2nd Penn State football doc details Franklin’s medical meddling, including player who tried suicide (2024)

A second team doctor with Penn State football testified Tuesday about multiple times that he said Coach James Franklin attempted to interfere with the medical decisions of team doctors and trainers.

This interference included a player who attempted to kill himself by throwing himself out a window, according to Dr. Pete Seidenberg, who served as a primary care team physician during Franklin’s early years as head coach. Seidenberg is no longer with Penn State and practices out of state.

“Thankfully someone stopped him,” Seidenberg said of the player, who was not named in open court in Dauphin County.

The suicidal player was still receiving treatment in short-term psychiatric care when Seidenberg testified Franklin and then-Penn State athletic director Sandy Barbour wanted the player medically disqualified from the team.

Seidenberg testified this would have meant the player would lose his Penn State scholarship so Franklin could offer it to another player during the upcoming offseason.

UPDATE: It was later clarified that under NCAA rules, the medically disqualified player would not have lost his scholarship benefits at Penn State, but he would be forever banned from playing football there. The medical disqualification also would make a new scholarship available for another player.

Seidenberg testified he and Dr. Scott Lynch, then Penn State’s director of athletic medicine and orthopedic consultant to the football team, declined to follow Franklin’s and Barbour’s request to medically disqualify the player at that time. Seidenberg said it would have been the equivalent of disqualifying a player with a torn ACL before he received surgery.

The incident was one of several detailed Tuesday by Seidenberg as part of the ongoing trial brought by Lynch.

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Lynch was fired from his dual roles as Penn State’ director of athletic medicine and orthopedic consultant to the football team on March 1, 2019, leading to his lawsuit.

The suit alleges Lynch had repeated clashes with Franklin, who took over in 2014. Lynch claims he was terminated from his dual roles because he refused to “allow a coach to interfere with his medical treatment and return to play decisions.”

Lynch says he reported Franklin’s interference to Penn State Athletics and Penn State Health, including his immediate supervisor there, Dr. Kevin Black, who’s also being sued by Lynch. He is seeking both compensatory and punitive damages in the case.

The defense asserts there’s no evidence Lynch ever altered his medical treatment of players under pressure from Franklin — or anyone else.

On the witness stand, Seidenberg detailed numerous meetings in which he said Franklin pressured him, Lynch and the chief athletic trainer to alter their medical decisions and the treatment advice and options given to players.

Repeatedly, after detailing these incidents, Seidenberg described Franklin’s actions this way: “I perceived that as his attempt to influence medical decisions.”

There were multiple defense objections during Seidenberg’s testimony for “hearsay.” Dauphin County Court Judge Andrew Dowling barred the doctor from repeating any of Franklin’s words on the witness stand. Instead, Seidenberg had to testify to what he observed and the conclusions he drew from Franklin’s actions.

Franklin and Penn State Athletics were dropped from Lynch’s lawsuit due to Lynch missing a filing deadline.

One of the meetings with Franklin, other team and AD officials and the medical staff occurred on a Friday night at the Penn Stater Hotel prior to a game. Seidenberg testified that Franklin wanted a significant starter to be cleared for play.

“Coach was trying to get us release the athlete for return to play,” the doctor testified. “We were being pressured to release the athlete. There was a discussion. Coach was trying to influence medical decisions.”

In the end, Seidenberg testified that he and Lynch resisted this, and the player was not cleared for the upcoming game.

Asked how Franklin reacted to this medical decision, Seidenberg testified: “He was angry. He was angry at our decision.”

In another instance where the team medical staff stood firm against Franklin over a player’s treatment, Seidenberg testified of the coach: “He got up from the conference table abruptly and went back behind his desk. The meeting was over.”

Lynch’s attorney, Steven F. Marino, quipped that Franklin’s actions amounted to a “principal’s office moment.”

Seidenberg testified he and Lynch would explain the various treatment options to injured players, leaving it to them whether to opt for surgery or a more conservative approach involving therapy that could take longer if the treatment doesn’t work.

In two such cases described from the witness stand, Seidenberg said Franklin favored surgery as the first option, calling meetings in both cases with Seidenberg and Lynch. Yet again, the doctors abided by the players’ choices for the more “conservative” medical approaches.

Seidenberg testified Franklin often questioned the number of players on the injury list for practice. Players limited by injury were clad in “baby blue” jerseys for practices.

“There was pressure to get people out of the baby blues and pressure to do it quickly,” Seidenberg testified.

To show Lynch didn’t always go against Franklin, Seidenberg chronicled an incident in which a player broke a bone in his foot during the 2019 Citrus Bowl. Lynch explained the injury to the player, telling him going back in the game would not further damage the foot. Lynch left it to the player, who opted to go back into the game.

Afterward, Franklin lauded the player to the entire team.

“Coach was very happy,” Seidenberg recalled. “The athlete was applauded for continuing to play hurt.”

“What was the message?” Marino asked his witness.

“Play hurt.”

“And that came from coach Franklin?”

“Correct,” Seidenberg said.

Just in case players didn’t get the message, Franklin floated an idea to borrow a locker room sign from the rival Michigan program. The sign, introduced in court, read: “The unmotivated player, the out-of-shape player, the hurt player, and the bad player all look the same.”

Shocked by the message, Seidenberg testified he sent an email to Lynch and the head trainer saying, “I am concerned that he felt the need to share this with us.”

Added Seidenberg on the stand: “This encourages hurt players to hide their injuries and not report them to the medical team.”

©2024 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit pennlive.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Copyright 2024 Tribune Content Agency.

2nd Penn State football doc details Franklin’s medical meddling, including player who tried suicide (2024)

FAQs

2nd Penn State football doc details Franklin’s medical meddling, including player who tried suicide? ›

A second team doctor with Penn State football testified Tuesday about multiple times that he said Coach James Franklin attempted to interfere with the medical decisions of team doctors and trainers. This interference included a player who attempted to kill himself by throwing himself out a window, according to Dr.

Where did Penn State coach Franklin go to college? ›

Franklin graduated from East Stroudsburg (Pa.) University in 1995 with a degree in psychology and earned a master's degree in educational leadership from Washington State University. Franklin graduated from Neshaminy High School in Langhorne, Pa. Franklin and his wife, Fumi, have two daughters, Shola and Addison.

What is Coach Franklin's record at Penn State? ›

Here's Franklin's Penn State tenure in those terms: Overall record: 88-39. Big Ten record: 56-32.

Who was the disgraced coach of Penn State? ›

Disgraced Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky was the first in a series of scandals involving sexual abuse by authority figures in athletics. A podcast tells the heartbreaking story of one of the victims.

Who is Penn State's most famous football coach? ›

Joe Paterno (born December 21, 1926, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.—died January 22, 2012, State College, Pennsylvania) was an American collegiate gridiron football coach, who, as head coach at Pennsylvania State University (1966–2011), was the winningest major-college coach in the history of the sport, with 409 career ...

Who was the best QB at Penn State? ›

1. Kerry Collins

Kerry Collins is the best passer in Penn State history. He had an explosive arm, and the numbers to prove it. Collins threw for over 5,000 yards and 39 touchdowns in his career. He finished his career with 21 victories and five losses.

Who is Penn State's winningest coach? ›

He was the head coach of the Penn State Nittany Lions from 1966 to 2011. With 409 victories, Paterno is the most victorious coach in NCAA FBS history.

What Penn State QB went pro? ›

Christian Blaize Hackenberg (born February 14, 1995) is an American former professional football player who was a quarterback in the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Penn State Nittany Lions, and was selected by the New York Jets in the second round of the 2016 NFL draft.

Where is James Franklin coaching now? ›

Franklin's Career
YearRoleTeam/School
2006-2007Offensive CoordinatorKansas State
2008-2010Offensive CoordinatorMaryland
2011-2013Head CoachVanderbilt
2014-PresentHead CoachPenn State
9 more rows
May 6, 2024

Where did Penn State's wrestling coach go to college? ›

At just 29 years old, Sanderson came to Penn State after three very productive years as the head coach at his alma mater, Iowa State.

Where did Jerry Sandusky go to college? ›

Sandusky attended Penn State, where played college football under Rip Engle for the Nittany Lions, starting at defensive end from 1963 to 1965. In 1966, Sandusky graduated first in his class with a B.S. in health in 1966 and obtained a second degree in physical education in 1970.

Where did Jake Franklin go to college? ›

Prior to his coaching career, he played quarterback at Grapevine Faith High School, followed by a journey to multiple colleges including Abilene Christian, Cisco College, Central Lakes College, and the University of St. Thomas.

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