Joe Paterno's name off Big Ten trophy
In light of the child sex-abuse scandal at Penn State, Joe Paterno's name has been removed from the new Big Ten championship trophy, the conference announced Monday.
Paterno survey
A public opinion survey shows that 51 percent of Americans think Joe Paterno should have been fired, compared to 21 percent who thought he should have kept his job.
However, Pennsylvanians feel the opposite. The survey -- conducted by Global Strategy Group in conjunction with ESPN Research -- showed that 45 percent of Pennsylvania residents think firing Paterno was the wrong decision, compared to 35 percent who said it was the right one.
The poll included 804 Americans from Nov. 11-13 and conducted using an online methodology recruiting from a representative panel of Americans. Special care was taken to ensure that the geographic and demographic divisions of the actual population were properly represented. An oversample of 145 interviews with Pennsylvania residents was used to gather reactions there.
Nationally, the poll showed that Paterno's favorability rating was 25 percent "favorable" and 49 percent "unfavorable" during the survey. Prior to that, 51 percent of fans saw Paterno as "favorable" and only nine percent didn't.
However, avid college football fans had a 51 percent favorable impression of Paterno, with a 41 percent unfavorable impression. Just 22 percent of Americans felt Paterno should have coached until the end of the season; in Pennsylvania, however, that number jumped to 41 percent.
Most fans felt Penn State handled the situation appropriately, but 60 percent disapproved of how students reacted by protesting (only 16 percent approved).
-- ESPN.com
The Big Ten said that the crisis at Penn State, which led to Paterno's firing as coach Wednesday night, prompted the decision to remove his name from the Stagg-Paterno Championship Trophy. The trophy will be awarded Dec. 3 at the inaugural Big Ten football championship game at Indianapolis.
The trophy will now be called the Stagg Championship Trophy.
"We believe that it would be inappropriate to keep Joe Paterno's name on the trophy at this time," Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany said in a statment. "The trophy and its namesake are intended to be celebratory and aspirational, not controversial. We believe that it's important to keep the focus on the players and the teams that will be competing in the inaugural championship game."
Amos Alonzo Stagg won 319 games in 57 years, most at the University of Chicago. Paterno's 409 wins are the most by a major college coach.
Penn State (8-2, 5-1 Big Ten ) and Michigan State (8-2, 5-1) lead their respective divisions and will advance to the title game in Indianapolis if they win the rest of their games.
The Big Ten pointed to the recent grand jury indictments against retired Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky and two other officials, a U.S. Department of Education investigation into Penn State's response to the allegations of sexual abuse involving Sandusky, and Paterno's dismissal by the school's board of trustees as reasons to remove Paterno's name from the trophy.
Robert Stagg of Grand Rapids, Mich., a great grandson of Amos Alonzo Stagg, said last week his family was honored to have the Stagg name on the trophy whatever happened with Paterno's name.
Penn State said it would not comment.
Paterno was fired Wednesday after he initially said he planned to retire at the end of his 46th season, but the outcry following the arrest of Sandusky on 40 criminal counts of molestation proved too much for the board of trustees to ignore.
Defensive coordinator Tom Bradley was selected as interim coach, and No. 21 Penn State lost Saturday in its first game of the post-Paterno era. The Nittany Lions, who have a one-game lead on Wisconsin (No. 17 BCS, No. 15 AP) in the Leaders Division of the Big Ten, finish the season with road games against Ohio State and the Badgers.
Tickets to the championship game already have been printed and they include an image of the trophy and the name Stagg-Paterno. Big Ten spokesman Scott Chipman said many of the tickets have been shipped and the conference will not reprint the remaining tickets.
Adam Rittenberg covers Big Ten football for ESPN.com. He can be reached at espnritt@gmail.com. Information from The Associated Press was included in this report.
PENN STATE SCANDAL

More than six decades of achievement could not withstand the sin of omission in connection to a terrible scandal. And so it ends for Joe Paterno. Ivan Maisel | Paterno fired | Full coverage
PENN STATE SCANDAL
- Trustees try to quell alumni angst
- Ex-assistants' severance to total $4.4M
- Faculty Council unhappy with inquest
- Paterno: I was confounded by allegation
- Penn State hires Patriots' O'Brien
- Judge: Ex-Penn State officials can face trial
- Sandusky waives hearing, goes to trial
- Penn State terminates Paterno licensing ties
- Sandusky's wife: He didn't harm kids
- Ex-FBI director to lead Penn State probe
- Paterno, Spanier fired from Penn State
- Key players in Penn State saga | Timeline
- PDF: Sandusky grand jury transcript
- Penn State blog coverage | Podcast

COMMENTARY
- Woj: Ignorance no excuse for Paterno
- Drehs: No easy answers for McQueary
- Schlabach: Long road to recovery
- Schlabach: Paterno's firing was just
- Bryant: A failure of power, moral authority
- Reilly: Save your sympathy for the victims
- Weinreb: Growing up Penn State
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