Penn State scandal, JoePa and the football/college town complex

Discussion in 'Politics & Current Events' started by That Phat Hat, Nov 8, 2011.

  1. superdave

    superdave Member+

    Jul 14, 1999
    VB, VA
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Only if it's the world's biggest drop or the world's smallest bucket.

    But you're winning the thread, so keep it up!
     
  2. KensingtonSC

    KensingtonSC Still Lazy After All These Years

    FC Vaduz / Philadelphia Union
    Jan 7, 2010
    Andalusia, PA
    Club:
    FC Vaduz
    How much is $12 million to a university like Penn State? Seriously. They can get donations from alums to cover that amount every single year. Penn State isn't poor. Far from it.
     
  3. taosjohn

    taosjohn Member+

    Dec 23, 2004
    taos,nm
    Well, no-- they'll still be recruiting to a program which has lost steadily for four years and whose coach has never won. They'll have a reasonable pitch to make to blue chippers, but they'll probably get 10% of those pitched instead of 40% for a while.

    The change will be real for at least four years after the sanctions expire, I would guess-- they'll be in constant danger of recruiting on the opposition instead of the program.

    "Come to Penn State, you'll get to play against Big Ten competition" instead of "Come to Penn State and compete for championships."
     
  4. england66

    england66 Member+

    Jan 6, 2004
    dallas, texas
  5. KensingtonSC

    KensingtonSC Still Lazy After All These Years

    FC Vaduz / Philadelphia Union
    Jan 7, 2010
    Andalusia, PA
    Club:
    FC Vaduz
    Their lone opportunity to win a championship in the last 15 years was their Orange Bowl run in 2005 when they finished third in the nation, so they've mostly been selling the idea to parents that Penn State is a worldly institution built on honesty and integrity. They've had some real mediocre years between then and now, so it's not like they were going to be any good anyway. At best another 8-4 year.

    I'm not saying that they won't be hurt by some of these sanctions. They will, but it won't be to the degree where the culture would change. It's like the University of Miami. How many more recruiting violations do they need before something drastic is finally taken against the program where the culture of corruption is changed? I guess that's hard to do when the NCAA is so corrupt to begin with.
     
  6. raza_rebel

    raza_rebel Member+

    Dec 11, 2000
    Club:
    Univ de Chile
    Sandusky used the program for at least one child as bait. Paterno and the University covered it up becuase of the hit the football program would take. Let's change the scenario. Let's assume that Sandusky was the Calculus I professor. Would the higher-ups have covered it up in the same manner?
     
  7. Ismitje

    Ismitje Super Moderator

    Dec 30, 2000
    The Palouse
    Club:
    Real Salt Lake
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    That's not how donations to a university work. See this post for some context.
     
  8. KensingtonSC

    KensingtonSC Still Lazy After All These Years

    FC Vaduz / Philadelphia Union
    Jan 7, 2010
    Andalusia, PA
    Club:
    FC Vaduz
    This was posted by someone who covers college sports over on another thread...

    Like I said, not a big deal to Penn State.
     
  9. minerva

    minerva Member+

    Apr 20, 2009
    Denver, CO
    Club:
    Liverpool FC
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I thought $54M was their revenue. the profit was something like $15M.
    still not a huge hit, but it's significant. it won't kill the program permanently, but it'll definitely set it back 5-10 years. I don't think the so-called death penalty should really be the standard to judge by. I don't think it will ever be imposed again. I don't think the NCAA would even impose it again on SMU with hindsight. it has taken SMU 20 years to recover to some minimum extent, and it will never fully recover. I don't think the NCAA knew or understood the full ramifications of the death penalty when they imposed it on SMU. this is a pretty stiff penalty, and I'm satisfied with it.
     
  10. Ismitje

    Ismitje Super Moderator

    Dec 30, 2000
    The Palouse
    Club:
    Real Salt Lake
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    . . . that someone who covers college sports obviously doesn't cover college finances. I understand better, but without studying the rules governing profit generated in the PSU endowment, I cannot say for sure. Here at my university, you simply cannot take the money generated by the endowments in my corner of the Common Investment Trust and take it for another purpose. Lawsuits galore would ensue.

    If they are fortunate to have significant funds donated to a general fund, that can be used for whatever purposes the managers of the fund and the university see fit. But neither people of means (who tend to endow things in their names) nor people with a tie to a specific program (academic, co-curricular, extracurricular) tend to give money to general funds.
     
    Auriaprottu repped this.
  11. KensingtonSC

    KensingtonSC Still Lazy After All These Years

    FC Vaduz / Philadelphia Union
    Jan 7, 2010
    Andalusia, PA
    Club:
    FC Vaduz
    Your school may differ from Penn State. I don't know specifically how they work their money. I'm not their accountant. All I know is that they're not broke, and they should easily be able to take care of $12 million a year, especially if their football profits alone are $54 million.
     
  12. taosjohn

    taosjohn Member+

    Dec 23, 2004
    taos,nm
    This was pretty widely discussed at the time, and they most certainly did.

    The NCAA had already applied its maximum traditional sanctions to SMU repeatedly without result, and been lied to all the way up to SMU's board of governors IIRC. They were past being concerned about SMU-- they were trying to write a cautionary tale for the UNLVs of the world...
     
  13. soccernutter

    soccernutter Moderator
    Staff Member

    Tottenham Hotspur
    Aug 22, 2001
    Near the mountains.
    Club:
    Tottenham Hotspur FC
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I was talking about the behavior, not the lure. PSU football in general is all over this mess. But to say that PSU football caused the behavior is false. PSU football and the enablers allowed Sandusky to continue, but it was Sandusky's behavior in the first that caused the whole mess.

    Further, for your comparison, does said Calculus professor have a Field's Medal or Nobel Prize? If not, then it is not an equal comparison.
     
  14. roadkit

    roadkit Greetings from the Fringe of Obscurity

    Jul 2, 2003
    Fornax Cluster
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Penn State's donations in just the last year were in the two hundred million-plus category.

    This NCAA fine is BS. They vacated Paterno's wins since '98 when there was proof he covered up for a child molester. They should find out how much Penn State made from football since '98 and fine them half of it.

    Penn State can pay the fine with last year's donations and have almost $150M left over.
     
  15. soccernutter

    soccernutter Moderator
    Staff Member

    Tottenham Hotspur
    Aug 22, 2001
    Near the mountains.
    Club:
    Tottenham Hotspur FC
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    To back up Ismitje, at my wife's grad school (she went to a large public school that has a major sport with a national reputation, and a long serving coach that recently ended his tenure), the money that was designated for her "school" could not be used anywhere else. There was a related "school" that got tons of money, more than could be used in a year, for which my wife's "school" was envious. On top of that, the football program made tons of money, but only a small amount was ever distributed for anything other than the athletic department (I from the descriptions, I assume this was something legal/contractual). So just because PSU has over $1 billion, I don't think very much, if any, can be used to pay off the fine (or it is a tax? ;)). What I wonder is if they have a general fund.
     
  16. superdave

    superdave Member+

    Jul 14, 1999
    VB, VA
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States

    Not sure how old you are, but I first became aware of sports in this vein about 1971. SMU has already recovered.* The Pony Express teams were an absolute aberration from the norm for SMU football. What you see is what you get, and what you've always gotten.

    *For el jefe or other fanaticos out there, I know SMU had some great teams waaaay back in the day. But since football went to double platoon, SMU hasn't been a factor except for that small window we're talking about here.
     
    Auriaprottu repped this.
  17. superdave

    superdave Member+

    Jul 14, 1999
    VB, VA
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    1. They aren't. That's the point.
    2. What do you think happens to the football profits???? Think, man, think!
     
  18. Dr. Wankler

    Dr. Wankler Member+

    May 2, 2001
    The Electric City
    Club:
    Chicago Fire
    That covers the differences between Penn State and SMU that I mentioned: I seem to remember even when it was paying players, SMU was still drawing around 40,000 per game. The size and success of the program was never anywhere near Penn State's. But still, I don't remember anyone trotting out the "but what about the innocent non-revenue athletes" line when SMU football went down.
     
  19. superdave

    superdave Member+

    Jul 14, 1999
    VB, VA
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I don't work in academia or anything, but even *I* know how wrongheaded you're being here.

    What do you think PSU does with the donations?

    Some of you people are venting rather than thinking. This fine is going to HURT. If you follow college sports, you would have an idea of the money involved. Schools will do some pretty rapacious stuff just to get an extra $1M per year. This fine is 12 times that! Think of all the drive to get conference championship games in football. How much money does an ACC school or a Big 12 school get for those championship games???

    Lastly, I would point out that almost all that money just gets funneled back into the maw of the beast. If PSU is down several million dollars a year, they're going to be hiring 3rd rate asst coaches when their staff turns over. They're going to have 3rd class weight lifting facilities.
     
  20. KensingtonSC

    KensingtonSC Still Lazy After All These Years

    FC Vaduz / Philadelphia Union
    Jan 7, 2010
    Andalusia, PA
    Club:
    FC Vaduz
    According to this article, in 2009 PSU had over $50 million in profits as they ran one of the most lucrative and profitable college football programs in the country.
     
  21. Auriaprottu

    Auriaprottu Member+

    Atlanta Damn United
    Apr 1, 2002
    The back of the bus
    Club:
    Atlanta
    Nat'l Team:
    --other--
    If you're talking about selling themselves as a troo B(C)S title contenda, there's only about six programs that can do this right now, and three of them are in the same conference. What top programs will tend to emphasize is winning their conference and then hoping that the regular season pageant's judges choose to put them into that 4-team playoff with the three SEC slots. PSU won shares of the Big Ten in 2005 and 2008, so it's not like they had nothing to show for the last 15.

    No, it isn't.

    It's much worse.

    It's worse, even, than the situation at Alabama where a booster "committed suicide" during the Albert Means investigation (blood was found on both floors of the deceased's home as well as on the stairs). It's worse than Auburn outbidding Mississippi State for Cam Newton. It's worse than the Eric Ramsey scandal at Auburn or the Gene Jelks scandal at Alabama. It's worse than Arkansas hiring the head coach's side trim over more qualified candidates. It's worse than former Alabama coach Mike Dubose lying to his AD about side trim. Worse than former Alabama coach Mike Price getting caught with a woman before spring training, worse than Mississippi State's violations, you get the pic.

    The U's a 16 year-old pot dealer with shiny rims that get his car noticed by the cops. The programs I mentioned are Escobar-esque by comparison.
     
  22. TobaccoMonopolyFC

    Oct 12, 2011
    Club:
    AS Monaco FC
    Nat'l Team:
    Bahamas
    Not that it means a damn thing in the grade scheme of things, but since Penn State's bowl wins were vacated the University is no longer the rightful owner of the associated trophies, what happens to them?

    And you can put every pay-to-play grade-changing scandal at every level together and this is still a zillion times worse. It'll take a generation for Penn State to recover from this, if they ever do. The Penn State name is basically dead outside of Pennsylvania now.
     
  23. KensingtonSC

    KensingtonSC Still Lazy After All These Years

    FC Vaduz / Philadelphia Union
    Jan 7, 2010
    Andalusia, PA
    Club:
    FC Vaduz
    I'm saying that there's a culture problem with college football. That's where my comparisons to the U of Miami come in. The culture is rife with corruption and scandal, and yet the NCAA doesn't levy the harsh punishments. Of course what went on at Penn State was the worst thing that's happened to date regarding a program, but the culture surrounding college football has led to this, and as long as the NCAA keeps giving wrist slaps, then nothing will change.
     
  24. Auriaprottu

    Auriaprottu Member+

    Atlanta Damn United
    Apr 1, 2002
    The back of the bus
    Club:
    Atlanta
    Nat'l Team:
    --other--
    The trophies will probably be returned to the bowl organization. No respectable program would want them if they lost the game on the field.

    If you want the culture of college football to change, the NCAA isn't the place to start looking anyhow. They're not in it for doing right, or they'd have done a lot of things differently since the early fifties (that's basically about the time they began to be the governing body that mattered most to those with the most). They're in it to make the biggest member schools the most money.
     
  25. ElJefe

    ElJefe Moderator
    Staff Member

    Feb 16, 1999
    Colorful Colorado
    Club:
    FC Dallas
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Part of the reason why SMU didn't recover more quickly (and really hasn't) is because the SMU administration put the hammer down on their own athletic department, including imposing admissions requirements for student-athletes that are much more stringent than other Division I programs have.

    June Jones has started publicly pushing back on those requirements because they've cost him some recruits. And to be honest, those self-imposed requirements make it very difficult for SMU to maintain a credible Division I program in most sports, but especially football.
     
    russ repped this.

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