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JoePa injured at practice (Read 1076 times)
Aug 8th, 2011 at 9:09pm

Webb   Offline
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JoePa gets run over, injured at practice

Quote:
BlueWhite Illustrated reported earlier Monday that (Penn State coach Joe) Paterno was injured at practice Sunday when he was run over by a wide receiver running a route.  Paterno suffered injuries to his pelvic and shoulder areas, but, the website reports, it’s believed that surgery will not be necessary ...

The 84-year-old Paterno will be entering his 46th season as the Nittany Lions head coach in 2011.
 

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Reply #1 - Aug 9th, 2011 at 1:55pm

hyperpep111   Offline
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Who is joepa???
 

Most people think that flying a plane is dangerous, except pilots because they know how easy it is.
Arguing with a pilot is like wrestling with a pig in the mud, after a while you begin to think the pig likes it.
                                    
...
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Reply #2 - Aug 9th, 2011 at 3:21pm

Webb   Offline
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You're kidding, right?

Joe Paterno is the most respected coach in NCAA football.

Joseph Vincent "Joe" Paterno (born December 21, 1926) is a college football coach, and is currently the head coach of the Penn State Nittany Lions, a position he has held since 1966. Paterno, nicknamed "JoePa", holds the record for the most victories by an FBS football coach, has coached more bowl game wins than any other coach in college football history and is the first FBS coach to reach 400 victories.
 

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Jim
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Reply #3 - Aug 10th, 2011 at 2:39am

tcco94   Offline
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Grin Lots of people don't know him, the one's who usually dont pay attention to college football.

He needs to retire. Just my take. I mean didn't he get injured like last year or 2 years ago? The guys a legend, not saying leave cause he's bad or anything.
 
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Reply #4 - Aug 10th, 2011 at 3:19am

Hagar   Offline
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tcco94 wrote on Aug 10th, 2011 at 2:39am:
Grin Lots of people don't know him, the one's who usually dont pay attention to college football.

That includes most people from outside the USA. Wink
 

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Reply #5 - Aug 10th, 2011 at 4:40am

hyperpep111   Offline
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Im sorry I dont know American football. I know of something called rugby. which is basically the same but with more rules.
And don't really know the American Version of f1 cause Dont live in America Smiley. But I do find it funny watching American football on tv. And I always think VIOLENCE. Grin Grin Grin Shocked
 

Most people think that flying a plane is dangerous, except pilots because they know how easy it is.
Arguing with a pilot is like wrestling with a pig in the mud, after a while you begin to think the pig likes it.
                                    
...
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Reply #6 - Aug 10th, 2011 at 12:30pm

tcco94   Offline
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Hagar wrote on Aug 10th, 2011 at 3:19am:
tcco94 wrote on Aug 10th, 2011 at 2:39am:
Grin Lots of people don't know him, the one's who usually dont pay attention to college football.

That includes most people from outside the USA. Wink

Then that means they must not know Brett Farve either. But don't worry were doing you guys a favor Wink.
 
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Reply #7 - Aug 10th, 2011 at 3:15pm

BigTruck   Offline
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hyperpep111 wrote on Aug 10th, 2011 at 4:40am:
But I do find it funny watching American football on tv. And I always think VIOLENCE. Grin Grin Grin Shocked


You should start watching Hockey.   Cool
 

...  ...  ...    
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Reply #8 - Aug 10th, 2011 at 11:34pm

tcco94   Offline
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BigTruck wrote on Aug 10th, 2011 at 3:15pm:
hyperpep111 wrote on Aug 10th, 2011 at 4:40am:
But I do find it funny watching American football on tv. And I always think VIOLENCE. Grin Grin Grin Shocked


You should start watching Hockey.   Cool

+1
 
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Reply #9 - Nov 21st, 2011 at 12:22am
U4EA   Ex Member

 
Webb wrote on Aug 9th, 2011 at 3:21pm:
You're kidding, right?

Joe Paterno is the most respected coach in NCAA football.


Purty sure everyone knows who "JoePa" is now.

And I'm equally sure "most respected" carries little relevance anymore referencing him and his cronies.
 
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Reply #10 - Nov 21st, 2011 at 12:56am

Webb   Offline
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Good thing I'm too much of a gentleman to tell you what an asswipe you are.
 

A bad day at golf is better than a good day at work.

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Jim
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Reply #11 - Nov 21st, 2011 at 3:16am
U4EA   Ex Member

 
If one of those was your kids I am quite sure your response would be a tad different.

But as it stands, you're response pretty much illustrates a tacit approval of that sorta behavior. 

You weren't one of those tippin' media trucks over the other day were ya?
 
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Reply #12 - Nov 22nd, 2011 at 10:42am
U4EA   Ex Member

 
Webb wrote on Nov 21st, 2011 at 12:56am:
Good thing I'm too much of a gentleman to tell you what an asswipe you are.


You are just too cute in your commentary! Smiley

But in all fairness, let's see what others are saying:

"Gregg Doyel, CBSSports.com: “Paterno, cheered by more than 100,000 people on Saturday? Idolized for three more hours? Upheld as a hero, as a paragon of virtue, as everything that is right about Penn State? That couldn't happen, because Paterno is none of those things. Not anymore. Joe Paterno was part of a cowardly system that looked the other way for nine years as an alleged pedophile was roaming State College. More than that --Sandusky was using the Penn State football offices as one of his home bases.”

Richard Justice, Houston Chronicle:“Joe Paterno didn’t do the right thing then, and he wasn’t going to do the right thing now. He was going to do it his way. He was going to please himself, and to hell with anyone who thought he should do it otherwise. In the end, he seemingly couldn’t understand how he failed the school he professed to love so much. He just didn’t understand that he could not coach another game, that he could not stay at Penn State another hour. Paterno simply didn’t understand that it would have been unspeakably offensive for him to coach again. How would the victims have felt? How would their families have felt? How have they felt the last decade when they believed no one would ever be held accountable? They must have felt that Paterno was the law and order in Happy Valley, and that no one — no district attorney, no cop, no one — would challenge him.”

Pat Forde, Yahoo! Sports: “That is the danger in the cult-of-personality dynamic of college sports. Coaches are elevated to such mythic levels that they become larger than the programs they lead and often larger than the universities that employ them. Perspective gets warped. Bad endings often ensue. But the stupefying thing is that nobody – nobody – could ever have foreseen a scandalous ending for Joe Paterno. He had done so much right for so many years. He had won so many games, donated so much money to the school, graduated so many players, made so few missteps – not a single major NCAA violation in a sport rife with corruption. And then this blew up the perfect little athletic world. Jerry Sandusky in the Garden of Eden, his alleged crimes against children undeterred by those around him. A scandal so shocking that even the most jaded mind could not have dreamed it up. Not those allegations. And not in this place.”

David Steele, FanHouse: “A lifetime of winning, setting examples and molding an image can, and should, be completely erased if an act or choice is that heinous and devastating. That admirable record stands small compared to the grotesque size of the violations Sandusky committed, the lives he ruined—and the chances Paterno, Spanier and others had to stop it in its tracks, yet let it go by. Every action, big and small, good and bad, has consequences. Paterno and Spanier are suffering them now. After all this time has gone by, somebody had to remind those men of this. The obligation fell to the Penn State board of trustees Wednesday night. For once, someone at that university didn’t pass it on to somebody else and hope it would take care of itself.”

Andy Staples, SI.com:“Paterno's larger-than-life stature also is nominally why Penn State students took to the streets in protest Wednesday night, flipping a news van, throwing rocks, destroying property and generally causing chaos. Were all of them genuinely upset about the way a coaching legend was shown the door? Of course not. Many were bundles of raging hormones who went out to raise hell because that's what everyone else was doing. The dudes mugging for the CNN cameras gave that away.”


 
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Reply #13 - Nov 25th, 2011 at 3:21pm

tcco94   Offline
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You know I think his legacy will be similar to Tiger Woods. Your gunna always have the media talking about it no matter what till the day he dies just like with Tiger Woods. They only day the media will give up is when they aren't here anymore and only talk about the good things they did.

I think Joe's Legacy is similar to Tigers because your going to have half the people hate him and half the people love him. Noone will be able to change anothers thought at this point and same with Woods, noone will change their mind on him now. These guys are legends and there's no doubt in that but their legacy's have been hit hard so you either love the guy or hate him.

Just leave it at that.

Wink
 
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