Joe Pa

Discussion in 'Sports Board' started by Gator Bill, Mar 1, 2008.

  1. Gator Bill

    Gator Bill Well-Known Member Administrator

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    I'm personally hoping he will finish ahead of Bobby Bowden in coaching victories. Some of Bowdens came at a lower division school and before the NCAA is done at FSU he may have to forfeit some wins.

    However it looks like Paterno might not be there but for one more season.

    Maybe Penn State should do what FSU has done and name the successor?

    Joe Pa's Future





    Matt Hayes

    A sad day is not too distant in Happy Valley


    Let me take you back a short time, when life was easy for the face of college football. A simple, untouchable time.

    After the 2004 season, Penn State president Graham Spanier arrived at Joe Paterno's house and asked the coach, 78 at the time, to retire gracefully, and yes, immediately.


    Joe said no.

    Now here we are in the waning months of winter; 29 wins, a Big Ten championship and three bowl victories later, JoePa is fighting for his job again.

    "It's a different world this time," says one prominent Penn State booster. "Everyone associated with the process knows that, including Joe."

    Like it or not, the tenuous coaching business is more about what could be than what is. And if that future is uncertain and trending toward a blip of a dip, alarms go off, rumors float and the dreaded vote of confidence is soon to follow.

    Used to be that JoePa was immune to this nonsense, a half-century investment in Penn State shielding him from the bickering and infighting of big-money boosters and heavy-handed administrators itching to make their mark on the program.

    But at some point this spring -- and maybe as soon as in a few weeks -- Spanier and athletic director Tim Curley will meet with Paterno for the annual review of the program. It is widely believed that Spanier will then detail his vision for the future of Penn State football -- and Paterno's place in it.

    Spanier hasn't publicly commented about the process -- why would he at this point? -- but all signs point toward a defining offseason in Happy Valley.

    Essentially, there are two options: 2008 will be Paterno's last season, or Paterno will fight -- as he did in 2004 -- to keep his job. And if he fights by engaging big-money boosters, he will all but eliminate the possibility of one of his current staffers (read: defensive coordinator Tom Bradley, a Nittany Lions aide for three decades) succeeding him.

    It's a sad, almost too cruel, slap of reality: If Paterno wants to repay Bradley's loyalty, he has to give up the program he built -- a program that has averaged nearly 10 wins since the last ultimatum from Spanier. Only this time around, the dynamics have changed dramatically.

    Spanier has grown more powerful within the university community, and Paterno has grown weaker on the recruiting trail. Penn State's 2008 signing class was its worst in more than a decade, and many rival coaches are successfully using Paterno's age against him.

    Paterno privately told recruits he would be at the school for at least three more years before his handpicked successor took over. If only it were that simple.

    JoePa no longer is untouchable. The end is unavoidable for the octogenarian -- and, yes, finally inevitable.
     
  2. Sid

    Sid Well-Known Member

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    I have mixed feelings. I have immense respect for JoPa and his legacy, but there comes a time when common sense must prevail on his part. Whether true or not, it appears that Joe's ego is in the way of his making a graceful exit. It's time. I just hope he can bring himself to seeing it and can act accordingly.
     
  3. gipper

    gipper Well-Known Member

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    At some point, the coach realizes that he can't give 100% which is what he always asks of his players. When that happens a coach should let go. That's what Bobby Knight did and of course many in the media ripped him for "quitting" on his team. But Knight loves to fish and he's already found another way to fill his time. Maybe JoPa just can't think of any other way he'd like to spend his time. Then again, maybe someone doesn't want him home all day. :D
     
  4. Terry O'Keefe

    Terry O'Keefe Well-Known Member Administrator

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    This sort of surprises me,

    but that is a good record and I wonder if the next guy can do better. One thing though is their recruiting, it wasn't very good this past year in terms of ratings and I would bet that a new regime would be able to leverage the "new" part of things and get highly ranked kids interested in going to Penn State, again. There is certainly a lot of talent in PA and NJ that PSU traditionally gets and probably have been poached away by Rutgers, Pitt, ND and other B10 schools.


    For example I have read that Tyrel Pryor would go to Penn State except that he has no faith that they can develope him into a QB who can play at the next level, or develope him at all.

    Terry