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 10:53 am
and baseball players have been taking steroids for years so I guess its all good–what flawed logic–its amazing to me that a team can cheat, win 3 superbowls, get caught red handed and the story of the day is whether some mediocre running back deserved to get pepper sprayed–but I guess its all about the kids
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Rating: 2.7 / 5 with 14 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:07 am
Jets! Jets! Jets! Jets!
- Old Grey Lady
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Rating: 2.15 / 5 with 7 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:08 am
But will it play in NY?
-Old Grey Lady Marketing Dept.
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Rating: 1.5 / 5 with 8 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:12 am
So this is how we do it, see? Ya get the Globe on the pro-Pats side, ya get the Times on the anti-Pats side, ya sell more papers in both mahkets, yer revenues increase, all’s good. Same iz th’ deal wit’ Obama an’ Clinton….
Old Grey Lady Holding Company, Bent-Nose Corporate Consultant
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Rating: 2.9 / 5 with 8 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:15 am
why do you, and Many others continue to justify one wrongful act by citing another???
They should all be looked at and dealt with individually and appropriately.
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Rating: 2.35 / 5 with 9 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:18 am
“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.”
You’re accused not at times, but all of the time of being Patriot*** apologists simply because you are.
The Pats*** admitted that they have been cheating since 2001. The “everyone’s doing it” argument is the tool of the weak-minded. The NFL won’t attach an asterisk to any of their titles because it’s not in the league’s best interets from an image standpoint, but millions of fans already have, rightfully so, made that judgement on their own.
Your constant apologisitic stance on this issue is sickening.
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Rating: 2.9 / 5 with 19 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:27 am
Mike I’d add ESPN to the list of media outlets with obvious agendas at work. They really should change the name of this media created “scandal” to LIEgate because that’s what large segments of the media are doing to keep this going. It’s not just the Patriots who’ve broken work rules here. Shocking how large segments of the media never let the FACTS get in the way of their agendas.
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Rating: 3.35 / 5 with 10 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:35 am
Hey Castanza, you should stop watching the NFL. Your conspiracy theories are those of someone who should not be buying their product. Stick it to the man and show them who is boss.
Taping signals is legal. Taping them from where the Patriots did is not. The location has always been the issue. The league knows that teams steal and tape signals all the time. There are rules in place that police these practices.
A tape of a practice would be devastating. If one surfaces it will be devastating. Walsh stole Patriots property and may have broken the law if he did in fact tape conversations with Pioli. His unwillingness to talk was because he needed a lawyer and cash.
As far as Specter goes I have only one word. Comcast.
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Rating: 3.7 / 5 with 16 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:36 am
Blame the times for overblowing this story more than it was worth. They are standing now with MATT “I’M A FRAUD” WALSH with NO WALKTHROUGH tape! Tha’s what you get for hitching your wagons to a RAT!
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Rating: 2.75 / 5 with 11 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:40 am
To all those who believe Florio is a Patriots apologist, I suggest two things:
1) Read some of the September 2007 stories at Archive.ProFootballTalk.com
2) Don’t let your Patriots hate overcome logic and reason
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Rating: 3.75 / 5 with 17 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:52 am
It isn’t being an apologist to acknowledge the atmosphere and context of alleged “cheating”. Do fans jump all over an opponent for un-flagged holding on plays, citing the opposing team as “cheaters”? Obviously not; it is widely acknowledged that all teams hold, and the most flagrant penalties are called and penalized.
So it is also important to consider the atmosphere in which the Patriots were caught by the Jets and penalized by the NFL for videotaping during the game.
The fact is, the commissioner of the NFL let this entire problem of videotaping from the sidelines get out of hand. At the time of his last clarification memo, he could have personally called coaches to say that this time - under his watch - the NFL was going to deal serious penalties to any team caught videotaping from unauthorized locations during a game.
If the goal of the commissioner is to best serve the NFL - in this case, maintain it’s reputation while curtailing unauthorized videotaping - he should have called teams personally. The hours spent delivering a personal message would have been much more convincing than one memo among dozens (if not hundreds) that the NFL commissioner’s office likely dispatches each season.
As it is, he has wasted 10 times more hours on this and sullied the NFL’s reputation, all to make himself appear as a “law-and-order” commissioner. If he knew that the Jets were planning to bust the Patriots during that game, he is all the more to blame.
In other words, as commissioner, it is not his job to be a cop, but to promote the game of football. In this respect, he has failed miserably.
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Rating: 3.25 / 5 with 10 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:56 am
And the beat goes on… I think everyone already has their position on this - short of a walkthrough tape turning up, the “Pats apologists” will maintain the position that it was a rules violation, based on the location of the filming, and that the punishment has already been meted out. And no matter how flimsy the evidence turns out to be, the “Pats haters” will maintain that they cheated, and that they should be banned forever, and that Bill Belichick hates children.
Weren’t we done flogging this dead horse? Personally, I think it’s time for another Brady vs Manning debate. Doesn’t really matter which Manning, these days.
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Rating: 3.4 / 5 with 8 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:56 am
I WOULD LIKE THE TIMES TO SUBMIT THE JETS RECORD FOR THE PAST
EIGHT (8) YEARS.!!!!! PUT THE RECORD ON THE FRONT PAGE TO
SEE WHAT A FOOTBALL TEAM JETS JETS JETS !!!!!!
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Rating: 2.6 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 11:58 am
God I can’t wait for football season to start and we get some real news, so we can go back to bickering over which team sucks the most, as opposed to weather or not the Pat’s cheat, the Cowboys are all thugs, Al Davis is a moron, The Bengals are idiots, blah blah blah……
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Rating: 3.65 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:00 pm
In the case of the New York Times, “all the news that fits” is closer to reality.
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Rating: 2 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:01 pm
LOL… Yeah… it was the location that was the problem. Lord some of the Pats*** apologists are insufferably obtuse sometimes.
Spin it all you want, Noriega. The Pats*** cheated for years, they admitted it, and cheating will be their legacy.
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Rating: 2.9 / 5 with 17 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:03 pm
Add that puke Fish dude from ESPN as biased vs the Pats he knows nothing about football an less about spygate he writes pages an pages that tell you nothing hey Fish life as a snitch sucks
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Rating: 1 / 5 with 2 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:05 pm
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAMMMMMMMEN, Florio.
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Rating: 1 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:06 pm
Right, no mention of tampering to go along with the videotaping issue. Also no mention of salary cap cheating and full contact practice issues to go along with the videotaping issue and tampering issues. What’s your message? That nothing should ever be mentioned because every team does everything all the time?
I’m pretty sure that the “he did it too!” and “he’s worse than me!” defenses stopped working in the second grade.
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Rating: 3.4 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:07 pm
The New York Times fell to the level of The Enquirer years ago.
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Rating: 2.35 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:08 pm
Hey VandiGAY, you are the one who is weak-minded, as you let your unmitigated hatred and envy of the Patriot’s success cloud any objectivity you may have. There is nothing new here, sorry to disappoint you! Yes, I am a Patriots fan, but I respect great NFL organizations like INDY, Pittsburgh, San Diego, and Dallas. The Patriots paid a severe penalty for what they did, get over it!
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Rating: 2.8 / 5 with 9 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:10 pm
sing it my brother
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Rating: 2.35 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:20 pm
The guy who thinks Florio is pro-Pats is either out of his mind, can’t read, or is blinded by his Pats hatred.
Florio constantly refers to stealing signals as “cheating” and had countless articles on here slamming the pats.
There has been like 2 pro-Pats articles in the past that were quickly burried under Turds’ arrests.
If taping signals is cheating, than so is Horse-collar tackles, holding, facemask penalties, salary cap rule violations, tampering, pass interference, etc.
Kudos to Florio for finally writing an article telling it the way it is….
From here on out, every rules violation should be regarded as cheating on this site. It would be an excellent way of showing everyone’s stupidity with this overblown mess.
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Rating: 3.75 / 5 with 10 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:22 pm
Wait!
The New York Times wrote a biased article proscribed to a one sided and pre-set agenda?
Noooooo way!
Next you’ll be telling us that they have been known to plagiarize or maybe even have reporters that create fictional sources or make up stories about “victims” that support the Times liberal world view.
Incredible. I am simply speechless.
How dare you impugn the “real” media!
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Rating: 1.8 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 11th, 2008 at 12:30 pm
I agree, the NFL wants this to quietly go away, why? Becuase if they came down on the Patiots as hard as the Hatriots wanted them to, they would have to do the same to some 10 to 15 other teams, IMHO. Get the picture?
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Rating: 2.8 / 5 with 9 rating(s)