It takes loss of schollies, tv appearances and a bowl ban to to prevent other universities from trying something like this? All the jail time, financial penalties, and utter disgrace isn't enough?
ironically imo, you are placing football on a pedestal by acting like a punishment to a football program is actually relevant to the prevention ofchild rape and criminal cover up.Bulldog Bruce said:It takes loss of schollies, tv appearances and a bowl ban to to prevent other universities from trying something like this? All the jail time, financial penalties, and utter disgrace isn't enough?
willi13 said:that they let a child rapist have free reign on the campus. Instead of reporting him and protecting the children, they kept their information to themselves. Penn State deserves the death penalty, period.
IBleedMaroonDawg said:willi13 said:that they let a child rapist have free reign on the campus. Instead of reporting him and protecting the children, they kept their information to themselves. Penn State deserves the death penalty, period.
I agree.
We are not talking about $100 hand shakes. We are talking about sadistic child crimes that were covered up by everyone in charge of the athletic administration.
I don't agree with the argument that other people will suffer because of this and that these types of sanctions should not have been handed down. Do we let lawbreakers go unpunished because it will affect their families who had nothing to do with the crime?
There has never been a case like this in college football and it deserved the sanctions handed down. Otherwise you are telling the rest of the athletic departments out there it's okay to cover up crimes of this magnitude, you will just get a bowl ban and a fine.
Hector said:You say no, I say yes. Good luck with your logic in the future.
Thank youMr Obvious.patdog said:Penn St. isn't being punished because a coach broke the law. They're not being punished because a coach raped children. They're being punished because they knowingly covered it up when they found out about it and knowingly aided and abetted the coach in recruiting victims for at least 14 years. THAT'S what Penn St. is being punished for. Every school in the country has a drug policy and even the Mississippi Bears have kicked several players out of school for violating their relatively weak policy. Arkansas just fired their coach for breaking the law by circumventing the hiring process togive his mistress a job. Georgia and Auburn both just kicked their best RB out of school. That's internal control. You can't totally prevent a coach or player from breaking the rules or laws, but when you discover it, you take action. And that's what Penn St. didn't do.
dawgs said:i'm all for punishing the guilty parties. they are responsible for their individual crimes and imo that's as far and punishment should extend. how's that logic for you?
How so? The NCAA has punished schools for sins long past since its inception. It just so happens that in this instance they had access to a report by Louis Freeh that detailed the lack of institutional control necessary to run an athletics department under NCAA guidelines.Bulldog Bruce said:Absolutely it has been discussed how the NCAA sanctions against USC punished the wrong folks. Pete Carroll's reputation has not been destroyed and he makes 5 million a year now. The AD lost his job, but did not go to jail.bullysleftnut said:The Penn State head football coach and athletic department dictated to the university powers how a felony charge was to be covered up to protect their image.
If that isn't textbook Lack of Institutional Control I don't know what is. The NCAA *HAD* to hammer Penn State in this situation. Otherwise they may as well close up shop.
As far as 'hurting innocent people', did anyone care about the USC football players that got hammered 6 years after Reggie Bush left for the NFL? What about the coaches that got hammered the year after Pete Carroll left for the Seahawks?
That argument doesn't hold water.
So just because the NCAA was wrong on that occasion, doesn't mean they should be wrong again. That is also a weak argument.
patdog said:You just fire the people who committed the violations and you've punished them. No one is left who is guilty of anything. And the school gets a free pass. It just doesn't work that way. The school covered up what was happening and the school is being punished.
So if the multi-million dollar fine is - in fact - unprecedented, who lied?RonnyAtmosphere said:..my opening statement was EXCEPT FOR THE MULTI-MILLION $ FINE, NONE OF THIS WAS UNPRECEDENTED.
I yelled it in all caps so your dumbass might see it this time.
And you are one to talk about bitching.