What do you do?
I'd kill the program.
I'd kill the program.
Last edited by 13rin (2012-07-22 16:54:59)
I stood in line for four hours. They better give me a Wal-Mart gift card, or something. - Rodney Booker, Job Fair attendee.
Last edited by 13rin (2012-07-22 16:54:59)
what would that accomplish13rin wrote:
I'd kill the program.
It would punish people who are no longer associated with the school very much...Mutantbear wrote:
what would that accomplish13rin wrote:
I'd kill the program.
Last edited by 13rin (2012-07-22 18:02:25)
http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/22/us/penn-s … ?hpt=hp_t1Penn State University will be hit with fines in excess of $30 million as part of "significant, unprecedented penalties" expected to be announced Monday by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, a source familiar with the case told CNN on Sunday.
While the school's football program will not face the so-called "death penalty" that would have prevented the team from playing in the fall, the school might have preferred a one-year suspension because of the severity of the scholarship losses, postseason sanctions and other penalties, the source said.
For at least 2 years as a deterrent for other schools. Make a statement that all will hear.13rin wrote:
I'd kill the program.
It would force the school to reevaluate its administrative and campus culture.Jay wrote:
It would punish people who are no longer associated with the school very much...Mutantbear wrote:
what would that accomplish13rin wrote:
I'd kill the program.
Last edited by Mutantbear (2012-07-22 18:50:05)
Hitting the student body with $30M in fines for what the past administration did is completely ass backwards. That's what? $1,000 per student? Since when is it a sports councils right to act as judge and jury for an academic university? Yeah, the coverup was terrible, but try those people in court, don't punish the entire school. I hope the NCAA burns in hell.Macbeth wrote:
It would force the school to reevaluate its administrative and campus culture.Jay wrote:
It would punish people who are no longer associated with the school very much...Mutantbear wrote:
what would that accomplish
Assuming anything even matters
Jay wrote:
Yeah, the coverup was terrible, but try those people in court, don't punish the entire school. I hope the NCAA burns in hell.
Yes there is. It's called the criminal justice system. The abuse and subsequent coverup were off-field actions that really had nothing to do with the football program. It didn't help them win or lose or cheat or anything else. The bullshit just happened to take place mostly within the athletic department of a member school. The NCAA really should just butt the fuck out and let the people have their day in court.Spearhead wrote:
Kill the program, or at least for 10 years or something. People keep bringing up the fact that you'd be punishing other people as well. I'm not so sure that even matters at this point. There's no system in place to actually hold them accountable so just like with a little toddler, take away the candy.
Then kick the school out of the NCAA. They should not have the ability to levy a $30M fine.Spearhead wrote:
What you're missing here is the fact that the culture itself is on trial. So in your mind, the NCAA should just pretend this didn't happen? It's also their job to promote and uphold values within their system. It's absolutely their right to do so.
Last edited by Jay (2012-07-22 20:00:15)
http://deadspin.com/5928112/ncaa-may-fi … 60-millioneleven bravo wrote:
isnt the fine the withholding of scholarships?
the NCAA oversees more than football, by all means kill the women's gymnastic progam because the defensive coordinator from the men's football team was raping little boys in the shower.Spearhead wrote:
Well I agree, and kicking them out of the NCAA would essentially be killing the program.