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Amid
scandal,
revered
PSU
coach
Joe
Paterno
dies
By
GENARO
C. ARMAS
AP
Sports
Writer
STATE
COLLEGE,
Pa. (AP)
-- Happy
Valley
was
perfect
for Joe
Paterno,
a place
where "JoePa"
knew
best,
where he
not only
won more
football
games
than any
other
major
college
coach,
but won
them the
right
way:
with
integrity
and
sportsmanship.
A place
where
character
came
first,
championships
second.
Behind
it all,
however,
was an
ugly
secret
that ran
counter
to
everything
the
revered
coach
stood
for.
Paterno,
a
sainted
figure
at Penn
State
for
almost
half a
century
but
scarred
forever
by the
child
sex
abuse
scandal
that led
to his
stunning
dismissal,
died
Sunday
at age
85.
His
death
came
just 65
days
after
his son
Scott
said his
father
had been
diagnosed
with a
treatable
form of
lung
cancer.
The
cancer
was
found
during a
follow-up
visit
for a
bronchial
illness.
A few
weeks
later,
Paterno
broke
his
pelvis
after a
fall but
did not
need
surgery.
Mount
Nittany
Medical
Center
said in
a
statement
that
Paterno
died at
9:25
a.m. of
"metastatic
small
cell
carcinoma
of the
lung."
Metastatic
indicates
an
illness
that has
spread
from one
part of
the body
to an
unrelated
area.
The
hospital
says
Paterno
was
surrounded
by
family
members,
who have
requested
privacy.
Paterno
had been
in the
hospital
since
Jan. 13
for
observation
after
what his
family
called
minor
complications
from his
cancer
treatments.
Not long
before
that, he
conducted
his only
interview
since
losing
his job,
with The
Washington
Post.
Paterno
was
described
as frail
then,
speaking
mostly
in a
whisper
and
wearing
a wig.
The
second
half of
the
two-day
interview
was
conducted
at his
bedside.
His
family
released
a
statement
Sunday
morning
to
announce
his
death:
"His
loss
leaves a
void in
our
lives
that
will
never be
filled."
"He died
as he
lived,"
the
statement
said.
"He
fought
hard
until
the end,
stayed
positive,
thought
only of
others
and
constantly
reminded
everyone
of how
blessed
his life
had
been.
His
ambitions
were far
reaching,
but he
never
believed
he had
to leave
this
Happy
Valley
to
achieve
them. He
was a
man
devoted
to his
family,
his
university,
his
players
and his
community."
Paterno's
death
just
under
three
months
following
his last
victory
called
to mind
another
coaching
great,
Alabama's
Paul
"Bear"
Bryant,
who died
less
than a
month
after
retiring.
"Quit
coaching?"
Bryant
said
late in
his
career.
"I'd
croak in
a week."
Paterno
alluded
to the
remark
made by
his
friend
and
rival,
saying
in 2003:
"There
isn't
anything
in my
life
anymore
except
my
family
and my
football.
I think
about it
all the
time."
Two
police
officers
were
stationed
to block
traffic
on the
street
where
Paterno's
modest
ranch
home
stands
next to
a local
park.
The
officers
said the
family
had
asked
there be
no
public
gathering
outside
the
house,
still
decorated
with a
Christmas
wreath,
so
Paterno's
relatives
could
grieve
privately.
And,
indeed,
the
street
was
quiet on
a cold
winter
day.
Paterno's
sons,
Scott
and Jay,
arrived
separately
at the
house
late
Sunday
morning.
Jay
Paterno,
who
served
as his
father's
quarterbacks
coach,
was
crying.
Paterno
built a
program
based on
the
credo of
"Success
with
Honor,"
and he
found
both.
The man
known as
"JoePa"
won 409
games
and took
the
Nittany
Lions to
37 bowl
games
and two
national
championships.
More
than 250
of the
players
he
coached
went on
to the
NFL.
"He will
go down
as the
greatest
football
coach in
the
history
of the
game,"
Ohio
State
coach
Urban
Meyer
said
after
his
former
team,
the
Florida
Gators,
beat
Penn
State
37-24 in
the 2011
Outback
Bowl.
Paterno
roamed
the
sidelines
for 46
seasons,
his
thick-rimmed
glasses,
windbreaker
and
jet-black
sneakers
as
familiar
as the
Nittany
Lions'
blue and
white
uniforms.
The
reputation
he built
looked
even
more
impressive
because
he
insisted
that
on-field
success
not come
at the
expense
of high
graduation
rates.
But in
the
middle
of his
46th
season,
the
legend
was
shattered.
Paterno
was
engulfed
in a
child
sex
abuse
scandal
when a
former
trusted
assistant,
Jerry
Sandusky,
was
accused
of
molesting
10 boys
over a
15-year
span,
sometimes
in the
football
building.
Outrage
built
quickly
when the
state's
top cop
said the
coach
hadn't
fulfilled
a moral
obligation
to go to
the
authorities
when a
graduate
assistant,
Mike
McQueary,
told
Paterno
he saw
Sandusky
with a
young
boy in
the
showers
of the
football
complex
in 2002.
At a
preliminary
hearing
for the
school
officials,
McQueary
testified
that he
had seen
Sandusky
attacking
the
child
with his
hands
around
the
boy's
waist
but said
he
wasn't
100
percent
sure it
was
intercourse.
McQueary
described
Paterno
as
shocked
and
saddened
and said
the
coach
told him
he had
"done
the
right
thing"
by
reporting
the
encounter.
Paterno
waited a
day
before
alerting
school
officials
and
never
went to
the
police.
"I
didn't
know
which
way to
go ...
and
rather
than get
in there
and make
a
mistake,"
Paterno
said in
the Post
interview.
"You
know, (McQueary)
didn't
want to
get
specific,"
Paterno
said.
"And to
be frank
with you
I don't
know
that it
would
have
done any
good,
because
I never
heard
of, of,
rape and
a man.
So I
just did
what I
thought
was
best. I
talked
to
people
that I
thought
would
be, if
there
was a
problem,
that
would be
following
up on
it."
When the
scandal
erupted
in
November,
Paterno
said he
would
retire
following
the 2011
season.
He also
said he
was
"absolutely
devastated"
by the
abuse
case.
"This is
a
tragedy,"
he said.
"It is
one of
the
great
sorrows
of my
life.
With the
benefit
of
hindsight,
I wish I
had done
more."
But the
university
trustees
fired
Paterno,
effective
immediately.
Graham
Spanier,
one of
the
longest-serving
university
presidents
in the
nation,
also was
fired.
Paterno
was
notified
by
phone,
not in
person,
a
decision
that
board
vice
chairman
John
Surma
regretted,
trustees
said.
Lanny
Davis,
the
attorney
retained
by
trustees
as an
adviser,
said
Surma
intended
to
extend
his
regrets
over the
phone
before
Paterno
hung up
him.
After
weeks of
escalating
criticism
by some
former
players
and
alumni
about a
lack of
transparency
trustees
last
week
said
they
fired
Paterno
in part
because
he
failed a
moral
obligation
to do
more in
reporting
the 2002
allegation.
An
attorney
for
Paterno
on
Thursday
called
the
board's
comments
self-serving
and
unsupported
by the
facts.
Paterno
fully
reported
what he
knew to
the
people
responsible
for
campus
investigations,
lawyer
Wick
Sollers
said.
"He did
what he
thought
was
right
with the
information
he had
at the
time,"
Sollers
said.
The
university
handed
the
football
team to
one of
Paterno's
assistants,
Tom
Bradley,
who said
Paterno
"will go
down in
history
as one
of the
greatest
men, who
maybe
most of
you know
as a
great
football
coach."
"As the
last 61
years
have
shown,
Joe made
an
incredible
impact,"
said the
statement
from the
family.
"That
impact
has been
felt and
appreciated
by our
family
in the
form of
thousands
of
letters
and well
wishes
along
with
countless
acts of
kindness
from
people
whose
lives he
touched.
It is
evident
also in
the
thousands
of
successful
student
athletes
who have
gone on
to
multiply
that
impact
as they
spread
out
across
the
country."
New Penn
State
football
coach
Bill
O'Brien,
hired
earlier
this
month,
offered
his
condolences.
"The
Penn
State
Football
program
is one
of
college
football's
iconic
programs
because
it was
led by
an icon
in the
coaching
profession
in Joe
Paterno,"
O'Brien
said in
a
statement.
"There
are no
words to
express
my
respect
for him
as a man
and as a
coach.
To be
following
in his
footsteps
at Penn
State is
an
honor.
Our
families,
our
football
program,
our
university
and all
of
college
football
have
suffered
a great
loss,
and we
will be
eternally
grateful
for
Coach
Paterno's
immeasurable
contributions."
Paterno
believed
success
was not
measured
entirely
on the
field.
From his
idealistic
early
days, he
had
implemented
what he
called a
"grand
experiment"
- to
graduate
more
players
while
maintaining
success
on the
field.
"He
maintained
a high
standard
in a
very
difficult
profession.
Joe
preached
toughness,
hard
work and
clean
competition,"
Sandusky
said in
a
statement.
"Most
importantly,
he had
the
courage
to
practice
what he
preached."
Paterno
was a
frequent
speaker
on
ethics
in
sports,
a
conscience
for a
world
often
infiltrated
by
scandal.
The team
consistently
ranked
among
the best
in the
Big Ten
for
graduating
players.
As of
2011, it
had 49
academic
All-Americans,
the
third-highest
among
schools
in the
Football
Bowl
Subdivision.
All but
two
played
under
Paterno.
"He
teaches
us about
really
just
growing
up and
being a
man,"
former
linebacker
Paul
Posluszny,
now with
the
NFL's
Jacksonville
Jaguars,
once
said.
"Besides
the
football,
he's
preparing
us to be
good men
in
life."
Paterno
certainly
had
detractors.
One
former
Penn
State
professor
called
his
high-minded
words on
academics
a farce,
and a
former
administrator
said
players
often
got
special
treatment.
His
coaching
style
often
was
considered
too
conservative.
Some
thought
he held
on to
his job
too
long,
and a
move to
push him
out in
2004
failed.
But the
critics
were in
the
minority,
and his
program
was
never
cited
for
major
NCAA
violations.
The
child
sex
abuse
scandal,
however,
did
prompt
separate
inquiries
by the
U.S.
Department
of
Education
and the
NCAA
into the
school's
handling.
Paterno
played
quarterback
and
defensive
back for
Brown
University
and set
a
defensive
record
with 14
career
interceptions,
a
distinction
he still
boasted
about to
his
teams in
his 80s.
He
graduated
in 1950
with
plans to
go to
law
school.
He said
his
father
hoped he
would
someday
be
president.
But when
Paterno
was 23,
a former
coach at
Brown
was
moving
to Penn
State to
become
the head
coach
and
persuaded
Paterno
to come
with him
as an
assistant.
"I had
no
intention
to coach
when I
got out
of
Brown,"
Paterno
said in
2007 in
an
interview
at Penn
State's
Beaver
Stadium
before
being
inducted
into
college
football's
Hall of
Fame.
"Come to
this
hick
town?
From
Brooklyn?"
In 1963,
he was
offered
a job by
the late
Al Davis
-
$18,000,
triple
his
salary
at Penn
State,
plus a
car to
become
general
manager
and
coach of
the
AFL's
Oakland
Raiders.
He said
no. Rip
Engle
retired
as Penn
State
head
coach
three
years
later,
and
Paterno
took
over.
At the
time,
Penn
State
was
considered
"Eastern
football"
-
inferior
- and
Paterno
courted
newspaper
coverage
to raise
the
team's
profile.
In 1967,
PSU
began a
30-0-1
streak.
But Penn
State
couldn't
get to
the top
of the
polls.
The
Nittany
Lions
finished
second
in 1968
and 1969
despite
perfect
seasons.
They
were
undefeated
and
untied
again in
1973 at
12-0
again
but
finished
fifth.
Texas
edged
them in
1969
after
President
Richard
Nixon,
impressed
with the
Longhorns'
bowl
performance,
declared
them No.
1.
"I'd
like to
know,"
Paterno
said
later,
"how
could
the
president
know so
little
about
Watergate
in 1973,
and so
much
about
college
football
in
1969?"
A
national
title
finally
came in
1982,
after a
27-23
win over
Georgia
at the
Sugar
Bowl.
Another
followed
in 1986
after
the
Lions
intercepted
Vinny
Testaverde
five
times
and beat
Miami
14-10 in
the
Fiesta
Bowl.
They
made
several
title
runs
after
that,
including
a 2005
run to
the
Orange
Bowl and
an 11-1
season
in 2008
that
ended in
a 37-23
loss to
Southern
California
in the
Rose
Bowl.
In his
later
years,
physical
ailments
wore the
old
coach
down.
Paterno
was run
over on
the
sideline
during a
game at
Wisconsin
in
November
2006 and
underwent
knee
surgery.
He hurt
his hip
in 2008
demonstrating
an
onside
kick. An
intestinal
illness
and a
bad
reaction
to
antibiotics
prescribed
for
dental
work
slowed
him for
most of
the 2010
season.
He began
scaling
back his
speaking
engagements
that
year,
ending
his
summer
caravan
of
speeches
to
alumni
across
the
state.
Then a
receiver
bowled
over
Paterno
at
practice
in
August,
sending
him to
the
hospital
with
shoulder
and
pelvis
injuries
and
consigning
him to
coach
much of
what
would be
his last
season
from the
press
box.
"The
fact
that
we've
won a
lot of
games is
that the
good
Lord
kept me
healthy,
not
because
I'm
better
than
anybody
else,"
Paterno
said two
days
before
he won
his
409th
game and
passed
Eddie
Robinson
of
Grambling
State
for the
most in
Division
I. "It's
because
I've
been
around a
lot
longer
than
anybody
else."
Paterno
could be
conservative
on the
field,
especially
in big
games,
relying
on the
tried-and-true
formula
of
defense,
the
running
game and
field
position.
He and
his
wife,
Sue,
raised
five
children
in State
College.
Anybody
could
telephone
him at
his home
- the
same one
he
appeared
in front
of on
the
night he
was
fired -
by
looking
up
"Paterno,
Joseph
V." in
the
phone
book.
He
walked
to home
games
and was
greeted
and
wished
good
luck by
fans on
the
street.
Former
players
paraded
through
his
living
room for
the
chance
to say
hello.
But for
the most
part, he
stayed
out of
the
spotlight.
Paterno
did have
a knack
for
jokes.
He
referred
to
Twitter,
the
social
media
site, as
"Twittle-do,
Twittle-dee."
He also
could be
abrasive
and
stubborn,
and he
had his
share of
run-ins
with his
bosses
or
administrators.
And as
his
legend
grew, so
did the
attention
to his
on-field
decisions,
and the
questions
about
when he
would
hang it
up.
Calls
for his
retirement
reached
a
crescendo
in 2004.
The next
year,
Penn
State
went
11-1 and
won the
Big Ten.
In the
Orange
Bowl,
PSU beat
Florida
State,
whose
coach,
Bobby
Bowden,
was
eased
out
after
the 2009
season
after 34
years
and 389
wins.
Like
many
others,
he was
outlasted
by "JoePa."
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