The word is that the NCAA will announce its sanctions tomorrow (Monday, July 23). One purportedly knowledgeable person said the sanctions are unprecedented. Already there is speculation about whether a deal has been cut between PSU and the NCAA.
It is apparent that the NCAA is basing any actions or sanctions on the Freeh report, not on its own traditional investigation procedures. It is also noteworthy that the NCAA is not relying on its Infractions Committee, for the very obvious reason that they are not dealing with mere recruiting violations.
I persist in my belief that the NCAA will not administer the "death penalty" (I wish there were a more appropriate term for schedule cancellation) if only because of the calendar. NCAA rules provide for a response by the punished institution, then a hearing, and all this rigmarole takes months.
The statue is now gone, a few trustees have been replaced (many more to go, in my view) and other forms of punishment could be meted out by the NCAA (e.g., vacating of all football victories between, say, 1998 and 2011, a reduction in football scholarships, and no bowl games for a few years) and digested by a new administrative leadership at PSU.
Stay tuned.