With respect to the Spygate story, we’ve been accused at times of being apologists for the New England Patriots and at other times for having a bias against them. And that tells us that our effort to be fair and balanced on this issue is generally working.
One media publication that isn’t, in my own personal assessment, behaving in a fair and/or balanced manner is the former employer of Jayson Blair, the newspaper of record, the repository for all the news that’s fit to print.
The New York Times.
In its May 11 edition, the Times has published what we regard as, quite simply, a one-sided hatchet job that ignores the basic reality that pro football teams break the rules all the time, if doing so will (or might) result in some type of actual (or perceived) benefit in the quest to score more points that the opponents on a per-game basis.
The gist of the article is that most of the changes to the league’s rules since Bill Belichick’s arrival as head coach in 2000 have been driven by complaints made about the practices of the Patriots.
The article cites only one unnamed league executive in support of the assertion. (That said, an unnamed Jaguars exec is cited in support of the claim that the Jags filed a complaint against the Patriots in 2006 due to the failure of the coach-to-quarterback radio system.) “They were the only team, really,” the unnamed executive said. “Clearly, they were the team mentioned far more than anybody else.”
The “executive” in question presumably is a member of the league’s competition committee, since the item focuses on the efforts of the league’s rule-making body to make tweaks, supposedly in order to thwart (or, as in the case of Spygate, nail) the franchise that won three Super Bowls in four seasons and nearly captured a fourth to cap what would have been a 19-0 season.
But teams have been cheating, or at least trying to cheat, for years. We posted back in February this 1967 article from Sport magazine, which talks about the cloak-and-dagger realities of the modern (at the time) NFL. Also, in the wake of Spygate I, former Cowboys and Dolphins coach Jimmy Johnson was candid about the fact that he was taught how to videotape defensive coaching signals when he arrived in the NFL in the late 1980s.
And don’t get us started (again) on tampering. In this regard, the Pats have been victimized as much as anyone, with their effort to squeeze Lawyer Milloy into a lower deal reportedly undermined by improper communications between Milloy’s camp and the Redskins. Ditto for receiver Deion Branch, with whom the Pats were convinced the Jets had tampered in 2006.
But it was the 49ers, not the Patriots, who were made to be the example of a practice so embarrassingly widespread that the league considered earlier this year the possibility of simply allowing tampering in the week or so before free agency opens.
Make no mistake about it — rules violations like tampering create as much, if not more, of a benefit than videotaping defensive coaching signals. By engaging in impermissible negotiations with the agent of a player who is under contract with another team, the team that tampers has an opportunity to make the other team worse and to make itself better, if the player ultimately moves to the new team, once he’s officially on the market. Even if the player stays put, the act of tampering potentially fractures the relationship between the player and the team.
But the Times makes no mention of tampering or any other rules violations that other teams are or might be committing. Instead, the focus is squarely on the Patriots.
The Patriots recognize what the Times is doing, and to his credit team spokesman Stacey James is willing to call it what it is. “We believe that this inquiry is patently biased and that a truly objective report would investigate all instances of these complaints, not exclusively those against the Patriots,” James wrote in an e-mail to the Times.
If the Times has an agenda against the Pats on this story, the reason for it is unclear. The New York Times Company also owns the Boston Globe, which has become the favored newspaper of Patriots fans in the wake of the February 2 item from the Herald that accused the hometown team of videotaping the Rams’ walk-through prior to Super Bowl XXXVI.
But, then again, Matt Walsh and his lawyer, Michael Levy, have given the Times plenty of information about the whole Spygate II situation, and perhaps the Times has developed (intentionally or otherwise) a pro-Walsh, anti-Pats approach in the hopes of keeping the Walsh-Levy pipeline open, especially with Walsh scheduled to sit down with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell in two days.
Regardless of the reason, we think that the story shows at best a fundamental misunderstanding of the NFL, and at worst an outright bias against the New England Patriots.
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May 11th, 2008 at 12:52 pm
I have been reading the Times for three decades. I have been a season ticket holder for the Knicks (when they were watchable), the Giants, and regularly went to Mets and Yankee games. While The Times is an important source for economic and international news, it has never been known for it’s sports coverage. The writers they have hired have a poor understanding of sports in general (except for their Outdoors writer who, obviously, does not cover team sports. He’s excellent.). William Rhoden is the worst of the group. He actually wrote an article defending Isaiah Thomas’ reign over the Knicks and quoted the basketball “experts” Spike Lee and Chris Rock as his support. If you are looking at The Times for sports coverage, you clearly rarely read the paper. Most Times subscribers use the sports section for important tasks like lining the bird cage, picking up after their dog, and starting up the fire in the fireplace.
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May 11th, 2008 at 12:59 pm
Thanks for bringing some common sense to the discussion Mike. The NFL desparately wants a scapegoat and the last thing they want is for someone to dredge up an article from 1967 that documents “cheating” in the NFL going back 50 years.
They’d rather encourage a perception that stealing signals is the exception and not, quite literally, the rule - and the same goes with all the other efforts for teams like the Bears to gain an often unfair advantage going back to 1955.
As far as the New York Times, I get the sense there is a reason they haven’t made the slightest effort to document how Walsh comes to have a $500 an hour DC lobbyist/lawyer who’s former lawfirm (2005) did work for Comcast and other lucrative interests in Washington.
They’re more eager to talk about about a crisis of credibility in the NFL than they are about a crisis of credibility in the media for some reason. Keep up the good work.
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May 11th, 2008 at 1:10 pm
I think PFT’s coverage of the Spygate controversies has been relatively balanced.
What’s more, PFT is correct to raise the tampering issue, which has been woefully neglected by the mainstream sports media. Why? I suppose it’s too complicated for many of them to follow, and exploring the subject would require critical thought and cognitive effort. Why bother with it when you can just take quotes from embittered characters with axes to grind regarding something that already has been hashed to death by the league.
Yes, most sports journalists are lazy. Most aren’t following sports because it’s what the like to do. Regrettably, most of them are covering sports because the senior editors of their publications, virtual or otherwise, believe it to be an area where their slothful, negligent work habits will do the least harm.
Thankfully, PFT is one of the exceptions. They dig deeper, raise issues that the mainstream sports journalists wouldn’t bother to unearth, and ask us to think a little harder, too.
Burn effigies of Belichick if you like, but that won’t help you understand what’s really happening behind the scenes at the NY Times and elsewhere. My supposition on the Times? I think they’re following Matt Walsh and his band of money-seeking hangers-on, but they’re also being egged on by members of the Jets’ hierarchy, especially by the Mangini mob, which has more than a few sharpened axes to grind when it comes to New England.
If Mangini and Tanenbaum spent as much time worrying about their own team as they do about framing the Pats for real or imagined transgressions, perhaps the Jets wouldn’t be heading toward another mediocre season.
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May 11th, 2008 at 1:15 pm
This is unreal, but I suppose we have come to expect the media to try and spin or downplay the truth all the time. What a joke to try and overshadow the Patriot cheating by comparing them to other teams that break the rules.
Ahh, I get it: The Jets and the 49ers are just as bad to tamper with players during the offseason and the Patriots are victimized as much as anybody. We can see where your’e bias stands Florrio. You’re just a Hackjob for Kraft. How pathetic.
Tampering with players in the offseason has no comparison with cheating on gameday to win football games. The Patriots will ALWAYS have this hanging over them and it will NEVER be forgotten.
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May 11th, 2008 at 1:24 pm
There is no spinning needed. Are teams allowed to tape signals of opposing teams? Yes or no.
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May 11th, 2008 at 1:29 pm
Bofarr, you’ve beat me to the punch. What I find humorous are some of the reactions to the NYT having a biased agenda. Especially the incredulousness of the author (he of great admiration of Keith Olbermann)
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May 11th, 2008 at 2:03 pm
I’m glad for once the Times is on the Jets’ side.
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May 11th, 2008 at 2:10 pm
Denver Diehard, a Cheerleader, says: “This is unreal, but I suppose we have come to expect the media to try and spin or downplay the truth all the time. What a joke to try and overshadow the Patriot cheating by comparing them to other teams that break the rules.”
You forgot the Broncos, who were fined more than twice as much as the Patriots and had draft picks taken away for violating the salary cap.
Did they learn their lesson? No of course not. They did it not once, but twice along the way.
Personally I think that giving a team extra money and extra players by which to win a Super Bowl is more of a major violation than violating what was, until this year, an obscure rule about where you can tape opposing team’s signals from, but that’s just me.
Actually it’s not just me as evidenced by the $2 million in fines levied against the Broncos compared to the $500,000 for the Patriots (and $250,000 for the coach).
I think the point here is your - and everyone else’s - inconsistency. Show you’re not just biased against the Patriots by calling for an asterisk next to the Broncos Super Bowl victories, and maybe an asterisk against the 72 Dolphins for the tampering they engaged in to hire Don Shula - which also caused the NFL to take away THEIR 1st round pick that year.
Florio’s attempting to be fair and consistent. You should try it too.
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May 11th, 2008 at 2:23 pm
ozjimbo is exactly right.
By now, just about everyone has an opinion on the subject.
People who’ve hated Belichick and the Pats for years (”are sick of them”) will tend to side with the asterisk, tarnished legacy, and Belichick created AIDS crowd.
People who’ve admired Belichick and the Pats for years will recognize the “scandal” for what it is, a violation of an unclearly worded but obviously intended portion of the rules, and dismiss everything past September 10, 2007 as fallout and attempts to keep the story in the headlines.
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May 11th, 2008 at 2:24 pm
Denver Diehard. Just another casual-fan who doesn’t have a clue what he’s talking about.
Tampering does more damage than taping signals in plain view.
Everyone ignores how all teams steal signals and how everyone in the stadium can see what was being taped.
Don’t be bitter b/c the Broncos are going backwards.
Speaking of the Broncos, didn’t Elway’s 2 SuperBowl winning teams violate the salary cap? hahah
that isn’t cheating though right? or is it?
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May 11th, 2008 at 2:41 pm
The point of mentioning that everyone does it, is not to excuse it but to point out the inequity of busting only one team for any violation of the rules. The Pats got busted for taping signals during games. Yet, other teams have admitted they did it too, with no negative consequences. The 49ers got busted for tampering with a player — they didn’t even sign. Yet, other teams blatantly do so without any repercussions.
If you are going to enforce the rules, enforce them evenly for all teams. You tape signals whether your are the Pats or the Seahawks, you get fined. You tamper with another’s teams players, you lose draft picks whether you are the 49ers or the Panthers. No favoritism, everyone plays by the same rules and gets punished the same for violating them.
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May 11th, 2008 at 2:50 pm
trying to tamper in free agency so you can sign a guy who may or may not actually make a significant improvement to your team is nowhere near the same in terms of impacting the games as being able to forecast exactly what the opposing defense is going to do based on stealing their signals.
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May 11th, 2008 at 3:57 pm
We also forget the fine folks at Espn, Mike Lupica , Gary Myers, and did I mention Espn, except for Colin Cowherd, who is fair and impartial..
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May 11th, 2008 at 4:11 pm
Boo-hoo. We’re the patriots* and we’re so oppressed. We eeked out three Super Bowl wins while we cheated and no one who matters is asking us to turn in our rings. How can the world be so unfair?
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May 11th, 2008 at 4:20 pm
“trying to tamper in free agency so you can sign a guy who may or may not actually make a significant improvement to your team is nowhere near the same in terms of impacting the games as being able to forecast exactly what the opposing defense is going to do based on stealing their signals.”
Right. And the Broncos cheating the salary cap so they could sign Elway also had no impact on their success. ROTFLMAO.
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May 11th, 2008 at 4:22 pm
Appalling. If so many teams video tape defensive signals, then why haven’t the tapes come out. It’s not the same as saying that you can call holding on every play, holding is very much a judgement call depending on where the hands are, how long they’ve been there, and (sometimes) where the hold is in relation to the play.
Taping defensive signals at all is illegal. There’s no scale. There’s no taping a little bit, and then too much is wrong. Pats were caught, and now there’s evidence they’ve been caught again, this time on the offensive side. If you can’t gain an advantage from doing it, then why a) is it illegal, and b) why would the pats do it?
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May 11th, 2008 at 4:36 pm
The mock outrage and naivity shown by Patriots haters is laughable. No doubt the fact the Patriots got caught has tarnished ther legacy. But to believe that they are the lone team to commit this transgresson is so plain dumb it is unbelievable to a rationable person. The fact that teams use complicated multi-person signals is a blatant acknowledgement that the other team is trying steal them. Newsflash to our resdent idiots-teams use these sgnals in games the Patriots aren’t even involved in.
Now that we got the sign stealng out of the way lets move on to vdeotape. All teams are provided with game tape and “coaches tape” that includes footage of the signals, nevermind the approx. 70,000 fans who are free to observe them with their own cameras. So it isn’t the videotape that is in question. That leaves us with the location and/or who does the videotaping. The infamous memo includes this “..or other locations accessible to coaching staff during the game”. This is the violation that the Patriots are guilty of. They had access to the tape during the game, leading to the supposition that it could be used during the game.
The entire “Pats Cheated, lets add asterisks and abolish any record of their existance!” rallying cry of the hater crowd is based off a supposition that it was used during the game. Which is fair. But it is just as fair to assume they didn’t.
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May 11th, 2008 at 4:41 pm
From the start its looked like a white wash job by the nfl to not get too much of a black eye out the the pats cheating to win.
The pats were cheating for quite a few years. And it finally took mangini the ex pats coach to spill the beans on them. And then Walsh backs that up by proving the pats cheated for many years.
Show some chahoonees nfl kick bellycheat and krapft out of the league.
But the nfl won’t. JUst keep spending your money on a possibly crooked game is their answer to us fans.
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May 11th, 2008 at 4:45 pm
To phillyslick 32, the reason the patriots are the center of attention is due to the fact that a coach in NY wanted to get back at his mentor. Otherwise, this does not get out. It is also due to the fact that a former employee wants his 15 minutes of fame; if he was really that interested in getting the truth out then it wouldn’t have taken him months to negotiate with the NFL about telling his story when in reality no confidentiality agreement existed. In addition, anybody who needs to be guaranteed a first class airfare as well as a 3 day “suite” reservation in a swanky NY hotel should tell you all about agendas. Please stop the sanctimonious dribble about how the Patriots were the only team “cheating”, especially when one of the “best” signal stealers is presently a coach on the Colts.
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May 11th, 2008 at 4:53 pm
Reply to phllyslick:
1)The reason the other teams tapes haven’t come out is likely for the same reason the Pats weren’t caught for 7 years, they aren’t exactly tripping over themselves to get caught. Most likely all the teams that were doing destroyed their tapes and have stopped now, they would have to be stupid not to.
2)They weren’t caught “again” they already admitted to doing since 2000.
3)Please tell me what super-secret offensive signals you can videotape with all offensive calls going through headsets? The groupings? LMAO Most teams use exactly the same signals.
4)On to the 2 part question, a)taping of signals isn’t illegal, the signals are intermittingly visable on every broadcast and constantly visable on coaches tape. It is the taping from locatons assessible to coaching staff DURING the game that is illegal, due to the POSSIBILITY it could be used DURING the game. b)Who knows, maybe he used them during the game, maybe he didn’t lke the angles on the coaches tape, maybe it was easier to sync up signals in the film room later in the week, we’ll never know.
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May 11th, 2008 at 5:06 pm
Hi, I read your site daily as it is updated several times a day. U r generally the first site out of all the sites to get the scoop on most information. I love how u don’t hold back opinions & keep an open mind & generally give both sides of the argument. However, what do the Patriots have on u? of course the owner’s r going 2say all the right things about Spy gate because they don’t want 2 become like MLB & have their problems aired 2the public. They want everything done internal, I would like to point out a few obvious facts from Spy gate & c if u can really see it happening in the real world of law.
1. Tapes, not hearsay but actual tapes showing a wrong doing r given to the commissioner. In the real world of crime & punishment does the judge a. keep the tapes & inspect them further. b. figures that if he is shown 4 tapes & knows this has been going on for a long time (since the year 2000 assumes there are others & looks 4them. c. trusts the team that committed the infraction to bring all the tapes 2him. d. has one of his minions raid the complex & go over each & every tape. e. decides hey the Pats that have made patsies out of him the NFL & the millions of fans, r telling the truth & what the heck lets burn these b4 anyone else has a chance 2c them because one got leaked to the media.
If u picked e. by some random idiotic thought then consider this, the commissioner said the tapes couldn’t help the Pats win games anyway (which is mind blowing because if u r stealing signs 4the next time u play them then of course they can help u.) Not 2mention if the team has to totally change their signals when they play the Patriots, because they Patsies r allowed 2cheat (nice benefit for the Pats who just happened 2have won….umm…….cheated to win a lot of super bowls lately),(then that is extra work for the opposing team.) so in the commissioner’s mind if the tapes couldn’t help the pats, why destroy them at all.
2. the commissioner destroys the tapes & in a huge display of Punishment(note the sarcasm here) fines a billionaire 500,000 & the coach 250,000 or whatever it was & takes away their low first round draft pick, leaving the now scorned Patriots (sarcasm again) with only their multiple super bowls cheats to live on.
3. Brady is a good qb but how hard would it b 2go from good 2great if u knew the other team’s defense???
4. A former Patriot defender admits he doesn’t know how but they got a list of the teams audibles every week b4 they played them, but hey I guess that doesn’t matter either because that player said he was more worried about the match ups against the opposing team.
5. U r now trying to discredit Walsh current statements by what he did in college? R U Freaking Kidding me??? What he did was bad & stupid but has nothing 2do with right here right now.
6. I could go on forever, but I am saying all this to find out what hold the patriots have over u, I know what hold they have on the NFL (my favorite sport by far by the way) (as PFT is my favorite sport site) if all comes 2light & the Pats have made fools out of the NFL, their super bowl wins become ruined & so does the credibility of the NFL. So what is it? Does PFT sit around in their Patriot pajamas with a flap in the back??? have u been told by the NFL to slant your stories in their favor??? I would like 2think u don’t give n 2anybody like you didn’t give n on the Vick thing. as horrible as the Vick thing was u didn’t give in to the NFL or the Atlanta justice(or lack there of ie Poindexter or whatever that D.A. Barney Fifes name is). but this just blows my mind.
6. Finally on the draft pick lost by the patriots & the fines the commissioner said that was the max he could do by NFL law?? I’m not buying it, u can suspend a player indefinitely & I think if he did the same 2head coach Belicheat a lot, not one NFL team or owner would say a word. In my opinion the act that he admitted to should already b a life time ban( and no I don’t think someone as smart as he is can read a memo like the commissioner sent the entire NFL & not understand it or for that matter know not it’s wrong, even if the memo was never sent.
I look forward 2hearing from u thanks for your time.
Thanks Again
Cya
Mike Massey
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Rating: 2.35 / 5 with 9 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 5:32 pm
A great article Forio. I commend you for this one. It was both thorough and fair.
Reading the comments never ceases to amaze me though. Several people appeared to only read that “there is all kinds of cheating going on” as an excuse. Amazing. I dont think you could spell it out for them any clearer than you did here.
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May 11th, 2008 at 5:46 pm
Heres another thought. Considering the pats have been proven to cheat with the videoing and possibly audio stealing of signals what else have they done to cheat to win. Don’t think they just stopped at that.
Again if the nfl were a legitimate organization they should have some neutral investigative body really investigate the pats organization.
For the pats to cheat so badly and then say they were the champions is blasphemy to the largest degree.
And now the question is is the nfl game as dishonest as the pats make it appear..
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May 11th, 2008 at 5:47 pm
Umm, the NY Times article was about the use of technology in the NFL. I don’t see how the salary cap or tampering would be pertinent to the subject.
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May 11th, 2008 at 5:54 pm
“The mock outrage and naivity shown by Patriots haters is laughable. No doubt the fact the Patriots got caught has tarnished ther legacy. But to believe that they are the lone team to commit this transgresson is so plain dumb it is unbelievable to a rationable person.”
On target. If these people really believed the offense was so grievous, if they really believe it’s such a threat to the game, then why aren’t they calling for a league-wide investigation into taping signals? Why wouldn’t they want to know if other teams have done this too? You could ask the same question of Arlen Specter.
But none of them is asking for this. And it’s pretty clear why, too–because in their craven little hearts they’re petrified of what an investigation might turn up. Could be their own team has taped signals too and wouldn’t that suck? So instead they play the false sanctimony card and scream and screech about the Patriots.
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