, 80 scholarships gone over 4 years, no postseason bowl or playing in Little 12 title games for 4 years — that should be enough to reduce the Nittany Lions to the MAC’s level like Ball State, Kent State or Eastern Michigan for many years to come. Penn State hockey might end up being the number one sport on campus someday. I say that only because the men’s basketball program has been lousy for what seems to be an eternity. Come to think of it, Penn State has a great women’s volleyball program. That may be the sport Penn State fans will decide to hang their hats on in the near future.

The NCAA also trashed Joe Paterno’s now proven sullied reputation by making the program vacate 111 of his wins during the time Jerry Sandusky was raping kids in Penn State football team showers and other places, fondling them in cars, etc., while Paterno and the rest of the suits there were scheming to keep Sandusky’s degenerate behavior hidden in a locked desk drawer. All the MAC schools that lost to Paterno from 1998 to today will gain a victory except the Rockets. You may remember in 2000 when Gary Pinkel whipped the old man, 24-6. That was a solid beating TU gave the old man on September 3 in Happy Valley. Until then, Penn State had never lost to a MAC opponent. The Rockets never were behind in the game. Chester Taylor ran for 141 yards, including 2 touchdowns, and Tavares Bolden threw for 140 yards and a touchdown for the good guys. The Rockets had not beaten such a highly regarded opponent since opening the 1997 season with a 36-22 victory over Purdue. And the win over Paterno stood as the Rockets’ greatest victory until they beat then number 9- ranked Pitt in the Glass Bowl in 2003, 35-31. I still regard UT’s 13-10 win over Michigan as the greatest victory in the Rockets’ program, only because it was against the team that always reminds us non-Michigan fans that the Wolverines have the most wins in college football.

Penn State got what it deserved in avoiding the death penalty, which was going to take place if they didn’t take the NCAA deal of scholarship losses, bowl bans, etc. It could have even had the NCAA strip four nonconference games from a future schedule, say 2016, as an example of making it an even a harsher punishment short of being dead for a season or more. Their fans can whine all about the nuances of the penalties and live the rest of their lives in denial. One of their big excuses is that there was no precedent for the NCAA to act this way. How does precedent get set if there isn’t a crime or other egregious immoral, unethical, etc., behavior for it? This is new NCAA precedent. That’s how courts and other bodies of government or organizations like the NCAA set precedent in real life. They will have to deal with their punishment in the same way as all other schools do. The suits who covered up the scandal should be given jail cells next to Sandusky for the next 20 years, while Jerry rots there for the rest of his disgusting life. If Paterno is spinning in his grave, so be it.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

The NCAA should flush Penn State down the toilet...


The Freeh Report on the Penn State scandal damages Joe Paterno and guts him like a filleted trout. The damage is irreparable. Contrary to popular rabid PSU fan and Paterno family belief in Happy Valley, the greedy JoePa (he was negotiating a contract boost while knowing Sandusky’s crimes were public knowledge) was in on all the conversations about what to do with Sandusky the child raper. There is a lot of cognitive dissonance going on there in that town and across the country with diehard Nittany Lion fans. JoePa knew full well what was going on in football shower rooms and in Sandusky’s basement with those poor kids. His pristine image and legacy are tainted with this scandal. The school is going to take it in the nuts from the families of those boys. They are owed big money for what their sons had to endure from that slimy bucket of puke.

The football program needs a huge slap down, too. The Big 10 and/or the NCAA must weigh in on this gross lack of institutional control and blatant, deliberate cover-up of Sandusky’s crimes. Heavy penalties should be meted out: 5 years of not playing in the Little 12’s championship game followed by a 5-year bowl ban, loss of 30+ scholarships over 3 or 4 years, 10 years probation, 2 years off TV, etc. And that comes after the entire program being closed down for the 2013 season. The players on that roster can be told they can leave to go to another D-I school without losing a year of playing time. Football then resumes in 2014 in Unhappy Valley. The Nit Lion fans can blame the disintegration of their program on JoePa, the school prez, the A.D. who was JoePa’s lap puppy and coffee server, and the other vice-president who covered up the scandal with them. For added measure to blast Paterno, the football program should have to forfeit every one of JoePa’s wins after the 1999 season. The Tressel tattoo and memorabilia for sale scandal at Ohio State pales in overall comparison and magnitude to the decade of shameful criminal behavior going on at Penn State…in the locker room, Sandusky’s basement and in the school president’s and athletic director’s offices. Penn State must pay for its moral bankruptcy.