The Nittany Turkey

Primarily about Penn State football, this is a tale told by idiots, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

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Home Archives for Beaver Stadium

No Longer Just a Leaked Rumor

Posted on November 24, 2009 Written by The Nittany Turkey

The Beaver Stadium season ticket morass came to the fore this week, dominating the Penn State Official Athletic Site.

This money grab in the midst of an economic recession inspires me to use the Yiddish term chutzpah, which roughly translates to, “You gotta lotta balls!”

In the introductory blurb of one of the most sophomoric pieces of marketing double talk I would never expect to see from Penn State, the megabuck swindle is described as “pursuing success with honor.”

In my mind, captioning the blurb “banking on prior successes to suck out more money” would have been more honest and forthright.

“Consistent with Penn State Athletics’ core mission of pursuing Success with Honor, Penn State must take the steps necessary to ensure that the Nittany Lions remain at the forefront of the increasingly competitive college athletics landscape.”

So, in other words, Penn State won’t remain at the top of the graduation rate for football players unless we raise mo’ money from season ticket holders. Wait! Which one are they buying here, the honor or the success?

“As an integral part of doing so, Penn State Athletics is excited to announce the  Nittany Lion Club Seat Transfer & Equity Plan (STEP).”

Oh, yeah. Like all governmental money grabs, it has to have an acronym. No wonder they’re excited over there in the Lasch Building. It’s enough to send shivers up and down Chris Matthews’ legs.

“The Nittany Lion Club STEP, to be implemented in two phases over the next 18 months, will provide current and new Nittany Lion Club members who purchase football season tickets the opportunity to transfer, retain, upgrade or relocate their seats.”

Of course. If you want to make something look less like fascism, throw a couple of cookies at us scurvy peasants. So, if we don’t come up with the money, they’ll be delighted to move us to much less desirable seats of our own choosing. And yes, if we want to transfer our seats to a new victim, they’ll be OK with that, just as long as they can tap into a new revenue stream. They needed the transfer provision because they knew that they would be driving many people away.

They’re making transferring seats so easy that the application is available on-line.

And here is the best part of the three paragraph opening statement:

“We realize that the Nittany Lion Club STEP means change. But we also realize that change, properly planned and executed, means progress. We’re thankful that the Nittany Lion Club membership will be at the forefront of making sure that Penn State Athletics is making progress.”

Real change you can believe in? Where have I heard that before? Hmmm, monkey see, monkey do. Obama really set the negative role model here, demonstrating that no matter how dastardly the proposed changes might be, and no matter how Machiavellian the change imposing authority might be, people will buy into the concept of change for change’s sake if they’re looking for miracles. With Washington, the devil is always in the details, but few common folk have the time and energy to smoke out the impossibilities associated with the proffered changes. Miracles don’t happen; death and taxes are inevitable.

The big difference here is that Penn State Athletics is a dictatorship. Nobody elected them. They are trying to ram this down our throats by relating the success and honor of the team with “real change you can believe in.” Something doesn’t compute. That feeble and sophomoric blurb was about as much of a hand-wave as they thought they needed in order to put the tuxedo on the pig, because what the hell — if we don’t like it, tough shit.

Director of Athletics Tim Curley’s message employs yet another Penn State motto (again ineptly) to make its point: “Embracing Tradition. Preparing for the Future.” He follows it with, “At Penn State, we face the very real fact that the former is at risk without commitment to the latter.”

Let’s see, Timmy. Could you be trying to bamboozle us with “very real facts?” (Meaning that they’re not facts at all, but if we call them very real, maybe you’ll believe their factuality.) Is Penn State really going to be in danger of not embracing tradition and preparing for the future if the athletic department doesn’t get this additional season ticket money? Perhaps in the small, self-absorbed world of athletics, it is presumed that this motto refers only to the profitability of the football program and not to the rest of the university. I always assumed that it meant minding our past while preparing students for the challenges of the future. How in the hell is the athletic program accomplishing that by increasing revenue? If anything, they’re screwing students out of their good seats and channeling them into crappy, lower level end zone seats.

Anyhow, there’s a lot of information and even more disinformation and bullshit for you to wade through on the site. Start with the “Pursuing Success with Honor” page and work your way through the links.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: Beaver Stadium, Nittany Lion Club, Penn State Athletics, season ticket money grab, season tickets, STEP

More on the Season Ticket Morass

Posted on November 17, 2009 Written by The Nittany Turkey

In an article posted last night on PennLive.com, David Jones of the Patriot-News amplifies upon the earlier report regarding the Penn State administration’s intention to charge additional fees for season ticket holders and to relocate the student section at Beaver Stadium.

Jones takes no pro or con position on the fees themselves, letting conceptual validation stand up to the fundamental microeconomic principles of supply and demand. He posits that as long as demand exists for the product Penn State is putting out, alumni and fans will pay the freight. However, in the unrestrained manner to which we are accustomed from Jones, he proceeds to go off on the quality of the product, to wit:

“Where I have a real problem with Penn State is part of the product — the pansy scheduling that so transparently reeks of money-grubbing. As a fan of college football, I hate seeing the current trend, not just here but around the country, of power schools scheduling pancakes just in order to get a home game and an extra payout.

…

“Running a business to succeed is one thing. Marketing a product without value is another. And Penn State football this year had very little.”

Although to say that Penn State football this year had very little value might seem like a wee bit of over the top hyperbole, it’s not very far from the truth. Season ticket holders were treated to such finery as sure wins against ho-hum opponents Akron, Syracuse, Temple, and Eastern Illinois, in which the Nittany Lions underperformed, apparently thinking they could “mail it in”. Paying customers were further tormented by the inability of this year’s team to rise to the level of Iowa and Ohio State, and they were wrung out watching a half-assed effort against Indiana. Alas, the homecoming game with Minnesota, won by PSU 20-0, might have been the only truly entertaining game of the year, but because of the snowstorm, it was sparsely attended, the vast confines of Beaver Stadium appearing to be half empty. In summation, the home fans attending games at Beaver Stadium were treated to three halves of football: half-assed, half-gassed, and half-vast.

As I mentioned in my previous post on this subject, I know a long-time season ticket holder who has had enough of this crap and will definitely not be renewing his contract. I know that there are more like him who will raise hell, and many more who will silently pull out. Raising the price of a product while reducing its quality is an arrogant gesture that takes unfair advantage of the fierce loyalty we all feel for Dear Old State. David Jones hits the bullseye in that regard.

Read Jones’ article here.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: Beaver Stadium, consumerism, Penn State Football, rip-off, season tickets

A Time-Trip with the Lions

Posted on October 21, 2009 Written by The Nittany Turkey

This Turkey, a foul old fowl, occasionally takes a nostalgia trip back to his own Penn State days. Perhaps some of the others in my vast audience who are getting a little grey around the temples (or who have lost their feathers entirely) will be able to relate to some of the ancient history I present here.

I took lots of pictures back then. Although many have been lost through the years, I am fortunate to have stumbled upon a few. One of them in particular captured a Nittany Lions defensive play (a failure, alas) against Oregon on October 4, 1964. That picture is the inspiration behind this post.

It was the 15th annual Band Day at Beaver Stadium, with sixty bands from Pennsylvania high schools performing on that early fall day. A capacity crowd of 44,000+ was present to watch the 0-2 Nittany Lions battle their distant foe from the Pac-8 conference.

Bob Perry Hits a Deep One
Bob Berry Hits a Deep One

Here, you see the Nittany Lion defense being stretched by a deep pass from Ducks’ quarterback Bob Berry (#15) to flanker Steve Bunker (#88). (Click on the picture to enlarge it.) While that play did not hit pay dirt, it sent a message about the deep threat. After that, the Penn State defense dropped the safeties back to guard against the bomb, in the process making them susceptible to the option run, which Oregon head coach Len Casanova did not hesitate to employ.

The Lions probably would have won this one, if it were not for six fumbles lost. The game started out pretty well for the home team. Thanks to Berry’s only mistake of the day, a fumble late in the first period on the Penn State 26, which was recovered by All-America middle guard Glenn Ressler, PSU was able to keep it close in the first half. Two plays later, Ed Stuckrath ran it in from the two yard-line, and Penn State took a 7-6 lead into the locker room at halftime.

[Read more…]

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: Beaver Stadium, college football, history, Len Casanova, Oregon Ducks, Penn State Nittany Lions, Rip Engle, Sports

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Whodat Turkey?

The Nittany Turkey is a retired techno-geek who thinks he knows something about Penn State football and everything else in the world. If there's a topic, we have an opinion on it, and you know what "they" say about opinions! Most of what is posted here involves a heavy dose of hip-shooting conjecture, but unlike some other blogs, we don't represent it as fact. Read More…

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