The vacating of wins penalizes one person, posthumously. JoePa wanted that all-time win record, and having those 100-some wins disappear costed him that.
He's dead, and doesn't care about that. What's the point? I've stated before that I hate Penn State, but that's no reason to tarnish their football record when the case at hand has nothing to do with cheating. The NCAA didn't even give them due process like they did for
every other infringing university has ever received. The problem I have is this. Essentially the blame comes down to four guys. One is dead. One has been tried and found guilty and is going to Federal prison, and the other two will probably be charged. Therefore I fully support the punishment in terms of a financial blow to the football dept (60 million is a bit steep, but whatever), probation, and the loss of bowl games. However, vacating wins and removing scholarships is bullshit of all bullshits. I really think the NCAA over-stepped it's boundaries, and all that Mark Emmert is spouting about academics vs. athletics is bullshit too. The only reason he acted was due to the media circus pressure depicting PSU as the scapegoat itself. It's about four guys. Period.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...el/07/23/penn-state-ncaa-sanctions/index.html[DOUBLEPOST=1343093018][/DOUBLEPOST]
Eh, it's punishment for a school that had it's authority figures cover up child molestation. It has zero impact on me but I'm delighted (I wouldn't call it giddy... but whatever floats your boat) that people and organizations are taking it seriously. If you cover up kids getting abused you get punished. I think the people who are complaining that this is just too harsh might need to step back a second. Or not. Whatever rocks your socks I guess.
I feel it is too harsh because justice had been served when the perpetrator of the crimes had been convicted and sent to Federal prison. On what grounds is the NCAA acting? The Freeh report is an investigation drawn up by one judge (who has a murky history to himself). Really the NCAA has no right to act until Graham Spanier, Gary Schultz and Tim Curley are tried and convicted for conspiracy in a court of law. They've done this for
every single university scandal except this one.[DOUBLEPOST=1343093406][/DOUBLEPOST]
I root for an SEC team, we don't give a fuck about the other shitty conferences.
That's great and all, but it seems to me you care more about another institution getting hammered to the wall over any actual justice being bestowed upon the victims. What do the NCAA punishments really accomplish other than showing that the NCAA can act on a university well outside matters that govern university athletics. Why are they even involved? In what way does the scandal affect the outcome of the games played by PSU? That's the whole purpose of the NCAA: to monitor fairness between competing institutions; not to get involved in matters outside of what directly affects the players and coaches.