Raeden Zen's Blog, page 524

July 25, 2012

July 24, 2012

Rant of the Day

I’m breaking the rules.


Yeah, you read that right. 


Breaking,


the,


rules. 


I have 2 rants:


1. Spain is imploding, as I said it would on my very first blog post way back when on May 26. I think the IBEX is eventually on its way to 2,000; it currently sits around 6,000. There will be fits and starts and we’ll get a “summit” rally here and a “summit” rally there, but by hook or by crook Spain’s market will fall the way of Greece, down 85% from its bubble peak. (Sorry, I never have good news nowadays.)


2. Penn State is imploding, but not as bad as it could have been. Anyone who reads my posts knows that I went to PS and yet I still believed the school and program needed to be punished. But at this point, it seems like they’re just beating up a corpse. First, Penn State hasn’t been a consistent national title contender since the 1990s. And it was never a pure football factory given the insanely high graduation rates. Second, we never got the top flight recruits everyone says we are now not going to get. Occasionally we’d land a 5-star guy but for the most part Joe and Co. would take 3- and 4-star blue-collar PA, Northeast, and Mid-Atlantic guys and turn them into studs.


The one gripe of a lot of the alumni that I completely agree with is this notion that PSU football was all about the game and not about the academics; simply untrue. The numbers don’t show it. Listen to the way the current and former players speak; read what LaVar Arrington writes for the Washington Post. They aren’t a bunch of dumb jocks who skip(ped) out on class. Never were and they aren’t now either.


Anyway, these media folks all said the exodus would come. “NONE OF THEM ARE GOING TO STAY!!! AHHHHH” Yet, here we are, a few days later, and all indications are that the best players don’t plan on going anywhere. They’re being trained by some of the best coaches in the game in what may be the top facilities in the country, and some are ready for the NFL. Ultimately, that’s what it’s all about. Does it really matter if you play in the Godaddy.com bowl, or even the National Championship Game? In the end, the goals should be (1) get an education and (2) go to the NFL and earn solid coin b/c the NCAA is too cheap and hypocritical to pay you. (i.e. perfectly okay for these guys to put their bodies on the line to earn money for schools, which in turn pay the NCAA, but it’s not okay for the players to be paid.)


So where does this leave me with my team? The same place all the students, alumni, residents of PA, and Northeasterners need to be; totally behind the players and coaches. GO TO BEAVER STADIUM. There are a lot of jobs in that town at stake, a lot of people’s livelihoods. More important, part of our punishment is to pay $60 million into a fund for victims of child abuse, so supporting the team will support a great cause. And finally, these guys deserve our support, especially now, as they could have all jumped ship but it seems most of them are choosing to stay. They are bucking the NCAA. They are bucking every sports writer in America that said we wouldn’t have a team to take the field in the fall.


Our scandal was bigger than football, and the football program has been properly punished, in my humble opinion. So has the University. Now we Penn Staters need to stick together and support our University and its football team.


My prediction: the atmosphere in that stadium this fall is going to be the likes of which this country has never seen in the history of sports.

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 24, 2012 18:28

Photo



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 24, 2012 16:34

Photo



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 24, 2012 13:25

July 23, 2012

Photo



1 like ·   •  2 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 23, 2012 18:29

Photo



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 23, 2012 15:56

Photo



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 23, 2012 13:27

Rant of the Day

You guessed it.


Penn State.


It’s not just “any other day” in blue and white land.


Today is the first day of the rest of PSU’s life. Without Joe Paterno, without his statue, and with knowing the final NCAA penalties, however harsh they may be.


A friend of mine sent me a video of PSU people defending Joe as the statue was removed. He asked, “What’s wrong with these people?”


Here’s what I replied:


“There are going to be those PA people, especially those from Central and Eastern PA who adore Joe like a family member. They’ll forgive anything. (Many westerners always hated PS and Joe.) Like I said, I think if I were a student there now rather than years back I would feel betrayed to the point where I’d want to transfer. This goes well beyond ‘not being perfect’ or ‘making a mistake.’ It’s the danger in acquiring too much power and it has happened throughout history. It’s the reason George Washington knew he had to walk away. It’s so cliché but so true, power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. PSU is a big lesson for this country and to a degree I think the statue had become a distraction. If someone as good as Joe Paterno (you’ve heard it all before 50 years of giving, yada yada) could turn so vile it can happen to anyone or any institution. In my opinion, whether or not PS football dies is kind of secondary to focusing on the abuse of power. It does, however, give the media something to write about.”


So, as everyone is so focused on punishing PS football let’s keep in mind the bigger message here. The more compelling one. The one the inept media is missing even as our very own Federal Government and Federal Reserve continue to centralize more and more power within their respective walls. Anyone. I don’t care who it is. Remember Joe? Anyone with too much power is bound to abuse it.


Now, let’s get back to the NCAA penalties. I think PSU lucked out. (Gasp.) I know every PS football fan is hurling rocks at my head, but it could have been worse. If, and it’s a big if, Coach O’Brien can hold this team and his recruiting class together, PS football will emerge in four years in a much better place. You can count on the public completely forgetting PS football by then. Scandal? Joe who? Whatever. In the meantime, Coach O could be building to something great, something better than PS football has seen since the early 1990s. The challenge, of course, for PSU will always be to contain the beast, to never again allow it to grow so large that it overshadows not only the University, but State College, and indeed, Central and Eastern Pennsylvania.


So, today, PS football fans will collectively scream at the injustice while the haters will say they should have received the death penalty. That’s why PS lucked out. At least the NCAA is giving the football program a chance, however small, to continue.The death penalty doesn’t allow that. Everyone would have to leave. And building it from scratch would have been onerous. There is enough PA pride (or “cultish behavior,” if you prefer) to hold this thing together. Look at what Lane Kiffin did at USC, even with the 2-year bowl ban and massive scholarship reductions. (Looks like he kept that Southern California “cult” together.) And Ohio State, you would not even know they had a scandal. That “cult” bounced back quicker than anyone would have ever imagined. And of course, Miami. We’re at a point where the only way a Miami scandal shocks is if someone is dead. “So and so ordered a hundred hookers and booze and cocaine.” Whatever. “So and so offered money in a pay for play scandal.” Whatever. “So and so paid players to injure opposing players.” Whatever. It’s Miami. The NCAA hasn’t even ruled on its latest scandal yet, which broke over a year ago. And either way, its “cult” always bounces back. In fact, all these “cults,” or fan bases as I call them, find a way of staying together and I’m sure PSU will find a way through this.


The bigger, and more important question Americans need to ask themselves is, “What institutions or people do we have in our culture that currently hold too much power and what can we do to prevent the inevitable disasters that await because of it?”

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 23, 2012 07:51