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Non-horrible Sandusky thread to discuss PSU sanctions (2 Viewers)

For those saying PSU didn't gain any advantage, why did they all cover it up then? If they didn't think that doing the right thing would have hurt them in some way, they wouldn't have all covered it up to begin with.
This is my take as well. Of course they gained a competitive advantage. I don't think anybody expects them to win as easily going forward now with the sanctions just administered. The same would have held true had the come clean 10+ years ago and faced punishments.
:confused:What punishment would they have received if Sandusky was just reported to the police and a proper investigation occurred?In 1998 there was a police investigation and no charges brought. There was a police report on file with the department. There was no cover-up then. It was out there with the police, child services, a therapist and investigators not involved with PSU.
 
As a final point....nobody defending PSU is defending what happened, or the individuals concerned. I am in no way trying to minimize the harm. I'm a victim of this kind of abuse myself, and there's no way in heck I would want to punish the rest of my family for what my uncle did to me or my siblings.
First off, I'm sorry to hear about your prior abuse. I do think you can offer a different perspective to this.Question. If your parents had discovered what he was doing to you, but decided it wasn't in the family's best interest to turn him in, wuold that change your opinion?
Yes...it would, and in one case, did. But family isn't just mom and dad...it's brothers and sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles, grandparents. The family I speak of at PSU isn't just Paterno or the AD. It's the fans, the players, the alumni. Those who didn't know shouldn't suffer one iota of punitive damages....not for something like this. We don't need to make an example of PSU because nobody, anywhere, would defend what these few people did. Penn Staters are hurt by what these family members did (those of us who have come to accept that they happened, that Joepa lied...other may need more time to accepot this, they may need the Frey report to be verified, etc.) We don't need people from outside to spank us too. The family is victimized by the actions of one of it's own doing something like this...the families heart bleeds for it. Many Penn Staters were hurt by this BEFORE NCAA sanctions...we don't need you or the NCAA rubbing more salt in wounds we didn't cause.
 
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:hey: That's me and I stand by my statements. Just because a bunch of Alabama people think it's important doesn't make it so. You college football fanboys are a big problem with college football.
Us college fanboys are what is right with college football and what keeps college football so great. I figured you wouldn't understand. Go back to your ivory tower. I bet you have never played any competitive sport past JV.
BURN!~
WTF does that mean, ToughGuy?
 
:hey: That's me and I stand by my statements. Just because a bunch of Alabama people think it's important doesn't make it so. You college football fanboys are a big problem with college football.
Us college fanboys are what is right with college football and what keeps college football so great. I figured you wouldn't understand. Go back to your ivory tower. I bet you have never played any competitive sport past JV.
BURN!~
WTF does that mean, ToughGuy?
it means you totally shredded the dude, dude. totally~!
 
:hey: That's me and I stand by my statements. Just because a bunch of Alabama people think it's important doesn't make it so. You college football fanboys are a big problem with college football.
Us college fanboys are what is right with college football and what keeps college football so great. I figured you wouldn't understand. Go back to your ivory tower. I bet you have never played any competitive sport past JV.
BURN!~
WTF does that mean, ToughGuy?
it means you totally shredded the dude, dude. totally~!
Oh. Sorry. I thought you were poking at me.I don't want to come off as being an ### or anything. I was just trying to make a few points that the wins mean alot to the players and fans, who had nothing to do with this horrible tradegy.

 
I enjoy seeing CFB fans cry, rage, and taunt each other. And for that reason alone, I wanted PSU's fottball program beheaded.

 
As a final point....nobody defending PSU is defending what happened, or the individuals concerned. I am in no way trying to minimize the harm. I'm a victim of this kind of abuse myself, and there's no way in heck I would want to punish the rest of my family for what my uncle did to me or my siblings.
First off, I'm sorry to hear about your prior abuse. I do think you can offer a different perspective to this.Question. If your parents had discovered what he was doing to you, but decided it wasn't in the family's best interest to turn him in, wuold that change your opinion?
Yes...it would, and in one case, did. But family isn't just mom and dad...it's brothers and sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles, grandparents. The family I speak of at PSU isn't just Paterno or the AD. It's the fans, the players, the alumni. Those who didn't know shouldn't suffer one iota of punitive damages....not for something like this. We don't need to make an example of PSU because nobody, anywhere, would defend what these few people did. Penn Staters are hurt by what these family members did (those of us who have come to accept that they happened, that Joepa lied...other may need more time to accepot this, they may need the Frey report to be verified, etc.) We don't need people from outside to spank us too. The family is victimized by the actions of one of it's own doing something like this...the families heart bleeds for it. Many Penn Staters were hurt by this BEFORE NCAA sanctions...we don't need you or the NCAA rubbing more salt in wounds we didn't cause.
But how is that different from any other time the NCAA imposes penalties?

NCAA penalties harm those who did not engage in the behavior that caused the sanctions. That's what they do. To disagree is to say the NCAA should never enforce any penalties ever, because they always harm those who didn't behave wrongly. That's a fine position to take, but you can't act like Penn State fans and current players or staff are being unfairly harmed any more so than the fans /current players of any other program that's been the subject of sanctions.

 
I think the fact PSU has already agreed to the sanctions should quiet the "absurd" snarky comments. To my mind there's really no penalty too severe, and the only reason I've heard against laying down the hammer was that it would create undue harm to the existing student athletes. By letting them leave without NCAA restriction and/or maintaining their scholarships without playing, I think the NCAA has effectively addressed that concern.

I'm not sure I quite understand vacating the wins -- but I've never understood going back and removing wins. Everyone remembers the games as they happened, and it's not like those changes are going to have an impact on the kids who played in the games or the career trajectories of the coaches involved.
Strongly disagree. PSU fans are furious with those who knew and were silent...many are even coming around to blast Paterno. Sanctions like this punish every person, every fan, every alum when in the end, only a HANDFUL of people knew and kept silent.

People need heros...people need role models to look up to. Paterno was held up by EVERYONE...not just PSU...as a hero and role model. It is unreasonable unconscionable to punish every person associated with PSU because of the illegal actions of a few....and it's even more so to do so in this way when those actions provided minimal assistance to the football program.

I understand the outrage...but this punishment is over the top absurd. It's punishing the wrong (#($& people.
No, it's punishing Penn St.'s athletic program and the institution. As it should.
 
Taking away wins keeps the focus on Joepa and his tranished legacy rather than keeping the focus where it should be.
I dunno... I think it is important to focus on everything. The monsters who did it/enabled it and the victims. It doesnt have to be one or the other. Hopefully the Paterno family suffers through as many years of shame, as they have spent basking in the fraudulant greatness of that scumbag. It's just too bad he croaked before he could share in it.
 
As a final point....nobody defending PSU is defending what happened, or the individuals concerned. I am in no way trying to minimize the harm. I'm a victim of this kind of abuse myself, and there's no way in heck I would want to punish the rest of my family for what my uncle did to me or my siblings.
First off, I'm sorry to hear about your prior abuse. I do think you can offer a different perspective to this.Question. If your parents had discovered what he was doing to you, but decided it wasn't in the family's best interest to turn him in, wuold that change your opinion?
Yes...it would, and in one case, did. But family isn't just mom and dad...it's brothers and sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles, grandparents. The family I speak of at PSU isn't just Paterno or the AD. It's the fans, the players, the alumni. Those who didn't know shouldn't suffer one iota of punitive damages....not for something like this. We don't need to make an example of PSU because nobody, anywhere, would defend what these few people did. Penn Staters are hurt by what these family members did (those of us who have come to accept that they happened, that Joepa lied...other may need more time to accepot this, they may need the Frey report to be verified, etc.) We don't need people from outside to spank us too. The family is victimized by the actions of one of it's own doing something like this...the families heart bleeds for it. Many Penn Staters were hurt by this BEFORE NCAA sanctions...we don't need you or the NCAA rubbing more salt in wounds we didn't cause.
The guilt by association comes into play here, though. It's unfortunate, but it happens everywhere. You don't go to war with just a country's leaders - you go to war with a country (and most folks you are shooting at are simply cogs in the wheel.)The "entire culture" is guilty here, even the ones standing on the sidelines. And in a larger way, the culture of college football athletics is guilty. The whole system where the program is bigger than any one person/victim/crime. The alumni and the rabid fans are guilty by association, because they help create a culture where things like this are swept under the rug in hopes they will just go away. It's not their fault personally, mind you. It is what it is.

This penalty is aimed not just at Penn State - in a broad way, it's aimed at all football factories, iconic coaches, etc. It's a loud and clear message that this kind of thing cannot happen again anywhere.

 
How are these in any way absurd? If anything, these are wholly and completely inadequate and the NCAA really chickened out here.

USC got basically 3 years of probation (3 years of reduced scholarships, 2 year post season ban) for putting an athlete's parents up in a nice house. 11 years of covering up child rape so you could go on making money is worth one more year than that? What a joke.

The idea that the death penalty would hurt the people that weren't involved was always stupid. There's a word for that. It's called life, and it's not always fair. When corporate executives screw up and run a company out of business all the low level workers that had nothing to do with that lose their jobs as well. The ability to transfer without penalty will take care of that anyway. Hopefully the majority of the athletes that are still there will at least do the right thing and get out of there anyway.

This needed to be something that scared all universities into realizing that football isn't more important than doing what's right. A 4 year probation is going to have zero effect on that. The NCAA doles out probations all the time and other universities continue to break the same rules. It doesn't scare anyone off. Teams bounce back from probation strong as ever. Florida went from probation to a 15 year run in the top 5. USC is the preseason #1 team their first year off it.

$60 million dollar fine? 1 year's gross revenue? The point is that money is not greater than doing what's right, so take away all the money they made from not having that very simple value. Fine them the profits they made between 2001-2012, the period where they covered up what was going on, even if it takes them 20 years to pay it off.

####ies.
Huh? This is the first year of the sanctions for Southern Cal, but the effects probably won't be felt for another year or two, provided their players all stay healthy.
 
How are these in any way absurd? If anything, these are wholly and completely inadequate and the NCAA really chickened out here.

USC got basically 3 years of probation (3 years of reduced scholarships, 2 year post season ban) for putting an athlete's parents up in a nice house. 11 years of covering up child rape so you could go on making money is worth one more year than that? What a joke.
USC violated NCAA rules and therefore got punished by the NCAA. PSU did not actually violate any NCAA rules. That's why some of us think it's absurd that they're facing NCAA sanctions.
This needed to be something that scared all universities into realizing that football isn't more important than doing what's right.
Having senior administrators serve prison time doesn't accomplish this?
Sure they did. Articles 2.4 and 10.1 of the NCAA constitution command ethical conduct on behalf of coaches and others associated with athletic programs, and 2.4 expansively states, "These values should be manifest not only in athletics participation, but also in the broad spectrum of activities affecting the athletics program."

How do you figure they didn't violate any NCAA rules? There is no specific rule related to cover-ups, but this fits perfectly into those two bylaws.

 
I think the fact PSU has already agreed to the sanctions should quiet the "absurd" snarky comments. To my mind there's really no penalty too severe, and the only reason I've heard against laying down the hammer was that it would create undue harm to the existing student athletes. By letting them leave without NCAA restriction and/or maintaining their scholarships without playing, I think the NCAA has effectively addressed that concern.

I'm not sure I quite understand vacating the wins -- but I've never understood going back and removing wins. Everyone remembers the games as they happened, and it's not like those changes are going to have an impact on the kids who played in the games or the career trajectories of the coaches involved.
Strongly disagree. PSU fans are furious with those who knew and were silent...many are even coming around to blast Paterno. Sanctions like this punish every person, every fan, every alum when in the end, only a HANDFUL of people knew and kept silent.

People need heros...people need role models to look up to. Paterno was held up by EVERYONE...not just PSU...as a hero and role model. It is unreasonable unconscionable to punish every person associated with PSU because of the illegal actions of a few....and it's even more so to do so in this way when those actions provided minimal assistance to the football program.

I understand the outrage...but this punishment is over the top absurd. It's punishing the wrong (#($& people.
This culture IS the problem. Paterno and the program was larger than life to too many people and that's why they covered this up. And that's why it needed to be dismantled.
 
Let me try to articulate this another way.1. It's absurd to try to punish the culture of PSU because that culture is no different than it is at virtually every school with a big time football program. You can't fix it by singling out one school.2. Any competitive advantage gained by PSU on the actual football field was minimal. Had the right thing been done at the right time, the damage to the school and football program would have been small. Because there would have been damage...I can see the argument that the NCAA could and should levy punishment...but the crimes were individual ones not directly related to football. Punishments for violations like this should be in line with the real "advantage" (or, in this case, averted damage) gained, not overly punitive.3. The crimes in this case really were limited to a handful of people...and are being handled by the courts. People who had nothing to do with it, and more importantly, gained nothing from the cover up, are being punished. That's not justice. Cowherd said this better than me.As a final point....nobody defending PSU is defending what happened, or the individuals concerned. I am in no way trying to minimize the harm. I'm a victim of this kind of abuse myself, and there's no way in heck I would want to punish the rest of my family for what my uncle did to me or my siblings.
1. The culture at PSU WAS different in that Paterno was a demigod, who was both a kindly old man and a guy who based on the Freeh report and other information, indicates that this situation may well have been unique to Penn State. He was "too old" to "understand" what McQueary said was a common defense of Paterno in the early going, and then it became "this kind of thing wasn't talked about" in his day. But most importantly, the sanctimonious positioning of the "grand experiment" and this narrative don't go together. Paterno being Paterno and PSU being PSU may well have fostered this coverup.3. A handful of people. I mean, I don't even know how to justify this one, we do have great reason to believe that many people who are molested go on to molest. This is an exponential problem well beyond a handful. You are PRECISELY trying to minimize this. I'm sorry what you've endured but frankly, it sounds like reasoning after the fact to justify the PSU case. Your family member was wrong, but if someone knew, could help, and did not, that is a wrong on par with that in my mind.
 
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Christo, who is a lawyer, has made the assertion that had Penn State chosen to challenge this in court, they would have won, since he is confident that the NCAA does not have the legal power to invoke sanctions in this instance.Curious as to whether anyone agrees with this.
He is wrong. And, I find myself agreeing with Christo more often than not on this board.
 
As a final point....nobody defending PSU is defending what happened, or the individuals concerned. I am in no way trying to minimize the harm. I'm a victim of this kind of abuse myself, and there's no way in heck I would want to punish the rest of my family for what my uncle did to me or my siblings.
First off, I'm sorry to hear about your prior abuse. I do think you can offer a different perspective to this.Question. If your parents had discovered what he was doing to you, but decided it wasn't in the family's best interest to turn him in, wuold that change your opinion?
Yes...it would, and in one case, did. But family isn't just mom and dad...it's brothers and sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles, grandparents. The family I speak of at PSU isn't just Paterno or the AD. It's the fans, the players, the alumni. Those who didn't know shouldn't suffer one iota of punitive damages....not for something like this. We don't need to make an example of PSU because nobody, anywhere, would defend what these few people did. Penn Staters are hurt by what these family members did (those of us who have come to accept that they happened, that Joepa lied...other may need more time to accepot this, they may need the Frey report to be verified, etc.) We don't need people from outside to spank us too. The family is victimized by the actions of one of it's own doing something like this...the families heart bleeds for it. Many Penn Staters were hurt by this BEFORE NCAA sanctions...we don't need you or the NCAA rubbing more salt in wounds we didn't cause.
But how is that different from any other time the NCAA imposes penalties?

NCAA penalties harm those who did not engage in the behavior that caused the sanctions. That's what they do. To disagree is to say the NCAA should never enforce any penalties ever, because they always harm those who didn't behave wrongly. That's a fine position to take, but you can't act like Penn State fans and current players or staff are being unfairly harmed any more so than the fans /current players of any other program that's been the subject of sanctions.
At least in those other cases there was no other punishments to happen. Without those punishments, those were did wrong would have had NO PUNISHMENT, and other schools would have purposefully turned a blind eye to violations. There was a very real purpose of warning and deterrance involved. Those violators lost their jobs and personal prestige....but so did the officials involved at PSU. Did this case NEED a warning? Do we really need NCAA deterance to other schools not to cover up real crimes? Do schools really need a deterance to keep them form turning a blind eye to something like this? I really don't think so...this is not an institutional thing, it's an individual thing. Those involved are being punished by the law far worse than anything the NCAA can do. They already lost their jobs and prestige. The NCAAs sanctions have no teeth in the area of deterance, and are not remotely punitive to the people who most deserve to be punished. They satisfy a blood lust because society wants more than the heads of those who did this. We want to punish their families too..and that is NOT justice.

 
How are these in any way absurd? If anything, these are wholly and completely inadequate and the NCAA really chickened out here.



USC got basically 3 years of probation (3 years of reduced scholarships, 2 year post season ban) for putting an athlete's parents up in a nice house. 11 years of covering up child rape so you could go on making money is worth one more year than that? What a joke.

The idea that the death penalty would hurt the people that weren't involved was always stupid. There's a word for that. It's called life, and it's not always fair. When corporate executives screw up and run a company out of business all the low level workers that had nothing to do with that lose their jobs as well. The ability to transfer without penalty will take care of that anyway. Hopefully the majority of the athletes that are still there will at least do the right thing and get out of there anyway.

This needed to be something that scared all universities into realizing that football isn't more important than doing what's right. A 4 year probation is going to have zero effect on that. The NCAA doles out probations all the time and other universities continue to break the same rules. It doesn't scare anyone off. Teams bounce back from probation strong as ever. Florida went from probation to a 15 year run in the top 5. USC is the preseason #1 team their first year off it.

$60 million dollar fine? 1 year's gross revenue? The point is that money is not greater than doing what's right, so take away all the money they made from not having that very simple value. Fine them the profits they made between 2001-2012, the period where they covered up what was going on, even if it takes them 20 years to pay it off.

####ies.
USC didn't even have anything to do with it. It was an outside person who wanted to be in business and/or represent Bush he left SC. The house issue had nothing to do with getting or keeping Bush at USC, yet the still got the postseason ban.
Sure they did. Todd McNair, the RB coach, knew about it and knew about Mike Ornstein.
 
Can't believe people are saying this is not enough.This is a very significant penalty to the school in terms of money, prestige, and ability to recruit/compete over the next few years. It takes a swipe at JoePa by knocking off the wins - which I am sure was the only reason for vacating the wins back to '98.This punishes the school and the program. The criminal course can punish the individuals.
:goodposting: And to the guy that says "taking away Joe Pa's wins are only for stupid people" doesn't know crap about college football. Some people worship these coaches. Go to Alabama and say something about Bear Bryant and you are liable to get shot.
:hey: That's me and I stand by my statements. Just because a bunch of Alabama people think it's important doesn't make it so. You college football fanboys are a big problem with college football.
Us college fanboys are what is right with college football and what keeps college football so great. I figured you wouldn't understand. Go back to your ivory tower. I bet you have never played any competitive sport past JV.
Looking back on my responses I think I have been unnecessarily baiting and insulting the passionate fans of college football teams and I apologize for it.
KNOW YOUR ROLE IVORY TOWER NERD!....FOOTBALL!!!!!!
 
Christo, who is a lawyer, has made the assertion that had Penn State chosen to challenge this in court, they would have won, since he is confident that the NCAA does not have the legal power to invoke sanctions in this instance.Curious as to whether anyone agrees with this.
He is wrong. And, I find myself agreeing with Christo more often than not on this board.
Anyone who concludes before the fact that they know for sure how a legal proceeding (especially a request for injunctive relief) would be resolved is wrong. There's too much that's unknown, and in the case of injunctions there's too much subjectivity built into the standard.With the NCAA in particular there's a lot of soft language in their rules and whatnot, and historically a lot of deference from the courts.
 
Penn State must also reduce 10 initial and 20 total scholarships each year for a four-year period. Why does the media keep saying 10 scholarships per year when this statement says 20 Total Scholarships. Kind of lost here is it 10 or 20 and are there different levels of scholarships. I know in some sports you can get a partial scholarship.
They have a cap of 65 (20 scholarship reduction). They lose 10 scholarships to give out for the next four years (15 max). But, it's worse than that because of the 65 cap. If Penn St. is only losing 12 seniors in a season and it will bring them down to 53 players, then Penn St. has a max of 12 scholarships for that year. They can't use the 3 extra they would have otherwise.
 
They have a cap of 65 (20 scholarship reduction). They lose 10 scholarships to give out for the next four years (15 max). But, it's worse than that because of the 65 cap. If Penn St. is only losing 12 seniors in a season and it will bring them down to 53 players, then Penn St. has a max of 12 scholarships for that year. They can't use the 3 extra they would have otherwise.
Is it really possible they would only lose 12 scholarship players in a season? That seems unlikely.
 
Can't believe people are saying this is not enough.This is a very significant penalty to the school in terms of money, prestige, and ability to recruit/compete over the next few years. It takes a swipe at JoePa by knocking off the wins - which I am sure was the only reason for vacating the wins back to '98.This punishes the school and the program. The criminal course can punish the individuals.
:goodposting: And to the guy that says "taking away Joe Pa's wins are only for stupid people" doesn't know crap about college football. Some people worship these coaches. Go to Alabama and say something about Bear Bryant and you are liable to get shot.
:hey: That's me and I stand by my statements. Just because a bunch of Alabama people think it's important doesn't make it so. You college football fanboys are a big problem with college football.
Nothing like a lecture on priorities from the guy with 11,000 posts on a fantasy football board.
 
Can't believe people are saying this is not enough.This is a very significant penalty to the school in terms of money, prestige, and ability to recruit/compete over the next few years. It takes a swipe at JoePa by knocking off the wins - which I am sure was the only reason for vacating the wins back to '98.This punishes the school and the program. The criminal course can punish the individuals.
:goodposting: And to the guy that says "taking away Joe Pa's wins are only for stupid people" doesn't know crap about college football. Some people worship these coaches. Go to Alabama and say something about Bear Bryant and you are liable to get shot.
:hey: That's me and I stand by my statements. Just because a bunch of Alabama people think it's important doesn't make it so. You college football fanboys are a big problem with college football.
Us college fanboys are what is right with college football and what keeps college football so great. I figured you wouldn't understand. Go back to your ivory tower. I bet you have never played any competitive sport past JV.
Looking back on my responses I think I have been unnecessarily baiting and insulting the passionate fans of college football teams and I apologize for it.
KNOW YOUR ROLE IVORY TOWER NERD!....FOOTBALL!!!!!!
lul
 
I think the fact PSU has already agreed to the sanctions should quiet the "absurd" snarky comments.
Not really, no. The NCAA should have had no role in this. The fact that PSU was brow-beaten into accepting these sanctions doesn't change that.
Not only that but this sets a pretty scary precedent for the NCAA. None of the normal procedure followed here.
:goodposting:
They didn't need to because Penn St signed on. They waived their right to normal process.
 
Christo, who is a lawyer, has made the assertion that had Penn State chosen to challenge this in court, they would have won, since he is confident that the NCAA does not have the legal power to invoke sanctions in this instance.Curious as to whether anyone agrees with this.
It's true whether anyone here agrees or not.
 
As a final point....nobody defending PSU is defending what happened, or the individuals concerned. I am in no way trying to minimize the harm. I'm a victim of this kind of abuse myself, and there's no way in heck I would want to punish the rest of my family for what my uncle did to me or my siblings.
First off, I'm sorry to hear about your prior abuse. I do think you can offer a different perspective to this.Question. If your parents had discovered what he was doing to you, but decided it wasn't in the family's best interest to turn him in, wuold that change your opinion?
Yes...it would, and in one case, did. But family isn't just mom and dad...it's brothers and sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles, grandparents. The family I speak of at PSU isn't just Paterno or the AD. It's the fans, the players, the alumni. Those who didn't know shouldn't suffer one iota of punitive damages....not for something like this. We don't need to make an example of PSU because nobody, anywhere, would defend what these few people did. Penn Staters are hurt by what these family members did (those of us who have come to accept that they happened, that Joepa lied...other may need more time to accepot this, they may need the Frey report to be verified, etc.) We don't need people from outside to spank us too. The family is victimized by the actions of one of it's own doing something like this...the families heart bleeds for it. Many Penn Staters were hurt by this BEFORE NCAA sanctions...we don't need you or the NCAA rubbing more salt in wounds we didn't cause.
But how is that different from any other time the NCAA imposes penalties?

NCAA penalties harm those who did not engage in the behavior that caused the sanctions. That's what they do. To disagree is to say the NCAA should never enforce any penalties ever, because they always harm those who didn't behave wrongly. That's a fine position to take, but you can't act like Penn State fans and current players or staff are being unfairly harmed any more so than the fans /current players of any other program that's been the subject of sanctions.
IMO, the NCAA is wrong in all of those cases as well. If it were up to me, the NCAA and all of their rules would be abolished. In this case, there's an added dimension of the NCAA granting some special powers they never had before to apply this punishment.
 
As a final point....nobody defending PSU is defending what happened, or the individuals concerned. I am in no way trying to minimize the harm. I'm a victim of this kind of abuse myself, and there's no way in heck I would want to punish the rest of my family for what my uncle did to me or my siblings.
First off, I'm sorry to hear about your prior abuse. I do think you can offer a different perspective to this.Question. If your parents had discovered what he was doing to you, but decided it wasn't in the family's best interest to turn him in, wuold that change your opinion?
Yes...it would, and in one case, did. But family isn't just mom and dad...it's brothers and sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles, grandparents. The family I speak of at PSU isn't just Paterno or the AD. It's the fans, the players, the alumni. Those who didn't know shouldn't suffer one iota of punitive damages....not for something like this. We don't need to make an example of PSU because nobody, anywhere, would defend what these few people did. Penn Staters are hurt by what these family members did (those of us who have come to accept that they happened, that Joepa lied...other may need more time to accepot this, they may need the Frey report to be verified, etc.) We don't need people from outside to spank us too. The family is victimized by the actions of one of it's own doing something like this...the families heart bleeds for it. Many Penn Staters were hurt by this BEFORE NCAA sanctions...we don't need you or the NCAA rubbing more salt in wounds we didn't cause.
But how is that different from any other time the NCAA imposes penalties?

NCAA penalties harm those who did not engage in the behavior that caused the sanctions. That's what they do. To disagree is to say the NCAA should never enforce any penalties ever, because they always harm those who didn't behave wrongly. That's a fine position to take, but you can't act like Penn State fans and current players or staff are being unfairly harmed any more so than the fans /current players of any other program that's been the subject of sanctions.
IMO, the NCAA is wrong in all of those cases as well. If it were up to me, the NCAA and all of their rules would be abolished. In this case, there's an added dimension of the NCAA granting some special powers they never had before to apply this punishment.
Me too. I'm just saying that you can't make that argument specific to this case. If you support the NCAA (which is getting harder and harder to do, as anyone who's read the Taylor Branch article in the Atlantic last year will tell you), you can't criticize a punishment simply because it harms people other than the wrongdoers. Pretty much every NCAA sanction in its history has harmed people other than the wrongdoers.
 
Listening to some of the folks calling in on local sports radio makes me realize that the cult of Joe is even worse than I thought it was.

 
Listening to some of the folks calling in on local sports radio makes me realize that the cult of Joe is even worse than I thought it was.
Are Paterno fans running out and buying 2012 College Football Almanacs that still list him as having the most wins? :popcorn:
 
They have a cap of 65 (20 scholarship reduction). They lose 10 scholarships to give out for the next four years (15 max). But, it's worse than that because of the 65 cap. If Penn St. is only losing 12 seniors in a season and it will bring them down to 53 players, then Penn St. has a max of 12 scholarships for that year. They can't use the 3 extra they would have otherwise.
Is it really possible they would only lose 12 scholarship players in a season? That seems unlikely.
Sure. It happens a lot when you have coaching turnover. Players from one (or two) classes get pushed out who aren't going to see the field. The incoming coach then uses those scholarships to bring in huge recruiting classes in his first two years. Those scholarships had to come from somewhere, so it results in unbalanced classes.Southern Cal, in their first year of scholarship limits this past season, only took 12 (they could have taken 15). They are now using those three scholarships for early entries in this year's class.
 
Christo, who is a lawyer, has made the assertion that had Penn State chosen to challenge this in court, they would have won, since he is confident that the NCAA does not have the legal power to invoke sanctions in this instance.Curious as to whether anyone agrees with this.
He is wrong. And, I find myself agreeing with Christo more often than not on this board.
Anyone who concludes before the fact that they know for sure how a legal proceeding (especially a request for injunctive relief) would be resolved is wrong. There's too much that's unknown, and in the case of injunctions there's too much subjectivity built into the standard.With the NCAA in particular there's a lot of soft language in their rules and whatnot, and historically a lot of deference from the courts.
I don't know for sure what would have happened with an injunction. You're right. No one does. However, it is crystal clear to me that the NCAA has the power to sanction for these actions. And, I cited at least two of the articles that give them that power above.
 
Christo, who is a lawyer, has made the assertion that had Penn State chosen to challenge this in court, they would have won, since he is confident that the NCAA does not have the legal power to invoke sanctions in this instance.Curious as to whether anyone agrees with this.
It's true whether anyone here agrees or not.
I don't think true means what you think it means.
:goodposting: A lot of things don't mean what Christo thinks they do.
 
So what's the accurate number on scholarship losses? Now I'm hearing 10 this year and 20 each year after that.
10 scholarships per year are lost (so, they can give out a max of 15 out of 25). They are capped at 20 fewer total scholarships for the next four years (putting them at a team of 65 scholarship players (as opposed to everyone other than Southern Cal having 85).
 
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For those saying PSU didn't gain any advantage, why did they all cover it up then? If they didn't think that doing the right thing would have hurt them in some way, they wouldn't have all covered it up to begin with.
Jobs, reputations, pride. Many factors. Those claiming this was simply about protecting PSU football are being naive.
 
For those saying PSU didn't gain any advantage, why did they all cover it up then? If they didn't think that doing the right thing would have hurt them in some way, they wouldn't have all covered it up to begin with.
This is my take as well. Of course they gained a competitive advantage. I don't think anybody expects them to win as easily going forward now with the sanctions just administered. The same would have held true had the come clean 10+ years ago and faced punishments.
That assumes they would have faced punishment 10 years ago. The 1998 incident was investigated by police and prosecutors. The next incident that came to light was 2001. Why would there be sanctions if they reported Sandusky again?
 

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