AP Photo |
Nothing against Wolverine head coach Brady Hoke or the fine
young men on his team but I just don’t have it in me this week. I’ve spent the past several days trying to
understand how an institution like Penn State University can be hijacked so completely that its most
senior officials ignored criminal acts against children for ten years in
order to preserve its reputation.
The word reputation in this case is nothing more than
a codename for money. As I mentioned to
the Freep’s Drew Sharp today, it came down to one question, “What will you
ignore for $51 million a year?” That’s
the revenue Penn State football generated last year and what their senior officials were
protecting. That’s 51 million reasons why people like Joe
Paterno could literally call the shots on campus for the last 30 years or
so.
That’s why this is not just about Penn State. It is about looking at every program at every institution and asking some hard
questions and figuring out where the line is drawn. It also goes beyond football, way
beyond. It’s looking at the whole moral
azimuth of our communities throughout the country, all of our institutions
whether it’s a college or a church group.
While some are right to use this tragedy as a way to raise
awareness, it does no good when people choose to do wrong for $51 million in
incentives. And now we’re supposed to
fix it with ads and checks, or with symbolic statements during pregame and
halftime?
I guess it’s a start.
AP Photo |
I feel some relief seeing pictures of students and faculty
with posters and blue ribbons standing up for the victims of Jerry Sandusky’s
alleged crimes but it’s symbolism and nothing more. Sure it will add to the coffers of some
anti-abuse charities and that’s not a bad thing but we’re missing something
fundamental here.
How does a game become
so important to some, so lucrative that it stretches beyond the laws of the
land and the laws of humanity? How have
we let our moral azimuth get so askew that the fanaticism over a game causes us
to protest on behalf of its iconic figures, when they are responsible for
allowing children to be sexually abused?
Tony Dungy, America’s coach and role model dad, suggested we
use this as an opportunity to talk to our kids.
It doesn’t go far enough because we must take
the herculean step and evaluate this entire system because every scandal that has touched the NCAA in
recent times has somehow involved money.
Take it out of the equation and end the rule sports programs have on our
institutions of higher learning, and apparently the criminal justice system.
We can find a way to have and enjoy sports in our
communities without letting the revenue it generates consume our better
judgment. For God’s sake we shouldn’t
even be talking about “revenue” in college sports---make it non-profit after
covering operating costs. Take away the
money aspect of it and there is no longer incentive for corruption and criminal
behavior.
These games we play are
supposed to be about fun, teaching sportsmanship, work ethic, and so many other
valuable lessons to our kids. The
problem is when you look at the biggest college programs in the country they
are constantly under some kind of investigation for breaking rules. It’s ironic that by and large they are the
most significant revenue generators in the NCAA and this is the real message
sports sends the kids in our society.
Don’t get it twisted.
Jerry Sandusky (center) photo by AP |
I don’t blame college sports for Jerry
Sandusky’s alleged criminal behavior but a select group of men protecting a
big-money college sports program are at the very center of how he was allowed to
continue preying on children. These were people who could have done something about it but came up with 51 million reasons
to take an approach of indifference and not rock the boat.
51 million reasons to ignore the sick slapping sound of Jerry Sandusky anally raping a ten
year-old boy pinned up against the shower wall at the sports complex on Penn
State, if McQueary tells it right.
51 million reasons to ignore a janitor’s claim that he saw Jerry
Sandusky forcing oral sex on an 11 year-old.
There are plenty of reasons I could find to cheer for the
Wolverines this weekend but the math is simple for me and it’s the one reason I
can’t be a raving college football fan right now. I'll likely listen to the game just to get some perspective more than anything.
2 comments:
Good post. Money and power is a great responsibilty. The leaders of Penn State let those kids down. The leaders of Penn State made a mistake that also let the entire institution down. Now Penn State is paying the price for their love of power and money. I have no sympathy for Penn State's idolized football program. The leadership's actions brought turmoil on themselves.
Thanks for your comment. The sad part is you're right but it comes down to whether you use that power for good or for your own gain. We should covet nothing more than our fellow man. The one thing about Penn I will say is that they are just one of so many programs who bend the rules and sometimes break the laws to protect that revenue stream. Sports could be and often is so much more. As a coach we tried to use it to teach kids about teamwork, sportsman ship and effort. Unfortunately what they see in these big programs are greed and a willingness to bend/break rules to preserve "the program"
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