Brandon Short Defends JoePa

This email purported to be from linebacking legend Brandon Short is circulating around the Net and describes how football coach Joe Paterno behaved on the day after his Nov. 9 firing from Penn State in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal.

Short says that he and his wife spent part of Nov. 10 with Paterno.

The email says Paterno was more concerned about how his current and former players were affected than himself, and was talked out of holding a press conference.

Among Short’s revelations is that Paterno specifically says that Coach Mike McQueary never told him “that he saw Jerry Sandusky raping a boy in our locker room shower.”

Short who says he “thought he knew Jerry Sandusky extremely well” expressed shame and anger at his ow participation in Sandusky’s The Second Mile organization for at-risk boys.

The email refers to Gray Schultz as “chief of university police” when the reality is that Schultz was a university vice president who responsibilities included oversight of the department.

Hat tip to PennLive.com. Here is the complete email:


Captains:

It would be an understatement to say that we are
saddened by the recent allegations regarding Jerry Sandusky and the
subsequent fallout. If these allegations are true then Jerry used Penn
State Football and every one of us who may have helped Jerry with The
Second Mile to lure in at risk children and then exploit them both
mentally and physically. I thought that I knew Jerry Sandusky extremely
well. Jerry was my position coach for five years and I have spent
countless hours with him one on one putting in game plans and discussing
ways to help him grow The Second Mile. I cannot express the confusion,
pain, and anger I feel every time I think of Jerry committing such
vicious crimes. With that said, at this extremely dark hour we have
failed to see that another crime has been committed.

In the media
fire storm that ensued the damning allegations against Jerry a lead
villain has emerged; Joe Paterno. Not Jerry Sandusky, Tim Curley, or
Gary Schultz but Joe the man who took second hand information and
immediately gave it to his superior and the chief of university police.

My
wife and I were fortunate enough to spend a few hours with Joe and Sue
the day after the Board of Trustees made the decision to fire Joe. Even
at the lowest point of his life, in typical Joe fashion Coach was more
concerned with how his current and former players were doing than he was
with his own situation. All of us know the immeasurable quality of
Joe’s character and we also know that he’s a fighter. Coach pulled out
his notes and said that he was ready to hold a press conference in his
backyard to answer any questions and clear up any uncertainty the day
after he was fired. However his advisers thought that it would appear
defensive and be a mistake.
Joe assured me that Mike McQueary never
told him that he saw Jerry Sandusky raping a boy in our locker room
shower. Joe immediately went to his superiors and arranged a meeting
with Mike, Tim Curley, PSU athletic director, and Gray Schultz, chief of
university police. Remember that Jerry was not a football coach at the
time and therefore Joe had no authority to do anything other than report
what Mike told him to the authorities (which he did). Joe trusted Penn
State’s Athletic Director and its Chief of Police to do their jobs and
it appears they didn’t. The university
ultimately fired Joe Paterno because it didn’t do its job. And that is a crime.

Joe
Paterno has always had the courage to stand up and fight for the people
in his life. Joe regularly put his neck on the line and believed in
many of us when nobody else would. In the past, Joe has supported us
because he knew the character of the men that we’ve become. We all know
Joe in a way that rest of the world does not. We know Joe’s true
character. And now it’s time for us to stand up for him in his time of
need.

With the exception of a few brave men, there has been a
deafening silence from the Penn State Football family regarding Coach
Paterno and what has made Penn State a special place for the last half
century. We owe it to each other to speak up and do for Joe what he has
always done for us.
Attached is a link to a recent Wall Street
Journal article which attacks Coach Paterno for defending his players
and calls Penn State an undisciplined program.

http://online.wsj.com/article/…_LEFTTopStories

There
have been suggestions on specific actions that we can take to support
our program. Following the holiday, we plan on sending you a rough draft
of an action plan for your review. Thanks and have a good holiday
weekend. WE ARE!
Brandon

 

Brandon Short Defends JoePa

Understanding Fumblitist And Why Some Teams Are Fooled By A Hard Count

Understanding Fumblitist And Why Some Teams Are Fooled By A Hard Count — It has been revealed that those involved in the NFL overwhelmingly tilt towards the GOP in their political donations.

Of the top five franchises in giving, only the Dolphins gave more to the Democrats and even they were pretty even with the Dems getting 52 percent of the contributions and the Republicans getting 45 percent.

Of course, there are some teams that clearly hang out with the jackasses than roam with the elephants.

Of the $37,000 in contributions made since January 2009 by those with Jeff Lurie’s Philadelphia Iggles, 94 percent went to Democrats.

Can that be the explanation as to why an Andy Reid-coached team can never seem to keep a second or two on the clock for a field goal attempt?

 

Understanding Fumblitist And Why Some Teams Are Fooled By A Hard Count

NFL Players Slaves?

This is being republished with the permission of Chris Freind.

Talk about a political football. At a time when most municipalities are running in the red, another line item must now be factored into budgets: new history textbooks.

That’s right. It turns out that the real reason for fighting the Civil War was the North’s desire to steal the incredible wealth of the slaves. Apparently, despite subjugation by their owners, the majority of slaves were millionaires, and those who weren’t still received a guaranteed minimum of $310,000 per year.

Shocking as this recent historical find seems, it was certified by Minnesota running back Adrian Petersen, and as we all know, anything a National Football League player says must be true. Petersen’s plethora of antebellum knowledge was revealed as he enlightened the nation by comparing the NFL labor dispute to “modern-day slavery.”

At issue is how to divvy up $9 billion in revenue between owners and players. Talks have broken off and management has locked out the players.

Summing up how the players were being treated during the negotiations, Peterson said, “It’s modern-day slavery, you know?”
He added, “People kind of laugh at that, but there are people working at regular jobs who get treated the same way, too.”
That brilliant Petersen Principle, though, remains a bit unclear. Were those “regular” people — those not involved in the NFL negotiations — average Americans who will work the first four months of this year just to pay their local, state and federal tax burden?

As in, a “slave” to the government? A government, by the way, that “regular” Americans send more money to than they spend on food, clothing and shelter combined.

Or was Petersen’s defense of regular people referring to the poor and disadvantaged NFL saps who only make seven figures a year, compared to Petersen’s $10.5 million, and whose six-year contract is worth almost $41 million? And for those making the league minimum of $310,000, well, they should probably pick cotton in the off-season just to make ends meet.
It must be tough being an NFL slave.

*****

The Petersen case underscores just how hypocritical some “leaders” have become regarding race relations. As a result, we aren’t the color-blind country we should be, but instead see the gulf between black and white only widen.

Take the pathetic defense of Petersen’s remarks from his agent Ben Dogra (who obviously has a financial interest in seeing this flap go away). Rather than condemn the statement for what it was, he defends it with meaningless rhetoric. “I think anybody that knows Adrian knows that (he) is a very strong-willed and passionate individual,” Dogra said. “The game means an awful lot to him.”

Gee, thanks for clearing that up, Ben. In other words, because he makes eight figures a year and is “passionate,” it’s okay to equate his situation to slavery, which, by the way, is still rampant in parts of the world.

But it gets better: “People should not just take his statements per se word by word. It’s a difficult time. He would love to play. I’m sure that everybody would love to see football continue in the NFL… nobody should really look at those words and take them out of context.”

Nice try, Ben. But how exactly are they “out of context?” He compared his situation to slavery. That’s a fact. It wasn’t a slip of the tongue, and there’s no gray area here. His “passion” and “love of the game,” while admirable, have absolutely nothing to do with his racist remarks. He shouldn’t get a free pass for outrageously disrespecting the misery that slaves in America endured. A life, by the way, that they couldn’t walk away from, unlike Petersen, who at 25, could quit his work today and live comfortably for five lifetimes.

But he has been given a free pass. And that is the real — and wholly unreported — story.

Adrian Petersen will come and go. He’ll probably make some half-hearted apology written by PR specialists and appear at events to make him seem more racially-sensitive (although he has yet to do so). And he’ll dazzle on the gridiron for seasons to come (especially if he learns to stop fumbling). But in the big picture, Petersen is irrelevant.

No, the biggest frauds of all need to be exposed. Through the whole flap, nary a peep was heard from the Jesse Jacksons and Al Sharptons of the world. And where was that bastion of cowardice, the NAACP?

Conspicuously silent, but what else is new?

And this is precisely why they have no credibility left. Condemning racism of all kinds and promoting equality should be their goals, but instead, it’s the polar opposite. To them, separate and unequal trumps unity, and the condemnation of racism is done on an extremely selective basis. Translation: jump on the bandwagon in cases involving a “racist” white person, but go on vacation when the person is black.

The list of being on the wrong side is long: the Duke lacrosse team falsely accused (who were innocent), the Tawana Brawley case which Sharpton enflamed with racial rhetoric (where rape allegations by white men of a black girl were proven false), the ridiculous firing of Don Imus, and the Jena Six case in Louisiana, when Jackson reportedly ripped then-presidential candidate Barack Obama for “acting like he’s white.”

But when a situation like that of Adrian Petersen comes along, providing a perfect opportunity to explain why slavery comparisons are so hurtful and destructive, their silence is deafening. And their credibility, whatever is left of it, crumbles.

The conversation at kitchen tables and watercoolers around the nation is that Jackson and Sharpton are worthless, and the NAACP promotes racism far more than it fights it. But fear of being labelled racist and bigoted keeps most people — and most media commentators — from taking on these hypocrites, and speaking the truth.

Racism still exists in America, albeit to an infinitely smaller degree than it once was. Perhaps the greatest example of that progress was illustrated when a black President — itself a remarkable feat — gave the eulogy of Senator Robert Byrd, a former member of the KKK.
Unfortunately, that progress has come in spite of, not because of, people like Sharpton and Jackson. But there is a silver lining. Their blowhard political grandstanding and blatant hypocrisy have become such trademarks that they not only lack credibility, but more important, relevance. No one cares what they have to say anymore because their platforms have been built on a house of cards.

The biggest tragedy of all is that, had these men — d
ynamic orators of great charisma — truly fought the good fight, America’s racial divide would be measurably smaller.

What a shame. Leaders who preach color-blindness but really only see black-and-white…are a terrible thing to waste.

 

NFL Players Slaves?

Will NFL Mean No Fans Left?

Will NFL Mean No Fans Left — Fans of the San Diego Chargers, Detroit Lions and Oakland Raiders will miss their teams on TV tomorrow as the teams failed to sell out the stadiums by the Thursday deadline.

This brings the number of NFL blackouts to 13 for the season which is more than half of last year’s 22 with 60 percent of the games still to be played.

On a clearly unrelated note, it has been revealed the the NFL’s political action committee has donated near $600,000 to politicians, mostly Democrats, including Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi.

Has anyone wondered if there was a correlation between disposal income i.e. the amount of money going to things like taxes, fuel and food and expensive ticket purchases?

Nah. Just make the players wear pink. That will bring the fans flocking  back.

 

Will NFL Mean No Fans Left

Greg Skrepenak and His Luzerne County Crucifixion

Greg Skrepenak and His Luzerne County Crucifixion
Greg Skrepenak was warmly greeted when he appeared Sunday, two days after his sentencing, at the Festival and Flea Market at St. Mary’s Byzantine Catholic Church in Wilkes Barre. Parishioners offered him sympathy and support, and many expressed disgust at some of the things being said about him. With him is parish priest Father James Hayer.

The holy and sainted Democrats who run Pennsylvania’s Luzerne County drafted local sports legend and political neophyte Greg Skrepenak to run for county commissioner in 2003. He easily won as expected and was promptly named chairman of the board.

Skrepenak, known in the area as Skrep, won All-American honors in football and basketball at Wilkes Barre’s G.A.R. Memorial Junior Senior High School in the 1980s and was an MVP in baseball. Skrep went on to the University of Michigan were he became an All-American offensive lineman and was the Gator Bowl MVP in 1991. He went on to a respectable pro career with the Los Angeles and Oakland Raiders and the Carolina Panthers.

Skrep’s life was not a bed of roses, however. Personal issues led to his retirement from football. His wife had become addicted to drugs and he was raising by himself his daughter and two sons.

Skrep as commissioner did as he was told and in return was given rein to indulge his dreams of expanding services to those with drug problems and youth at risk.  He ran for re-election in 2007 and again easily won.

Maybe the most damning thing Skrep  did in his tenure as Democrat Party puppet was vote to use private detention centers for juveniles. These centers were paid on a per prisoner basis. This resulted in horrifying abuse. Kids who committed rather minor offenses were ordered incarcerated by judges who received kickbacks. Anyway, the sin was not the vote, as dumb as it may have been in hindsight, but the kickbacks and Skrep has not been connected to them in the slightest.

What Skrep was connected to was taking a $5,000 discount from the fellow who was building his condo, a fellow who then at Skrep’s behest received some sweet tax breaks from the county. Skrep initially denied seeing anything wrong in this. He thought the discount was due to friendship and said he would have pushed for a tax break for the fellow anyway because, well, he was his friend. Those who know him believe him. Skrep could safely be described as the dream commissioner for a Luzerne County party boss.

Anyway, a hungry federal prosecutor couldn’t resist such an easy chance to put a new head on the wall and Skrep was charged with bribery, a charge to which he would eventually plead guilty.

With the big man safely down, the local media jumped on him with both feet. Every word he uttered in his defense was questioned. His children were ridiculed. The references to his religion he made during his apology at his sentencing were mercilessly mocked.

U.S. District Judge Richard P. Conaboy gave him 24 months and those who leech pleasure from others’ pain gave themselves pats on the back.

Oh, if only Skrep had been a billionaire pedophile like Jeff Epstein for whom our courageous men and women in federal law enforcement managed to also get a two-year sentence. Then Skrep could have daily furloughs to his office for his first year and serve his second year under house arrest.

But the feds have their priorities, one guesses.

 

The Crucifixion Of Greg Skrepenak

 

Greg Skrepenak and His Luzerne County Crucifixion

 

The Crucifixion Of Greg Skrepenak

 

Greg Skrepenak and His Luzerne County Crucifixion

Drexel Thug Life Or Culture Counts

Drexel Thug Life Or Culture Counts — A trio of young black men who are students at Drexel University in Philadelphia allegedly followed through on a convoluted plot to rob a female student at gunpoint in her apartment and are now charged with robbery, theft, assault, weapon offenses and conspiracy which are felonies and mean a pretty screwed-up life if convicted.

Two of men, Jamie Harris and Kevin Phillip, both 21 from New York City, are scholarship players on the school’s Divison I basketball team which last year  went 16-16 and finished fifth in the Colonial Athletic Association.

Harris, the team’s starting point guard and leading scorer. was a third-team, all-conference selection. Phillip was a 6-6 backup forward.

The third man, Devon Bond, 21 also, of Marlton, N.J. is said to be the one who cooked up the Keystone Crook scheme and is also charged with burglary.

The incident occurred after Bond allegedly convinced the others that a co-ed who was an acquaintance had a lot of money in her apartment. He allegedly obtained an invitation to her home and after a short conversation left with the door propped open. He then returned and short time later Harris and Phillip entered waving guns, police said. They pushed Bond to the floor in an attempt to make it appear he was also a victim, police said. No money was found so the basketball players reportedly stole two cell phones. Bond quickly followed them out, said police.

Drexel Thug Life Or Culture CountsThe accused were soon tracked down via surveillance camera footage and  credit card transactions at a nearby pizza shop, and that’s how things stand.

Authorities and others expressed puzzlement as to why young men would throw away such promising lives. Well, culture counts Sherlock. If the music to which you listen glorifies the thug life; and the magazines you read and movies you watch glamorize those who lead such lives; and your community leaders give you a wink and tell you it should be part of your experience; and if your preachers give you something other than the Gospel and tell you theft and violence are legitimate responses to the condition they tell you you’re in; and if your schools reinforce that message; and if the general media does not contradict it; and if there is no father around to set you straight; expect to be a young man facing felony charges.

Drexel Thug Life Or Culture Counts

Change Opportunity For Jim Thorpe, Pa?

Change Opportunity For Jim Thorpe, Pa?  — Sunday’s New York Times’ sports section  carried a large story on the continuing saga of Jack Thorpe’s attempts to bring the bones of his father  back to his home state of Oklahoma from his grave in Jim Thorpe, Pa.

The Pennsylvania sports legend was buried in 1953 in the small borough that is the Carbon County seat after his wife, Patricia, who was Thorpe’s third wife and Jack’s stepmother, became angered at Oklahoma’s refusal to erect a monument to her husband. The Pennsylvania boroughs of Mauch Chunk and East Mauch Chunk were merging and offered to not just do so but to rename the new municipality in his honor if she would let him be buried there.

Thorpe never set foot in the place. His road to fame started 100 miles southwest at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School which he led to a national collegiate football championship in 1912.

Jack, 73, is now suing in federal court demanding the bones be returned in compliance with Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990. One has to admit that it is a bit of a stretch to use a law aimed at preventing the desecration of Indian grave sites to move Thorpe’s bones considering Thorpe was a life-long Catholic, a quarter Irish and a quarter French, and had never been buried anywhere else. Federal judges, however, have certainly been known to be whimsical in their interpretation of law especially in the pursuit of political correctness and praise from the wine and cheese set.

Perhaps, it would be best for the borough to cut its losses and let the bones go. Of course, then it would need a new name.  Maybe there is a long-ago sports great looking to return to a little bit of spotlight by agreeing to let his body be buried there. How does Mark Spitz, Pa. sound? Bruce Jenner, Pa.? Randall Cunningham, Pa.? Greg Gross , Pa.? They could open it for bids. The possibilities are endless. Feel free to make a suggestion.

Change Opportunity For Jim Thorpe, Pa?

 

Philly Lax All Stars To Take On Team USA

Team USA men’s lacrosse team is playing one of its three exhibition games this summer 8 p.m., Friday, June 18 at Banko Field at Lehigh University against Philadelphia Lacrosse Association All Stars and tickets — $10 in advance — can be gotten at www.palacrosse.com/teamusa2010.php .

Proceeds with be used for Team USA’s expenses for the Federation of International Lacrosse World Lacrosse Championships, July 10-24 in Manchester, England. 

Famous Philadelphia Sports Fans II

Gov. Ed Rendell has criticized the use of a Taser by Philadelphia Police to bring down young Steven Consalvi as journeyed through the outfield of Citizen’s Bank Park in the ninth inning of the Phillie-Cards game, May 3.

Rendell thought they should have used a snowball.

Famous Philadelphia Sports Fans II

Famous Philadelphia Sports Fans II