Virginia football: Jerry Sandusky was a finalist for Cavs coaching job in late 2000

Posted: September 7, 2012 at 7:15 am


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CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. For programs that rarely play and have very different football traditions, Virginia and Penn State share a number of personnel connections.

Quarterback Michael Roccos father was a standout signal caller for the Nittany Lions, and coaches Mike London and Bill O'Brien have ties that go back to their days as ACC assistants.

But perhaps most notable is the fact that Jerry Sandusky was one of the top finalists for the job when Cavaliers coach George Welsh retired.

Sandusky, who awaits sentencing on 45 counts of child sex abuse, was interviewed twice by Virginia officials in late 2000, and was visited in Pennsylvania by then-president John Casteen and then-athletic director Terry Holland.

Accounts from the Times-Dispatch at the time said Casteen and Holland came away from (the) visit concerned that his involvement with the Second Mile, the charitable organization he founded in 1982, might prevent him from making the necessary commitment to coaching.

Two days later, Al Groh announced his resignation as New York Jets coach to take the job at U.Va.

Holland, in an e-mail, said the search was waiting for Groh to finish the season with the Jets all along.

We never got to the point of a background check for Coach Sandusky, so (I) dont have any idea of whether or not that would have revealed anything, particularly at that time, he wrote.

Of his reaction to hearing the charges against Sandusky, Holland said he was surprised: Everything we knew of Coach Sandusky at that time indicated that he was an excellent coach and an even better human being.

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Virginia football: Jerry Sandusky was a finalist for Cavs coaching job in late 2000

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September 7th, 2012 at 7:15 am

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