To be sure, the situation unfolding at Penn State is unusual, if not unique, both for the appalling nature of the allegations and the stature of the coach involved. Joe Paterno was no typical college football coach.
More than any other man, Mr. Paterno is Penn State — the man who brought the institution national recognition, the man who built a football program based on “honor” for 46 years, the winningest football coach in Division I history.
IN PICTURES: Fallout from the Penn State scandal
And he had already announced his retirement effective at the end of the season. To students, such an abrupt firing was no way to treat a legend.
But to many outsiders, such an outpouring of violence was no way to react. Television footage showed mobs overturning a television news van, smashing car windows and newspaper boxes, and aggressively tussling with police in riot gear.
The Penn State riot represents the “warped moral atmosphere” that is created when “universities look to college football as the financial engine of campus that bends the will of the campus,” says Dave Zirin, sports columnist for The Nation magazine.
Certainly, top college football programs have enormous influence at universities.
College football is a $3 billion industry, and Penn State at the top in both earnings and profit for the Big Ten Conference. According to Forbes, Penn State generated $70.2 million in football revenue and $50,4 million in profit for the 2009 season. The athletic department pocketed more than half that, $26.4 million.
Moreover, big-time college athletics play into tribalism.
They are “almost like a cult” in how they strike awe among school officials and students, says Frank Splitt, a former Northwestern University professor who has written extensively on corruption in collegiate sports.
Sports forms a “glue” that binds students and alumni to their alma maters in powerful and visceral ways, he adds. “It gives them something that they can all adhere to.”
In this way, Paterno’s influence on Penn State students and alumni was profound. The football team that Paterno created has been, in many ways, the catalyst for what the university has become. In that way, Paterno is at the core of the university’s sense of identity.
Students chanted “one more game” — asking that the university to allow him to at least coach in the final home game of the season, at home to Nebraska Saturday, so fans could pay tribute to what he has accomplished.
“When you have a company town, everyone’s instinct is to protect the company and the company in this case is big time college football,” says Mr. Zirin.
But the allegations in the Jerry Sandusky case are so heinous that Penn’s State’s Board of Trustees fired Paterno immediately. Mr. Sandusky, a former defensive coordinator under Paterno, is charged with sexually assaulting eight boys from 1994 to 2009. The indictment states that a graduate student witnessed Sandusky raping a young boy in the locker-room shower and told Paterno. Paterno informed his superiors but not law enforcement.
Paterno in his retirement announcement that his inaction “is one of the great sorrows” of his life.
The Sandusky scandal — and the riot that followed Paterno’s firing — are alarms for the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) that things are getting out of control, adds Eldon Ham, a sports attorney in Chicago.
The NCAA currently has nothing in place to address what happened at Penn State, but it has the power to broaden its current mandate to help prevent potential cover-ups from happening. For example, the organization could introduce term limits for coaches to prevent any individual coach from gaining too much control. Or it could use its probation period to demand that the university revisit its chain of command and conduct policy.
So far, the NCAA has refrained from addressing the scandal, which makes Mr. Ham suggest the organization may be “part of the bigger problem.”
“If they can do anything, it would be under the auspices of the institutional control argument. And this institution lost control,” he says. “Their silence is distur
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Tags: arrests, ave, college, fired, football, Graham, Jerry, Joe, joepa, news, Paterno, Penn, pennstate, Pennsylvania State University, pepper, police, psu, Riot, RT, Sandusky, scandal, Spanier, spray, state, students, tipped, van, wendy murphy, WTAJ, youth

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ScrayXXI
140 days ago
Even Spanier’s hair …
Even Spanier’s hair dresser knew about Sandusky; but only Paterno gets fired. Not all of the Trustees who make more money than the state knows about, not all of the higher ups that threatened a poor defenseless man who came from NOTHING and made PSU what it is today. Because its not like Paterno:
-donated MILLIONS to the library
-has his own scholarship program
-gives in dozens of other donations
Anyone against Paterno is blinded by the media; they lack an education and class.
i8hy6e3
140 days ago
the world is crazy …
the world is crazy NOW.
MistressKim
140 days ago
I agree with you …
I agree with you wholeheartedly. They’re celebrating this man, because apparently football is more important than education. It’s so sad. A man continuously rapes innocent children for probably decades and because of his career, influence and connections he was able to cover his trail which allowed him tokeep doing it and his legion of nitwits are outraged that he can no longer coach? What the is wrong with these people? This is what happens when sports is regarded the same as a religion.
BionicBrotha83
140 days ago
Them muthafukas …
Them muthafukas retarded !!!!!!!!
VanessaWilsonMUA
140 days ago
I couldn’t agree …
I couldn’t agree more!!!!
ssips720
140 days ago
the kids at penn …
the kids at penn cannot think! its sick.
i dont know any other college age people like that.
its disgusting.
i would never hire anyone at penn state.
and to be honest, when i heard about the rioting.. i thought they were rioting for the children! can u believe what they were really rioting for?
Anglynn74
140 days ago
Agree w/ you I …
Agree w/ you I don’t get it either, these kids rioting don’t have their priorities in order. These are the same people who’ll bitcvh & moan over cigarette smoke, complain over anything taht is not PC…yet they put football on a higher pedestal than child molestation cover ups…….WTF???? As a parent I find their little riot tantrum just as appaling.
godzilla1077
140 days ago
@TobeyStarburst …
@TobeyStarburst Wrong. He could have told the police and this would have stopped years ago. Instead, Paterno opted to let Sandusky to have access to PSU facilites to this day.
Slydemcgee
140 days ago
he has 40 counts …
he has 40 counts child rape so far and Texas say they gonna charge him with raping a boy in Texas while his wife was there with him. The boy their was a member of the coachs youth center he had started and that the same youthgroup that he caught raping in Pen he would fly the kids to game and rape them and rape in the Gym at penn state or take them to his house and rape them, and heard he was selling some of the kids from youth group too but havent heard anythings from authoritys on that yet
CATSASS1117
140 days ago
You are 100% …
You are 100% correct. Glad I found this…
3star2nr
140 days ago
@TobeyStarburst …
@TobeyStarburst because calling the POLICE was owe so difficult. The man is a piece of shit. He passed the buck rather than report it
Sefarst86
140 days ago
Well said, Nelson. …
Well said, Nelson. The riot was shameful. Everyone who was part of it should wake up tomorrow and be humiliated by their actions.
FabSquirrel303
140 days ago
I’m with you Nelson …
I’m with you Nelson
and tobeyStarburst he did not do everything, he could have gone to the police and he could have told the whole truth not a watered down version
Thelionkinglives
140 days ago
@TobeyStarburst He …
@TobeyStarburst He could have actually told police, it’s pretty simple
SimXLive
140 days ago
Welcome to the New …
Welcome to the New America, you know, the one the Republicans want!
TobeyStarburst
140 days ago
Joe did nothing …
Joe did nothing wrong he did everything he could have done dude.
TheJackyBear
140 days ago
YOU DIDN’T MISS …
YOU DIDN’T MISS NOTHIN… YOU ARE 100% CORRECT AGAIN…iT’S DIFFERENT…