The ESPN ombudsperson, Le Anne Schreiber, posted earlier on Thursday a scathing critique of the network’s handling of the Spygate saga on May 13, the day that NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell met with former Pats employee Matt Walsh.
And she appropriately lambasts the NFL Live crew, including Mark Schlereth and Cris Carter, that became convinced during the wait for Goodell’s post-meeting press conference that the freshly-released Walsh videos were used during the same game in which the images were shot.
Writes Schreiber: “Schlereth imagined how such tapes might affect the outcome if film was shot, edited and utilized ‘during the course of a game’ — a practice Patriots coach Bill Belichick had consistently denied since last September, and for which there was no evidence. Never mind. The mere possibility that tapes could have been shot and used during a given game, with likely ‘amazing’ effect on game outcome, got Schlereth and then Carter so riled up that pretty soon they had convinced themselves of the virtual certainty of their speculation.”
You go, um, Ombudsperson.
But there’s more.
“For an hour and 15 minutes preceding the Goodell news conference, this ‘SportsCenter Special’ was a runaway train of inflammatory speculation that had Schlereth and Carter placing asterisks on all the Patriots’ Super Bowl wins under Belichick.”
Schreiber also threw darts (as compared to javelins) at Sal Paolantonio and John Clayton.
“Even normally calm heads like John Clayton and Sal Paolantonio, ESPN reporters put on screen to comment from their remote locations, caught the fever. Clayton in Seattle offered the information that, with current technology, you could now burn CDs from videotapes at halftime and use them during the game. ‘They obviously had some value within the game,’ said Paolantonio, in Manhattan at the still-delayed news conference.”
The Ombudsperson likewise criticized ESPN for later giving Dolphins linebacker Joey Porter a platform for a semi-coherent bitch-session regarding the Patriots and cheating.
“Why treat one player’s angry personal opinion on a league-wide matter as news? Why not solicit a wider range of opinion? Those were the questions those who wrote me wanted answered.”
Amen, Ombudsperson.
We recommend reading and digesting the entire article. We’ve got a feeling that more than a few Patriots fans will be memorizing it.
_2.gif)





June 12th, 2008 at 3:56 pm
LOL at the pat’s fans who claim they don’t care about other’s perception of the Patriots but battle tooth and nail with those who have a negative opinion of cheaters. Oh, BTW the Pat’s just HAPPEN to be the one’s who got caught cheating.
I’m not a Patriots fan, but ALWAYS admired them as a team for their accomplishments…until they got caught cheating. Does that make me a Patriots hater…no. Do I respect them as I once did? ABSOLUTELTY NOT!
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.5 / 5 with 12 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 4:00 pm
What does the NFL Personal Conduct rule have to do with this and Bill? Think about it as two words… what does personal mean.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 1 / 5 with 2 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 4:06 pm
ampats,
oh you definately care or you wouldn’t be taking the time to justify, spin, rationalize and otherwise legacy protect.
ironically, for the same reason you claim that you and the patriot fans don’t care about perception is the exact reason none of you get any credibility in this discussion
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 4.5 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 4:07 pm
I love the concept that Patriot fans are so upset that other teams fans don’t like them. Guess what…. we don’t like your team either lol. That’s the whole point…
Get a clue.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 1.15 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 4:32 pm
When you have nothing to root about with your own team, you try to tear down the accomplishments of someone elses. Sure they broke some rules, but they are hardly deserving of the punishment they’ve recieved in public opinion, but public opinion is what it is, the unruly mob needlessly searching for blood. I can explain in a million and a half reason why the rule is stupid and why I wouldn’t see an advantage in taping games, and I’m sure you could too if you had the ability to pull your heads out of your asses. Christ, you’d swear Belichick would be in a better position if he switched controversies with Marshawn Lynch. I doubt even the Colts would have recieved this much crap if they had been caught. But again, Belichick did leave an opening. Regardless, this is a dead issue, and I’m done paying it any of my time. It’s time to move on.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.95 / 5 with 12 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 4:35 pm
Maybe I am alone in this, but I am a Patriots fan and I do think it sucks that the team’s reputation has been tarnished.
That said, I also fully believe that all great teams are hated (been that way throughout sports history) and, in this case, the whole thing has been blown way out of proportion.
They took advance scouting a step too far and videotaped it. There is virtually no benefit to what they did aside from the same benefit you would get from watching any other tape of a game. There is no way that a defensive coordinator goes the entire season, let alone into the next season, with the EXACT SAME hand signals.
They cheated (such as it was) and they were caught and they deserved what they have gotten, but to think that it was as big a deal as the media and some of the people on this site think it was is ludicrous.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.8 / 5 with 9 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 4:39 pm
Not like Spygate matters, their first Super Bowl win already has an asterisk thanks to the dubious Tuck Rule call made by Walt Coleman. Everyone but the most delusional Patriots fans recognize that call as one of the worst in sports history.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.2 / 5 with 9 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 4:39 pm
The Personal Conduct rule refers to violent and/or crimal behavior. Taping from the sidelines is a violation of the Ops Manual–the same guidelines that cover how many towels have to be provided in the opponents locker room. If anyone who believes the Pat’s success is the result of cheating has to be ready explain last year–unless you believe the story that the grounds crew buried minicams in the field at Gillette, with tranmission direct to a sophisticated editing room in a camper parked across from the stadium.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.6 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 4:41 pm
alswearengen, sorry for the typo moron. Trikee is the ever a Patriots post that you don’t share your 32 IQ posts. Whats your team anyway? If you do not respond with team,let me say it in advance LOSER
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.15 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 4:49 pm
Patriots fans:
Your coach cheated and got caught red-handed. He has professed no remorse for cheating, other than, perhaps, for getting caught. The New England Patriots franchise will carry the stigma of being cheats as long as this man is head coach. Why is this so difficult to understand?
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.65 / 5 with 9 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 5:07 pm
I WONDER IF ANY OF YOU EVEN KNOW WHAT THE DUTY OF AN OMBUDPERSON IS????!!!! AN OMBUDPERSON IS NOT THERE TO SIT AS JUDGE/JURY/EXECUTIONER OF THE PATS IN THIS CASE (we have all done that already!), BUT RATHER TO HOLD ESPN ACCOUNTABLE FOR THEIR ACTIONS! HER COLUMN WAS INTENDED TO COUNTERACT ANY INJUSTICES BROUGHT ABOUT BY UNINFORMED, OFF-TARGET, ILL-ADVISED REPORTING (Typical for Cris Carter). SHE IS THERE TO PUT THEM IN THEIR PLACE WHEN THEY ARE IRRESPONSIBILE WITH THEIR REPORTING. PERIOD. END OF STORY!
This in no way justifies what the Patsies actually did, but rather hold ESPN accountable for the words of their “journalists” and “reporter” (better known as personalities).
THE PATSIES STILL CHEATED! THEY STILL GOT CAUGHT CHEATING!AND GOODELL STILL BUNGLED THE HANDLING OF SPYGATE!
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 4.1 / 5 with 9 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 5:12 pm
Dynasties don’t need to have ombudspersons defend them.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3 / 5 with 8 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 5:34 pm
Its all part of the plan to try and cushion the blow of the pats cheating to win those super bowls.
For gods sake nfl show some brains and guts and take the pats super bowl wins away. And kick Bellycheat and Krapft out of the league. Otherwise your just accepting that cheating big time is just fine.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.5 / 5 with 8 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 5:39 pm
To the Patriot Hating Morons
The article was not about the Patriots but about fairness and balance in journalism. If ESPN really wanted the ombudsman to treat the issue fairly it would have had it on the fron page of their site not buried in a link. It should give it as much prominence and attention as they gave to the coverage of the original airing.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 1.9 / 5 with 9 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 6:20 pm
I can’t believe you people are still fighting about this!!! It happened 10 months ago….Move On!! You will all feel much better if you just let it go!
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 1.75 / 5 with 4 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 6:28 pm
Funny how Cheatriots fans claim to not care what we think, yet they flood every single comment section of every single news outlet that has comments sections for its stories to rationalize and justify the PROVEN FACT that their team has been cheating since 2000. And the one fundamental question that not a single Cheatriots fans has ever been able to answer……..If it wasn’t an advantage then WHY do it? Been waiting since last September for an answer to that one and still haven’t gotten it. Probably because even the most die-hard Cheatriots apologist can’t come up with one that he can even type anonymously with a straight face.
All it takes is 1 or 2 plays to swing the tide of a football game, and it’s pretty obvious that those couple of plays here and there for over 6 years helped the Cheatriots accumulate unlikely wins. There is also proof they did it in the AFC Championship. The New England Patriots are cheaters and will always be remembered by the vast majority of the NFL fanbase (and probably player base as well) as the cheaters they are. Having those tarnished trophies up in Foxboro won’t change that one bit.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.5 / 5 with 8 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 6:34 pm
i wish people would read things first,then comment
secondly.this whole article is about objectivity in
reporting.espn has been cited for biased reporting,
that’s the story.
why does everyone try to bend and twist this into
something that it’s not.
a lot of the comments above are pure childishness,
how this story turned into a pissing match,beats me.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 4.2 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 6:38 pm
The funny thing is, all of you would beg to have Belichick as your head coach. Even with this stigma attached you will still take him, because he wins championships.
What the Patriots did was wrong and they have paid the price…..severely! Don’t think YOUR team didn’t do it in the past, because it has been admitted WIDELY around the league that all teams did it. Just so happens we got caught doing it.
As for Matt Walsh, that little worm, the only thing he accomplished that he’s a little weak knee’d puke, who was a disgruntled employee. What he gave the NFL is what the NFL already knew. He didn’t bring any of this so called “earth shattering” evidence. He’s just a spoiled little weasel, that was coddled by mommy and daddy and when things didn’t go his way, he pouted and then did this.
Funny thing is, I bet he’s a cuckold!
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3 / 5 with 6 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 6:44 pm
The tuck rule was the correct application of a severely flawed rule. It was the right call according to the rulebook, no matter how you want to spin it. The rule itself was messed up, not the call.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 3.4 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 6:45 pm
Hmmm…. a woman reporter basically calling out Mark Schlereth and Cris Carter, two former NFL players, and saying that they don’t know what they’re talking about.
I guess all of Le Ann Shreiber’s claims and rants are from all of her years of experience playing between the hashmarks. Wow… I didn’t know she could speak from all this experience.
Typical woman.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.6 / 5 with 7 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 6:57 pm
“Violation of the personal conduct policy?” What laws did Belichick break?”
Same laws that Roy Williams broke. None. He still got suspended though.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 7:00 pm
I’ve said it BEFORE and I’ll say it AGAIN….Patriot Fans will CONTINUE to be PATRIOT FANS, Those that HATE the PATRIOTS will CONTINUE to HATE the Patriots, NO MATTER what is written or said…..so where is all this “message board debate” going?…good grief, GET A LIFE people!….is THIS the best way you could be spending your time?….the dumbing down of America continues……
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2.4 / 5 with 5 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 7:01 pm
ESPN blows anyway. Tired of the blinking lights and screaming announcers all trying to sound like Berman” He. Could. Go. All. The. Way. Blah. Blah. Blah.
The hyper-stimulus led me to turn off SportCenter a long time ago.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 2 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 7:03 pm
“It bewilders me that this is a bigger problem to people than Donaghy ADMITTING that PLAYOFF basketball games were altered by officials to force a game 7 in ‘02.”
Stern isn’t protecting Donahy by destroying evidence of his guilt. If he had, I’m pretty sure that Stern would have been removed as commissioner by now.
Secondly, no one has proven or even argued that anything that John Clayton stated - technology permits live feeds of videotape direct to CD burning and half time analysis - is not possible. The Patriots never argued the point - they merely said they didn’t use the film in a current game. Goodell destroyed evidence that might have proven otherwise. John Clayton is correct that technolgy exists to do this, and Ernie Adams is the best in the business for almost instant analysis. In-game videotaping can be used in a current game. That was the point that ESPN commentators were making, and the Omnibudsman glossed over that point because her focus was on journalism, not technology.
The fact that the technology exists to extensively cheat using videotaping almost assuredly resulted in the defensive headsets. The NFL realized that modern technology has outflanked their ‘good sportsmanship’ rules.
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 4.35 / 5 with 3 rating(s)
June 12th, 2008 at 7:09 pm
“Taping from the sidelines is a violation of the Ops Manual–the same guidelines that cover how many towels have to be provided in the opponents locker room.”
This is the same manual that stipulates no more than 11 guys on each side at all times, right? Nice attempt to minimize it!
(report as inappropriate)
Rating: 1 / 5 with 3 rating(s)