I see the point, I just think it is a silly one.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
I see the point, I just think it is a silly one.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
I don't think it's lost on us. It's just that in this case, not only is the HC responsible dead, the main perpetrator is already facing lifelong jailtime, the former president and AD are facing serious felony charges. Outside of McQueary and the BoT, don't know of any responsible parties are there at all to punish.The argument that this punishment hurts many others and, thus, shouldn't be allowed holds zero water for me. Why? Because any punishment has similar consequences. When the NCAA levies major sanctions on other programs, it hurts the entire university, its student body, and the alumni. That's the nature of committing a punishable act, it has consequences that extend beyond your own person. Don't blame the NCAA for punishing others, blame Paterno and the other school power brokers -- THEY were the ones who caused this. How is that lost on people?
Great post. I read this article a while back, and it completely changed my thinking on the NCAA.Have you read the article from The Atlantic about the NCAA? It's fascinating, and long. http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2011/10/the-shame-of-college-sports/8643/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.
I don't know enough about the inner workings of the NCAA rules ( and most of them are stupid anyway) to make a a good argument for or against in a courtroom. I would assume that there is enough wiggle room in the by-laws that they can cover this with something.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.
Given that Penn State signed off on this they either have taken the position that there is something that is there, or that they just didn't feel the fight would be worth it in the end. But, there are instances in the emails (from what I've read) in the Freeh report that the football program didn't report every violation, even minor ones. If that is true, the conspiracy, for lack of a better phrase, to do that over a long period of time should certainly be something the NCAA has the power to hammer.Beyond somehow artificially altering a record so somebody else is now the "career wins leader," No. If you can say that enabling Sandusky somehow gave PSU an unfair competitive advantage on the field in those games, then I'd say that I get it...but it's not like that was the case. This had nothing to do with on-field competition.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
Glad they did.This was too huge of a scandal for the NCAA to act just on past precedent. They couldn't let PSU get off because the NCAA hadn't put in rules against this kind of stuff. No one would have predicted something like this could happen.As I understand it both the NCAA Executive Committee and Division I Board of Directors granted Mark Emmert authority to act in this manner, unanimously. Doesn't sound like Emmert is overstepping his bounds to me.![]()
Kick them out of the Big 10 is my hope...those penalties were not harsh enough IMO, so hopefully the Big 10 will drop the hammer.Yeah, don't think that they might not add some additional sanctions on top of this. Maybe no tv or no tv money?Big Ten Conference presser at 11 AM est
It's crushing to the players who went to school there for the last 15 years.I see the point, I just think it is a silly one.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
Well, we know who won. But that will fade, and the record book is forever.Yeah this seems to me like not keeping score. Everyone knows who won we are just pretending. Same thing here.I hadn't put two and two together, but vacating the wins removes JoePa's status as the all time winningest coach. Wow.
That article was posted in an earlier college football thread somewhere on here and it was a wonderful read. I'm really amused to think of Sonny Vaccaro calling all those college presidents "whores" to their faces and them pretty much sitting there thinking, "yeah, he's right."Have you read the article from The Atlantic about the NCAA? It's fascinating, and long. http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2011/10/the-shame-of-college-sports/8643/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.
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.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.
I think they nailed it personally. Very severe and makes a strong statement to anyone from PSU who was hoping this would just go away. They managed to do that while going out of their way to limit the damage done to current players at PSU. They also leave the football program alive so they still have a path forward and can remain a key part of the community right away.A+ from me.Am I the only one that thinks the punishment was fair?
Only the really dumb ones.It's crushing to the players who went to school there for the last 15 years.I see the point, I just think it is a silly one.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
But it had everything to do with "football - and the money it makes - is more important than kids". This essentially says, no, it isn't.Beyond somehow artificially altering a record so somebody else is now the "career wins leader," No. If you can say that enabling Sandusky somehow gave PSU an unfair competitive advantage on the field in those games, then I'd say that I get it...but it's not like that was the case. This had nothing to do with on-field competition.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
I am certain that, before taking this action, the NCAA consulted their in-house attorneys and asked, "Can we do this?" and they received one of two answers:1. Yes, it's within the bylaws.2. We don't know, but it doesn't matter, because Penn State will never challenge.I don't know enough about the inner workings of the NCAA rules ( and most of them are stupid anyway) to make a a good argument for or against in a courtroom. I would assume that there is enough wiggle room in the by-laws that they can cover this with something.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.Given that Penn State signed off on this they either have taken the position that there is something that is there, or that they just didn't feel the fight would be worth it in the end. But, there are instances in the emails (from what I've read) in the Freeh report that the football program didn't report every violation, even minor ones. If that is true, the conspiracy, for lack of a better phrase, to do that over a long period of time should certainly be something the NCAA has the power to hammer.
3. Probably not, but if we get the buy-in from Penn State and the other member institutions, we can.I am certain that, before taking this action, the NCAA consulted their in-house attorneys and asked, "Can we do this?" and they received one of two answers:1. Yes, it's within the bylaws.2. We don't know, but it doesn't matter, because Penn State will never challenge.I don't know enough about the inner workings of the NCAA rules ( and most of them are stupid anyway) to make a a good argument for or against in a courtroom. I would assume that there is enough wiggle room in the by-laws that they can cover this with something.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.Given that Penn State signed off on this they either have taken the position that there is something that is there, or that they just didn't feel the fight would be worth it in the end. But, there are instances in the emails (from what I've read) in the Freeh report that the football program didn't report every violation, even minor ones. If that is true, the conspiracy, for lack of a better phrase, to do that over a long period of time should certainly be something the NCAA has the power to hammer.
If the NCAA hadn't acted, how would that mean that PSU "got off?" They canned their President and AD -- both may be in prison this time next year -- and the university is facing tens of millions of dollars in civil liability. Reading these threads, it's as if people aren't even aware of the existence of the courts.This was too huge of a scandal for the NCAA to act just on past precedent. They couldn't let PSU get off because the NCAA hadn't put in rules against this kind of stuff. No one would have predicted something like this could happen.
The smart ones.So which Division 1 coaches are already in Pennsylvania trying to steal away scholarship players?
You don't think Penn State players that attended in the 00s, you don't think those former players feel the sting today a little bit? I'm surprised you would say this.Only the really dumb ones.It's crushing to the players who went to school there for the last 15 years.I see the point, I just think it is a silly one.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
You can read the initial letter that the NCAA sent to PSU here, with quotes from the bylaws: http://www.psu.edu/ur/2011/NCAA.pdfThe bylaws include about provisions on ethical conduct. I think created enough space for the NCAA to act.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.
Obviously. This was done solely as a punishment to Joe Paterno. Some may think it is lame but it does knock him down as the winning-est coach, something that was very important to him.Beyond somehow artificially altering a record so somebody else is now the "career wins leader," No. If you can say that enabling Sandusky somehow gave PSU an unfair competitive advantage on the field in those games, then I'd say that I get it...but it's not like that was the case. This had nothing to do with on-field competition.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
Of course - and both are basically what we deal with every day in the law. Sometimes it doesn't matter what is right, just or in the statute, but what will someone actually challenge - that balancing act becomes just as important to the law as the actual law being discussed (or in this case the rules).There is also the argument we all hate to deal with in court, and that is the spirit of the rule. If the NCAA exists for what is says it exists for, and the rules it has written are there for the reasons they say they are, then what happened here has to be covered under the spirit of those laws. Forget the rape itself - the institutional cover up based on the football program and its legacy and towering power over the university itself is something that has to be addressed somehow I think. For over a decade the football program acted awfully solely to protect itself and the unviersity allowed it to happen. On some level I don't see that as anything different then what SMU did.I am certain that, before taking this action, the NCAA consulted their in-house attorneys and asked, "Can we do this?" and they received one of two answers:1. Yes, it's within the bylaws.2. We don't know, but it doesn't matter, because Penn State will never challenge.I don't know enough about the inner workings of the NCAA rules ( and most of them are stupid anyway) to make a a good argument for or against in a courtroom. I would assume that there is enough wiggle room in the by-laws that they can cover this with something.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.Given that Penn State signed off on this they either have taken the position that there is something that is there, or that they just didn't feel the fight would be worth it in the end. But, there are instances in the emails (from what I've read) in the Freeh report that the football program didn't report every violation, even minor ones. If that is true, the conspiracy, for lack of a better phrase, to do that over a long period of time should certainly be something the NCAA has the power to hammer.

No. My wall street journal alert on the press conference focused more on Joepa now not being the winningest coach than it did on the other sanctions. And I'm sure the media coverage and Joepa apologists alike will be focusing mainly on that topic. Which, in my opinion, is much less important than changing the focus and culture of the school. Who cares about Joepa's win total? What purpose does that serve? Would there really be people out there that would say yeah all this terrible stuff happened but at least Joepa is still the winningest coach, woohoo. I agreed with Ray and Emerrett that the NCAA has authority to ensure that an institution is operating with integrity and responsibility and the other sanctions were warranted to change the wrongs of the culture that was breeded at PSU. But taking away past wins inherently feels like (to me at least) that there should be competitive reasons for doing so. As awful as the situation was, it wasn't a matter of gaining a competitive advantage so I am struggling to see the point of taking wins away. It only seems to be a spiteful measure pointed towards Joepa's legacy just because they felt like it. And now everyone will focus on that.You're kidding, right?Taking away wins keeps the focus on Joepa and his tranished legacy rather than keeping the focus where it should be.
how many did they loseloss of those scholarships>>>>>>>>>>death penalty imothey are fd for a good 10 years now (at least).
People keep saying this...but it simply isn't true. Reporting the problem in 1998 would have cost PSU little, if any money.But it had everything to do with "football - and the money it makes - is more important than kids". This essentially says, no, it isn't.Beyond somehow artificially altering a record so somebody else is now the "career wins leader," No. If you can say that enabling Sandusky somehow gave PSU an unfair competitive advantage on the field in those games, then I'd say that I get it...but it's not like that was the case. This had nothing to do with on-field competition.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
I work with someone who is still hanging on to the Civil War or War of Northern Aggression as he would say. Same thing will happen here it will always be an asterisk thing.Well, we know who won. But that will fade, and the record book is forever.Yeah this seems to me like not keeping score. Everyone knows who won we are just pretending. Same thing here.I hadn't put two and two together, but vacating the wins removes JoePa's status as the all time winningest coach. Wow.
this morning.60how many did they loseloss of those scholarships>>>>>>>>>>death penalty imothey are fd for a good 10 years now (at least).
In essence, they've don't exist. The only punishments that have any meaning for most people involve the football program. That's been the reality from the beginning of this story.If the NCAA hadn't acted, how would that mean that PSU "got off?" They canned their President and AD -- both may be in prison this time next year -- and the university is facing tens of millions of dollars in civil liability. Reading these threads, it's as if people aren't even aware of the existence of the courts.This was too huge of a scandal for the NCAA to act just on past precedent. They couldn't let PSU get off because the NCAA hadn't put in rules against this kind of stuff. No one would have predicted something like this could happen.
You know they used a defensive coordinator in 1999 that should have already been in jail right?Beyond somehow artificially altering a record so somebody else is now the "career wins leader," No. If you can say that enabling Sandusky somehow gave PSU an unfair competitive advantage on the field in those games, then I'd say that I get it...but it's not like that was the case. This had nothing to do with on-field competition.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
I think most people, with the exception of stupid fans, move on from those events. Everybody knows what happened on the field in those games. And lol at cappy, thumping his chest because the guy ahead of his guy got disqualified.You don't think Penn State players that attended in the 00s, you don't think those former players feel the sting today a little bit? I'm surprised you would say this.Only the really dumb ones.It's crushing to the players who went to school there for the last 15 years.I see the point, I just think it is a silly one.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
You are wrong.People keep saying this...but it simply isn't true. Reporting the problem in 1998 would have cost PSU little, if any money.But it had everything to do with "football - and the money it makes - is more important than kids". This essentially says, no, it isn't.Beyond somehow artificially altering a record so somebody else is now the "career wins leader," No. If you can say that enabling Sandusky somehow gave PSU an unfair competitive advantage on the field in those games, then I'd say that I get it...but it's not like that was the case. This had nothing to do with on-field competition.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
Do you think Jerry Sandusky cares more about today's NCAA sanctions than his prison sentence? Do you think Spanier cares about this more than his own possible prosecution?In essence, they've don't exist. The only punishments that have any meaning for most people involve the football program. That's been the reality from the beginning of this story.If the NCAA hadn't acted, how would that mean that PSU "got off?" They canned their President and AD -- both may be in prison this time next year -- and the university is facing tens of millions of dollars in civil liability. Reading these threads, it's as if people aren't even aware of the existence of the courts.This was too huge of a scandal for the NCAA to act just on past precedent. They couldn't let PSU get off because the NCAA hadn't put in rules against this kind of stuff. No one would have predicted something like this could happen.
Am I the only one that thinks the punishment was fair?

What?? The prosecutor declined to prosecute in 98 when the info was brought to him.You know they used a defensive coordinator in 1999 that should have already been in jail right?Beyond somehow artificially altering a record so somebody else is now the "career wins leader," No. If you can say that enabling Sandusky somehow gave PSU an unfair competitive advantage on the field in those games, then I'd say that I get it...but it's not like that was the case. This had nothing to do with on-field competition.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
They HAD to agree to the punishment in order to save face (or what's left of it's face) with the public. Good move on Penn State' part to except whatever punishment was given to them and move forward with the healing 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.
"Only football matters" ??Because at least in other cases the punishments are directly related to CHEATING. As horrible as this was, it wasn't cheating.
A handful of us think it was light.Am I the only one that thinks the punishment was fair?
Not sure, but I don't know if you can be on an academic scholarship and still play, or that scholarship counts towards your total. A few years ago a Nebraska player had to make the choice between playing football or a full-ride academic scholarship. He chose academics. Again, I could be wrong.Do you think Penn State wants to push the edge on NCAA violations now?Assuming there is a lot of pride by Penn State alumni and wanting to rebuild the program as fast as possible, seems there will be a lot of academic scholarships established by alumni for students excelling in athletics?
No. Do you think Penn State fans and alumni care more about Sandusky's fate and Spanier's fate than they do about the NCAA sanctions?Do you think Jerry Sandusky cares more about today's NCAA sanctions than his prison sentence? Do you think Spanier cares about this more than his own possible prosecution?In essence, they've don't exist. The only punishments that have any meaning for most people involve the football program. That's been the reality from the beginning of this story.If the NCAA hadn't acted, how would that mean that PSU "got off?" They canned their President and AD -- both may be in prison this time next year -- and the university is facing tens of millions of dollars in civil liability. Reading these threads, it's as if people aren't even aware of the existence of the courts.This was too huge of a scandal for the NCAA to act just on past precedent. They couldn't let PSU get off because the NCAA hadn't put in rules against this kind of stuff. No one would have predicted something like this could happen.
Agreed - but at what point do records become arbitrary? To me, a "record," is something that is set through actions, and not something that you can "adjust" as punishment. I mean, would people have been OK with Pete Rose having 1,000 hits stripped from him as a punishment for gambling? If the world's fattest man murdered someone, it'd be like Guinness saying "We're going to discredit him for 300 lbs, thus not making him the world's fattest man anymore."Obviously. This was done solely as a punishment to Joe Paterno. Some may think it is lame but it does knock him down as the winning-est coach, something that was very important to him.
I got nothing there. Very valid point...take the 1999 wins, but beyond that I still think it's grasping.You know they used a defensive coordinator in 1999 that should have already been in jail right?
You really think people would have abandoned the program for outing Sandusky?I don't think so. It might have cost a handful of recruits that year, but would have had no lasting or significant damage.You are wrong.People keep saying this...but it simply isn't true. Reporting the problem in 1998 would have cost PSU little, if any money.But it had everything to do with "football - and the money it makes - is more important than kids". This essentially says, no, it isn't.Beyond somehow artificially altering a record so somebody else is now the "career wins leader," No. If you can say that enabling Sandusky somehow gave PSU an unfair competitive advantage on the field in those games, then I'd say that I get it...but it's not like that was the case. This had nothing to do with on-field competition.Seriously??? You can't see the point of this?Vacating wins is the dumbest punishment in the NCAA's arsenal IMO. Everyone knows who won those games.
So your position is that this is really about punishing Penn State alumni and fans?No. Do you think Penn State fans and alumni care more about Sandusky's fate and Spanier's fate than they do about the NCAA sanctions?
I'm ok with it. No matter what they did it was going to either be not enough or too much. This whole situation is sad in the truest sense of the word. Given what we are dealing with here, and everyone that has paid any attention to this knows what happened - predator was allowed to continue his crimes because the football coach was too powerful, the football program too powerful and no one in power did anything to stop it - that the fact there are people actually demanding where in the NCAA rule book are the violations to allow a punishment here is on some level ridiculous. Do we really need a written rule on this for college athletics? IF that is where this is going, then the entirety of college athelics needs to be stopped for a few years for people to get their heads out of their collective asses.Am I the only one that thinks the punishment was fair?![]()
Really? That strikes me as the dumbest argument of all.I got nothing there. Very valid point...take the 1999 wins, but beyond that I still think it's grasping.You know they used a defensive coordinator in 1999 that should have already been in jail right?