In hindsight, it was a fitting way to conclude one of the most bizarre offseason weeks in NFL history. The notoriously reclusive Bill Belichick, coach of the New England Patriots and presumed mastermind of the coaching signals videotaping scheme, opted to unload on former video employee Matt Walsh in an interview that aired on the CBS Evening News, only three days after Walsh told NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell that Walsh is aware of no cheating other than the videotaping of coaching signals.
“He was fired here for poor job performance,” Belichick said of Walsh. “There’s not a lot of credibility.”
But what exactly about Walsh’s credibility is Belichick attacking?
At a time when the Patriots should be relieved, Belichick couldn’t leave well enough alone. He opted to question the veracity of Walsh’s statement that the team (i.e., Belichick) knew that the videotaping of coaching signals was a violation of the rules.
Belichick’s overriding point is that he didn’t consciously cheat, but that he merely misinterpreted the rules. Belichick claimed during the CBS interview that “[t]here was no deception” in what the team was doing.
The coach also attacked Walsh’s football credentials. “For him to talk about game-planning and strategy and play-calling and how he advised coordinators is . . . it’s embarrassing,” Belichick said. “It’s absurd. I mean, he didn’t have any knowledge of football. He was our third video assistant.”
But, coach, Walsh’s job was, in part, to videotape the coaching signals. The only thing he did to “advise coordinators” was to tell former defensive coordinator Romeo Crennel that Walsh believed at least one other team was doing to the Pats what the Pats were doing, through Walsh, to other teams. So this effort to make Walsh look like he didn’t know what he was doing unfairly suggests that Walsh wasn’t qualified to know that he was taping coaching signals, and that the team (i.e., Belichick) didn’t want Walsh to get caught doing it.
The bigger problem that we have with the interview is that it demonstrates that Belichick’s logic is seriously flawed. He wants us to believe that the effort to videotape defensive coaching signals was not conducted in secrecy, which would bolster Belichick’s position that the conduct was the result of an innocent misunderstanding of the rules. But Belichick conceded to CBS that the September 2006 memo from the league clarifying the rule put him on notice that it wasn’t an issue of misinterpretation.
”I made a mistake,” Belichick said. “It was wrong. I was wrong.”
Fine. Then why is Belichick trying to discredit Walsh’s contention that it was wrong? So we’ll believe that the videotaping from 2000 through 2005 was the result of a misinterpretation of the rules, and that Belichick only became an intentional cheater once the rule was clarified in September 2006 to leave no room for misinterpretation?
The strategy truly is perplexing.
And we’re very disappointed with the failure of the network of Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite to treat this issue with the kind of simplicity and clarity that would have made it easier for the audience to understand what’s really going on here.
In a nutshell, Walsh contends that the Pats intentionally were breaking the rules. Belichick contends that the team didn’t know it until 2006, at which time the team then began intentionally breaking the rules. And, unfortunately, CBS failed to reference Commissioner Roger Goodell’s opinion on whether there was any misinterpretation of the rules by Belichick.
“I’m pretty well on the record here that I didn’t accept Bill Belichick’s explanation for what happened, and I still don’t to this day,” Goodell said at his May 13 press conference.
To put it another way, Walsh says one thing, Belichick says something else. And Goodell sides not with Belichick but with Walsh.
It really is that simple. Unfortunately, not many of the people who watched the CBS report will realize that.
Oh, and CBS also didn’t mention its business relationship with the Patriots in conjunction with a story that was deemed to be sufficiently newsworthy to find a home in the first ten minutes of the broadcast.
Maybe we’re not perplexed, after all.
_2.gif)






May 17th, 2008 at 1:53 am
this is a rubbish article florio. You totally misenterpated what Bill said. Why dont you mention the main point that he said people waved at the camera and he brought his own video of Walsh videotaping in plain site in pats gear not very secretive at all..That was his main point that they weren’t hiding it and Walsh is talking out of his ass. He has an agenda against the Pats and Bill tried to discredit him. Yes the pats were wrong but you cant believe everything the scumbag Walsh says. Look at him hes talking to everyone he can now just to get his name out there and make a buck. Unreal you dont mention that.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 1:59 am
CBS is The Official Flagship for the AFC. Just a thought.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.35 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 2:07 am
It’s absolutely comical to listen to a liar, cheat and someone who tainted the integrity of the league try to discredit someone else.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 4.35 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 2:44 am
The only good thing that happened out of this whole fiasco is that the cheaters got embarrassed in the Super Bowl. It’s kind of sad when cheaters can’t find a way to win the big one. I guess there is some truth to karma after all.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.65 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 2:52 am
Please. It’d be one thing if after being put on notice Belichick stopped. But he didn’t. He continued to cheat, after he was explicitly warned that what he was doing was cheating. So whether or not he was intentionally cheating before that (which he cleary was), he was intentionally cheating after it. He’s a cheater. He’s a liar. He’s an embarrassment to the NFL and to its fans. I don’t care how effective his cheating was. I don’t care when it started or when it ended. I don’t care about Walsh or Specter. I don’t even care how much of the Pats’ success is owed to their cheating. The fact is that Belichick, and many of the Patriots coaches and coordinators over the years, have knowingly and willingly cheated. They have purposefully tarnished the integrity of the game and breached the bounds of fair play. They should be banned from the NFL for life and stripped of any accomplishments or awards they’ve been given. But, of course, they won’t be. Because the NFL has no interest in actually cleaning the league up. They just want to maintain the appearance that the league is clean. Because perception is reality… right?
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 4 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 2:53 am
This makes me laugh. It insenuates that Belichek did not know it was bcheating before 06 but when he found out, he continued to do it. He knew it the whole time. AND IF TAPING DID NOT GIVE AN ADVANTAGE, THEN WHY CONTINUE TO DO IT AFTER IT WAS MADE CLEAR TO BELLICHEK THAT IT WAS NOT ALLOWED. BS. The question is not if Walsh is credible, it is did you cheat knowingly or unknowingly when and how? Why should we believe that it was only a couple of times? This WHOLE thing freaking Stinks.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 3:14 am
Walsh knew he was part of something big. Belichick did to. Why else would Walsh secretly record meetings with Scott Pioli.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 4:09 am
Well, Mike, I applaud you for telling it like it is and risk alienating the Patriot jock suckers. I used to think you aimed your message at the masses, but you are finally addressing the hypocricy of the Patriot organization. When Belichick opens his unrepentent mouth on national TV , it must make Goodell squirm as he imagines Sen. Specter livid all over again. As much as Goodell would like to close the book on Spygate, he knows most fans suspect that only the tip of the unscrupulous iceberg has been discovered thus far from Belichicks book of tricks. With all the recent focus on the ‘incompetent’ 3rd video assistant, why hasn’t Goodell reported what the more responsible 1st and 2nd videomen over the past 8 years have to say, as well as Ernie Adams and his crew of assistants? Could it be that Belichick’s CBS rant was also a warning shot across the bow of any other Patriot employee who might want to blow the whistle as well. The message clearly was Belichick will destroy anyone who dares to challenge his domain.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.65 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 4:30 am
SeanMartin, as one of the “unintelligent crowd,” I laugh at those of you who think you are so smart that you’re beyond common sense. Do you actually believe that Bellichick didn’t know what he was doing was wrong? I bet you’ve never had a teenager because as a Mom I’ve heard excuses like that many a time and I can tell you it would lame even for a teenager, and a totally ridiculous excuse for a coach of a professional football team to try. I don’t claim to be a football expert, but I know a line of BS when I hear it. I also think that if I was handed a video camera and told to film the coaches on the sideline, even in my “unintelligent” state I could figure out what they wanted from the film.
I laugh at your self importance Sean Martin. Grow up.
I also have to say I thought this site was biased towards the Patriots, but this article is fair and well written.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 4:36 am
Hey facts you would love to have him as your coach.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 5:17 am
anyone can tape signals.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 1 / 5 with 1 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 5:32 am
Hey Cowboy (Florio):
Thanks for the opinion.
For those of us who no longer shive a git, do you think it possible to move on to other “infotainment”!
Thanks,
Chief
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3 / 5 with 2 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 5:43 am
Bill Belichick is ticked, and he is unloading his anger. Let him be.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3 / 5 with 2 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 6:16 am
does Belichick realize that his own credibility isn’t exactly shooting through the roof these days???
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 4 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 6:33 am
Good lord, people, just let it go…
It ain’t worth the oxygen or keystrokes…
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3 / 5 with 2 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 6:42 am
I think what got Belichick riled about was Walsh
was Walsh telling people and publications that he was a scout
in his last year with the Patriots. He was not an area college scout.
You can choose to not believe anything Belichick says.
But it’s unfair to not look into all of Matt Walsh’s misstatements and
inconsistencies while only choosing to call out Belichick for
having the nerve to counter-attack.
I realize the Patriots are expected to just take all the shots
lest they be attacked even more for fighting back.
But they’re only going to take so much before they’re forced to strike back, even though it’s fight that can’t be won in the media.
The Patriots are all alone, but I know there’s plenty of silenty hypocricy.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.75 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 6:46 am
Belichick is a grade A anus. Plain and simple. His coaching record sucked before he started taping.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.65 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 6:54 am
The fact that mediots like Mike Florio now embrace Matt Walsh as a truthful source of info is really hilarious. Not surprising but quite funny. The 3rd video assistant on the Patriots was game planning with the coaches? That is what Walsh told the NY Times. How long before Walsh, who was fired for secretly taping conversations of Scott Pioli (Did the mediots who interviewed Walsh ask him about that??) is hired my some mediot outfit to do NFL analysis. Hey why not? Walsh is as trustworthy and knowledgable as most mediots working the NFL beat.
Hey Mike Florio is shooting video “conducted in secrecy” when it’s done out in the open on the sidelines in front of 70,000 people with opposing coaches waving at the camera?
And you wonder why we call you mediots? ha ha ha ha ha
As I said in an earlier post for the Florio’s and other mediots this is all about being obsessed with Bill Belichick and his refusal to suck the media lollipop and has very little to do with the breaking of an NFL “rule”. If this is any other NFL coach this story is over in two weeks.
Spygate has been a living breathing example of an agenda driven media feeding frenzy generated because of a personal dislike for their target.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 7:37 am
Good post Florio. I only disagree with one thing. You said that many who watched the CBS report will not recognize that Goodell agreed with Walsh. I think that most honest, objective fans are well aware of that. This New Englander is willing to admit that Belichick cheated and is now lying about it.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 4 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 7:39 am
If Walsh was instructed to conceal what he was doing, why woul he be in full Patriot gear, viewable to 70,000 people?
That seems to be a major point of contention yet it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense. The Patriots went to “great lengths…” to conceal what they were doing? Please.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 7:45 am
…and the team that Walsh witnessed “cheating” as everyone calls it (even though the NFL’s rule had a gaping loophole that the NFL actually recognized and closed in 2006) was?
What? You mean NO ONE at the New York Times, in the Commissioner’s office, or in the United States Senate sought to ask Walsh the most basic of all follow up questions to such a bombshell announcement?
Am I the only one who gets the feeling they don’t WANT to know? They’ve got a handy scapegoat… the last thing everyone wants is to do is entertain the notion that some, most or all teams cheat in some way or another.
It’s just amazing they get away with this even when someone makes an announcement in the NY times - they think no one will notice or wonder why they didn’t ask the natural next question.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 1 / 5 with 1 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 8:04 am
HA HA
Look at all the little cheating maggots trying to destroy you now Mike. Of course earlier this week they were in love with you. Fickle little hyenas- they are as dirty as their cheating coach.
Face it cheaters, the interview- all 15 minutes of it, is garbage. Bill is a liar. Bill knows that he’s playing a game because he knows while he didn’t directly tell Walsh not to get caught his compadre in cheating- Ernie Adams did. Bill also knows that this lame claim that Walsh doesn’t know anything about football is a bunch of junk. All Walsh claimed was to have advised Romeo of someone doing the same thing and yet Bill wants to make it seem like Walsh was implying he was giving advice on what plays to call. Face it cheaters, Bill doesn’t know anything about football either, he only knows how to lie and cheat.
No one is as stupid as Bill and the rest of you idiots thinks, we know that these other guys that Bill paid to do this were producing tapes in 2002+ that were used during the games.
Your Super Bowls are meaningless.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 4.2 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 8:04 am
look, Im just a girl. My 12 yr old son oftens corrects me on things I say stupid stuff about, so Im by no means a professional football anything. That said, heres my take on this whole mess:
The Patriots have been taping signals for years…legally until 06..illegally (ok, not illegally but against the rules) for ONE game, in which they were caught.
They really werent attempting subterfuge, they taped in the wide open, and it wasnt that they taped that was the issue, it was from where.
Matt Walsh is one of those guys that women hate, he brags about the things “he” has done, and glorifies them into something they just arent. “I drive a Maserati” versus “I parked some rich guys Maserati at the club last night.” It has some truth to it, he did drive a Maserati, but it wasnt his and it sure didnt last long, but he feels big and important by saying it.
Throughout all of this, I cannot shake the image in my mind of the pictures from the article about his wedding. The man had a bedroom that was less a man’s room than said 12 year old son currently has. Can you say glory-seeker? He made it LOOK like he was something he wasnt, with all of his pats paraphanelia, but the stuff was mostly stolen. The hubris of going public with shots of the piles ‘o stuff was shocking. And I have no doubt it was latched onto by the team when his name started popping up again. That same article made it sound like he did everything but wipe BBs butt. He was a THIRD STRING camera dude, who got fired for ineptitude and deceit. But that didnt look good on a resume, so he…uh…lied. (And the world believed this guy?)
What MW had to offer to anyone was nothing but a big old bowl of spoiled grapes. He had nothing new to offer. He came out of that meeting looking like even more of a schmuck than he did going in.
I wonder what his wife thinks? Or better yet, his Father-In-Law? Is he a Pats fan? Must make for some awkward silences around the table, dont you think?
I think Tomasse of the Herald is an ass. I think his explanation sucked. I think he and whoever ok’d that story should be fired, because the integrity of the paper is only as good as the lowest man n the rungs.
I wonder what the guys on the team must have felt like, seeing that article and living with that kind of hatred and disgust (Cheatriots, Belicheat, asterisks, walkthroughs). How could they have played that game, with the wind knocked right out of them? I see them as individuals, I guess, and I cant help but wonder what it felt like for a man of great character like Tedy B to suit up that day, when he has done everything in his power to lead a good and decent life and be an example of GOOD sportsmanship? what did he tell his sons? What will they remember about this day?
I may be one of the only fans who look forward to what you write here, and how often that is about the Patriots. I get it, it is on my mind a lot too. So thanks , even when you say things I disagree with, you say them respectfully. And you dont make things up, or at least I dont think you do, to get a scoop.
Speaking of scoops. I will ALWAYS think of Tomasse as “Scoop” from now until forever. And it isnt a good kinda scoop. I cannot imagine how he thinks he can continue to cover our beloved patriots, and that ANYONE will read his drivel ever again. He is a traitor, more hated than mangini. and that says a LOT.
My biggest rivalry used to be the Colts. Now I just want to pummel the Jets into oblivion. Hypocritical asshats.
If Arlen gets his way, there is gonna be HELL to pay in the NFL. But I suspect his new statements about “not seeking an investigation” are the direct result of other Senators telling him that he was beginning to sound like he needed some prozac, or something. The man is certifiably NUTS. Cause yeah, this is a big deal, in the sports world..but um…arent we at WAR? And by the way, about those gas prices? (I still cant believe no one has blamed GWB for spygate yet.)
I respect BB more now than ever. Crazy, isnt it? But he could have been blabbing this whole time, and he didnt. I like his mysteriousness. Its a whole lot more manly than Mr Blabbermouth walsh. When BB talks, its worth listening to.
I hope our team takes it all the way this year, and silences the critics. Sadly, if we dont have a GOOD showing, we will forever be tarnished, and people will say we only won because we cheated. we did cheat. in ONE game. Boy would I love old Arlen to prove that we werent the ONLY ones. But then again, thats a can o worms that would likely destroy the NFL as we know it, and even for revenge, I wont go there.
Oh…one more thing. Yeah, Im old. Middle aged, work my ass off. and yep, I PROUDLY wear my bruschi jersey…still. and no, I couldnt probably run the length of a football field. and no, I dont care what ANYONE thinks. They’re my team, and I love em.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.55 / 5 with 9 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 8:05 am
I suspect that by “advising coordinators” BB was referring to Walsh’s claim that he gave pointers to some of the Pats’ coaches about what he saw during the Rams’ walk-through. If that is the case, it doesn’t really matter how sophisticated Walsh’s understanding of football strategy was: any competent fan can tell an unusual formation, and of course even my kid would notice if a major player like Faulk practiced returning kicks.
On the other hand, I think BB’s objection is definitely more believable with regard to the taping rule. Suffice to say, he had been taping openly for a while, since Pats cameramen were caught a couple times, tapes exist of coaches waving at the cameras, and of course the taping during the Jets game was completely in the open. Thus, the options are:
- Walsh’s claim that he was told to hide was false;
- Walsh’s claim was true, but the Pats did not think it was a big deal to tape anyway (e.g., they thought they would not get punished, or only get a slap on the wrist if caught), so they didn’t tell other cameramen;
- the Pats knew they would be in trouble if caught, but decided they would be in more trouble if caught hiding than if caught in the open (plausible deniability);
- the Pats grew complacent with time, assuming that what they were doing was not really breaking but more like stretching a rule, as a result of the league not doing anything the other times they got caught, and possibly of their knowledge that the practice was common enough (corroborated by Walsh’s own claim he saw other teams taping the Pats).
The last one seems the more likely to me. The only conclusion that doesn’t hold water is that the Pats told all of their cameramen to hide because they knew they were seriously breaking a rule, but then didn’t care if the cameramen did or did not follow orders. That really doesn’t jibe with BB’s detail-oriented and paranoid coaching style.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.35 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
May 17th, 2008 at 8:12 am
from patsfans.com
Quote:
Q. The week before the 2002 Super Bowl against the Rams — walk me through the week.
A. Me and Steve didn’t get down until Tuesday, with all the other assistant coaches. Bill and the other players went down Monday, because they had to be there for media day on Tuesday. Since it was a short week because of 9/11, we stayed behind until Tuesday with the coaches, helping them prepare the game plan.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/16/sp…1&ref=football
Its a ridiculous suggestion by Walsh and what Belichick was referring to. That and other suggestions by Walsh he was involved in game planning. And Walsh goes on to say me and Steve stayed behind until Tuesday “with all the OTHER assistant coaches.” First of all, he is talking about Steve Scarnecchia, who was a video assistant like Walsh. Yet apparently, in Walsh’s delusional mind, he was an assistant coach…..i.e. his reference to “all the OTHER assistant coaches” as if he is one himself. This is clearly delusional and twisted. He was a video assistant. Low level. So was Steve. He wasn’t an assistant coach.
Too bad Florio didn’t research this blog entry very well, obviously missing these comments by Walsh. Walsh is a desperate guy with delusions of what he was in the past being greater than the facts indicate.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.4 / 5 with 5 rating(s)