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 5:59 pm
It is good to see that at least Mike Florio is one member of the media who is starting to see that many parts of the media decided to leave their journalistic integrity behind for pure and unadulterated yellow journalism. The New York Times was once the gold standard of journalism. But they have ditched that for sensationialism actually even before the Spygate stuff. All you have to do is look at the McCain piece a couple months ago to see that (I am not a McCain supporter and I thought the piece labeling McCain as a philander without any real evidence was near libelous).
As to people claiming Pats fans are using everyone cheats as an excuse should look again. No one seems to be saying that. They are saying it isn’t fair that the media is on a witch hunt for the Patriots when other teams have been accused of cheating even some this year. This year alone, the Colts (colusion with the Titans), Titans (Colusion with the Colts), 49ers (tampering, fined), Packers (jamming the Lions’ sideline to QB signals) have been accused of cheating in one form or another. Why were those not mentioned in the piece?
As for tampering, I agree it isn’t like taping defensive signals. It is clearly more damaging. You strip a team of their star player because they know before free agency that they can get much more elsewhere, that hurts the team for years.
For an extreme case, say Peyton Manning was going to be a free agent and the Colts had agreed not to franchise him (a la Asante Samuel, Lance Briggs, and Nate Clements) and the Saints told him that they were willing to pay him double his salary before free agency starts. Eventhough the Colts offered him a big raise, he knew the Saints were offering a lot more and he had a chance to play for his hometown and father’s team. He ends up bolting because of this. Are you going to tell me that tampering in this case, is less than videotaping defensive signals?
Stealing defensive signals may not have any affect since teams change them up all the time (sometimes multiple times in a game). Besides, it is legal to steal signals, just not via videotaping them. So even if you break the code, there is no guarantee they will have the same code next time. Also, the most you can affect a team if you do crack the code is 3 time in a season for a divison rival or twice for a non-division rival and that assumes you play them in the playoffs.
The Pats were wrong and were punished for it. There has been no evidence of new violations no matter what the media and haters want to portray. The NYT have been on a witch-hunt from the beginning (it isn’t a coincidence that all the damaging pieces that get the most attention against the Patriots come from either Mike Fish of ESPN or the NYT). They are just single-minded in their trying to bury the Patriots.
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Rating: 1.2 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 6:15 pm
Hey iamanidiodicmoronredhdrck or whatever it is, this one of the few objective places to talk about pro football. Just because PFT chooses to form their own opinion based on the FACTS, does not mean they are taking sides! Get over yourself! The Pats have 3 super bowl titles, and would have been four except for a great effort by the Giants. Nothing you or any other jealous haters can changes that, regardless of your emotional outbursts.
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Rating: 2.35 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 6:15 pm
The Trolls/PatsHaters continue to ignore facts and just say “cheaters” “cheaters” over and over again.
Yet they are Jets, Dolphins, Colts, and Broncos fans. Who are all “cheaters” too.
The ignorance thrives.
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Rating: 1 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 6:24 pm
3-0 in the Super Bowl when taping signals and 0-1 when not. But I’m sure they gained no advantage.
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Rating: 3 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 6:33 pm
I support anyone with an anti-Pats agenda, so more power to the Times. They cheated three teams of a Superbowl because of cheating and still got a top-10 pick in the draft this year - they shouldn’t have been allowed anywhere near the first round, trade or not.
They play dirty as hell (Losman to the knee, Jacobs to the eye) and get little or no punishment. Isn’t it logical they are going to get hated on?
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Rating: 2.5 / 5 with 8 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 6:46 pm
It needs to be reiterated that ALL teams don’t cheat. Holmgren and Dungy each made speeches to this effect when the allegations first surfaced. The Pats did something that the Commish obviously felt warranted penalties of $750K in fines and a sacrificed 1st round pick. The Walsh debacle seems to vindicate the Pats in some circles, but the fact is they have been cheating for years and got caught. Saying “everyone does it” is erroneous and flimsy. Yeah, they are being targeted and dragged through the dirt, but they kinda deserve it, no?
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Rating: 3.4 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 6:55 pm
Mike Massey,
You’re a buffoon!!
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Rating: 3.65 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 6:57 pm
With due respect, the PFTers have been far more pro-Pats than neg-Pats. In some regards, that is to be expected. They have a record, owner, front office, coach and staff, and a roster of players that is one of the if not the best in the league, and has been since the implementation of the cap. But, since Spygate broke, the folks at PFT have been far more shrugs and sarcasm than realistic about the nature, extent and impact of what the Pats have done. Here is a real short synopsis: they won rings with film and did not without - and did so when they were dogs and lost when they were heavily favored. Chirp all you want about everyone does it, the film was not that helpful, the league came down hard enough, blah, blah, blan. They better win one soon, or this will resonate like the state of our economy in an election year.
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Rating: 2.6 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 7:07 pm
Wrathchild,
If you support biased journalism even if you agree with the bias, I am sorry for you. I am sickened by the state of journalism today. I do not want the new media to tell me the story I want to hear, I want them to tell the truth.
I am not naive to expect unbiased the truth out of the media. But if you chear on this biasness, I really feel sorry for you.
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Rating: 3 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 7:13 pm
If you truly believe the only reason the Patriots have been the most successful team in the league since 2001 is because of a few video tapes, you clearly know nothing about football. You would think going 18-1 after this story broke, without the video tapes, would convince people of that. Maybe these are the same people who don’t believe dinosaurs ever existed. They broke the rules, they paid their price, get over it. I hate to break it to you, but they’re still better than your team (unless you’re a Giants fan.)
How this Patriots taping fiasco is getting more press and causing more fan uproar than a F*#^ING NBA REFEREE TAKING MONEY FROM THE MAFIA TO SHAVE POINTS is so beyond comprehension that I need to go lie down now, just to prevent my head from exploding.
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Rating: 3.5 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 7:18 pm
Lawdog,
Yeah, because going 18-1, being the only team with 16-0 regular season, and had the most prolific offense in NFL history is no indication that they can win without defensive signals. I can’t think of anything being more indictment of the Patriots needing those defensive signals than breaking the scoring, passing, and receiving TD records after they turned over the tapes to Goodell.
I think that it is obvious that since the Pats offense was arguable the best offense of all time and Brady has his best year by about 1,000 miles without the videos of the defensive signals that it is obvious that the Pats offense can’t function without using the defensive signals.
I don’t know where Patriots haters get these ideas.
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Rating: 3.4 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 7:39 pm
Just to humor myself, I typed “tim donaghy nba scandal” into google. I got 64,800 hits.
Next, I typed “patriots nfl scandal” into google. 375,000 hits.
According this highly un-scientific study, taping defensive signals is over 5x more important of an issue for people than taking money from the mob and using your position as a referee to alter the final score. Alright, that did it … my head just exploded.
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Rating: 4.2 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 8:04 pm
hey Vandilay_Industries, you say “cheating will be their legacy”. This story is a joke buddy, Florio is pointing out the obvious, everyone with a shred of common sense understands what is at work here. It’s laughable if you think real NFL people and knowledgeable fans think this had anything to do with any of their SB wins. Just because you’re part of a large legion of bidder, jaded and jealous nitwits doesn’t mean that cheating will be even whispered 50 years from now when people are discussing this incredible dynasty. Just get over the fact that they have the best coach/qb combo in NFL history and move on, please!
It’s a simple life lesson guy, people are always trying to take down the king.
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Rating: 3 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 8:08 pm
Mike Florio is my frikkin hero - finally, a real journalist has written this about the Times. The Boston Herald, I can deal with that - you read that for Nostradamus’s predictions about the Bruins, or whatever. But people believe what’s in the Times - and what they have written about the Patriots since December is irresponsible and mean, not to mention biased. It must be to sell papers … but it burns me. I only buy the Times once a week now - on Saturday, for the crossword puzzle.
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Rating: 2.35 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 8:11 pm
It’s amazing to read these threads… we have Broncos fans all but calling for an asterisk next to the Patriots title when they were twice caught cheating on the salary cap and fined more than twice as much as the Patriots.
You’ve got Dolphins fans decrying playcall taping in 2001 while the Fins were caught themselves doing so in 2006 when the League made clear that there was nothing wrong with this (those of you who actually think that taping playcalling is ILLEGAL should get a clue from that instance alone)
You’ve got Colts fans thinking Dungy is above it all when he made a point of hiring the coach who everyone admits is the “best” at taping playcalls and analyzing them.
You’ve got Jets fans who seem to believe the Patriots coaching staff is the NFL equivilent of Satan, now decrying the taping of offensive playcalling by the Patriot Defense and have seem to forgotten who the Defensive coordinator for the Patriots was.
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
Forgive me, but I do believe that all teams in the NFL are “cheaters” - the only difference as I see it is that the Patriots are just cheaters while other teams are cheaters and hypocrits (with the exception of the Jets, who’s coach is a cheater, hypocrit, AND a rat.)
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Rating: 3.65 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 8:12 pm
“I do not want the new media to tell me the story I want to hear, I want them to tell the truth.”
You’re going to be waiting a long time to hear that, my friend.
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Rating: 3 / 5 with 2 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 8:34 pm
Having lived in Detroit for nearly 50 years and then moving to New England, I gotta say that being a fan of a team that is hated and reviled by (seemingly) everyone BUT its own fans is quite the new experience. I wonder how much hate there would be for the Patriots if their record was more like the Lions’.
Oh, and as to the question about which is more important in the grand scheme of things - whether or not some NFL team potentially “cheated” while winning three Superbowls or whether some guy potentially got pepper-sprayed by Texas cops for “boating while black” - obviously the Superbowl/cheating thingie is WAAAAaaaaaayy more important!
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Rating: 3 / 5 with 2 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 8:35 pm
The point the pats supporters refuse to see is the pats cheated to win those trophys.
So give em back and fire bellycheat and krapft who allowed the cheating.
What part of playing fair and doing the right thing do the pats fans not understand.
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Rating: 2.6 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 8:49 pm
“You’re going to be waiting a long time to hear that, my friend.”
I already said I wouldn’t. But to celebrate that fact like you want to, is moronic. The death of legitimate journalism is a horrible thing. If you love it, you are part of the problem. The press feel they have to dumb down and sensationalize the news for the mindless masses who only have the attention for scandal, sleaze, and controversy. How is that a good thing and something to be celebrated?
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Rating: 1 / 5 with 1 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 8:52 pm
foober,
The Pats were caught and punished. Hey, the Bromcos were caught cheating to win their Super Bowl and were fined nearly a million dollars and had a third round draft pick taken away from them for their cheating. Time heals all wounds.
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Rating: 3 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 9:02 pm
Robo769 - you forgot something:
The fact that the Patriots have had one of the top defenses in the league for several years in a row is only because they videotaped the defensive signals of their opponents and those Pats defenses contributed nada to their winning seasons and Superbowl victories.
Wait. Wha?
BTW - is it “cheating” to uprate one’s own comment? If so, well, oopsie!
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Rating: 4 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 9:09 pm
the Pats were 7-4 with the Walsh tapes….18-1 without.
it was legal to tape until 2006…..so 200o-2 is irrelevant.
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Rating: 2 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 9:19 pm
“It Was A Fumble”
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Rating: 5 / 5 with 2 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 9:53 pm
What? It was not legal to tape until 2006; where’d you get that from?
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Rating: 5 / 5 with 1 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 10:22 pm
Replace the word patriots with the word cardinals back in september and this is a complete non issue.
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Rating: 1 / 5 with 3 rating(s)