New Penn State coach braces for huge transition
August 29, 2012 - 1:22 am
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. - Bill O'Brien has turned into Penn State's steady, even-keeled rock through tough times, but even he'll allow himself to be a little nervous before his first game as Nittany Lions coach.
After all, a new era is about to begin in Happy Valley.
"I will certainly have butterflies before this game. I'd be crazy to tell you otherwise," he said Tuesday about Saturday's season opener against Ohio. "I mean, this is my first football game as a head football coach."
O'Brien expects those nerves to disappear come kickoff once he settles into the routine of coaching.
And yet almost everything else about Saturday won't be routine, either.
It's the first season opener at Penn State without Hall of Fame coach Joe Paterno as head coach since 1965.
It's the first game since the NCAA meted down landmark sanctions on the program because of the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal. Paterno was fired days after Sandusky was arrested in November.
It's the first time the Nittany Lions who stayed with O'Brien will take the field since the NCAA allowed players to seek immediate transfers in light of the sanctions. Nine players have moved on since the penalties were announced July 23, most notably 1,200-yard rusher Silas Redd.
Bowl games and Big Ten titles are out for the next four years. More than 90 percent of the roster stayed, but the defections have many pundits calling Penn State a Big Ten also-ran.
Senior linebacker Gerald Hodges seems as motivated as ever.
"There are a lot of guys in that locker room that feel they have something to play for," Hodges said. "All that anger filled up. All that tension filled up ... I can just tell we can't wait to unleash something."
Part of O'Brien's job this week is to help keep his players' emotions in check, beyond the usual opening-day jitters. Hodges and many other players have said they've also been energized by a university community that has rallied around players who had nothing to do with the scandal but have taken the brunt of the punishment.
"So I think if our guys can control their emotions and play within themselves and not try to be heroes and just play the way they've been playing in practice, then we'll have a shot to control those emotions early on," O'Brien said. "But it's something that we have talked about and we'll continue to talk about."
A former offensive coordinator of the New England Patriots, O'Brien walked into the Beaver Stadium media room for his inaugural weekly news conference a few minutes early - much like the late Paterno did. He settled into the same spot at the podium, deftly and patiently answering numerous questions around the theme of whether Saturday's game had added significance for a program in an historic transition.
"You know, again, I've said this before, that there is a lot of this that is a little bit more than - about a little bit more than football, and I understand that," O'Brien said. "But as we head into this first game and we get out there on Saturday, it's about football."
And much like he has the past several months, O'Brien proclaimed a new era for the school. He reiterated that Penn State players would continue to focus on academics and be involved with the community.
In another recently announced change, players will wear blue ribbons on the backs of their helmets in support of victims of child abuse. O'Brien also sought to add names to the backs of jerseys to honor the players who decided to stay to help rebuild the program.
"But again, they're just a part of this whole thing," he said. "We're just the football program that's trying to be a part of making sure that we go out there and play well but also help the community as much as we possibly can as a part of it."
ex-faculty leaders blast ncaa probe
PHILADELPHIA - Former Penn State faculty leaders blasted the NCAA and former FBI director Louis Freeh on Tuesday over their handling of the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal, saying Freeh's report - prepared for the university - and the NCAA's $60 million in fines unfairly punish the entire university community.
The statement, signed by 29 past chairs of the faculty senate, said Freeh used "scant evidence" to support conclusions that the NCAA then relied upon and embellished to set sanctions that harmed not just the athletic department but Penn State's academics well-being and financial health.
Freeh defended his work Tuesday. Addressing specific criticism that his team did not interview Mike McQueary and other key witnesses, Freeh said his team respected requests by state prosecutors to rely on their grand jury testimony. McQueary is the graduate assistant who saw Sandusky, a former assistant football coach, in the shower with a boy in 2001.
"We stand very strongly behind our report," Freeh said.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS