I was born and spent the first 12 years of my life in Philadelphia and visited often after we moved to the Chicago area. So I’m not surprised that I followed Penn State football for years – even at a distance. It always struck me how the school produced outstanding athletes and scholars year after year – and nobody ever had their own name on a uniform.
Penn State is front page news these days – first because of the allegations of sexual abuse by a former assistant coach and this week because of the death of Joe Paterno, who served the school as head coach for 40 years. Much has been said and is being written about Paterno and the impact the sexual abuse scandal had on his last days and will have on his legacy.
The news carried photos of students and other admirers gathering around the Paterno statue in State College, PA. How many people can visit statues of themselves during their own lifetimes? Paterno surely did. What will those who visit that statue in the future learn about the man and how will they feel about him? Today many students – present and past – feel a tremendous loss, as well they should.
My own image of Paterno was of a man pacing the sidelines during Nittany Lions games. I never saw him wear a headset, as most coaches do today. He often spoke to players coming off the field and occasionally to the other coaches – his assistants. What a remarkable statement of trust that he could allow everyone around him to perform during the game knowing he had provided all the coaching he could in the week or weeks leading up to a game.
It’s a great lesson about coaching and life. You don’t have to call the plays on game day to be a leader. And you don’t have to carry around a playbook to know if you’ve planted the right seeds for a winning formula. Joe Pa knew that. Maybe that can be his legacy – leadership.