Projo Pats Blog

Hoffman: Suit against Patriots only reaffirms the obvious

10:14 AM Tue, Feb 19, 2008 |
By Mike McDermott    Email this author |   Email this entry

By Rich Hoffman
The Philadelphia Daily News

Watching in amazement as Sen. Arlen Specter and some attorneys from the Cincinnati area attempt to turn Bill Belichick and his video camera into a federal case, literally, the following is offered for perspective:

"We know that (stealing signs) became an area of concentration for a lot of teams," the coach said. "I think that crossed the line of ethics; to have teams videotaping me on the sideline, then learning our plays."

The coach in question was Sam Wyche, then of the Tampa Bay Bucs. The quote comes from a St. Petersburg Times story published in 1994.

Then, this:

"We don't do it," another coach said. "There are other clubs that do and are really good at it. There are even two or three teams that videotape the other team's signals and study them ... I don't know if it's legal, but I'm pretty sure it's not kosher."

That coach was Jimmy Johnson, then of the Miami Dolphins. The quote comes from a Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel story published in 1997.

It has been against the rules forever, according to an NFL spokesman contacted the other day, but it seems that at least several teams were undeterred about sideline taping over the years - and, amazingly enough, both the sport and the republic survived. Yet here we all are, in a desperate race to get somebody named Matt Walsh in front of a legal stenographer so that he can tell us what he says he knows about the Patriots and whether they taped the St. Louis Rams at their pre-Super Bowl walkthrough in 2002.

Belichick is on record now, in a Boston Globe story published Monday. He denies everything, up, down and sideways. He says he didn't order videotaping of the walkthrough; he didn't see any tape; he has never seen a tape of any opponent's practice; and he "couldn't pick Matt Walsh out of a lineup."

It was all pretty emphatic - Clemensesque, in fact.

Hugh K. Campbell Jr., one of the attorneys who filed the class-action lawsuit against the Pats and Belichick, said that, like the rest of us, he read the coach's extensive denials Monday morning.

"We're curious to find out what Matt Walsh has to say," he said.

The $100 million lawsuit - which claims to represent the interests of Rams players and ticketholders defrauded by the dastardly Belichick - totals 25 pages. It is a colossal bore, as are most lawsuits. Having subjected it to a thorough and professional review - that is, as thorough and professional a review as can be performed by a layman who is semi-sprawled on a couch and flipping through it during commercials - this seems to be the entire basis of the suit:

"An unidentified source, but one the Boston Herald relied upon enough to publicize the allegation, told the Boston Herald a member of the Patriots video staff taped the St. Louis Rams last 'walk-through' before they played in the 2002 Super Bowl."

That's it. Really.

No?

"I don't think it's only based on a newspaper report," said Campbell, on the phone Monday from his office in Cincinnati.

"Bill Belichick has been fined $500,000 by the league," he said. "Obviously, I think they had proof that he did illegal taping since at least 2000, and I think Sen. Specter would agree with that. The filming didn't just start in 2006."

But videotaping sideline signals is completely different from videotaping a team's walkthrough on the day before the Super Bowl. The former is illegal, but more in the realm of digital gamesmanship, and it has been going on with other NFL teams, or at least alleged, for years; no, decades. The latter is much worse, a whole 'nother kettle of pixels and would almost certainly result in Belichick's being kicked out of the league (for lying to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, if nothing else).

Anyway, the race now is to get Walsh, the former Pats video/lackey guy, under oath. The problem is that Walsh is seeking immunity from a lawsuit regarding anything he says or anything he swiped from the Pats after he was fired.

Campbell said he and one of his co-counsels, Eric C. Deters, were working Monday on finding a way to craft an immunity deal. Campbell said that he was contacting Specter and trying to coordinate their efforts somehow - "It seems to make sense, in that we're all trying to get the same information," he said - and that Deters was contacting Walsh's attorney and working that angle.

"It's up to the court to allow discovery," Campbell said, meaning he can't get Walsh in front of the stenographer until the court says so. "It would be nice if Matt Walsh would come forward."

He will at some point, with some kind of immunity - that seems certain now. At which point, this great governmental intrusion into the unsportsmanlike conduct that has existed in the NFL forever will begin in earnest. Walsh will allege, Belichick will deny, and a grand national search will begin for an NFL version of Andy Pettitte. Hilarity will ensue.

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Comments

Art said:

Great story. And really... People need to get a life and move on. Seems like we already addressed all this video-gate stuff and BB paid the price for his crime. We could shake out the underwear drawer of every last team in the NFL and probably find a lot more interesting stuff. But what good is it?



chuck said:

Art

You said we could shake out the underware drawer of every last team in the NFL...but that would never happen that way. Teams have been lusting to discredit and deny the Pats for years. Now that they have their opportunity they will not pass it up just because they are being inherently hypocritical. The NFL is a giant soap opera. Soap operas need villians and we are it. It doesn't help that we are a blue state enclave in a league of red and purple state cities. I believe that Belichick will never see the training camp as HC of the NEP. And that would be a damn shame. Why? For all the parity the league likes to boast about, for all the weaslely thinks that Bill may have done, this boils down to a popularity contest. I have no doubt that if Bill were a gregarious, glad-handed good ol' boy instead of a grumpy introverted loner, they'd all be saying "Not OUR Bill! He's such a good GUY! Let's cut him some slack!" Instead, this is like the high school toughs beating up the class nerd because all of his right answers "make us look dumb"!

The only way to reveal the hypocrisy and partiality that is behind this is to out the other teams that have historicaly done this. Only this would belie the idea that the Patriots are uniquely evil and that some of their accusers have done the same thing. What do you bet that the other teams are busily burning THEIR old tapes and that the NFL will cover for those teams if any independent evidence shows up. The Patriots would make the perfect scapegoat to end this "stain" on the NFL.




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