The Late Joe Paterno Defends Penn State Football

Nearly six months after the legendary football coach passed away, Joe Paterno’s family has sent out an op-ed piece that he wrote to former PSU football players at the end of 2011.

The Paterno family claims that the following column was written in late December and early January, about a month before he lost his battle with lung cancer.  The story was forwarded to former Nittany Lion players on Wednesday morning.

Joe Pa was fired in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal during the winding days of the football season last November, and this is the first real statement from the coach written about the situation before he died.

Nearly six months after his death, the longtime coach’s family sends former Nittany Lion players what it describes as an op-ed piece he wrote at the turn of the year.

Editor’s Note: According to Joe Paterno’s family, the following column was written by the former Penn State football coach in late December and early January — less than a month before he died of lung cancer. The story, in the form of a Word file, was forwarded to former Nittany Lion players Wednesday morning.

Paterno was fired in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal last November. To the best of our knowledge, this is the only thing he wrote about the situation before he died.

Check out the entire piece below.

For the last two months, at the request of the Attorney General’s office, I have not discussed the specifics of my testimony regarding the pending cases. And while I will continue to honor that request, I do feel compelled to address comments made subsequent to November 9; specifically, I feel compelled to say, in no uncertain terms, that this is not a football scandal.

Let me say that again so I am not misunderstood: regardless of anyone’s opinion of my actions or the actions of the handful of administration officials in this matter, the fact is nothing alleged is an indictment of football or evidence that the spectacular collections of accomplishments by dedicated student athletes should be in anyway tarnished.

Yet, over and over again, I have heard Penn State officials decrying the influence of football and have heard such ignorant comments like Penn State will no longer be a “football factory” and we are going to “start” focusing on integrity in athletics. These statements are simply unsupported by the five decades of evidence to the contrary – and succeed only in unfairly besmirching both a great University and the players and alumni of the football program who have given of themselves to help make it great.

For over 40 years young men have come to Penn State with the idea that they were going to do something different — they were coming to a place where they would be expected to compete at the highest levels of college football and challenged to get a degree. And they succeeded — during the last 45 years NO ONE has won more games while graduating more players. The men who made that commitment and who gave of themselves to help build the national reputation of what was once a regional school deserve better than to have their hard work and sacrifice dismissed as part of a “football factory,” all in the interests of expediency.

Penn State is not a football factory and it is ALREADY a great University. We have world-class researchers, degree programs, and students in every discipline. Penn Staters have been pioneers in medical advancements, engineering, and in the humanities. Our graduates have gone on to change the world — even graduates with football lettermen sweaters.

That is why recent comments are so perplexing and damaging — Penn Staters know we are a world class University. We can recite with pride the ranks of our academic programs and the successes of our graduates. Penn Staters (and employers) know what we are and the quality of our education. Nothing that has been alleged in any way implicates that reputation; rather, it is only the inexplicable comments of our own administration doing so.

It must stop. This is not a football scandal and should not be treated as one. It is not an academic scandal and does not in any way tarnish the hard earned and well-deserved academic reputation of Penn State. That Penn State officials would suggest otherwise is a disservice to every one of the over 500,000 living alumni.

Forget my career in terms of my accomplishments and look at the last 40 years as I do: as the aggregate achievements of hundreds of young men working to become better people as they got an education and became better football players. Look at those men and what they have done in the world since they left Penn State and assess their contributions as an aggregate – is this a collection of jocks who did nothing but skate by at a football factory, or are these men who earned an education and built a reputation second to none as a place where academic integrity and gridiron success could thrive together?

Whatever failings that may have happened at Penn State, whatever conclusions about my or others’ conduct you may wish to draw from a fair view of the allegations, it is inarguable that these actions had nothing to do with this last team or any of the hundreds of prior graduates of the “Grand Experiment.”

Penn Staters across the globe should feel no shame in saying “We are…Penn State.” This is a great University with one of the best academic performing football programs in major college athletics. Those are facts — and nothing that has been alleged changes them.

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2 Responses to The Late Joe Paterno Defends Penn State Football

  1. July 12, 2012 at 6:04 am #

     Pa:” This is not a football problem…”  You are right!  It’s much, much
    deeper and worse.  It’s a recurring problem of trust, integrity, moral
    decency and character on the part of several highly paid and highly
    placed Penn State officials.  They individually and collectively failed
    in all of these areas and attempting to cover it up ads failure to
    revolting failure.

  2. January 5, 2014 at 1:04 pm #

    And the facts found in these allegations, along with many students of Penn State were shameful and disgusting. This has and should tarnish the image of the school. I do agree that it wasn’t a “football” problem and no one has said it was or is. It is ironic that prior to his death, he was still in denial as evidenced by this writing that he “allegedly” wrote! What is the message that the family is trying to relay with this after death op-ed?

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