dagblog - Comments for "Penn State, my final loss of faith" http://dagblog.com/link/penn-state-my-final-loss-faith-12219 Comments for "Penn State, my final loss of faith" en Published previous to current http://dagblog.com/comment/140879#comment-140879 <a id="comment-140879"></a> <p><em>In reply to <a href="http://dagblog.com/link/penn-state-my-final-loss-faith-12219">Penn State, my final loss of faith</a></em></p> <div class="field field-name-comment-body field-type-text-long field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even"><p>Published previous to current Penn State story</p> <blockquote> <p><a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2011/10/the-shame-of-college-sports/8643/">The Shame of College Sports</a><br /> By Taylor Branch, <em>The Atlantic</em>, <strong>October 2011</strong><br /><br /><em>A litany of scandals in recent years have made the corruption of college sports constant front-page news. We profess outrage each time we learn that yet another student-athlete has been taking money under the table. But the real scandal is the very structure of college sports, wherein student-athletes generate billions of dollars for universities and private companies while earning nothing for themselves. Here, a leading civil-rights historian makes the case for paying college athletes—and reveals how a spate of lawsuits working their way through the courts could destroy the NCAA.</em></p> </blockquote> <p>Pertinent excerpt on the good old days that never were:</p> <blockquote> <p>....The NCAA today is in many ways a classic cartel. Efforts to reform it—most notably by the three Knight Commissions over the course of 20 years—have, while making changes around the edges, been largely fruitless. The time has come for a major overhaul. And whether the powers that be like it or not, big changes are coming. Threats loom on multiple fronts: in Congress, the courts, breakaway athletic conferences, student rebellion, and public disgust. Swaddled in gauzy clichés, the NCAA presides over a vast, teetering glory....<br /><br /><strong>Founding Myths</strong><br /><br /> From the start, amateurism in college sports has been honored more often in principle than in fact; <strong>the NCAA was built of a mixture of noble and venal impulses.</strong> In the late 19th century, intellectuals believed that the sporting arena simulated an impending age of Darwinian struggle. Because the United States did not hold a global empire like England’s, leaders warned of national softness once railroads conquered the last continental frontier. As though heeding this warning, ingenious students turned variations on rugby into a toughening agent. Today a plaque in New Brunswick, New Jersey, commemorates the first college game, on November 6, 1869, when Rutgers beat Princeton 6–4.<br /><br /> In an 1892 game against its archrival, Yale, the Harvard football team was the first to deploy a “flying wedge,” based on Napoleon’s surprise concentrations of military force. In an editorial calling for the abolition of the play, The New York Times described it as “half a ton of bone and muscle coming into collision with a man weighing 160 or 170 pounds,” noting that surgeons often had to be called onto the field. Three years later, the continuing mayhem prompted the Harvard faculty to take the first of two votes to abolish football. Charles Eliot, the university’s president, brought up other concerns. <strong>“Deaths and injuries are not the strongest argument against football,” declared Eliot. “That cheating and brutality are profitable is the main evil.”</strong> Still, Harvard football persisted. In 1903, fervent alumni built Harvard Stadium with zero college funds. The team’s first paid head coach, Bill Reid, started <strong>in 1905</strong> at nearly twice the average salary for a full professor.<br /><br /> A newspaper story from<strong> that year</strong>, illustrated with the Grim Reaper laughing on a goalpost, <strong>counted 25 college players killed during football season</strong>. A fairy-tale version of the founding of the NCAA holds that President Theodore Roosevelt, upset by a photograph of a bloodied Swarthmore College player, vowed to civilize or destroy football. The real story is that Roosevelt maneuvered shrewdly to preserve the sport—and give a boost to his beloved Harvard.....</p> </blockquote> </div></div></div> Tue, 15 Nov 2011 01:19:38 +0000 artappraiser comment 140879 at http://dagblog.com