Paterno should go out on his own terms

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Joe Paterno turns 78-years-old four days before Christmas. In a conversation with an Associated Press reporter, Paterno indicated he planned to quit coaching after his next undefeated season. It could happen next year.

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Another Day, Another Dollar
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Joe said after the last game that he wanted to coach. I say let him coach, but it all boils down to wins & cash now, and one has to wonder if the game can't pass you by. Bobby Knight has heard that for a few years now, but he keeps on winning games. Paterno is a legend to the game and from the old school. Not many left. I say let him coach till he dies.
 

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The thing that is impresive about paterno is he is very generous donating tons of money so I would say he should go out on his own terms
 

The Social Conscience of the Rx!
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NO, he should leave now. Why should the whole school suffer because he has worked past his retirement. Tom Landry had to go, Eddie Robinson had to go,Bill Fitch hat what makes him so special. Should the players who want to have a chance at the NFL stay around while there draft potentail falls.
 

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papa joe controlled weak big east every year and wanted to play with big boys and it caught up with him. got greedy and wanted to be # 1 with total wins but it back fired. now he doesnt want to go out as loser and thats why he is staying on. but if he has winning season next year, he is gone. another willie mays, mike jordon. dont know when its time to hang them up and now is an embarrassment to the game. fans boo him every home game. sad to hear but 101,00 fans want him to retire
 

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http://www.the33tv.com/sports/sns-rt-us-usa-crime-coach-reactiontre7a90wc-20111109,0,6017757.story


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Penn State students protest after Paterno fired

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Penn State University students take to the streets, after it was announced that long time football coach Joe Paterno had been fired, in State College, Pennsylania. Pat Little/Reuters

Ian Simpson
Reuters
9:16 a.m. CST, November 10, 2011
65982360-09234654-400225.jpg


STATE COLLEGE, Pa (Reuters) - More than 1,000 protesting Penn State University students poured into the streets around campus on Wednesday after head football coach Joe Paterno was fired in fallout from a child-abuse scandal at the school.

Chanting "Hell no, Joe won't go" and "We want Joe back," they also cursed former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky, who was charged on Saturday with sexually abusing eight young boys over a period of nearly 15 years.
 

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http://www.the33tv.com/sports/sns-rt-us-usa-crime-coach-reactiontre7a90wc-20111109,0,6017757.story


Home *>*The CW 33 Local & National Sports
Penn State students protest after Paterno fired

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Penn State University students take to the streets, after it was announced that long time football coach Joe Paterno had been fired, in State College, Pennsylania. Pat Little/Reuters

Ian Simpson
Reuters
9:16 a.m. CST, November 10, 2011
65982360-09234654-400225.jpg


STATE COLLEGE, Pa (Reuters) - More than 1,000 protesting Penn State University students poured into the streets around campus on Wednesday after head football coach Joe Paterno was fired in fallout from a child-abuse scandal at the school.

Chanting "Hell no, Joe won't go" and "We want Joe back," they also cursed former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky, who was charged on Saturday with sexually abusing eight young boys over a period of nearly 15 years.


No parent would and should not want their kids to marry anyone in the above photo........................
 

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How fucking blind and/or stupid are those fans?

Mad because JoePa can't coach a couple more games?

I'm mad because 20 some odd kids were robbed of their innocence and childhood and will never be able to fully recover from the tragedies they went through.

I don't want to hear the excuse that he communicated it to the proper party. Legally speaking, that may save him but morally, it makes JoePa despicable. He knew about it and did nothing. For years. He knew the access that sandusky had to troubled and underprivileged children through his charity (perfect targets for sandusky) and did nothing. For years and years.

JoePa is dead to me. Anyone who defends him is either blind to the facts or doesn't have kids/grandkids/nieces/nephews of there own.

Can't coach 2 or 3 more games? Cry me a river. Compare that minimal loss to the devastation imposed on the victims and their families as a result of JoePa (and others) coming forward and making sure everything was properly handled.
 

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How fucking blind and/or stupid are those fans?

Mad because JoePa can't coach a couple more games?

I'm mad because 20 some odd kids were robbed of their innocence and childhood and will never be able to fully recover from the tragedies they went through.

I don't want to hear the excuse that he communicated it to the proper party. Legally speaking, that may save him but morally, it makes JoePa despicable. He knew about it and did nothing. For years. He knew the access that sandusky had to troubled and underprivileged children through his charity (perfect targets for sandusky) and did nothing. For years and years.

JoePa is dead to me. Anyone who defends him is either blind to the facts or doesn't have kids/grandkids/nieces/nephews of there own.

Can't coach 2 or 3 more games? Cry me a river. Compare that minimal loss to the devastation imposed on the victims and their families as a result of JoePa (and others) coming forward and making sure everything was properly handled.
 

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Funny thing if Paterno did retire when this thread was started in 2004, his legacy perhaps may still be intact as the most important positive figure in Penn State history maybe in Pennsylvania history up there with William Penn & Ben Franklin.
 

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http://www.thestarpress.com/print/a.../120723003/NCAA-ruling-Penn-State-comes-today



July 23, 2012

NCAA ruling on Penn State comes today

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Now the NCAA gets its say on Penn State.

College sports' governing body was expected to deal a series of heavy blows to the Nittany Lions football program on Monday, less than two weeks after a devastating report accused coach Joe Paterno and other top university officials of concealing child sex abuse allegations against a retired assistant coach for years to avoid bad publicity. A news conference was scheduled for 9 a.m. in Indianapolis.


A multi-year bowl ban, lost scholarships, recruiting limits, probation and a multimillion-dollar fine all seem likely for the program Paterno built into a national power under the slogan of "success with honor." And the NCAA, heavily criticized for its sometimes-ponderous pace in deciding penalties as scandals mounted at Ohio State, Auburn, USC and elsewhere, acted with unprecedented swiftness in arriving at what it called "corrective and punitive" sanctions for a team that is trying to start over with a new coach and a new outlook.

The NCAA announced no details Sunday in serving notice that it would indeed weigh in on perhaps the worst scandal in American college sports history. President Mark Emmert cautioned last week that he had not ruled out the possibility of shutting down the football program altogether — the so-called death penalty, famously used against Southern Methodist a quarter-century ago — saying he had "never seen anything as egregious" as the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal.

The NCAA announcement Sunday came shortly after Penn State took down its famed statue of Paterno, six months to the day since his death from lung cancer. The university said leaving it up would be a "recurring wound" for Sandusky's victims. An accomplished defensive coordinator, Sandusky was convicted of molesting young boys over more than a decade.

A harsh penalty from the NCAA could have repercussions well beyond Penn State's football program, which generates large profits — more than $50 million, according to the U.S. Department of Education — that subsidize dozens of other sports at the school. The potential for a historic NCAA penalty also is worrisome for a region where the economy is built at least partially on the strength and popularity of the football program.

Kayla Weaver, a Penn State senior and member of the dance team called the Lionettes, said an NCAA death penalty would not only make football players transfer, but it also would force program changes for cheerleaders, dancers and band members, and would hurt season-ticket holders.

"It could ruin everything that we've built here," said Weaver, from Franklin Lakes, N.J.

Added Derek Leonard, a 31-year-old university construction project coordinator who grew up in the area: "It's going to kill our town."

Emmert put the Penn State matter on the fast track. Other cases that were strictly about violating the NCAA rulebook have dragged on for months and even years. There was no sign that the infractions committee so familiar to college sports fans was involved this time around as Emmert moved quickly, no doubt aided by the July 12 release of the report by former FBI director Louis Freeh and what it said about Paterno and the rest of the Penn State leadership.

The investigation focused partly on university officials' decision not to go to child-welfare authorities in 2001 after a coaching assistant told Paterno that he had seen Sandusky sexually abusing a boy in the locker room showers. Penn State officials already knew about a previous allegation against Sandusky by that time, from 1998.

The leaders, the report said, "repeatedly concealed critical facts relating to Sandusky's child abuse from authorities, the university's board of trustees, the Penn State community and the public at large."

Sandusky is awaiting sentencing after being convicted last month of sexually abusing 10 boys over 15 years.

Emmert had warned Penn State last fall that the NCAA would be examining the "exercise of institutional control" within the athletic department, and said it was clear that "deceitful and dishonest behavior" could be considered a violation of ethics rules. So, too, could a failure to exhibit moral values or adhere to ethics guidelines.

The Freeh report also said school had "decentralized and uneven" oversight of compliance issues — laws, regulations, policies and procedures — as required by the NCAA.

Recent major scandals, such as improper payments to the family of Heisman Trophy winner Reggie Bush while he was at Southern California, and players at Ohio State trading memorabilia for cash and tattoos, have resulted in bowl bans and the loss of scholarships.

Current NCAA rules limit the so-called "death penalty" to colleges already on probation that commit another major violation. That was the case when SMU had its program suspended in the mid-80s, the last time the punishment was imposed on a major college football program.

NCAA leaders have indicated in recent months they are willing to return to harsher penalties for the worst offenses.

"This is completely different than an impermissible benefits scandal like (what) happened at SMU, or anything else we've dealt with. This is as systemic a cultural problem as it is a football problem. There have been people that said this wasn't a football scandal," Emmert told PBS recently. "It was that but much more. And we'll have to figure out exactly what the right penalties are. I don't know that past precedent makes particularly good sense in this case because it's really an unprecedented problem."

Another question was whether Penn State — and, by extension, Paterno, major college football's winningest coach — would have any of his victories thrown out. Paterno won 409 games for the school in his 46 seasons as head coach.

As Penn State awaited its fate, construction workers removed the larger-than-life monument of its Hall of Fame coach. The Paterno family released a statement criticizing Penn State's decision to remove the statue, saying it was made in haste and before all the facts about Paterno's role in the Sandusky scandal were known.

The bronze statue, weighing more than 900 pounds, was erected in 2001 in honor of Paterno's record-setting 324th Division I coaching victory and his "contributions to the university." Penn State President Rodney Erickson said he decided the sculpture had to come down because it "has become a source of division and an obstacle to healing."
 

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