O’Brien Stays at Penn State!


By David Jones, Harrisburg Patriot News

Penn State’s long holiday nightmare is over. Bill O’Brien is staying at Penn State.

In an exclusive conversation, the second-year head coach confirmed that he was contacted by and entertained overtures from multiple NFL clubs through his agent Joe Linta. But he has decided to remain at PSU for at least the 2013 season.

 ”I’m not a one-and-done guy,” said O’Brien. “I made a commitment to these players at Penn State and that’s what I am going to do.

“I’m a man of my word. I am what I am. Maybe I get fired in six years. But I’m not gonna cut and run after one year, that’s for sure.”

In addition to a clear testing of the pro head coaching waters, this was a strategic mission of sorts by O’Brien. By having Linta throw his name open to NFL openings and having the agent field offers, he was able to gain additional leverage that allowed him a chance to accomplish structural and personnel changes in the Penn State athletic department that may be forthcoming. O’Brien declined to be specific about those changes when asked but he did not deny those aims.

O’Brien acknowledged that PSU donor Terry Pegula, financier of the new Penn State hockey arena, has been a major ally in his efforts. Pegula was the first person who contacted O’Brien in late 2011 when he was eventually interviewed for the job.

Though O’Brien was not specific about it, high-level PSU sources have told me that a $1.3 million donation is to be added to O’Brien’s salary in the coming year that will bump his total compensation to $3.6 million and place him behind only Ohio State’s Urban Meyer ($4.3M) and Iowa‘s Kirk Ferentz ($3.8M) as the third-highest-paid coach in the Big Ten.

O’Brien Wins Another Coach of the Year!


Penn State’s Bill O’Brien has picked up another coaching honor.

The Maxwell Football Club named O’Brien coach of the year on Tuesday after the first-year head coach guided the Nittany Lions to an 8-4 record under unprecedented circumstances.

O’Brien will pick up the award on March 1 at the Maxwell Club’s awards gala in Atlantic City. That same night, Penn State’s senior class will receive the Brookshier Spirit Award for commitment, leadership and effort in 2012.

The season began under the cloud of strict NCAA sanctions for the school’s handling of the child sex abuse scandal involving retired assistant coach Jerry Sandusky.

But Penn State finished a surprising second in the Big Ten Leaders Division behind unbeaten Ohio State.

O’Brien has also been named ESPN coach of the year.

Three Coach of the Year Finalist Honors for Bill O’Brien


O’Brien was named a finalist for the Maxwell Football Club Coach of the Year award Wednesday morning, his third such nomination in as many days. The first year head coach was also named an Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year finalist by the Football Writers Association of America, as well as a finalist for the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year honor previously this week.  Add those nominations to his previous sweep of the Big Ten Conference Coach of the Year awards last week, and his addition to the Bear Bryant National Coach of the Year watch list, and O’Brien could have quite the haul of hardware between now and the calenders turn to January.
O’Brien is joined on the Maxwell finalists’ list by Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly, who will coach the Fighting Irish in the Jan. 7 National Championship game against Alabama, as well as by Kansas State head coach Bill Snyder. The 76th award winner will be announced Dec. 19, with an award ceremony of Maxwell Club award winners planned March 1st at the Maxwell Awards Gala in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Penn State’s senior class is already schedule to attend, as its’ senior class was the 2012 recipient of the clubs’ Thomas Brookshier Spirit Award, which will recognize their commitment, leadership, and outstanding effort during the season, according to a press release.

O’Brien Finalist for National Coach of the year – Football Writers Association


Penn State coach Bill O’Brien has been selected a finalist for the 2012 Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year by the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA).

The first-year Nittany Lion mentor last week was named the Big Ten’s Dave McClain Coach of the Year (media) and Hayes-Schembechler Coach of the Year (coaches).

O’Brien is joined as a finalist for the 2012 Eddie Robinson Award by:  Gary Andersen (Utah State), Dave Doeren (Northern Illinois), Brian Kelly (Notre Dame), Urban Meyer (Ohio State), Will Muschamp (Florida), David Shaw (Stanford), Bill Snyder (Kansas State) and Kevin Sumlin (Texas A&M).

The FWAA membership will vote this week and the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year will be announced on Dec. 13.

The FWAA has selected a national Coach of the Year every year since 1957, with the award being re-named in 1997 for former Grambling coach Eddie Robinson. Former Penn State coach Joe Paterno earned the honor in 1978, 1982 and 1986.

Named Penn State’s 15th head football coach on January 6, 2012, O’Brien became the seventh first-year head coach to earn the Big Ten-Dave McClain Coach of the Year in the 41 years it has been awarded.

Also on the Watch List for the Bear Bryant National Coach of the Year, O’Brien led the Nittany Lions to victories in eight of their final 10 games, earning an 8-4 overall record and a 6-2 mark in the Big Ten, with the only losses coming to division winners Ohio State and Nebraska. O’Brien’s eight wins are the most by a first-year Penn State coach in the 126 years of the program.

Penn State reeled off five consecutive victories after an 0-2 start, as O’Brien tied George Hoskins (1892) and Dick Harlow (1915) for the most consecutive wins by a first-year Nittany Lion coach. Penn State also won its initial three Big Ten road games, making O’Brien just the fifth Big ten coach since 1950 to win his first three conference away contests.

O’Brien engineered a dynamic, fast-paced offense that featured the Big Ten’s passing leader (Matt McGloin), top receiver (Allen Robinson) and a running back (Zach Zwinak) who gained 100 yards six times in eight Big Ten games and 1,000 yards for the season. Penn State led the Big Ten in total offense (437.0 ypg) in conference games and was second in scoring offense (32.6 ppg) and second in pass offense (283.1 ypg) against Big Ten foes this season.

Penn State gained more than 500 yards of total offense three times in conference play, topped by 546 yards vs. Indiana, its highest total against a Big Ten foe since gaining 557 yards against Michigan State in 2008.

O’Brien helped Penn State earn six first-team All-Big Ten selections and three individual conference award winners: - Michael Mauti (Mandeville, La.) was the Big Ten Butkus-Fitzgerald Linebacker of the Year; -    Allen Robinson (Southfield, Mich.) was named the Richter-Howard Receiver of the Year; - Deion Barnes (Philadelphia) was the Big Ten Freshman of the Year

O’Brien came to Penn State after five years on the New England Patriots‘ coaching staff, serving as the quarterbacks coach from 2009-11 and as offensive coordinator last year in helping the Patriots to the AFC Championship and a berth Super Bowl XLVI. O’Brien began his coaching career at his alma mater, Brown University, in 1993-94. He then coached at Georgia Tech (1995-2002), Maryland (2003-04) and Duke (2005-06) before joining Bill Belichick’s New England staff.

The Football Writers Association of America, a non-profit organization founded in 1941, consists of more than 1,200 men and women who cover college football for a living. The membership includes journalists, broadcasters and publicists, as well as key executives in all the areas that involve the game. The FWAA works to govern areas that include gameday operations, major awards and its annual All-America team.

Our Coach of the Year is Staying at Penn State!


While Penn State fans awaited word from the Big Ten on its Coach of the Year

Bill O’Brien’s agent said the coach isn’t going anywhere, except on the recruiting trail.Joe Hermitt/The Patriot-News

voting, the coach’s agent was telling ESPN on Tuesday that Bill O’Brien wasn’t taking another job.
“(O’Brien) is staying, and we’ve had no conversations with anyone else,”  Joe Linta said. “In fact, he’s leaving at 6 in the morning tomorrow to go out on the  recruiting trail.”

Linta added that recent talk about how much his client would have to pay in order to buy out  the remaining eight years of his contract at Penn State were “irrelevant.” Those rumors started recently when Patriot-News columnist David Jones asked O’Brien whether he was staying. The coach didn’t confirm that he was.

Here’s more on the agent’s remarks, including his reaction to the penalties that the NCAA levied on Penn State.

Penn State Plays for More than Titles or Bowl Games


By Dave Jones, Harrisburg Patriot News

In every sport, timeout huddles are known for being as much about breathers as about planning. That’s true in most places.

Especially on the periphery of the huddle, you’ll see reserves staring into the crowd, chatting with each other. And you might see starters leaning over to a cooler to sip water or receive some sort of nominal treatment on some minor scrape.

That’s not what you see this year in a Penn State huddle. Not when Bill O’Brien is in the middle of it.

What you do see is every conceivable member of the offense – on the road that’s about 32 guys – with his facemask pointed directly at the man in the middle with the playcard and the headset. Nobody is moving. Nobody is fidgeting. Everyone appears to be listening.

Which tells you two things about the 2012 Penn State Nittany Lions, one pretty apparent at this point and one I should’ve concluded before now:

First, they pay rapt attention to their head coach. It’s not the kind instilled by fear, either, but by respect.

“We have a resilient bunch of kids,” said O’Brien after a resounding 38-14 win in a Kinnick Stadium they quieted with expert precision. “They love to play for each other. And I think they enjoy playing for this coaching staff.”

And second, this team wants to be as good as it possibly can be.

So, it just may be that there won’t be any off day this season, that usually inevitable one where a team comes out flat. With unbeaten Ohio State on deck at Beaver Stadium, it’s a question that certainly needn’t be addressed in coming week.

This team is motivated. Not in the usual way, juiced by short-term adrenaline on the junk food of superficial week-to-week stimulus. They are powered for the long haul by all the reasons you can imagine and some that aren’t so obvious: A rebuttal to the many of us who said they couldn’t possibly compete at a championship level. Probably some retribution toward the NCAA. And a pent up frustration about all that’s happened in the last year over which they had utterly no control and for which they held zero responsibility.

And now, on top of all that, they have confidence. They’ve done what O’Brien and his staff has asked and it has worked in spectacular fashion.

So, they believe in their leader. They have confidence in themselves. And they are eager to prove a lot of people wrong and get a few people back.

What that all adds up to is a quest. This has become an effort worthy of some anthem or motto except that would be too hokey and superficial. It’s more organic and genuine than that.

Where is Penn State Football? An Update


COLUMN By STEVE HEISER 854-1575 x455 / @ydsports

We’ve come to the halfway point in the most unusual season in Penn State football history.

It seems like an appropriate time to take stock of the Nittany Lion program.

Here are three things that we’ve learned so far:

—1. Bill O’Brien seems like the right man for the job.

Since Day 1, he’s said and done all the right things under tremendously trying circumstances. All of that great public relations work would mean little, however, if the Lions were performing poorly on the field.

After a stumbling 0-2 start, however, Penn State seems to be steadily improving — as evidenced by four straight wins, including a rousing 39-28 fourth-quarter comeback victory on Saturday over previously unbeaten Northwestern. The Wildcats came in ranked No. 24.

O’Brien has also shown no fear, especially when it comes to play-calling. Fourth-down gambles don’t seem to scare him at all, and the fans are eating it up.

In the wake of unprecedented NCAA sanctions in the offseason, O’Brien also managed to hold the program together when it could have spun wildly into the college football gutter. He did lose a few standout players to immediate transfers (Silas Redd, Justin Brown, Anthony Fera), but for the most part, the Nittany Lions stood by their school and their new coach. That’s a testament to O’Brien and those players.

Some experts are already boosting O’Brien for Big Ten Coach of the Year honors. That seems like a stretch after just two conference games. But there’s no denying that O’Brien’s work to date has been impressive.

—2. These Nittany Lions are genuinely fun to watch.

They may not be the most talented bunch in Penn State history. Precious few of them will likely earn a living in the NFL.

But man, they play with fire and they play the game the right way.

That can be attributed directly to the team’s senior leaders — especially linebacker Michael Mauti, fullback Michael Zordich and quarterback Matt McGloin.

O’Brien takes every opportunity to heap praise on his senior class. O’Brien and his PSU seniors seem to have developed a special bond. That’s amazing considering they didn’t even know each other eight months ago.

Some of the Lions’ passion likely comes from an “Us-Against-the-World” mentality in the wake of the Sandusky Scandal. Some of it also comes from the fact that there will be no postseason games this season, or for the next few years. Therefore, the Lions can pour all of their heart and soul into the regular-season contests.

One has to wonder if the Lions can maintain that passion for six more games. That can be a hard thing to do. Most teams, sooner or later, come up empty. But so far, the Lions have consistently come ready to play.

—3. Recruiting, as expected, will be exceedingly difficult.

Since the NCAA sanctions came down, the Lions lost a few of their top recruits from their 2013 class.

And the new recruits they’ve attracted since then have generally been low-level prospects.

Penn State may also find it difficult to hold onto to some of the top verbal commitments they landed before the NCAA penalties came down, especially four-star Virginia quarterback Christian Hackenberg, who has been sending some mixed signals about his PSU commitment. He has said he remains committed to Penn State, but he has also said he wants to see how this PSU season plays out before signing on the dotted line in February. Those ambiguous statements have the Blue-and-White faithful on edge.

Losing Hackenberg would be a major blow — and not just because he’s a highly-rated player at a vital position. Losing the high-profile Hackenberg would also send a negative message to other potential recruits. It could have a domino effect. Penn State will have to play well and work hard to keep Hackenberg on board, because you can be sure that many other national powers will be calling, texting and visiting him.

O’Brien has done his best to publicize Penn State’s positives — its great facilities, its tremendous tradition and its national television exposure. O’Brien’s NFL-style offense and NFL contacts are also selling points. But given the severe sanctions, it’s still a very tough recruiting job.

In the final analysis, the Penn State football program under O’Brien is a work in progress — for this season and far beyond. In fact, this will likely be a long, hard slog for the next decade or so.

But after six games in this most unusual of Penn State seasons, there are reasons for hope. And at this point, that’s all Nittany Nation could have hoped for.

The Penn State Football Show


UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. - Nearly 40 radio stations in six states will carry the Penn State Sports Network’s “The Penn State Football Show” this year, with the season debut program set to air Thursday, Aug. 23. The program will also be carried live on http://www.GoPSUsports.com via Penn State All-Access.

The one-hour call-in program will take place at Damon’s Grill on East College Ave. in State College every Thursday at 6:05 p.m. from late August through the end of the football season. In late November, “The Penn State Basketball Show” will debut on most of the same Network stations and run through mid-March. “The Penn State Basketball Show” also will originate from Damon’s.

Football coach Bill O’Brien, men’s basketball coach Patrick Chambers, assistant coaches and members of the football and Nittany Lion basketball teams will be among participants on the programs.

“The Penn State Football Show ” will feature Coach O’Brien and other members of the football program answering questions from fans at Damon’s, online and on the phone. Fans can submit questions to www.GoPSUsports.com/askthecoachor call 1-800-52-LIONS begin_of_the_skype_highlighting            1-800-52-LIONS     end_of_the_skype_highlighting (525-4667) to ask questions of the coaches and student-athletes.

O’Brien will not be able to participate live in this week’s show due to the team’s practice schedule but will join the show live at Damon’s starting August 30.

Steve Jones, the radio play-by-play voice of the Nittany Lion football and basketball teams, is host of “The Penn State Football Show” and will be joined by Roger Corey, who hosts the Penn State Sports Network’s football pre-game Tailgate Show. Jeff Tarman is the producer of the show, which is a presentation of Penn State Sports Properties, a property of Learfield Sports.

“The Penn State Football Show ” can be heard on stations throughout Pennsylvania as well as New York City and northern New Jersey, Olean. N.Y., Youngstown, Ohio, Hagerstown, Md., Salisbury, Md. and Seaford

Calling ALL Penn State Lettermen!!


O’Brien is calling all lettermen for a squad meeting on campus next Tuesday

If you know anyone who played football for Penn State, please make sure they get this message!!