Thursday, March 31, 2011

JOE PATERNO


Believe deep down in your heart that you're destined to do great things

Born in Dec. 21, 1926, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S. American collegiate gridiron football coach who, as head coach at Pennsylvania State University (1966– ), was one of the most successful coaches in the history of the sport.
Paterno served in the U.S. Army in the final year of World War II before accepting an athletic scholarship to Brown University, where he studied English literature and played quarterback for the football team. Upon graduation in 1950, he intended to enroll in law school but was lured away when his former coach at Brown, Charles (“Rip”) Engle, became head coach at Pennsylvania State University (Penn State). After 16 years as Engle's assistant, Paterno succeeded him in 1966.
Paterno made an immediate impact on the program, leading Penn State to consecutive undefeated seasons in 1968 and 1969; the team posted another undefeated season in 1973. However, Penn State was denied a national championship in each of these three seasons, as it failed to finish first in the final football polls following each season. Penn State won its first national championship of the Paterno era in 1982 and added another—as well as a fourth undefeated season—in 1986. Penn State started playing football in the Big Ten Conference in 1993, and they won a conference title the following year after Paterno guided the Nittany Lions to a record of 12 wins and 0 losses. In 2001 Paterno posted his 324th career win, surpassing the record for all-time major college coaching victories held by Bear Bryant of the University of Alabama. (Paterno's victory tally was bested by Florida State's Bobby Bowden in 2003, and the two coaches remained in a close race for the record throughout the decade.) Paterno also owned the record for career coaching victories in bowl games.
In January 2002 Paterno became the first active coach in 20 years to receive the Amos Alonzo Stagg Award, the highest honour given by the American Football Coaches Association. A four-time winner of the association's Coach of the Year award, he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2007. Not content only to build the football program, Paterno was an advocate for academic integrity and donated millions to build up the nonsporting programs of the university.




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