What NCAA rule was broken? Cite it specifically for me, please.
Further, please outline how a single Penn St. football player or coach benefitted from Jerry Sandusky raping little boys.......
I don't know what rules the NCAA has pertaining to the governance of its own member schools and I am not going to spend time looking for them. I do, however, believe that by whatever authority the NCAA has to punish member schools for using an inappropriate mascot, they likely may also choose to punish a member school for covering up criminal acts committed on campus by their athletic department employee.
I don't have any doubt that Penn St. figured to gain from this cover-up by saving embarrassment and possibly saving their revered coach from forced retirement, possibly saving the loss of significant donations, and possibly saving the loss of football recruits.
Organizing tournaments.
Selling TV rights.
Making sure student-athletes are really student-athletes.
That's it.
Dean S - like it or not, the NCAA has a (huge) rulebook that spells out what the Institution is - and is not - responsible for.
If the NCAA did what you suggest, and took action regardless of whether that action was supported by its own rules, they would be opening themselves up to a lawsuit.
And "moral responsibility" - that is a very tricky door to open, and even harder to legislate or judiciate.
There are existing legal avenues that can be used to hold Penn State accountable - not to mention the landslide of civil suits that will follow the Sandusky verdict.
That may not be enough to satisfy your moral outrage, but in our society of laws, it will have to suffice.
+19
Witness Exhibit A Unnamed University
Disorderly conduct: Conduct which is disorderly, lewd, or indecent, breach of peace, or aiding and abetting, or procuring another person to breach the peace on university premises or at functions sponsored by or participated in by members of the university community is prohibited.
Witness Exhibit B
http://www.nacua.org/documents/NCAA_StatementReChildSexualAbuse.pdf
Witness Exhibit C unnamed university
Student-athletes who do not conform to this code may be subject to consequences for their actions that may include but are not limited to: a warning, dismissal from the team, reduction or withdrawal of athletically related financial aid, and suspension from the University. In addition to all University policies, student-athletes are responsible for following the standards in the NCAA student-athlete behavior statement and the Ohio Valley Conference Sportsmanship Statement as well as all city, state and federal laws.
Witness Exhibit D Unnamed University
It is imperative that student-athletes recognize the significance of their behavior as visible members of the campus and local communities. This same attention, however, also should inspire the institution to assure that its student-athletes receive the same treatment as students generally in disciplinary or criminal matters. Intercollegiate athletics cannot be viewed as a refuge where student-athletes may escape responsibilities imposed on all citizens, nor should student-athletes be held to a higher standard of conduct than that imposed on the student body as a whole. (Adopted by the NCAA Presidents Commission, July 1992.)
Witness Exhibit E Unnamed university
Student-athletes enrolled at NCAA member institutions should reflect the high standards of honesty and integrity set by the Association for conduct of Intercollegiate Athletics. As NCAA member institutions strive to fulfill their educational missions, they share a
right and a responsibility to preserve order and encourage ethical, responsible behavior through the formulation of standards of conduct for student-athletes and the designadtion of procedures by which those standards shall be enforced.
Not only do NCAA institutions recognize in their individual code of conduct statements that athletes need to abide by the law of the land, but are obligated by their institution to abide by it, and that the institutions abide by the law of the land, and that it is a requirement of the NCAA body as a whole. Therefore, the NCAA has set up an enforcement code, through its NCAA Student Behavior Statement on governing institutions on matters of law. The above institutions, just a small sampling agree to these principles and agree that it is a requirement of their membership in the NCAA to follow the law.
Penn State having failed that statement can and should be sanctioned for failure to abide by the code of conduct because that code of conduct can not be higher or lower in standard than that of any student or member of the institution as per the NCAA Presidents Commission statement of 1992. So, yes, I think the NCAA has the right to impose sanctions on Penn State and all other members have already agreed by their own compliance statements agree that the NCAA has the right to impose sanctions on institutions that do not comply with these statements. The power of the NCAA is to enforce the rules of the Universities which belong to the NCAA. Penn State, by agreeing to abide by the NCAA code of conduct, will now have to enforce its own rules on conduct, or be sanctioned by the NCAA in things like tournament rights, scholarships, etc.
So, no, the NCAA rules of conduct do not disregard criminal behavior. They have a code of conduct that all members have published on line agreeing to abiding by the law of the land and in treating each student with the same protections. In my fine mind, the Student Behavior Statement of the member institutions, modeled after the NCAA guidelines on the same conduct, requires members to uphold the law. Those same requirements are the requirements of membership. And, the control of membership rights resides solely at the discretion of the NCAA and its members, which therefore it allows to investigate misconduct, make a report of findings, rule on those findings, and make sanctions under the rules of the organization on member institutions, which Penn State has already agreed upon, which is my final exhibit.
Penn State Exhibit: (from ESPN) "NCAA spokesman Bob Williams said attorneys for the legislative body have confirmed the Penn State circumstances apply to a possible violation of unethical behavior standards and possible violation of rules of institutional control and oversight. Williams said the NCAA has not launched an enforcement investigation but instead a review that could prompt a formal investigation if recommended by the NCAAs senior management group." November 2011 as a result of the Sandusky investigation.
So, go hide in your legal shell and know that not only can the NCAA do something about Penn State, they already have begun to act on Penn State.
Of course Penn St. can legally enforce a signed code of conduct on its own student-athletes. The problem here is that no Penn St. student-athletes were involved, at all, in any of these events.
What else ya got?
We are talking about the school's behavior!
What NCAA rule was broken? Cite it specifically for me, please.
Further, please outline how a single Penn St. football player or coach benefitted from Jerry Sandusky raping little boys.
The Woog comparison is silly. Giving benefits to players is a direct and straightforward violation of NCAA rules. Sheltering pederasts is not. I'm sorry that the NCAA isn't going to punish Penn St. football so you can feel better about yourself.
The ideal outcome would be a self imposed PSU penalty that has the nod of approval from Emmert and Delany. No investigation, just announce in tandem with the Freeh report.
I think it will be unacceptable if there is no football penalty. This stuff was swept under the rug so as not to kill the golden goose. That is not acceptable in our conference.
So even though no NCAA rules were broken, the correct move is for PSU to institute NCAA penalties and punish players and coaches who weren't present at the time that no rules were broken. Yea, that makes a lot of sense.
This is a criminal and civil issue that will be addressed through the legal system. Penn State is "going to pay" many times over in the civil lawsuits it will be facing. There is no basis for making this into an NCAA issue.
The ideal outcome would be a self imposed PSU penalty that has the nod of approval from Emmert and Delany. No investigation, just announce in tandem with the Freeh report.
I think it will be unacceptable if there is no football penalty. This stuff was swept under the rug so as not to kill the golden goose. That is not acceptable in our conference. Athletics are meant to be kept in perspective.
Let’s all hope the federal investigators follow the money trail, follow the emails, follow the secret files, follow every trail as far up as it goes. We have a long-missing DA, labyrinthine connections between Penn State football, the Second Mile, deep-pocketed donors, school officials, and current Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett. Joe Paterno made millions of personal dollars with Second-Mile-connected deals – real-estate, bottled-water, convenience stores. And that’s just what has been chronicled by reporters. He, Spanier and Schultz had every venal reason to stay as quiet as possible for as long as any of them knew, whether 1994, 1998, 2001, or earlier.
Sandusky’s charity-as-victim-farm was intertwined with Penn State football since 1977, and we now know from the sworn testimony of other longtime assistant coaches that it was common for boys to be showering in their midst. There’s more than one sick bastard here, and more than one willfully ignorant adult.
In the letter, the N.C.A.A.’s president, Mark Emmert, said that the acts described in a grand jury report — including allegations that Sandusky raped or sexually assaulted eight boys over a period of 15 years — “try not only the integrity of the university, but that of intercollegiate athletics as a whole.” Emmert said that the N.C.A.A. would examine both a lack of institutional control, one of the most serious charges the N.C.A.A. can make against a university, as well as “the actions, and inactions, of relevant responsible personnel.”
I agree with this 100% This is a football issue.
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2012/06/22/bernstein-justice-done-but-more-to-do/
Or before you decry that as a opinion piece, here are some interesting facts about the financing of a Second Mile venture during the time of the McQueary allegations:
http://www.thedaily.com/page/2011/12/05/120511-news-paterno-business-1-5/
Every authority with every power of jurisdiction now has work to do.
Also if you forget, The NCAA sent a letter of Inquiry to Penn St. back in November:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/19/s...into-institutional-control-at-penn-state.html
This may well prove true. But until it does, anyone calling for the NCAA to do anything is just being silly.The big football stories are sure to come out. This isn't over by any means.
In other words, "we're looking into it."The governing body has said it will examine whether Penn State violated bylaws covering institutional control and ethical conduct in its handling of accusations against Sandusky.
Your wrong as always - it's still a football issue.dpodoll68 said:Nope. Not a football issue. Football players and/or coaches being involved does not make it a football issue. Sorry.
NCAA Mission Statement
Core Ideology:
The NCAA's core ideology consists of two notions: core purpose - the organization's reason for being - and core values - essential and enduring principles that guide an organization.
Core Purpose:
Our purpose is to govern competition in a fair, safe, equitable and sportsmanlike manner, and to integrate intercollegiate athletics into higher education so that the educational experience of the student-athlete is paramount.
The core purpose can therefore be broken up in two parts:
1) "To govern competition in a fair, safe, equitable, and sportsmanlike manner." The Jerry Sandusky situation does not fall into this category as his actions did not affect competition. If, however, the situation were found to be bigger and boosters and/or money was somehow involved, that would be a whole new can of worms.
2) "To integrate intercollegiate athletics into higher education so that the educational experience of the student-athlete is paramount." The Jerry Sandusky situation also does not fall into this category because his actions did not affect the educational experiences of student-athletes. IF, however, the line ended at "higher education," then an argument could be made that his actions could fall under the scope of the core purpose. It doesn't end there though and the purpose only pertains to the integration of athletics and education with regard to the student-athlete.
Core Values:
The Association - through its member institutions, conferences and national office staff - shares a belief in and commitment to:
· The collegiate model of athletics in which students participate as an avocation, balancing their academic, social and athletics experiences.
This value does not apply as it only pertains to the students and their role as student-athletes.
· The highest levels of integrity and sportsmanship.
This value is very broad and open and does apply to the situation.
· The pursuit of excellence in both academics and athletics.
This value does not apply IMO as his actions affected neither academics nor athletics (slightly debatable depending on your definition of athletics).
· The supporting role that intercollegiate athletics plays in the higher education mission and in enhancing the sense of community and strengthening the identity of member institutions.
This value applies the most to the situation. Obviously it affected the PSU community and the identity of member institutions.
· An inclusive culture that fosters equitable participation for student-athletes and career opportunities for coaches and administrators from diverse backgrounds.
This value may apply to the situation depending on how you interpret it. If you interpret it saying it seeks to protect the opportunities of coaches and administrators to advance, you could say that all of the PSU coaches' opportunities (especially McQueary's) were affected. However, if you interpret it only in regards to maintaining diversity in the opportunities, it wouldn't apply at all.
· Respect for institutional autonomy and philosophical differences.
This value would not apply to the situation as it would seek to allow the leadership of the university and the Board of Trustees to handle the situation on its own.
· Presidential leadership of intercollegiate athletics at the campus, conference and national levels.
This value would not apply except for the President's role in the situation and his unwillingness to do anything about it at the time. Therefore the value very well may apply.
So let me get the straight. You won't say any rules were broken but you still think punishment should be handed out? And if the NCAA doesn't do it then PSU should self punish? All because the conference will kick them out? Yea...no. The conference isn't going to kick them out. The B1G's reputation is in no way on the line. That's because the conference isn't in any way involved here. That's why no articles have been written calling for the B1G to step in or accusing the B1G of being complicit.I didn't allege that NCAA rules were broken. I only stated that I believe there must be, and will be football penalties. I think these will be self imposed. Even if the NCAA does nothing, the conference can do something. If the conference, in their.collective wisdom, concludes that they don't like having a member school where football and its reputation has become more important than the protection of children, they can kick PSU out and replace then with Notre Dame.
IMHO, PSU fails to impose a football penalty at its own peril.