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Penn State Cult (Joe Knew)

Penn State football facing attendance problem

Just the other day, Penn State offensive lineman Ty Howle was talking about his excitement for the home opener Saturday at Beaver Stadium, repeating the chorus sung by so many about Penn State's huge crowds.
"We can only imagine how great it's going to be with 108,000 screaming fans behind us," he said.

All of last year, coach Bill O'Brien echoed a similar sentiment — why would anyone need a bowl game when Beaver Stadium's 108,000 seats provided a bowl-like atmosphere?

These statements make convincing propaganda, as long as the fans come to the games. While no one questions the noisy, chaotic effectiveness of a full Beaver Stadium, the seats have too often gone unsold in recent years at a more worrisome rate than at other top programs, creating a problem for the athletic department.

Facing financial woes brought on by the Jerry Sandusky child sexual abuse scandal and NCAA sanctions that could deepen in the ensuing years, attendance will matter at Beaver Stadium this season and the capacity crowds of the past could be hard to replicate, particularly if last year's numbers and the ticket packages being peddled by the athletic department this season are any indication.

In July, athletic director Dave Joyner noted Penn State's attendance concerns. He framed these anxieties multiple times as part of a national problem.

"If you look at the curve that has been going on at Beaver Stadium over the last several years, it's been a steady line down, which it has been across the country," he said.

This national decline in college football attendance is true, but Penn State's drop has been especially precipitous.

Penn State averaged 96,730 fans per game in 2012, the fifth-highest total of any school in Division I-A. As promising as that number may be, it masks a problem. Whereas the average Division I-A university experienced an attendance decline of 1.2 percent in 2012 from the previous year, Penn State's average attendance declined 4.6 percent. Comparing last year's attendance to five years previous, 2007, Penn State was down 11.2 percent. The average Division I-A program was down 2.9 percent.

Another telling statistic was its percentage of fullness. With a capacity of 106,572, according to Penn State's athletic department, Beaver Stadium was 90.8 percent full last year on average. Of the top 25 football teams with the highest attendance last year, Penn State ranked 23rd in percentage of fullness. It was one of only seven of the top 25 highest-attended schools that had a percentage of fullness of under 95 percent (the average percentage of fullness for the top 25 attended programs was 97.8 percent), suggesting that its attendance problems are unusual for a powerful program.

When O'Brien began his two-week caravan around the East Coast this spring, he regularly stressed the importance of a full Beaver Stadium. In his speeches, he said that healthy attendance would lead to a healthy athletic department.

Joyner said the athletic department was coming up with ideas to improve fan experience. These measures include enhanced stadium WiFi, "new and improved" rentable seat cushions and a Beaver Stadium app that was introduced last season and allows fans to see videos and live stats. A new Jumbotron video screen also will be completed in 2014. (Associate athletic director of facilities and operations Mark Bodenschatz on Tuesday referred to this new Jumbotron as "quite awesome.")

As of this summer, the athletic department reported that 90 percent of season-ticket holders from last year had committed to season tickets this year. To attract crowds, Penn State also has introduced new ticket options, using tactics previously never utilized by the school.

This season, for instance, fans who wanted to buy single-game tickets to the Michigan game were mandated to buy the same number of tickets for Saturday against Eastern Michigan. The same went for the Nebraska game, which was paired with the Sept. 21 Kent State game.

About three weeks ago, Penn State released three new ticket packages. For a discount rate, recent graduates, as well as former and current Nittany Lion Club members, were offered tickets to multiple home games. The news release, posted on the athletic department's website, contained a quote from O'Brien that summed up the enormity and desperation of this gesture:

"There is nothing more important to the future of Penn State football and Penn State athletics than a full Beaver Stadium this season."
 
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The prosecutors recently addressed Paterno's role in this fiasco in a CBS interview.

Jerry Sandusky prosecutor: No evidence Joe Paterno participated in criminal cover-up at Penn State

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As for Paterno, Fina carved out a space that sounded pretty close to the legal responsibility / moral responsibility divide first raised by Pennsylvania State Police Commissioner Frank Noonan at a press conference on Sandusky's arrest in November 2011.

Paterno met minimal legal obligations, officials said then, because he did alert his superiors at Penn State to a 2001 eyewitness account of alleged sexual abuse by Sandusky, his longtime defensive coordinator, at a football shower facility.

That report was never turned to police or child welfare authorities for investigation.

Paterno was dead from complications from lung cancer months before before the state's probe of Penn State's response to the Sandusky probe was completed.

When pressed by interviewer Armen Keteyian on Paterno's role, and the common perception that he had a controlling hand in all university affairs, Fina suggested the former coach's words will have to speak for themselves.

"He (Paterno) said it best," said Fina, who has since left his state post for a position with the Philadelphia District Attorney's office. "He said: 'I didn't do enough... I should have done more.'"

Fina's reference appeared to be to a statement issued by Paterno in the days following Sandusky's arrest in which the longtime coach announced his intent to resign as head football coach at the end of the 2011 season.

Paterno, faced with growing questions about his role in the case, said in part that day: "This is a tragedy. It is one of the great sorrows of my life. With the benefit of hindsight, I wish I had done more."

Penn State trustees instead fired him that night.

Paterno's role in the scandal has become an unending debate for Pennsylvanians and Penn State fans, in part because of a communal need to know what to make of the coach so many lauded for his commitment to "success with honor" for so many years.
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DavidM
Post #10002
Annapolis, previously Abington PA

There's More To Say...Reply
but let me begin by encouraging everybody who will be in State College next Friday to find their way to the Penn Stater by 3:30. I know that some of you are just beaten down by the events of the last couple of years, but those who still care about getting the truth, and fairness for Penn State, need to get fired up and attend a week from now.

Moron #1 is in. No word yet from Morons #s 2 and 3. Wonder who's doing their social media?

Dear God, let this be a troll....please, please, please let this be a troll.
 
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Actually there will be a lot of threads about that I bet...O'Brien went ape[Mark May] at the end when a UCF guy went out of bounds and the refs wound the clock.

Yeah, I saw that. Which is idiotic, because they changed the rules a couple years back and the out-of-bounds clock stoppage only applies under the two minute mark now. I just can't believe the coach and announcers don't even know the rules any more. :lol:
 
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