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Penn State football slammed with NCAA sanctions
ESPN ^ | July 23, 2012, 11:30 AM ET | Associated Press

Posted on 07/23/2012 10:50:35 AM PDT by Absolutely Nobama

INDIANAPOLIS -- Penn State football was all but leveled Monday by an NCAA ruling that wiped away 14 years of coach Joe Paterno's victories and imposed a mountain of fines and penalties, crippling a program whose pedophile assistant coach spent uncounted years molesting children, sometimes on university property. The sanctions by the governing body of college sports, which capped eight months of turmoil on the central Pennsylvania campus, stopped short of delivering the "death penalty" of shutting down the sport. But the NCAA hit Penn State with $60 million in fines, ordered it out of the postseason for four years, and will cap scholarships at 20 below the normal limit for four years. The school also will be on probation for five years.

(Excerpt) Read more at sports.espn.go.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: ncaa; paterno; pedstate; pennstate; sandusky
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To: EEGator
All of the money is going towards charities to help and prevent child abuse.

Thank you.

I missed that detail as I was beating on my monitor.


81 posted on 07/23/2012 12:36:58 PM PDT by Iron Munro ("Jiggle the Handle for Barry!")
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To: Iron Munro

You’re welcome. Cases like these draw an emotional response...as is expected. A bunch of grown men covering up for a pedophile over a game is disgusting. I have done the same thing more than once when responding to a thread that upsets me.


82 posted on 07/23/2012 12:44:06 PM PDT by EEGator
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To: wrcase
I agree wholeheartedly. Now if we could only find a way to "relieve some of the pressure on universities to put aside all academic and ethical standards in the name of football liberalism or basketball political correctness."
83 posted on 07/23/2012 12:46:15 PM PDT by Humbug
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To: PzLdr

I suspect the NCAA knew if they put PSU on the Death Penalty it might not hold up, since PSU wasn’t on probation before...and thus, PSU would have grounds to appeal it.

And now that they are effectively on probation, they are now looking for the slightest violation in the next few years to slam them with the DP.


84 posted on 07/23/2012 12:47:14 PM PDT by dfwgator (FUJR (not you, Jim))
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To: EEGator

“I have done the same thing more than once when responding to a thread that upsets me.”

I just realized that sentence could be taken the wrong way. I mean I have reacted emotionally to a thread before.


85 posted on 07/23/2012 12:48:52 PM PDT by EEGator
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To: MuffysMom

The offense here is institutional. YES the alums DID do this. The foundation board did it. The boosters did it. The fans did it. The football program built and sustained the university to such a degree that they covered up child rape for over 10 years - with the full complicity of everyone from the president on down, literally, to the janitors that watched what was happening but were to afraid to report it.

What happened was indefensible, and that the entire organizational apparatus acted to cover it up cries out for a punishment that redefines what the NCAA believes is the death penalty.

3 years - no NCAA football. A fine equal to the football revenue generated since 1998 - the time ONE of the offenses was known by the ‘big 4’ at the university, but not reported - the proceeds of which go to a foundation that a) remunerates the victims, and 2) the rest of which funds research into the causes of pedophilia, and the quest for a cure.

If that kills the university, so be it. Never have I seen anything so like the atmosphere of 1940’s Germany in modern times. What must be done to merit universal opprobium any more? What must one do to be shunned?

This is like the LIBOR scandal. You can argue against conspiracies in general, until you realize that it required all 16 banks and at least two regulatory agencies (the Fed and the FSA) in two countries to perpetrate such a thing. The corruption was so culturally ingrained that when Barclay’s admitted to it, they figured the fine would do the trick and it would all blow over. After all, everyone was doing it.

As for the people who require justice being unaffected here, everyone still alive who knew and didn’t report can and should go to jail.

I will bet that were you to depose enough players, students, and alumni, there are others that knew, or witnessed actual crimes, that should have done something about it.

The irony is everyone, especially the NCAA, wants to move on, but not killing off Penn State is going to guarantee they can’t. Ohio State, by the way, is loving this. They should have had their asses handed to them, same as Auburn - including vacating a national title.

Now? “At least we didn’t anally deflower a ten year old. If you didn’t give them the death penalty, you can’t give us the death penalty either.”


86 posted on 07/23/2012 12:54:44 PM PDT by RinaseaofDs (Does beheading qualify as 'breaking my back', in the Jeffersonian sense of the expression?)
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To: Humbug

LOL. I’m afraid that would be a task of Herculean proportions. But seriously, I keep hearing “you can’t do this, it will hurt the program, school, players, coaches, tradition, etc”. Why is it that schools such as MIT and the University of Chicago seem to be doing just fine without athletics? Probably because they made a decision long ago to concentrate fully on academics instead of sports.


87 posted on 07/23/2012 12:56:29 PM PDT by wrcase
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To: PzLdr

You seem to forget that the NCAA exists because of the member institutions, not the other way around. The big football schools already have a very tenuous relationship with the NCAA. So let’s say that the NCAA did some draconian penalties like you proposed. Then what?

Well, then let’s say that Penn State left the NCAA and began to talk to other big time football schools about leaving the NCAA: free of scholarship limits and revenue sharing and free to form a “super conference” that could command a whopping TV contract. How would that work out for the NCAA?

The NCAA knows this is possible. This is why schools like Ohio State, USC, Alabama, and Penn State get lesser penalties in football and schools like SMU get the death penalty.


88 posted on 07/23/2012 1:00:39 PM PDT by Publius Valerius
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To: wrcase

Why is it that schools such as MIT and the University of Chicago seem to be doing just fine without athletics?


MIT had a decent baseball team back when I played against them. Their football team does all right as well.


89 posted on 07/23/2012 1:00:55 PM PDT by outpostinmass2
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To: LeonardFMason

Sex crimes, lying before a grand jury, letting a pedophile use the stadium showers.

Pretty much anything egregious is covered in a general morality clause.
If Penn State or any other school does not want to abide by the broad institutional control statute they have the option of not seeking NCAA sanctioning and not playing in their sandbox.

Kinds of like if you want to sleep around don’t teach at a Christan School that forbids it. This is a standard the school voluntarily submitted to. It is disengenuous to whine that it isn’t fair.


90 posted on 07/23/2012 1:03:52 PM PDT by MrEdd (Heck? Geewhiz Cripes, thats the place where people who don't believe in Gosh think they aint going.)
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To: napscoordinator

gratuitous


91 posted on 07/23/2012 1:06:53 PM PDT by Houghton M.
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To: outpostinmass2

But don’t they play in either Division III or club level? Division III or club level do not allow scholarships. My point is that the two schools I mentioned do not emphasize athletics nor I bet do they allow players who cannot meet the academic standards to play for their team. In other words, Andy Katzenmoyer would not be able to play football for MIT.


92 posted on 07/23/2012 1:11:19 PM PDT by wrcase
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To: MuffysMom
I.U. as in iowa or indiana?
asking if the team did this is asenine...under that standard the ncaa could never retroactively address any violations because team rosters change dramatically every 2-3 yrs and ALL punishments would wind up punishing new players and new coaches...a "no no" in your book
93 posted on 07/23/2012 1:22:36 PM PDT by Colofornian (Saying Mitt would keep past political promises is like prophesying that Gumby won't bend anymore)
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To: MuffysMom
I.U. as in iowa or indiana?
asking if the team did this is asenine...under that standard the ncaa could never retroactively address any violations because team rosters change dramatically every 2-3 yrs and ALL punishments would wind up punishing new players and new coaches...a "no no" in your book
94 posted on 07/23/2012 1:23:03 PM PDT by Colofornian (Saying Mitt would keep past political promises is like prophesying that Gumby won't bend anymore)
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To: kosciusko51

Keep in mind the defense of Mann was under the administration of Spanier, who should have been fired years ago at PSU. It would be good for the current President to review this case, considering Spanier’s behavior.

Also, wonder how many people on this thread actually read the report or are they taking the media’s interpretation? We, as conservatives, need to educate ourselves and not really on the MSM to tell us what the report says.


95 posted on 07/23/2012 1:25:51 PM PDT by Maryland Man
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To: wrcase
Why is it that schools such as MIT and the University of Chicago seem to be doing just fine without athletics? Probably because they made a decision long ago to concentrate fully on academics instead of sports.

Good point.

Growing up I was really into college sports, but increasingly it really has become little more than a minor league system operating on college campuses.

96 posted on 07/23/2012 1:39:28 PM PDT by Humbug
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To: Absolutely Nobama

These sanctions are way over the top and amount to grand standing and trying to taking a stand more holy than tho.

Sure, the Penn St. athletic dept., its rent a cop security dept. and the higher ups dropped the ball & covered up a sad crime against kids who happened to be in their locker room because a skank ex asst. coach still had privileges. But, these sanctions go so far they tarnish the work, wins and records of a lot of college athletes who played their hearts out for the school. The sanctions also poison the athletes still there who were not connected in any way to the wrong doing.

The NCAA is on no pedestal as TV money and exploiting a lot of kids who want to play sports is its main game. Sportsmanship and amateur sports ethics is way down in its to do list.


97 posted on 07/23/2012 1:43:14 PM PDT by RicocheT (Eat the rich only if you're certain it's your last meal)
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To: Maryland Man
I understand what you are saying. I think the corruption in this case is more than just the football team; it is a institution trying to hide some really dirty secrets. Let me put it more plainly: if Sandusky were molesting little girls, I my guess is that the institution would have acted swiftly to remedy the problem.

Also, some of us are still wondering what happened to that ADA that went missing. Something really stinks in this case.

98 posted on 07/23/2012 1:46:24 PM PDT by kosciusko51 (Enough of "Who is John Galt?" Who is Patrick Henry?)
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To: RicocheT
But, these sanctions go so far they tarnish the work, wins and records of a lot of college athletes who played their hearts out for the school.

They didn't get the raw deal that those kids got. They'll live.

99 posted on 07/23/2012 1:48:28 PM PDT by dfwgator (FUJR (not you, Jim))
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To: wita

So it seems to me as well. Let the judicial system do it’s thing and butt out...

...apparently it has escaped your notice that the NCAA’s contention in all of this revolves around the notion that the studied silence by the PSU officials was done to protect the football program’s reputation, thus allowing its prestige and revenue prospects to continue unabated...in other words, to evade an event that might put it at a disadvantage in the public arena, and by extension on the football field...this is hardly an implausible conclusion from reading the Freeh report, which the university commissioned and has accepted.
...regarding the judicial system, Sandusky is in jail, and Curley and Schultz face perjury trials, which I predict will not land them in jail, while Paterno could possibly (though I would think not) have faced a charge of perjury for his grand jury testiomony which was never credible in the first place. In what regard do you say let the judicial system play out? It has in fact spoken, quite loudly...


100 posted on 07/23/2012 1:50:55 PM PDT by IrishBrigade
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