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View Full Version : They are cheaters."Spygate" The scandal that started it all.



zulater
10-12-2014, 08:28 AM
Before the start of the football season, Cary Williams, a veteran cornerback for the Philadelphia Eagles, reminded the sports world about a scandal the NFL would prefer people forget.
“One fact still remains: They haven’t won a Super Bowl since they got caught. They are cheaters,” Williams said in August.
He was referring to Spygate, when the New England Patriots were busted for illegally videotaping the Jets’ defensive signals during the first game of the 2007 season.
Then, as now with a series of disturbing incidents of domestic violence, the NFL seemed more interested in covering up the problem than investigating it.
“It really shows you what’s truly important to the NFL — and that’s ‘duck and cover,’ ” said Bryan O’Leary, author of the book “Spygate: The Untold Story.”
And that’s why certain allegations — including that the Pats were using a radio frequency outside the NFL’s purview to *illegally communicate information to quarterback Tom Brady during the game — were seemingly ignored, O’Leary says.
The Jets play their arch rivals again this Thursday, and some fans are still fuming about the advantage the Patriots had over them — and that it was never fully probed.
“I just don’t understand it,” said lifelong Jets fan Ira Lieberfarb, 60. “They got caught cheating, and it should have been investigated in more *detail. I find it very strange.”
It was seven years ago that Jets security confiscated a sideline camera and tape from a Patriots video assistant during their Sept. 9 game at the Meadowlands.
The spying was a blatant violation of league rules, since knowing what an opponent will do on any given play confers an *immense advantage to a team.

As 49ers quarterback Steve Young once explained to ESPN: “The game would be over. If I knew what was coming, that’s the whole game.”
It was Jets head coach Eric Mangini, a former Pats defensive coordinator, who dropped a dime to NFL security about the sideline shenanigans of his former mentor, New England head coach Bill Belichick.
Mangini already had prepared an elaborate system to foil his former team.
“He had three sets of signals being given, one real, two dummy. He had the same thing going when he beat the Patriots” the previous year, a former Pats employee told Sports Illustrated.
But that meant extra work — that both teams were not playing on the same level field, the ex-staffer noted.
“I wasn’t going to give them the convenience of doing it in our stadium, and I wanted to shut it down,” Mangini said on “NFL Live,” adding that he later regretted doing it. “There was no intent to have the landslide that it has become.”
The filming was fairly straightforward — a staffer pointed a camera at an opposing team’s coaches from across the field. And it had gone on for nearly a decade — since Belichick took over the Pats in 2000, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell later revealed.
It was so obvious, the Pats were busted several times before Spygate erupted, including a year earlier, during a 35-0 thrashing of Green Bay............................................... .................................................. .................................................. .................................................. .................................................. .................................................. ........................................



But it wasn’t just a matter of filming opposing team’s coaches — it was also how that information was allegedly passed to Brady.
As the scandal broke, the NFL was investigating a possible violation into the number of radio frequencies the Patriots were using during the Jets game, sources told ESPN’s Chris Mortensen, who reported at the time that the Pats did not “have a satisfactory explanation when asked about possible irregularities in its communication setup during the game.”
Quarterbacks communicate with the sidelines via microphones in their helmets that pick up an NFL-monitored radio frequency. An NFL sideline official cuts off communications on this frequency 15 seconds before the play clock runs out.
O’Leary — who uses data crunched by a Las Vegas bookie and a Ph.D. statistician from China with no previous familiarity with Spygate — suggests Patriots “director of football research” Ernie Adams, a prep-school chum of Belichick from Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass., was the nerve center behind the chicanery.
Offensive plays would be called based on stolen signals and the information relayed straight to Brady’s helmet, O’Leary theorizes.
In this scenario, the extra frequency is critical, as it allows the team to do something in real time with the stolen signals, out of earshot of the NFL monitor, and change its plays accordingly.
If there’s an open channel during the play itself, you can also alert the quarterback to open receivers he may not see.
O’Leary repeats a rumor that Pats backup quarterback Doug Flutie once said he accidentally picked up Brady’s helmet during the 2005 season.
“He was amazed that the coaches kept right on speaking to Brady past the 15-second cutoff, right up until the snap,” *according to O’Leary.
“The voice in Tom Brady’s helmet was explaining the exact defense he was about to face.”
That same year, Pats linebacker Ted Johnson told USA Today that an hour before game time, a list of the opposing team’s audibles — the signals a QB would use at the line of scrimmage just before a snap to change the play — would sometimes appear in his locker. He had no idea where the lists came from. Three years later, he said he was as surprised as anyone to hear about the cheating allegations.
Action from then-rookie  Commissioner Goodell  was suspiciously swift, critics said.

http://nypost.com/2014/10/12/they-are-cheaters-spygate-the-nfl-scandal-that-started-it-all/

I never saw the part where Brady was getting information right up until the snap before.:wtf: Wow, those Super Bowls they won are a sham. I'm not one to strip victories after the fact, it pisses me off no end when the NCAA takes away wins from teams because a player or two took improper benefits, or as with PSU, a perverted coach and subsequent cover up etc...My thought being the game was decided on the field, punish with sanctions but don't change results. But this is different and explains why Goodell destroyed the evidence.

I don't know that they should have vacated the result, but Bellichick and Kraft both should have been permanently suspended from the NFL.

tube517
10-12-2014, 08:37 AM
Wow. I don't recall reading about getting Marsha the info up until snap either. This makes the so called punishment even more lame. Thanks for posting.

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ALLD
10-12-2014, 09:12 AM
How come Brady was not suspended too?

silver & black
10-12-2014, 09:13 AM
Tuck Rule my @!#$%^&* ass!

Count Steeler
10-12-2014, 10:41 AM
Integrity of the NFL.

T&B fan
10-12-2014, 04:13 PM
I posted this before . so the tapes are out there ...

Roger Goodell’s handling of New England’s tapes worsened the controversy. Goodell originally intended to secure the tapes.
However, someone leaked them to Jay Glazer of Fox, and Fox showed portions on a pregame show.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1...omoting-parity

Jay Glazer of Fox still has his copies

I show them at parties all the time, so they're more than welcome to come over to my house and see them. Me and my buddies will watch them all the time

http://deadspin.com/383677/jay-glazer-owns-the-nfl