NCAA restores Paterno's vacated wins

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As a non-Penn State alum (though I had been a fan of both Penn State and Paterno before this whole scandal, and hope James Franklin makes the program competitive again), McQueary comes off as having some screw loose.

His original story was that he saw Sandunsky showing with a boy with "possible" sexual sounds, but that he hadn't actually seen anything. Paterno says McQueary saw "fondling" while others report McQueary saw "horseplaying."

10 years later he changes his story and says he saw full-on rape and that that is what he reported.

He also was caught lying about stopping the incident and reporting it to the police. And he sued the university when the new coach after Paterno didn't hire him. Really, would anyone want someone that that kind of baggage coaching in the post-Paterno era at Penn State?

The inconsistencies shouldn't stop his experience from being used as one basis for finding the truth, but one should weigh what he is saying against his credibility.

Let's be honest, the guy was likely under immense pressure from all sides with regards to his story. Either way there is no doubt that he saw something sexual happening.
 
Nations literally punish each other over the actions of their leaders on a daily basis. So to answer that dude's question. Yes, yes we do.
That usually happens when there isn't a way to punish the leader without punishing the nation itself. We can't exactly arrest Putin, for example. In such a case, the actions of the individual cannot be separated from the actions of the state. We don't regularly punish all of Russia for crimes Russians commit in the US. The principal question is whether the actions of individuals within Penn State can be separated from the institution as a whole. They can, and have been by the justice system.
 
Should have lost their program.

The attitudes coming from Penn State just make it seem like a situation like Sandusky could easily happen again.

Basically if the wins get placed back, literally every other violation and should be overturned - USC, Ohio State etc.
 
I never said I'm free from bias (nobody is). Just less likely to make poorly informed snap judgments. Not the same thing.

I have my own brain. I've had years to stew over this. A bunch of other gamers that have probably barely given this a thought in quite some time aren't exactly gonna change my mind.
Your brain washed. Bad enough that football is more important than education are your school, but more important than child rape. Justice would have been to ban Penn state from NCAA football for generations.

Because your cult mentality needs to be punished.
 
This isn't necessary. We know why people are arguing over this, they're giving their reasons. And you know that it isn't because they're pro rape.

What aspect of Penn State are they actively supporting which isn't connected directly to the rape of children?
 
Exactly. The institution is not responsible for the actions of a single member. Do we punish countries for the actions of one of their members against ours?

lol, what the hell. Do you know what a war is?

This isn't necessary. We know why people are arguing over this, they're giving their reasons. And you know that it isn't because they're pro rape.

What are those reasons again? "it's a complicated situation," "as a Penn state alumni I'm less likely to make uninformed snap judgments," etc. Give me a break. The facts are clear. The cognitive dissonance is real. Making excuses for Paterno is enabling the enabler.
 
Let's be honest, the guy was likely under immense pressure from all sides with regards to his story. Either way there is no doubt that he saw something sexual happening.

As I already posted on the previous page people like to ignore the elephant in the room. Paterno under OATH said that McQueary told him it was of sexual nature.

Bashing his "inconsistency" really doesn't matter. Paterno knew it was of sexual nature.
 
Let's be honest, the guy was likely under immense pressure from all sides with regards to his story. Either way there is no doubt that he saw something sexual happening.

Yeah in a way he was in a no-win situation. The Penn State "truther" (whatever that is) hates him for being the key witness in bringing Paterno down, while the anti-Penn State crowd can criticize him for not doing anything at the time (beyond reporting to higher ups) especially considering he has been the one person claiming to have actually seen abuse first hand.

Still, wish he was a bit more stable and consistent for the sake of clarity.
 
As a non-Penn State alum (though I had been a fan of both Penn State and Paterno before this whole scandal, and hope James Franklin makes the program competitive again), McQueary comes off as having some screw loose.

His original story was that he saw Sandunsky showing with a boy with "possible" sexual sounds, but that he hadn't actually seen anything. Paterno says McQueary saw "fondling" while others report McQueary saw "horseplaying."

10 years later he changes his story and says he saw full-on rape and that that is what he reported.

He also was caught lying about stopping the incident and reporting it to the police. And he sued the university when the new coach after Paterno didn't hire him. Really, would anyone want someone that that kind of baggage coaching in the post-Paterno era at Penn State?

The inconsistencies shouldn't stop his experience from being used as one basis for finding the truth, but one should weigh what he is saying against his credibility.


EDIT: BTW I am in complete agreement with Sandunsky going away for life and criminal investigations into Penn State administrators and their roles in the scandal. I basically want as many clear facts and testimony and it sucks when things get muddied at all.

Paterno should be held responsible for not following up on whether or not one of his assistant coaches had a "screw loose" and was making up stories about seeing child rape, or if one of his former assistants (who he still let have access to campus facilities AND his players) was a child rapist. The buck stopped with him. That alone to me is an indictment of Paterno's character and his desires to sweep this under the rug rather than looking out for the potential victims.
 
That usually happens when there isn't a way to punish the leader without punishing the nation itself. We can't exactly arrest Putin, for example. In such a case, the actions of the individual cannot be separated from the actions of the state. We don't regularly punish all of Russia for crimes Russians commit in the US. The principal question is whether the actions of individuals within Penn State can be separated from the institution as a whole. They can, and have been by the justice system.
The institution and it's perceived importance enabled this horror to begin with.
And judging from the behavior of Penn state this culture of "Football over everything" still exists. No lessons learned.

Ergo you take it all away. Indiscriminately.
 
It's like they suddenly remembered they can do whatever they want. What can people do? Stop watching the games?

THe NCAA will be gone soon. The Power conferences are going to drop them like a bad habit.

By the way if you want to know how tone deaf and a bubble Penn State is, the guy they hired as their head coach, James Franklin, is a huge piece of shit himself who's got his own rape scandal issues.
 
The Freeh report had a lot of issues.

Besides, this ordeal basically killed Paterno.

I'm in no way minimizing how monstrous Sandusky is/was.

As for McQueary and he's basically a big dumb meathead.

It is what it is from that standpoint.

I just need one more for my Bingo card.
 
THe NCAA will be gone soon. The Power conferences are going to drop them like a bad habit.

Then there really won't be any accountability.
The institution and it's perceived importance enabled this horror to begin with.
And judging from the behavior of Penn state this culture of "Football over everything" still exists. No lessons learned.


Ergo you take it all away. Indiscriminately.
Regardless, if possible, one should dole out punishments only to individuals guilty of a crime. No need to use a sledgehammer when you can utilize a scalpel just as effectively. If anything, I would argue that the punishment only deepened Penn State's football culture even further. By distributing the punishment across the entire university (an act of vengeance, rather than justice) the NCAA aggrieved the entire university- and thus aligned the entire university against them. Give people something to hate, and they will tend to rally together greater than they ever had prior.
 
Should have lost their program.

The attitudes coming from Penn State just make it seem like a situation like Sandusky could easily happen again.

Basically if the wins get placed back, literally every other violation and should be overturned - USC, Ohio State etc.

You kill penn state football you would basically bankrupt state college, pa. A decision like that would have much bigger implications than football.
 
As I already posted on the previous page people like to ignore the elephant in the room. Paterno under OATH said that McQueary told him it was of sexual nature.
I'm not sure anyone is ignoring that. Paterno reported that McQueary saw fondling. He reported that to highers ups who say McQueary told them he was horseplaying. Everyone agrees that there should have been a bigger priority into finding out what happened that day in the shower.

There is nothing wrong with being OK with investigations into the administration who didn't report it while at the same time acknowleding that McQueary's inconsistencies don't help.
 
Basically you're saying child rape is a necessary evil.
Nobody is saying that.
Implications that outweigh the punishment for covering up child rape?
Well, if you want to enter into a utilitarian argument.

I would argue yes. In lieu of a "full" punishment for that crime (one I would disagree with as being necessary anyway), I would argue the loss of Penn State would be a greater loss than the ability to fully punish the institution for that moral crime (assuming I agreed that punishing the institution in this case were just, which I do not).
 
Horseshit. And shame on you for trying to put those words in my mouth.

Okay. Then even though there was a decade of child molestation coverup at an educational institution, you see no reason to remove, even temporary the troublesome football program?
 
Okay. Then even though there was a decade of child molestation coverup at an educational institution, you see no reason to remove, even temporary the troublesome football program?

You seem to have no understanding that there exists punishments less extreme than destroying the principle economic driver of a city over the actions of a few. And again, I think you owe me an apology for trying to put those words in my mouth.
 
You seem to have no understanding that there exists punishments less extreme than destroying the principle economic driver of a city over the actions of a few. And again, I think you owe me an apology for trying to put those words in my mouth.

I do have an understanding. You are again saying that there is no reason to argue against any sort of decommission because it's only from the actions of a few. There are unfortunate consequences I'd imagine in most instances where money is a high priority.

I also don't believe the program HAD to be killed, or don't assume you support that type of behavior if it wasn't. I just don't think there is anyway someone can just go with the grain that easily. NCAA was never going to harm their team. There are still plenty of reason to have had more action taken.
 
Talking about this reminded me that a coach actually tried to cover up the truth about the murder of one of his players and that program didn't get the death penalty either (Baylor basketball). If the NCAA is going to be this afraid to hand out that penalty, then I don't know why they should still be around.

THe NCAA will be gone soon. The Power conferences are going to drop them like a bad habit.

You honestly think things like accountability are going to get better with the Big 6 conferences running everything? If so, I've got some beachfront land in South Dakota to sell you.
 
Talking about this reminded me that a coach actually tried to cover up the truth about the murder of one of his players and that program didn't get the death penalty either (Baylor basketball). If the NCAA is going to be this afraid to hand out that penalty, then I don't know why they should still be around.



You honestly think things like accountability are going to get better with the Big 6 conferences running everything? If so, I've got some beachfront land in South Dakota to sell you.

lol I don't think anything will get better, just that the NCAA will cease to exist. I'm sure there will be no shortage of corrupt assholes lining up to replace them.
 
Talking about this reminded me that a coach actually tried to cover up the truth about the murder of one of his players and that program didn't get the death penalty either (Baylor basketball). If the NCAA is going to be this afraid to hand out that penalty, then I don't know why they should still be around.



You honestly think things like accountability are going to get better with the Big 6 conferences running everything? If so, I've got some beachfront land in South Dakota to sell you.
Both of which are reasons why the NCAA just shouldn't bother. Its never going to be consistent, just like the NFL. We have a (almost... eh... somewhat) perfectly suitable justice system designed to administer justice in these cases.
 
They did. Taking away those wins only hurt Paterno and the program's legacy.

Paterno's legacy is forever destroyed. He coached for like 50 years. Won 300+ games (originally). Won national titles. Coached countless NFL all pros and Hall of Famers. And the first thing anyone outside of Happy Valley will think about when they hear his name is "child rape". He's OJ Simpson status. Giving him back some wins is not going to change that.
 
Paterno's legacy is forever destroyed. He coached for like 50 years. Won 300+ games (originally). Won national titles. Coached countless NFL all pros and Hall of Famers. And the first thing anyone outside of Happy Valley will think about when they hear his name is "child rape". He's OJ Simpson status. Giving him back some wins is not going to change that.

True. I think by going back, all it's going to do is distribute more tin foil hats amongst the community.
 
Paterno's legacy is forever destroyed. He coached for like 50 years. Won 300+ games (originally). Won national titles. Coached countless NFL all pros and Hall of Famers. And the first thing anyone outside of Happy Valley will think about when they hear his name is "child rape". He's OJ Simpson status. Giving him back some wins is not going to change that.

Yeah, but giving the wins back will justify the "football over everything" culture in State College.
 
Serious question: do they do this for all athletes and coaches who have committed crimes? Take away wins, records, championships, achievements? Same goes for pro sports. And do people demand this type of punishment for anyone in sports who commits crimes or is this kind of an outlier? Just curious.

Edit: And do they take away all stats for players in those games? I mean it would seem weird if you went back in the record books and see Penn scored 5 touchdowns in this random game but the opponent scored none. But Penn lost cause their coach was involved in.... I guess it just seems weird to rewrite the books as if they never happened. Fire the person, ban them, and let them face their punishment in a court of law. I know this doesn't apply to Paterno since he is dead.
 
They did. Taking away those wins only hurt Paterno and the program's legacy.
The wins are ultimately a legacy of the school and the players. The students, players, and fans of Penn State did nothing wrong. The wins would not have been possible without those elements. Paterno was only a small part.

Can't really arrest Paterno, either.

Because he's dead. That doesn't justify distributing responsibility across the entire university.
 
Serious question: do they do this for all athletes and coaches who have committed crimes? Take away wins, records, championships, achievements? Same goes for pro sports. And do people demand this type of punishment for anyone in sports who commits crimes or is this kind of an outlier? Just curious.

Nope, which is one of the reasons this whole thing is highly contested. IIRC, this was the first time the NCAA had handed out penalties like this to an institution that, for all intents and purposes, hadn't broken an NCAA rule. Coaches and players can get charged with crimes and put in jail, but as long as they were technically eligible and didn't cheat, the records/games stay.
 
The wins are ultimately a legacy of the school and the players. The students, players, and fans of Penn State did nothing wrong. The wins would not have been possible without those elements. Paterno was only a small part.



Because he's dead. That doesn't justify distributing responsibility across the entire university.

The wins that were vacated were during a time when the NCAA determined that Penn St. was complicit in a cover up regarding Sandusky. It gave them as much of a competitive advantage (because what recruit wants to go to "the school where kids got raped in the showers") as a player's parents getting a house from some shady wannabe agent.
 
Serious question: do they do this for all athletes and coaches who have committed crimes? Take away wins, records, championships, achievements? Same goes for pro sports. And do people demand this type of punishment for anyone in sports who commits crimes or is this kind of an outlier? Just curious.

Serious question: Why do people pretend that these crimes are not related to Penn State. Crimes happened ON Penn State campus. Penn State ACTIVELY covered up those crimes. Hence why Penn State was punished. I'm really struggling to understand why this is so difficult for some people to understand. Maybe you could shed some light on this.
 
Serious question: Why do people pretend that these crimes are not related to Penn State. Crimes happened ON Penn State campus. Penn State ACTIVELY covered up those crimes. Hence why Penn State was punished. I'm really struggling to understand why this is so difficult for some people to understand. Maybe you could shed some light on this.

I think you don't understand what serious questions are. Jesus.
 
The wins are ultimately a legacy of the school and the players. The students, players, and fans of Penn State did nothing wrong. The wins would not have been possible without those elements. Paterno was only a small part.

Weird, you would think they'd be trying to build a statue of those students, players, and fans outside the stadium instead then.
 
I think you don't understand what serious questions are. Jesus.

I answered rhetorically because your question was phrased dumb. I don't think you got the hint from my response so here:

do they do this for all athletes and coaches who have committed crimes?
No

Happy now? Obviously with crimes committed there are a multitude of factors that go into determining whether or not it gets to the point of taking wins etc.
 
I answered rhetorically because your question was phrased dumb. I don't think you got the hint from my response so here:


No

Happy now? Obviously with crimes committed there are a multitude of factors that go into determining whether or not it gets to the point of taking wins etc.

My question was a legit question. It was only dumb to you because you made stupid assumptions.
 
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