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What's the deal with this Ronald A. Smith character?

ChiTownLion

Well-Known Member
May 29, 2001
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The fun continues. This time, it comes in the form of a book written by PSU professor emeritus Ronald A. Smith.

In 2012, Smith wrote a column slamming the NCAA and Rodney Erickson for the damage they did to Penn State. Now he's releasing a book that bodyslams Joe Paterno and his football culture at PSU. Wonder if he contributed to the Freeh Report. Special thanks to Jerry for being the gift that keeps on giving. None of this is possible without you.

Wounded Lions
Joe Paterno, Jerry Sandusky, and the Crises in Penn State Athletics
A rogue program, an iconic coach, and an unspeakable tragedy
uillinoispresslogo.jpg

9780252081491_lg.jpg


The Jerry Sandusky child molestation case stunned the nation. As subsequent revelations uncovered an athletic program operating free of oversight, university officials faced criminal charges while unprecedented NCAA sanctions hammered Penn State football and blackened the reputation of coach Joe Paterno.

In Wounded Lions, acclaimed sport historian and longtime Penn State professor Ronald A. Smith heavily draws from university archives to answer the How? andWhy? at the heart of the scandal. The Sandusky case was far from the first example of illegal behavior related to the football program or the university's attempts to suppress news of it. As Smith shows, decades of infighting among administrators, alumni, trustees, faculty, and coaches established policies intended to protect the university, and the football team considered synonymous with its name, at all costs. If the habits predated Paterno, they also became sanctified during his tenure. Smith names names to show how abuses of power warped the "Penn State Way" even with hires like women's basketball coach Rene Portland, who allegedly practiced sexual bias against players for decades. Smith also details a system that concealed Sandusky's horrific acts just as deftly as it whitewashed years of rules violations, coaching malfeasance, and player crime while Paterno set records and raised hundreds of millions of dollars for the university.

A myth-shattering account of misplaced priorities, Wounded Lions charts the intertwined history of an elite university, its storied sports program, and the worst scandal in collegiate athletic history.

"A distinguished Penn State sport historian gives us an intriguing account of his institution's athletics history and daunting journey through a period of national humiliation in well-chosen, research-guided language that holds the reader's interest start to finish."--Joe Crowley, former president, NCAA

"With exhaustive primary source exploration and riveting exposition, superimposed on an examination of Penn State as a fulcrum, Ron Smith examines the 'real controllers' of college sport—university presidents, boards of regents, and alumni—each of which over time have tended to separate college athletics from an institution’s intended academic purpose, and, as well, cast institutions into scandals of immense proportion, of which the Joe Paterno/Jerry Sandusky case thrust Penn State’s Happy Valley utopia into an abyss of staggering anguish and disbelief."--Bob Barney, author of Selling the Five Rings: The IOC and the Rise of Olympic Commercialism

"Smith thoroughly documents decades of events that led to the Sandusky abuse of children. Smith's detailed history of sports administration at Penn State illustrates how the abuse evolved and was ignored in a cloud of conflicting priorities. The reader wonders what kept the individuals in power from not responding sooner and appropriately."--John Swisher, Professor Emeritus, Pennsylvania State University

Ronald A. Smith is a professor emeritus at Pennsylvania State University. His books include Pay for Play: A History of Big-Time College Athletic Reform, Play-by-Play: Radio, Television, and Big-Time College Sport, Sports and Freedom: The Rise of Big-Time College Athletics, and Big-Time Football at Harvard: The Diary of Coach Bill Reid.
 
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Some of his writings could lead you to believe that he doesn't like college football. I suspect you can find many academics who feel that way. I haven't read enough to form a solid opinion on him.
 
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He sure seemed to be a big fan of Penn State, Paterno, and Sandusky in 2007 when he endorsed "The Perfect Season."

978-0-271-03282-5md.jpg


“Missanelli brings to life the 1986 national football championship season, with a great account of the Nittany Lion victory over the combat fatigue–clad Miami Hurricanes. The Foreword by D. J. Dozier is a delight, as are various vignettes of participants such as Jerry Sandusky, Shane Conlan, Bob White, and the unfortunate-in-life John Bruno.”—Ronald A. Smith, author of Big-Time Football at Harvard, 1905

http://www.psupress.org/books/titles/978-0-271-03282-5.html
 
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Triponyite Version 2.0? My dad was a prof through 70s/80s, had his fair share of football players. He always claimed they showed up, usually well prepared, participated, and, on the off chance of a problem, the athletic department stepped in to make sure the student athlete made things right. My dad has submitted letters to this effect to numerous publications, yet none have been accepted. I would love to know how many other professors had that same experience.
 
Last chance for the idiot to cash in before the trials really pick up and make his bs proven to be false.
 
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Last chance for the idiot to cash in before the trials really pick up and make his bs proven to be false.


He's making bubkis. Couldn't sell it to a major publishing house, so it's going through a university press. At $95 a throw the bulk of the few copies that are ever printed will go to remainder sellers within weeks of publication.
 
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He's making bubkis. Couldn't sell it to a major publishing house, so it's going through a university press. At $95 a throw the bulk of the few copies that are ever printed will go to remainder sellers within weeks of publication.
“I know I sort of denied that there was anything to this because I knew Jerry Sandusky, and I had a very high regard for him.” - Ronald A. Smith

He should have done more.
Cloth - $95.00
Paper - $21.95


For just $95.00, everyone in this community has a moral duty to purchase a copy of Ron's special edition, cloth-covered book so we can learn from his first-hand account about the perils of worshiping at the altar of Jerry Sandusky and his soul-crushing decision to facilitate child rape out of blind loyalty to a pillar of the community.
 
The fun continues. This time, it comes in the form of a book written by PSU professor emeritus Ronald A. Smith.

In 2012, Smith wrote a column slamming the NCAA and Rodney Erickson for the damage they did to Penn State. Now he's releasing a book that bodyslams Joe Paterno and his football culture at PSU. Wonder if he contributed to the Freeh Report. Special thanks to Jerry for being the gift that keeps on giving. None of this is possible without you.

Wounded Lions
Joe Paterno, Jerry Sandusky, and the Crises in Penn State Athletics
A rogue program, an iconic coach, and an unspeakable tragedy
uillinoispresslogo.jpg

9780252081491_lg.jpg


The Jerry Sandusky child molestation case stunned the nation. As subsequent revelations uncovered an athletic program operating free of oversight, university officials faced criminal charges while unprecedented NCAA sanctions hammered Penn State football and blackened the reputation of coach Joe Paterno.

In Wounded Lions, acclaimed sport historian and longtime Penn State professor Ronald A. Smith heavily draws from university archives to answer the How? andWhy? at the heart of the scandal. The Sandusky case was far from the first example of illegal behavior related to the football program or the university's attempts to suppress news of it. As Smith shows, decades of infighting among administrators, alumni, trustees, faculty, and coaches established policies intended to protect the university, and the football team considered synonymous with its name, at all costs. If the habits predated Paterno, they also became sanctified during his tenure. Smith names names to show how abuses of power warped the "Penn State Way" even with hires like women's basketball coach Rene Portland, who allegedly practiced sexual bias against players for decades. Smith also details a system that concealed Sandusky's horrific acts just as deftly as it whitewashed years of rules violations, coaching malfeasance, and player crime while Paterno set records and raised hundreds of millions of dollars for the university.

A myth-shattering account of misplaced priorities, Wounded Lions charts the intertwined history of an elite university, its storied sports program, and the worst scandal in collegiate athletic history.

"A distinguished Penn State sport historian gives us an intriguing account of his institution's athletics history and daunting journey through a period of national humiliation in well-chosen, research-guided language that holds the reader's interest start to finish."--Joe Crowley, former president, NCAA

"With exhaustive primary source exploration and riveting exposition, superimposed on an examination of Penn State as a fulcrum, Ron Smith examines the 'real controllers' of college sport—university presidents, boards of regents, and alumni—each of which over time have tended to separate college athletics from an institution’s intended academic purpose, and, as well, cast institutions into scandals of immense proportion, of which the Joe Paterno/Jerry Sandusky case thrust Penn State’s Happy Valley utopia into an abyss of staggering anguish and disbelief."--Bob Barney, author of Selling the Five Rings: The IOC and the Rise of Olympic Commercialism

"Smith thoroughly documents decades of events that led to the Sandusky abuse of children. Smith's detailed history of sports administration at Penn State illustrates how the abuse evolved and was ignored in a cloud of conflicting priorities. The reader wonders what kept the individuals in power from not responding sooner and appropriately."--John Swisher, Professor Emeritus, Pennsylvania State University

Ronald A. Smith is a professor emeritus at Pennsylvania State University. His books include Pay for Play: A History of Big-Time College Athletic Reform, Play-by-Play: Radio, Television, and Big-Time College Sport, Sports and Freedom: The Rise of Big-Time College Athletics, and Big-Time Football at Harvard: The Diary of Coach Bill Reid.

Figures its Univ of Illinois printing this money driven smear attempt.
 
The fun continues. This time, it comes in the form of a book written by PSU professor emeritus Ronald A. Smith.

In 2012, Smith wrote a column slamming the NCAA and Rodney Erickson for the damage they did to Penn State. Now he's releasing a book that bodyslams Joe Paterno and his football culture at PSU. Wonder if he contributed to the Freeh Report. Special thanks to Jerry for being the gift that keeps on giving. None of this is possible without you.

Wounded Lions
Joe Paterno, Jerry Sandusky, and the Crises in Penn State Athletics
A rogue program, an iconic coach, and an unspeakable tragedy
uillinoispresslogo.jpg

9780252081491_lg.jpg


The Jerry Sandusky child molestation case stunned the nation. As subsequent revelations uncovered an athletic program operating free of oversight, university officials faced criminal charges while unprecedented NCAA sanctions hammered Penn State football and blackened the reputation of coach Joe Paterno.

In Wounded Lions, acclaimed sport historian and longtime Penn State professor Ronald A. Smith heavily draws from university archives to answer the How? andWhy? at the heart of the scandal. The Sandusky case was far from the first example of illegal behavior related to the football program or the university's attempts to suppress news of it. As Smith shows, decades of infighting among administrators, alumni, trustees, faculty, and coaches established policies intended to protect the university, and the football team considered synonymous with its name, at all costs. If the habits predated Paterno, they also became sanctified during his tenure. Smith names names to show how abuses of power warped the "Penn State Way" even with hires like women's basketball coach Rene Portland, who allegedly practiced sexual bias against players for decades. Smith also details a system that concealed Sandusky's horrific acts just as deftly as it whitewashed years of rules violations, coaching malfeasance, and player crime while Paterno set records and raised hundreds of millions of dollars for the university.

A myth-shattering account of misplaced priorities, Wounded Lions charts the intertwined history of an elite university, its storied sports program, and the worst scandal in collegiate athletic history.

"A distinguished Penn State sport historian gives us an intriguing account of his institution's athletics history and daunting journey through a period of national humiliation in well-chosen, research-guided language that holds the reader's interest start to finish."--Joe Crowley, former president, NCAA

"With exhaustive primary source exploration and riveting exposition, superimposed on an examination of Penn State as a fulcrum, Ron Smith examines the 'real controllers' of college sport—university presidents, boards of regents, and alumni—each of which over time have tended to separate college athletics from an institution’s intended academic purpose, and, as well, cast institutions into scandals of immense proportion, of which the Joe Paterno/Jerry Sandusky case thrust Penn State’s Happy Valley utopia into an abyss of staggering anguish and disbelief."--Bob Barney, author of Selling the Five Rings: The IOC and the Rise of Olympic Commercialism

"Smith thoroughly documents decades of events that led to the Sandusky abuse of children. Smith's detailed history of sports administration at Penn State illustrates how the abuse evolved and was ignored in a cloud of conflicting priorities. The reader wonders what kept the individuals in power from not responding sooner and appropriately."--John Swisher, Professor Emeritus, Pennsylvania State University

Ronald A. Smith is a professor emeritus at Pennsylvania State University. His books include Pay for Play: A History of Big-Time College Athletic Reform, Play-by-Play: Radio, Television, and Big-Time College Sport, Sports and Freedom: The Rise of Big-Time College Athletics, and Big-Time Football at Harvard: The Diary of Coach Bill Reid.
Looks like a $$$$$ whore who will write anything to make a buck.
 
The fun continues. This time, it comes in the form of a book written by PSU professor emeritus Ronald A. Smith.

In 2012, Smith wrote a column slamming the NCAA and Rodney Erickson for the damage they did to Penn State. Now he's releasing a book that bodyslams Joe Paterno and his football culture at PSU. Wonder if he contributed to the Freeh Report. Special thanks to Jerry for being the gift that keeps on giving. None of this is possible without you.

Wounded Lions
Joe Paterno, Jerry Sandusky, and the Crises in Penn State Athletics
A rogue program, an iconic coach, and an unspeakable tragedy
uillinoispresslogo.jpg

9780252081491_lg.jpg


The Jerry Sandusky child molestation case stunned the nation. As subsequent revelations uncovered an athletic program operating free of oversight, university officials faced criminal charges while unprecedented NCAA sanctions hammered Penn State football and blackened the reputation of coach Joe Paterno.

In Wounded Lions, acclaimed sport historian and longtime Penn State professor Ronald A. Smith heavily draws from university archives to answer the How? andWhy? at the heart of the scandal. The Sandusky case was far from the first example of illegal behavior related to the football program or the university's attempts to suppress news of it. As Smith shows, decades of infighting among administrators, alumni, trustees, faculty, and coaches established policies intended to protect the university, and the football team considered synonymous with its name, at all costs. If the habits predated Paterno, they also became sanctified during his tenure. Smith names names to show how abuses of power warped the "Penn State Way" even with hires like women's basketball coach Rene Portland, who allegedly practiced sexual bias against players for decades. Smith also details a system that concealed Sandusky's horrific acts just as deftly as it whitewashed years of rules violations, coaching malfeasance, and player crime while Paterno set records and raised hundreds of millions of dollars for the university.

A myth-shattering account of misplaced priorities, Wounded Lions charts the intertwined history of an elite university, its storied sports program, and the worst scandal in collegiate athletic history.

"A distinguished Penn State sport historian gives us an intriguing account of his institution's athletics history and daunting journey through a period of national humiliation in well-chosen, research-guided language that holds the reader's interest start to finish."--Joe Crowley, former president, NCAA

"With exhaustive primary source exploration and riveting exposition, superimposed on an examination of Penn State as a fulcrum, Ron Smith examines the 'real controllers' of college sport—university presidents, boards of regents, and alumni—each of which over time have tended to separate college athletics from an institution’s intended academic purpose, and, as well, cast institutions into scandals of immense proportion, of which the Joe Paterno/Jerry Sandusky case thrust Penn State’s Happy Valley utopia into an abyss of staggering anguish and disbelief."--Bob Barney, author of Selling the Five Rings: The IOC and the Rise of Olympic Commercialism

"Smith thoroughly documents decades of events that led to the Sandusky abuse of children. Smith's detailed history of sports administration at Penn State illustrates how the abuse evolved and was ignored in a cloud of conflicting priorities. The reader wonders what kept the individuals in power from not responding sooner and appropriately."--John Swisher, Professor Emeritus, Pennsylvania State University

Ronald A. Smith is a professor emeritus at Pennsylvania State University. His books include Pay for Play: A History of Big-Time College Athletic Reform, Play-by-Play: Radio, Television, and Big-Time College Sport, Sports and Freedom: The Rise of Big-Time College Athletics, and Big-Time Football at Harvard: The Diary of Coach Bill Reid.
Professor Emeritus at PSU? Lately those have screwed PSU.
 
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