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 11:14 pm
Wrathchild, a Passionate Fan, says: “What? It was not legal to tape until 2006; where’d you get that from?”
Are guys kidding me? You really have never read the rule you all seem so righteous about?
Not only is it legal, the rule clearly states where and how tapes should be obtained. If you had any doubts whe Dolphins were caught using taped signal calls and the NFL clearly stated “That’s football” and didn’t even care where or how they got them - and that was AFTER the 2006 clarifying memo.
Taping signals is still legal TODAY. Are all you people really not understanding that?
Read the rule for yourself. Taping (for signals or anything else) is legal from the proper location. Taping from the sidelines taping is a no no… and until 2006 it was only a no no if it was going to be used for THAT game.
[b]NFL Policy Manual for Member Clubs, Volume II: NFL Game Operations Manual, General, Pages A105-A106:
V. Miscellaneous Rules and Regulations
A. No video recording devices of any kind are permitted to be in use in the coaches’ booth, on the field, or in the locker room during the game.
B. If clubs believe that violations of any of the Origination, Editing, Exchange, or Shipping rules have occurred, such violations should be brought to the attention of the Vice President of Officiating. Also, please inform the Video Directors Committee of any known violations. The Competition Committee will also urge that the Commissioner take appropriate disciplinary action in cases of substantiated violations.
C. Teams will be required to supply a yearly allotment of tapes to the Dub Center at NFL Films. Quantity required per club will be given to each team by May prior to the upcoming season. Tape stock will consist of brand-new 62-minute Beta SX tapes. For the 2007 season, 4,400 NEW tapes will be required.
D. To ensure the protection of equipment and employees of the team’s video departments, please follow the guidelines listed for the video shooting locations at your stadium:
-All video shooting locations must be enclosed on all sides with a roof overhead.
-Any doors entering the shooting locations within the public seating areas of the stadium are required to be lockable from both the inside and the outside of the location to prevent unwarranted access.
-All locations must have climate control (heat and/or fans). Any heaters and/or fans must be completely operational and produce the effect that is required. Heaters that do not produce any heat should be replaced.
-All locations must supply adequate power for each team (at least two outlets per team).
-All locations must be installed with the required video printer lines from both the sideline and the end zone shooting locations to the coaches’ booth and field. It is not required that wiring be installed for the opposite end zone position, but if the opposite end zone is wired for the home team, it must also be wired for the visiting team. Home teams must provide visiting teams with the same situational set up for printers that they have themselves (i.e. cover, placement behind the bench, etc.)
-It is suggested that each location provide either countertop space or tables for both teams in the booth and a table on the field and coaches’ booth.
Please ascertain that your club is in compliance with these guidelines.
…
NFL Constitution and Bylaws:
“Any use by any club at any time, from the start to the finish of any game in which such club is a participant, of any communications or information-gathering equipment, other than Polaroid-type cameras or field telephones, shall be prohibited, including without limitation videotape machines, telephone tapping, or bugging devices, or any other form of electronic devices that might aid a team during the playing of a game.”
September 2006 memorandum by NFL Executive Vice President of Football Operations Ray Anderson:
“videotaping of any type, including but not limited to taping of an opponent’s offensive or defensive signals, is prohibited on the sidelines, in the coaches’ booth, in the locker room, or at any other locations accessible to club staff members during the game.” [/b]
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May 11th, 2008 at 11:36 pm
Here is how this thing breaks. What will happen is on Tuesday Goodell and et all will meet, they will go over stuff on the tapes. Then goodell has his press conference gives the okay. While he is doing his press conference, walsh and levy meet with Spector. This is where it gets very interesting. While the piece in the times is very much a hatchet job in my opinion. Given the times propensity to be more on Spector’s and Walsh’s side, I think the headset communication issue is where they attack. As previously stated on this site and others, the offensive and defensive signals are a non issue at this point, rightly or wrongly they are old news. What is not old news is the headset communication.It prolongs the arguement longer which is Spectors goal and can say that Goodell is trying to sweep this under the rug. I believe that Goodell will go based on what is on the tapes and will not go with heresay from Walsh, which is why he will get outmanouvered on this one again.
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May 11th, 2008 at 11:37 pm
It’s the location of the taping Wrath.
From the NFL rules book: “No video recording devices of any kind are permitted to be in use in the coaches’ booth, on the field, or in the locker room during the game…All video shooting locations must be enclosed on all sides with a roof overhead.”
The location of the camera man on the sidelines breaks this rule. It allows the team to have access to the tapes during the game. Any signals filmed while taping from appropriate locations are fair game. In addition, teams can have people on the sidelines stealing signals and writing down all the same info, (i.e. down, distance, score, etc…). That info can then be edited in with game footage after the game.
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May 11th, 2008 at 11:46 pm
“Replace the word patriots with the word cardinals back in september and this is a complete non issue.”
Yeah, but to be fair, replace ANY word in the English language with “Cardinals” and it becomes a complete non-issue.
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May 12th, 2008 at 12:12 am
Ummm… Didn’t someone write a article for sporting news about a league wide problem of off the field issues?? That certain person also was bias and singled out the Bengals when clearly every team has turds on it!
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May 12th, 2008 at 12:23 am
look it up wrathchild
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May 12th, 2008 at 12:50 am
Hey Wrathchild, Iron Maiden rocks! however, Where’d you get the word where’d from, is it a word?
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May 12th, 2008 at 12:56 am
florio is pretty fair in his comments…..thats not the issue
pat fans will always support their team as they should…..they are loyal fans with a reason to support them. so their bias is natural…
the most damning evidence to me is this….
Bill Bellicheks record as an NFL coach before developing a database of tapes via spygate:
41-59
Bill Bellicheks record as an NFL coach after developing a database of tapes via spygate:
86-22
that is an .410 percentage before and an .800 percentage after. it doesn’t take a genius to see that something is likely amiss…. certainly there is a taint to the 3 Super Bowl titles…. but pats fans readily admit that….. all they are asking for is consstency in reporting.
remember Pats fans didnt cheat… they are only rooting for thir team as the hould
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May 12th, 2008 at 1:13 am
the most telling fact to me is this:
Bellicheks record before developing a database of tapes ; 41-59
Bellicheks record before developing a database of tapes ; 86-22
thats a .410 percentage before and .800 after…. it doesn’t take a genius to see that the 3 titles are tainted.
but dont blame pats fans…..they readily admit that fact… all they are doing is supporting their team as they should…..
all they want is consistent coverage and not to be singled out as the only ones cheating….. others cheat as well……only that the Pats were much more successful at it.
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May 12th, 2008 at 6:44 am
Belichick’s record before Tom Brady: 41-59
Belichick’s record WITH Tom Brady: 86-22 plus 3 Superbowl victories.
Yup! Clearly something is amiss. He should never have been allowed to use Tom Brady at QB.
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May 12th, 2008 at 8:09 am
The Times and Boston Herald should be ashamed of hyping this story to unprecidented levels of “Wategate Break in” have again shown thier true colors.
Which is worse? A newspaper who spreads disinformation about a man doing his job! Weather, we agree with his interpretation of a rule. He was wrong, fined and shunned by the very people who would love to see him go down in a smoldering heap!
A US Senator abusing his authority in an oversight committee. All in the guile of fairplay? A Sen. who spread disinformation concerning what was on the evidence list! All the while denying his constituents a chance to get the NFLN for free? Making a statements while selling a book stating that there was a “walkthrough tape”.
ESPN stating that poor Matt couldn’t speak up because of a confidentiality agreement that never existed? Even though Mike Fish wrote in his Feb 08 story that “no agreement existed”, per the Patriots and Bob Kraft! Clayton and Mortenson weren’t aware of this fact! Maybe ESPN should watch some of thier own tapes?
Last but not least, and the sad part really. Bill Belichick has been consistent and upfront with the Commissioner! The haters have had months, even years in a few cases. Still no new evidence Mike Fish. Offensive groupings? Since when was trying to figure out groupings was against the rules? It’s very clear to me that there are those who have an agenda vs. BB and now it’s crystal clear that the facts of the case are not the most important issue here! If it was this story would’ve been over months ago!
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May 12th, 2008 at 8:14 am
mercutio,
Keep dreaming. If Goodell does attacl the radio communications issue at all, it will be to say he has no credible evidence that the Patriots ever tried to block them. Even if the Patriots did block radio communications (which I seriously doubt and it is a charge that many teams have been accused of), Walsh wouldn’t know anything about it. I doubt a low level cameraman would be privvy to that to that type of stuff on any team.
Wow! These wild theories are out there. It is over. Sorry to disapoint you.
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May 12th, 2008 at 8:21 am
nfl fanguy,
You are right. The Pats had the best defense in the league in 2003 and the second best defense in 2004. How could he had done that without know the opposing team’s defensive signals? Makes sense huh?
Sorry, Belichick didn’t have Brady in Cleveland. Didn’t have control of his personnel in Cleveland. Didn’t have Scott Pioli to help scout and manage personnel in Cleveland.
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May 12th, 2008 at 9:28 am
The NYTimes has a 17% share ownership in Fenway Park and the Red Sox.
they have a VESTED interested in discrediting the Patriots so as to maximize their investment in the Sox.
Both teams battle for the limited advertising revenue available.
What the NY Times and the Boston Herald are doing to the Patriots is at a minimum UNFAIR.
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May 12th, 2008 at 2:22 pm
How is the Times’ article wrong? All they said is that there have been several changes to the manual in the last several years (fact) and that the Patriots are alleged to be cheaters by more teams than any other team (only support cited is the NFL executive, but does this idea really surprise anyone?). You can say “oh, the other teams are just jealous of the Patriots” but does anyone really think that some other team is alleged to cheat more often? If so, what team and what is your evidence? The Times has an NFL executive who says it’s the Patriots. If that’s bad journalism, then come forward with your proof. Pats fans hate all of the cheating talk, but the bottom line is that some team will be named the most by other teams and it happens to be the Pats, according to the executive. Reporting this story hardly constitutes an “anti-Pats bias.” It’s funny that the same Pats fans who complain that everyone else is a dumb conspiracy theorist is quick to have their own conspiracy theory that the NY Times is out to get the Pats.
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May 12th, 2008 at 3:34 pm
So apparently the New York Times has updated this story online several times to take out wording that makes this article more damning to the Patriots. If you compare the early print editions of the NYT and the current web article, there are at least five changes to tone down the rhetoric against the Patriots.
Note to Mike Florio. It would be a good story to for you to publish all the changes. I know one of the changes is the line:
“The league has handled the complaints internally, finding no proof for all but one” used to a “a few”.
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May 12th, 2008 at 4:04 pm
The Raiders used to coach how to get away with penalties. Not many teams are going to cry cheater cheater on them though. the Pats win so much, that is why they have a big target on them.
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May 12th, 2008 at 4:07 pm
It was said the Raiders used to coach how to get away with penalties. Not many teams are going to cry cheater cheater on them now adays thoguh. You have to win first. Patriots are the best at that right now.
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May 12th, 2008 at 4:55 pm
VeggieBurgher,
Apparently the NYT themselves think they got it wrong since they have revised the article online.
Of course it is bad journalism. Stacey James reportedly asked the Times reporter if they were going to look into specific claims of cheating by other teams (and he listed examples to the reporter)and the response was that they were not interested in exploring possible cheating by any other team and only wanted to get information of the Pats cheating allegations. How is that good journalism?
Also, using one source is not good journalism. The general rule of thumb is using three independent sources. The one source they used could not like the Patriots and wouldn’t mind trashing them. That is why using three sources is the standard.
Anyone with a journalism background will tell you the NYT piece is bad journalism. Plain and simple. Reporting the news shouldn’t be biased and the story should take the reporter where the information takes them, not the report making the information fit his story.
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May 12th, 2008 at 5:51 pm
What Florio (and the rest of the sports media) needs to do is start citing hard evidence when they try and say “everybody does it”. I have seen zero evidence of any kind indicating this was a widespread practice. Wanna know why? Because there isn’t any, and because it’s not a widespread practice. If it was there would be PLENTY of evidence. Funny how the Cheatriots’ fans (and Florio in this case) always have to fall back on Jimmy Johnson’s comments (a real character guy there by the way……LOL). Florio cites a 1967 piece and uses it to describe “modern football”? Please. Today’s NFL is nothing lile it was in 1967. Hell, it’s not even all that similar to what it was in 1987. Oh and by the way, here’s a quote by Marv Levy (same era as Johnson) saying he never did it and didn’t know of anybody else doing it:
“I saw one or two other former coaches say, Oh, everybody does it. Baloney. I didn’t do it, and I know many others who didn’t do that type of thing.”
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1699865,00.html
Also gotta love Cheatriots fans trying to lump signal taping in with on-field infractions like holding and horse collar tackles. Please. That’s just pathetic.
Oh and by the way, YES, video taping signals is against the rules REGARDLESS of the location. Here’s the reminder the league was sent before the season:
“Videotaping of any type, including but not limited to taping of an opponent’s offensive or defensive signals, is prohibited on the sidelines, in the coaches’ booth, in the locker room, or at any other locations accessible to club staff members during the game.”
Pretty straight-forward. That’s why nobody believes Bill Belicheat when he days he mis-interpreted the rule. Pretty cut and dry.
One other thing I find interesting is that Cheatriots fans think they’ve somehow dodged a bullet with the news that there’s not a Super Bowl walk-through tape (at least not in Walsh’s posession). LOL. We now have hard evidence that the Cheatriots have cheated since 2000, and that there’s a tape of an AFC Championship game. The Cheatriots were cheating during the 2002 AFCCG and there’s physical evidence of it.
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May 12th, 2008 at 6:47 pm
Why is so much time being spent on this story? Why are people even concerning themselves with the sorry, has-been pats? That team is on its way down with its one-dimensional offense and over-the-hill defense. Soon they’ll fade back to the nothingness they were until a few years ago and all anyone will rmember is that they were cheaters and frauds. So let’s move on, people. Even in mid-May there are better things to talk about.
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May 12th, 2008 at 7:05 pm
Hey subzero, you’re trying to be funny in a sarcastic way right? You don’t actually mean “That team is on its way down with its one-dimensional offense and over-the-hill defense. Soon they’ll fade back to the nothingness” do you??
If so you know about as much football as your average teenage chick…come to think of it that’s what you sound like anyways.
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May 12th, 2008 at 8:43 pm
mikemboston and other Pats*** clowns crack me up. Take a trip outside of your town and talk to football fans across the country. The majority of them don’t like your team and only half of it has to do with their winning.
They cheated. They’ve been cheating for years and they admitted it. And yes, it will be their legacy, punk. Everywhere except in Boston.
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May 12th, 2008 at 9:21 pm
maine man, bellichek started out 5 and 15 in new england which was a .25o percentage. so it wasnt “just” cleveland as you seem to think. all of Brady’s exploits are questionable…… since we now know that the Patriots were in possession of the opponents plays, it raises doubts as to his real level of ability,
That is the real tragedy of all this……spygate has called everything that the players and team have done into question. Much as STEROIDS has tainted Bonds and several others, spygate has forever tarnished the Patriots and Brady….. hopefully they will win a few titles in the future so that air of legitimacy can be restored….. otherwise they will be remembered as faux champions much like their18-1 record this year is looked at as fools gold by losing to the Giants….
as much as its unfair to the fans and players of New England, that is how the rest of the world sees it….. if the Pats can win a Super Bowl or two going forward that would rightfully change….. For the players sake alone I for one hope they do….
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May 12th, 2008 at 10:34 pm
Vandilay, you could not have put that any better. If these new englanders would take a peek outside of themselves they might actually see their team the way the rest of the world has come to. No matter how you break it down, or how you try to justify what they did, their accomplishments have been called into question…and rightfully so.
And mikemboston…I meant every word I wrote. Where was Moss the last game of the season and in the playoffs, including the superbowl? If you answered “nowhere to be found” you’d be right. You can’t be one dimensional in the NFL. That’s big boy football. If you are arrogant enough to try to do one thing over and over, eventually teams will figure you out and stop it. And as for that old, decrepit defense…come on, are you kidding me? Who do you plan to stop with that collection of senior citizens? No wonder Rodney Harrison had to turn to HGH…
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