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Report: Roger Goodell's Deflategate ruling was 'makeup call' for Spygate

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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Roger Goodell works for the NFL team owners. According to a report by ESPN the Magazine and "Outside the Lines," the commissioner took it easy on one of those owners during one major cheating scandal, leading him to go hard on the same owner's team during another scandal years later in an effort to appease his other 31 bosses.

One team owner called the massive Deflategate punishment handed down by Goodell to owner Robert Kraft's New England Patriots this year "a makeup call" for the commisioner's mishandling of the Spygate controversy in 2007.

ESPN says it conducted interviews "with more than 90 league officials, owners, team executives and coaches, current and former Patriots coaches, staffers and players" and reviewed "previously undisclosed private notes from key meetings" before ultimately linking Goodell's handling of the two scandals.

The resulting report, which appeared online Tuesday, also serves as a lengthy but fascinating look at the extent the Patriots allegedly have gone to in order to achieve an unfair advantage. During the Spygate era, the report says, "an entire system of covert videotaping was developed and a secret library created." In addition, it says, opposing teams' locker rooms or hotel rooms were raided in search of playsheets or playbooks, and visiting teams' headsets would be jammed to interfere with the transmission of signals.


When Spygate came to light, Goodell acted quickly, especially by today's standards. Within days, Coach Bill Belichick was fined $500,000 and the Patriots were docked another $250,000 plus a first-round draft pick. Oh, and Goodell also had all the evidence in the case destroyed.

While some in the league were satisfied, the report says, "other owners, coaches, team executives and players were outraged by how little the league investigated what the Patriots' cheating had accomplished in games.... The NFL's explanation of why [evidence] was destroyed -- 'So that our clubs would know they no longer exist and cannot be used by anyone,' the league said at the time -- only made it worse for those who were critical."

The report continues: "The view around much of the league was that Goodell had done a major favor for Kraft, one of his closest confidants who had extended critical support when he became the commissioner the previous summer. Kraft is a member of the NFL's three-person compensation committee, which each year determines Goodell's salary and bonuses."

That helped set the stage for the aftermath of Deflategate, the most recent cheating scandal involving the Patriots. After an investigation by Ted Wells, Goodell came down hard on Kraft's team, suspending quarterback Tom Brady four games without pay, fining the team $1 million and taking away two draft picks.

"To the many owners who saw the Patriots as longtime cheaters, it really didn't matter that Goodell appeared eager, perhaps overeager, to show the rest of the NFL that he had learned the lessons of Spygate," the ESPN report says. "One team owner acknowledges that for years there was a 'jealous ... hater' relationship among many owners with Kraft, the residue of Spygate. 'It's not surprising that there's a makeup call,' one team owner says. Another longtime executive says a number of owners wanted Goodell to 'go hard on this one.'"

Kraft ultimately accepted the team punishment, but Brady fought his. After Goodell upheld his own ruling in an appeal, U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman overturned it last week.

Goodell denied that his Deflategate rulings had anything to do with Spygate.

"I can state that I'm not aware of any connection between the Spygate procedures and the procedures here" regarding Deflategate, Goodell told ESPN. "There is no connection in my mind between the two incidents."

http://www.chicagotribune.com/sport...-espn-spygate-deflategate-20150908-story.html
 
Among the most notable items in the report, which was based on interviews with “more than 90 league officials, owners, team executives and coaches, current and former Patriots coaches, staffers and players, and reviews of previously undisclosed private notes from key meetings”:

— That the Patriots videotaped the signals of opposing coaches in at least 40 games from 2000 (Coach Bill Belichick’s first season) to 2007, and not merely in the 2007 season opener against the New York Jets, when a Patriots employee was caught taping the Jets’ coaching signals in a sting operation. Such taping, when done from a team’s sideline, is illegal under NFL rules.

— That NFL executives, including NFL general counsel Jeff Pash, discovered “eight tapes containing game footage along with a half-inch-thick stack of notes of signals and other scouting information.” Goodell ordered everything to be destroyed, with Pash and the other executives stomping on the tapes in a Gillette Stadium office and feeding the scouting notes into a shredder.

— That the taping of opposing signals “got out of control,” according to one former Patriots assistant. But it also was just the tip of the iceberg in the Patriots’ bag of dirty tricks, according to ESPN’s Seth Wickersham and Don Van Natta:

In fact, many former New England coaches and employees insist that the taping of signals wasn’t even the most effective cheating method the Patriots deployed in that era. Several of them acknowledge that during pregame warm-ups, a low-level Patriots employee would sneak into the visiting locker room and steal the play sheet, listing the first 20 or so scripted calls for the opposing team’s offense. (The practice became so notorious that some coaches put out fake play sheets for the Patriots to swipe.) Numerous former employees say the Patriots would have someone rummage through the visiting team hotel for playbooks or scouting reports. [Patriots video employee Matt] Walsh later told investigators that he was once instructed to remove the labels and erase tapes of a Patriots practice because the team had illegally used a player on injured reserve. At Gillette Stadium, the scrambling and jamming of the opponents’ coach-to-quarterback radio line — “small s—” that many teams do, according to a former Pats assistant coach — occurred so often that one team asked a league official to sit in the coaches’ box during the game and wait for it to happen. Sure enough, on a key third down, the headset went out.

— That Goodell pressured Mike Martz, whose St. Louis Rams lost to the Patriots in Super Bowl XXXVI, to issue a statement in 2008 saying he was satisfied with the NFL’s SpyGate investigation. Goodell asked Martz to make the statement in order to ward off a possible congressional hearing into the NFL. Martz told Wickersham and Van Natta that he’s certain he did not write some of the statement, and that “even to this day, I think something happened” in his team’s Super Bowl loss to the Patriots.

— And, finally, that the perception that Goodell gave the Patriots a break on SpyGate — New England received a $500,000 fine of Belichick, a $250,000 fine of the team and the loss of a first-round draft pick after a brief investigation — shaped his dogged insistence that Brady be suspended for deflating footballs in last year’s AFC title game. One owner told Wickersham and Van Natta that DeflateGate was a “makeup call” over missed chances to further punish the Patriots over SpyGate, and some owners now say Goodell’s job is more secure because of his handling of DeflateGate.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...-was-reason-nfl-strongly-pursued-deflategate/
 
I figured it was a "makeup call" for his botching of the Ray Rice case, and prior handling of cases involving violence against women.
 
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