***First Downs and Second Guesses - Blog #47
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With the conviction last month of former Pe
State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky on sexual abuse charges, most people around University Park were probably breathing a sigh of relief that the horror story was now over. For the Board of Trustees and upper management, it's only beginning...again.
Immediately following the verdict, the Pe
State president quickly stated that the university was ready to sit down with each of Sandusky's victims, and negotiate a financial settlement before the civil lawsuits against the university and its leaders could hit the courts. And you know those lawsuits were already written and ready to be filed.
With a $1.8 billion fund in the Pe
State Foundation, university officials would be more than happy to divest themselves of a few hundred million dollars to finally make this public-image nightmare go away. They were eager to settle because there have been stories circulating during the criminal trial that university officials had a secret file on Sandusky going back to 1998 when the first investigation into Sandusky's actions with young boys began. If the rumors of this concealed file were made public in court, and proved to be true, then the university would be in a boatload of liability trouble. And the total amount in damages to the victims could be a lot more than a couple hundred million dollars.
It will be interesting reading if these lawsuits are settled out of court. No amount of money can bring back the innocence that those victims lost many years ago at the hands of a sexual predator. And if some university officials knew of his deviant behavior back in 1998 and did nothing to stop him, the storyline could be more devasting than Sandusky's lurid trial details. I'm sure there is plenty of feelings of anger, resentment, and betrayal being expressed behind closed doors by Pe
State leaders. How deep into that Foundation Fund are these officials willing to go to compensate the victims and their families and to make this piece of stomach-turning school history disappear forever? We'll have to wait and see.
* The NCAA President's Council has presented their plan for a football playoff system for big-time college football. It will consist of the top four teams in the nation as identified by an as-yet-not-assembled committee, and will be played at bowl sites beginning on January 1st of 2014. This four-team system will be in place for 12 years.
I have no problem with the four-team concept. I'm happy that the President's Council took the initiative to devise a plan. I am concerned that the football players will be asked to extend their season even deeper into January when bodies are pretty banged up by the damage done during the regular season. And I'm tired of hearing the NCAA say that the games are for the players and not for the money generated from these games. If that is so, then why is the championship game location in this playoff system going to the highest bidder?
I also think each player on those four playoff teams should receive some monetary compensation for their participation. They deserve it for playing extra games and absorbing more pain and injury. Heck, their coaches get a handsome bump in pay for getting the team into the playoffs. Why shouldn't those athletes also get a piece of the action?
It's time for the NCAA to anty up and share some of that post-season loot with the players. The playoff system is above and beyond the regular season schedule. It goes beyond the scholarship money, too. Give these athletes their due. That's the right thing to do.
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***Blog #29 - First Downs and Second Guesses
Well, folks, we have another national championship to attend and cheer for this fall. It's the classic battle to see who is the best EIGHTH-GRADE football team in the nation.
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***Blog #30 - First Downs and Second Guesses
There is good news on the horizon for student-athletes at NCAA Division I schools. It is expected that the NCAA Division I board of directors will act upon a proposal to increase the value of individual scholarships by $2000 in the top-tier schools in Division I, moving them closer to covering an athletes' full cost of attending school. The $2000 would be at the top of the scale.
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***Blog #31 - First Downs and Second Guesses
College basketball coaches have August 1, 2011 written in red magic marker on their recruiting calendars. That is the day that the NCAA Division I Board of Directors designated as the starting date for unlimited calls and unlimited text messages to high school recruits after June 15 following their sophomore year. The coaches will also be allowed four evaluation days in April, previously a dead period. But the July recruiting days will be pared from 20 to 12.
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***First Downs and Second Guesses
I was shocked and saddened to learn of the medical diagnosis regarding Tennessee head women's basketball coach Pat Summitt: early onset Alzheimers. It's also scary for me because she isn't 60 years old yet, and I just turned 60 this year. Former head men's basketball coach at North Carolina, Dean Smith, has also been diagnosed with Alzheimers. He's nearing 80 years old, so this diagnosis isn't as discerning as Summitt's.
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