As the other thread is getting cluttered, I thought I would start one that does not focus so much on the Freeh Report, but more so on the actions the NCAA should or could take.
In the wake of the conspiracy to cover up the actions of convicted pedophile Jerry Sandusky, I find it interesting that people still find ways to defend the indefensible. Leaving out the multitude of civil suits for now (there are some saying damages could top 500 million), the NCAA is now focusing on this scandal ridden school and taking in the known facts and known actions of school administrators, athletics administrators, iconic (sic) coach inactions, and a host of other participants' actions and preparing to make a ruling regarding the sanctions possible against Penn State. While some delusional and attention seeking individuals claim that the NCAA can not do anything, one needs only refer to the NCAA Division I Constitution Section 6.0.1 to see that Penn State failed miserably at Institutional Control, and beyond that, there are a host of other issues when the words ethics come up. While it is possible that the NCAA may want to distance themselves from this stinking mess, the NCAA is walking a very tight line here, because any inaction will reflect very poorly upon themselves and their governance of collegiate athletics and institutions that participate in such.
The only reasonable course of action is that the NCAA at the least, must levy the "death sentence" on the Penn State Football program for no less than 2 years. Established precedence in the NCAA rulings involving 5 death penalty sentences too date have resulted in two, 2 year sentences, for recruiting violations. Recruiting violations. Let that sink in. 2 years of no sport athletics (in the reference sports) for recruiting violations. Paying student athletes to pay composed one of those "death penalties". Now look to the comparison at Penn State. At Penn State, administrators actively conspired to cover up a series of crimes so heinous that most have trouble saying it aloud. The Institutional Control failed miserably and allowed young adults and children to be brutally sodomized and raped by the scum of the human race, a pedophile named Jerry Sandusky. Further, the culture surrounding this program that was built up by an iconic "legend" allowed this to continue. Finally, and amidst the testifying before a grand jury, the iconic football legend was awarded a much larger retirement package even though he failed miserably at the least in simple ethics.
Penn State deserves not a simple 3 year penalty for the football program. It deserves a ten year absence of NCAA sports. Maybe then, that scandal ridden culture can truly learn that athletics and ethics can go hand in hand.
What are your thoughts?