Meet John Matko. John Matko
is a 34-year-old Penn
State class of 2000
alumnus, distraught by the recent revelations that legendary Coach Joe Paterno
and those in charge allegedly shielded a serial child rapist, assistant Jerry
Sandusky. He was livid that students chose to riot on campus this week, more
upset about Paterno's dismissal than anything else. He was disgusted that the
Board of Trustees decided to go ahead as planned with Saturday's Nebraska game just days
after the revelations became public. John Matko felt angry and was compelled to
act. He stood outside Saturday's Penn State-Nebraska game in Happy Valley
and held up two signs. One read, "Put abused kids first." The other
said, "Don't be fooled, they all knew. Tom Bradley, everyone must
go." [Tom Bradley is the interim head coach.]
The response to Matko gives
lie to the media portrayal of last Saturday's game. We were told the atmosphere
was "somber", "sad" and "heart-rending", as
"the focus returned to the children." The crowd was swathed in blue,
because, we were told, that is the color to awareness of child abuse (also the Penn State
colors) The team linked arms emerging from the tunnel. They dropped to a knee
with their Nebraska
opponents at midfield before the game. Once again, broadcasters told us,
"the players were paying tribute to the victims of child abuse." We
were told all of this, and I wish to God it was true.
I don't doubt the emotions
in Happy Valley are genuine. I don't doubt the
searing shock and pain that must be coursing through campus. But this is the
pain of self-pity not reflection. It's the pain of the exposed not the
penitent. Let's go back to John Matko. Matko stood with his signs behind
a pair of sunglasses. He wasn't soapboxing, or preaching: just bearing silent
witness. It was an admirable act but no one bought him a beer. Instead, beer
was poured on his head. His midsection was slapped with an open hand.
Expletives were rained upon him. His signs were also kicked to the ground and
stomped.
As the Washington Times wrote, "Abuse flew at Matko
from young and old, students and alumni, men and women. No one intervened. No
one spoke out against the abuse."
One disapproving student
said, "Not now, man. This is about the football players."
And with those nine
words, we see the truth about Saturday's enterprise. It was about the
football program, not the children. It was morbid theater where people
were mourning the death of a jock culture that somewhere along the line,
mutated into malignancy. It's a malignancy that deprioritized rape victims in
the name of big-time football.
The signs of this malignancy
did not emerge overnight. Looking backward, there are moments that speak of the
scandals to come. In 2003, less than one year after Paterno was told that Sandusky was raping
children, he allowed a player accused of rape to suit up and play in a bowl
game. Widespread criticism of this move was ignored. In 2006, Penn State 's
Orange Bowl opponent Florida
State , sent home
linebacker A.J. Nicholson, after accusations of sexual assault. Paterno's
response, in light of recent events, is jaw-dropping. He said, "There's
so many people gravitating to these kids. He may not have even known what he
was getting into, Nicholson. They knock on the door; somebody may knock on the
door; a cute girl knocks on the door. What do you do? Geez. I hope -- thank God
they don't knock on my door because I'd refer them to a couple of other
rooms."
Joanne Tosti-Vasey,
president of Pennsylvania 's National
Organization for Women in Pennsylvania ,
was not amused. With chilling unintentional prescience, Tosti-Vasey responded,
"Allegations of sexual assault should never be taken lightly Making light
of sexual assault sends the message that rape is something to be expected and
accepted." They called for Paterno's resignation and short of that, asked
to dialogue with Paterno and the team. Neither Paterno nor anyone in the power
at Penn State accepted the invitation.
This is the world Joe Pa
made. It's a world where libraries, buildings, and statues bear his name It's a
world where the school endowment now stands at over $1 billion dollars. It's a
company town where moral posturing acted as a substitute for actual morality.
In such an atmosphere, seeing the players and fans gather to bow their heads
and mourn Saturday wasn't "touching" or "somber" or
anything of the sort. It was just sad. It was sad because they still don't get
it.
One PSU student, named
Emily wrote the following to si.com's Peter King, "Truth
is, if not for Paterno's philanthropy and moral code (until his fatal lapse of
judgment), I and thousands of others wouldn't be here right now. If not for
Paterno ".Pennsylvania State might still be an agriculture school and State College might be lucky if there were a Wal-Mart
within a 30-mile radius. Paterno made a huge mistake, but that doesn't mean
he's not a good man."
Bullshit. Emily's words ring
as false as the apologists for the Vatican , Wall Street, the military
command at Abu Ghraib and any industry deemed "too big to fail." The
same moral code that Emily praises just can't be the same moral code that
covers up child rape. To do so is to make the very notion of morality
meaningless. Emily's gratitiude that her school isn't "30 miles from the
nearest Wal-Mart" can't justify defending Paterno. To do so, makes
you complicit in the crimes and the cover-up. It also ensures that such a thing
could happen again.
On Saturday, while Matko
endured physical and verbal rage of the PSU faithful, hundreds gathered
around the Paterno statue outside the stadium, laying down flowers and gifts.
The pain might run deeply in Happy
Valley but the cancer
runs deeper. To really move forward, the malignancy must be removed. Fire
everyone. Shut down Happy
Valley football for a
year. Do whatever you have to do to make sure that the world Joe Paterno made
has seen its last day.
[Dave Zirin is the author
of "The John Carlos Story" (Haymarket) and just made the new
documentary "Not Just a Game." Receive his column
every week by emailing dave at edgeofsports.com. Contact him at edgeofsport at gmail.com.]
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