In addition to the press conference conducted on Wednesday by Senator Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), Specter released a lengthy statement regarding the results of his interview of former Pats employee Matt Walsh, and other observations regarding the Spygate situation.
The entire statement is right here. Here are a few highlights:
First, Specter points out the ongoing ambiguity regarding the extent to which the taping was disclosed by the Patriots and/or the league when the matter first came to light in September 2007. “Originally,” the statement reads, ”Commissioner Goodell said the taping was limited to late in the 2006 season and early in the 2007 season. In his meeting with me on February 13, 2008, Goodell admitted the taping went back to 2000. Until my meeting with Matt Walsh on May 13, 2008, the only taping we knew about took place from 2000 until 2002 and during the 2006 and 2007 seasons.”
Second, Specter shares more details about Walsh’s activities at the Rams’ walk-through practice prior to Super Bowl XXXVI. “Walsh said [former receivers coach Brian] Daboll asked him specific questions about the Rams offense and Walsh told Daboll about Faulk’s lining up as a kick returner. Walsh also told Daboll about Rams running backs ‘lining up in the flat.’ Walsh said Daboll then drew diagrams of the formations Walsh had described.”
Third, the statement outlines the lengths to which the Patriots went to avoid detection of the taping of defensive coaching signals. “During at least one game, the January 27, 2002 AFC Championship game, Walsh was specifically instructed not to wear anything displaying a Patriots logo. Walsh indicated he turned the Patriots sweatshirt he was wearing at the time inside-out. Walsh was also given a generic credential instead of one that identified him as team personnel.”
Fourth, Specter shared previously undisclosed (to the general public) details information about how the videotaping of defensive coaching signals was used: “Walsh was told by a former offensive player that a few days before the September 11, 2000 regular season game against Tampa Bay, he (the offensive player) was called into a meeting with Adams, Bill Belichick and Charlie Weis, then the offensive coordinator for the Patriots, during which it was explained how the Patriots would make use of the tapes. The offensive player would memorize the signals and then watch for Tampa Bay’s defensive calls during the game. He would then pass the plays along to Weis, who would give instructions to the quarterback on the field. This process enabled the Patriots to go to a ‘no-huddle’ offensive, which would lock in the defense the opposing team had called from the sideline, preventing the defense from making any adjustments. When Walsh asked whether the tape he had filmed was helpful, the offensive player said it had enabled the team to anticipate 75 percent of the plays being called by the opposing team.”
Fifth, Specter locked onto the red-herring notion that “offensive signals” were taped, too — even though there is no such thing as an “offensive signal,” and that the only thing taped in this regard (indications of grouping formations) are quickly decoded by advance scouts.
Sixth, Specter relies upon the nonsensical and inane rantings of ESPN’s Mark Schlereth in support of the notion that the tapes of the defensive coaching signals were used in the same game. Specter’s own statement, as it relates to how the defensive signals were used, contradicts the notion that the Patriots would have been able to decipher the signals on the fly. Moreover, Specter ignores the fact that Walsh said that the signals weren’t used later in the same game.
Seventh, as to the practice of taping teams whom the Pats weren’t scheduled to play again that year, the reality is that the Patriots clearly were establishing a database of coaching signals that could then be used when facing the same coaches in the future, whether with their current team or with a new team.
Eighth, and finally, Specter lays out his reasons for pursuing this matter: “There is an unmistakable atmosphere of conflict of interest or potential conflict of interest between what is in the public’s interest and what is in the NFL’s interest. The NFL has good reason to disclose as little as possible in its effort to convince the public that what was done wasn’t so bad, had no significant effect on the games and, in any event, has all been cleaned up. Enormous financial interests are involved and the owners have a mutual self-interest in sticking together. Evidence of winning by cheating would have the inevitable effect of undercutting public confidence in the game and reducing, perhaps drastically, attendance and TV revenues.
“The public interest is enormous. Sports personalities are role models for all of us, especially youngsters. If the Patriots can cheat, so can the college teams, so can the high school teams, so can the 6th grader taking a math examination. The Congress has granted the NFL a most significant business advantage, an antitrust exemption, highly unusual in the commercial world. That largesse can continue only if the NFL can prove itself worthy. Beyond the issues of role models and antitrust, America has a love affair with sports. Professional football has topped all other sporting events in fan interest. Americans have a right to be guaranteed that their favorite sport is honestly competitive.”
Reasonable minds might differ in this regard, but the antitrust exemption gives Congress an obvious interest in the manner in which the NFL conducts itself. The problem for Specter, however, is that he’s still a lone voice shouting in the desert, with none of his colleagues joining in the quest to investigate the NFL.
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May 15th, 2008 at 11:38 am
Wow, there sure is quite a bit of ignorance being shared in regards to this subject. First, of course the congress, and any member thereof, has “more important” issues to contend with but does anyone actually believe that they should only concern themselves with the “more important” issues of the day? How would anything of less importance ever get done? Should all members of congress be locked in session or their offices until all the important issues are resolved and utopia is attained? No individual concentrates all their focus and attention on their most important issues all day every day. The second example of the ignorance of the masses is the point that this is not the business of congress. In order for the NFL to be granted a limited anti-trust exemption it had to agree to congressional oversight. Therefore the business of the NFL is the business of congress. Also, it’s not about the team that cheated, or even how they cheated, it’s about how the league handled the evidence and investigation of a team caught cheating. So the fact that other teams have cheated, and may continue to, doesn’t have anything to do with congress being involved.
The real question is, what was it that attracted the attention of Congressman Spector? It was the destroying of the evidence. By destroying the evidence the NFL denied congress the opportunity for oversight in violation of their limited anti-trust exemption agreement. So either Goodell and company, along with all the NFL’s lawyers, failed to consider that fact or… they were very much aware of the potential interest of congress and decided they would destroy the evidence anyway. If they didn’t consider the anti-trust implications that would be blatant incompetence, and the Patriots and the league as a whole have been done an injustice. If they did consider the implications and still destroyed the tapes? You tell me, why?
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May 15th, 2008 at 11:38 am
“He is so dirty, and so paid off, HOW DO THE PEOPLE OF PA keep electing this blowhard?”
Same way the people of MASS keep electing Kennedys, I would expect.
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May 15th, 2008 at 11:41 am
“Suspending BB isn’t going to make a huge difference. The players will still go out and execute;”
Unless it happens to be the Super Bowl, anyway.
“and do you really think this won’t put a chip on the shoulder of a team who has proven what it can do when it plays with one.”
What’s that, go 16-0 in the regular season and then commit the worst chokejob in modern sports history in the Super Bowl?
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May 15th, 2008 at 11:45 am
If you want a good example of irresponsibility, you can look no further than the way that Roger Goodell INVITED a big investigation by destroying the evidence that he destroyed.
I mean, if you don’t want to look at the gross irresponsibility that has to be present to cheat in a way that all teams were very specifically and explicitly warned against prior to the season, anyway.
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May 15th, 2008 at 12:06 pm
Specter or “Spectacle” is a moron.
You make Senators look exactly like they really are… Blabbering idiots fleecing American taxpayers money to fuel their own personal agendas. Why don’t you do something about this “sagging economy” and “lousy dollar” ya dope.
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May 15th, 2008 at 12:14 pm
Oh and that comment by a poster that said basically “everyone does things for special interest reasons.. its human nature” is just flat out WRONG. You obviously judge everyone else by your own fault, but not “everyone” is “anything”
Intelligent people don’t make blanket statements, because blanket statements are largely false “in nature”
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May 15th, 2008 at 12:25 pm
The Patriots should just be “contracted” as Bud Selig used to say in baseball.
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May 15th, 2008 at 3:47 pm
Florio, you left out some other, very important statements from Spector’s statement:
“Walsh said he did not tell Goodell about the taping during 2003, 2004 and 2005 because he was not asked.
(2) The NFL confiscated the Jets tape on September 9, 2007; imposed the penalties on September 13, 2007; on September 17, 2007, viewed the tapes for the first time; and then announced they had destroyed those tapes on September 20, 2007. Commissioner Goodell made his judgment on the punishment to be levied before he had viewed the key evidence.”
I, for one, agree with Spector on the timeline. This timeline makes absolutely no sense if you think about. How could the NFL possibly do it’s due diligence in just one day????
Goodell’s public image has taken a major hit. He knows it too. Why else would he all of a sudden, after declaring “nothing new” from meeting with Walsh, and declaring the “case closed” would he now be calling on the Jet’s coach (who is a former Pats coach), to come back to his office??
DEFINITELY A COVER UP!!! Real question, is: What are they covering up? Is it the wide spread cheating all clubs were/are doing? Or were they just trying to sweep this under the rug and hope it goes away??!!
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May 15th, 2008 at 4:09 pm
(2) The NFL confiscated the Jets tape on September 9, 2007; imposed the penalties on September 13, 2007; on September 17, 2007, viewed the tapes for the first time; and then announced they had destroyed those tapes on September 20, 2007. Commissioner Goodell made his judgment on the punishment to be levied before he had viewed the key evidence.”
What key evidence did he not view? HE certainly viewed the tapes and had made his mind up that he did not buy BB’s loophole excuse.
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