Interesting read on Penn State Job about Tom Bradley

Topgundawg

Redshirt
Oct 23, 2010
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Pulled this out of the Pile of **** on the Web about Penn State Job....
</p>

Penn State University has officially started its
search to replace football coach Joe Paterno, whom it unceremoniously
dumped in the wake of the sex-abuse scandal that has engulfed the
school, the surrounding community and the commonwealth.</p>

On Monday, the school announced that a six-person committee headed by
acting athletic director Dave Joyner would search for PSU’s first new
football coach in 46 years. There were reports Tuesday that Mississippi
State’s Dan Mullen is the front-runner.</p>

But I think the best choice might be the guy currently holding the job.</p>

On the surface, interim coach Tom Bradley, who stepped in when
Paterno was fired on Nov. 9, appears to be exactly what Penn State
should step away from.</p>

In a program where a closed-door culture that wielded too much
influence seems to be the root cause of the current problems, Bradley,
the longtime defensive coordinator, is the ultimate insider. He has a
37-season link to the Paterno era, starting with four as a player.</p>

I certainly understand the argument that the next coach of the Nittany Lions should have no previous ties to the university.</p>

But is it the right move for Penn State and Penn State football as
both try to move forward from something that has shaken Happy Valley to
its core?</p>

First, let me be clear that Bradley must be completely free of the
current scandal. He must be vetted by the search committee as if he were
running for president of the United States. Nothing is off-limits. No
question is out of bounds. He must be absolutely honest about
everything.</p>

Bradley cannot have even a hummingbird-size skeleton in his closet
that shows he had any inkling of prior knowledge of the allegations
against former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky.</p>

OK, so considering the chances are remote that Bradley never even
accidentally overheard a whispered conversation about Sandusky, why him?</p>

Well, because no football coach in the country better understands
what is happening with Penn State football and what is going to happen
with Penn State football moving forward.</p>

Bradley has been in the belly of the beast with this football program for the past month.</p>

Even more, he knows that as bad as things already have been, the
stronger corrosive digestive juices haven’t yet started to truly flow.</p>

There are dark, dark weeks, months, possibly years ahead for Penn State football.</p>

When it is all said and done, the one thing we know for sure is that
football is never going to be all about football at Penn State again.</p>

The scrutiny that the next coach will be under will be unlike anything in the history of college athletics.</p>

Any coach coming into Penn State must understand that his program is going to be under a microscope viewed throw a telescope.</p>

Minor slips will be viewed like major stumbles.</p>

Wins and bowl bids are going to be afterthoughts to personal conduct of players and coaches for the foreseeable future.</p>

Honestly, despite what a candidate might say to get a high-profile
job like Penn State, how many football coaches are equipped to deal with
the reality of that?</p>

Urban Meyer, who would have been the best
football choice for Penn State, took the Ohio State job, knowing that
the Buckeyes are soon going to get some kind of NCAA sanctions.</p>

Al Golden, a solid coach who played at Penn State from 1987 to ‘91,
signed an extension with the University of Miami knowing that the
Hurricanes are likely to be banged hard once the current NCAA
investigation is done.</p>

The NCAA is looking into Penn State’s institutional control in the
wake of the Sandusky scandal, but as far as I can tell, PSU isn’t likely
to face any sanctions.</p>

But that’s how toxic this scandal is. This is a morality play in
which Penn State is going to have a difficult time coming out looking
good. For some, probably nothing it does will be enough.</p>

Penn State is probably lucky that Meyer is off the board.</p>

Considering what is going on, can you imagine what the perception
would have been had Penn State given Meyer the six-year contract worth
$4 million annually that Ohio State did?</p>

Hardcore PSU football fans probably wouldn’t care about that because
Meyer would have guaranteed the Nits would again be national contenders.</p>

The administration at Penn State knows that’s the last thing that can appear to be the primary concern.</p>

By nature, coaches don’t like transparency. The next coach at Penn
State is going to have to run his program through panes of crystal-clear
glass.</p>

He and his players will have little, if any, margin for error for doing anything wrong.</p>

The next coach at Penn State is going to have to tell recruits that
coming to State College is going to be about playing football under
extraordinary circumstances that will challenge their maturity,
discipline and responsibility more than at any other program.</p>

The next coach at Penn State cannot shy away from that.</p>

And if a kid can’t handle that, no matter how talented he may be, the
next coach at Penn State is going to have to move on to the next
recruit who can.</p>

The next football coach at Penn State is going to have to understand
that, fair or not, football is now viewed as part of the problem at Penn
State.</p>

I don’t know what kind of football coach Bradley is, but after 37
seasons there, I’m sure he has a unique love for Penn State University —
not just for Penn State football.</p>

An outsider probably would be the safer choice.</p>

But an insider like Bradley understands the culture that brought Penn State to this point.</p>

He knows without question that all of that is going to change. He
knows he won’t be able to cut any corners or make any exceptions. He’ll
know to not even ask.</p>

Tom Bradley is probably the only candidate for the Penn State job who
has a precise understanding of what he would be walking into.</p>

Right now, that might be more valuable to Penn State University as a
whole than a football coach who can guarantee a trip to the Rose Bowl.</p>
 

AssEndDawg

Freshman
Aug 1, 2007
3,183
54
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There is way too much pressure on Penn State to clean house and with the NCAA watching that is what they probably will do. What the guy writing this article, and most of the people at PSU, seem to be forgetting is that this isn't about football. This is about the tacit approval of a child rapist in the Athletic Department (employed or not he was allowed to use PSU athletic events as his honey-trap for young boys).

I think people in sports are seriously losing the plot on this one. ESPN keeps calling it a "sex scandal" and it's not! A sex scandal is banging the secretary; this was allowing a serial child rapist to destroy the lives of young boys in the Penn State locker room. This was vile and it was criminal and the fact that some people, especially the ones at Penn State, are glossing it over is disgusting. They should shut down the football program, at least for a while, but of course they won't. Because obviously in our society there is a certain amount of money that some people think gives them the right to push this aside and just keep on keeping on.

To this point, if Dan Mullen is willing to take that job, if he is willing to slide into the Athletic Department where a child rapist was given free reign to destroy kids, then he's not the kind of person I would want coaching at MSU. When you can look at the dollar signs, and talk about the prestige, and try to sweep away the "small sex scandal" then there is something terribly wrong with you. This was not something that one man did, this was a systemic problem spreading throughout the University. The entire thing disgusts me.

I thought it was interesting ESPN did a poll and nearly 50% of people said they would not want their school to participate in a bowl if Penn State was going to be the other team. At least some people get this.