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Fortunately, Cult hero John Ziegler has explained why the Paternos dropped the lawsuit. The move was all about protecting the "victim" (or whatever you want to call him) of the 1971 assault. That's just how the Paternos roll, always putting the "victims" ahead of Joesus' reputation.
Penn State suing Tennessee DC Bob Shoop for breach of contract
Nearly two years removed from his time in Happy Valley, and Bob Shoop still can’t put Penn State in the rearview mirror.
In early June, PennLive.com has reported, PSU filed a breach of contract lawsuit against Shoop in Centre County (PA) court in early June. Monday, the same site noted, the the suit was moved to U.S. Middle District Court.
In the suit, the university is seeking nearly $900,000 it says Shoop owes it after he left as the defensive coordinator at Penn State for the same job at Tennessee in January of 2016.
Entire article: http://collegefootballtalk.nbcsport...ennessee-dc-bob-shoop-for-breach-of-contract/
They bent over in the shower to pick up the soap and got "probed."So, Shoop screwed them against their will, and now they want restitution?
What are they? "Victims?"
You've seen the size of his hands, right?So, Shoop screwed them against their will, and now they want restitution?
What are they? "Victims?"
Ya think?Here's my theory, and I'm stickin' to it. The NCAA always knew Paterno was a fraud and his "Grand Experiment" was a myth. They knew how he manipulated graduation rates. They knew that his AD didn't have a compliance department and didn't report any Clery Act requirements. They knew the story behind the ouster of the Student Affairs VP. They kept it quiet because Paterno served a massive public relations service to them.
Every time an SMU or Barry Switzer scandal broke, they threw Paterno out to the public as a counter-story. Every time a fedex package full of cash from Kentucky to a recruit burst open on the conveyor belt, they threw Paterno out there as a counter-story. Every time a Fab Five or Reggie Bush or Tressel were exposed, they threw Paterno out there as a counter-story. But all the time, they had plenty of information on how things really went down in State College. When the Paternos went to war with them, they went full Dean Wormer and dropped the big one during discovery, and the Paternos crawled back into their hole rather than allow the real truth to be exposed.
Ya think?
Here's my theory, and I'm stickin' to it. The NCAA always knew Paterno was a fraud and his "Grand Experiment" was a myth. They knew how he manipulated graduation rates. They knew that his AD didn't have a compliance department and didn't report any Clery Act requirements. They knew the story behind the ouster of the Student Affairs VP. They kept it quiet because Paterno served a massive public relations service to them.
Every time an SMU or Barry Switzer scandal broke, they threw Paterno out to the public as a counter-story. Every time a fedex package full of cash from Kentucky to a recruit burst open on the conveyor belt, they threw Paterno out there as a counter-story. Every time a Fab Five or Reggie Bush or Tressel were exposed, they threw Paterno out there as a counter-story. But all the time, they had plenty of information on how things really went down in State College. When the Paternos went to war with them, they went full Dean Wormer and dropped the big one during discovery, and the Paternos crawled back into their hole rather than allow the real truth to be exposed.
Here's my story, and I'm sticking to it.
I don't think that the NCAA really cared about anything that was going on in Paterno-land. By almost all apparent measures he ran a clean program. Veneer goes a long way, right? Good graduation rates, players always handed the ball to the ref after scoring... and aside from a random machete incident in the cafeteria, his kids stayed (read: were kept) out of the news papers and legal blotters. It was easy, as you suggest, to parade Paterno when there were other 'distractions' in college football. I don't think that the NCAA gave two [Mark May]s about what they and, for the most part, the rest of the world didn't know about.
I think that the same could likely be said for the old-bag he called wife. I don't think for a second that senile old lady knew [Mark May] of what was going on. I'd liken it to how much Ellen Tressel knew about what went down with Jim. I have to guess Ellen didn't know much of anything until she needed to know. I'd further guess that Peterno went to the grave (read: hell) denying [Mark May] to his wife... knowing that he had one foot in the grave it must have been easy, considering the extent to which he went to protect his grand experiment, she was just an acceptable casualty.
That said, I suspect that Mrs. Peterno (and potentially family) filed that / those lawsuit(s) thinking that Joe was clean. What they found out during the discovery phase was likely a bit of a surprise. And while they may be surprised, let down, and ashamed... those things are far better feelings to have in private than they are in full public display. Kind of a "better to let the world think your husband a complete sleeze-bag-child-rapist-enabler than to go forward with a lawsuit and prove it" situation.
And if I'm right, I'd pay good fucking money to see Mrs. Peterno with a fresh set of steak knives in a room with good 'ol Jerry. As we're all aware, hell... fury... and scored women. It'd be worth the price of admission.
Is this one of those scored women? (I think we need 2 of em to get the full score?)
I'm not real keen on her suit, I think she should remove it.Meh. Don't like her elbows.