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02.04.2008 2:01 pm

Belichick: Outcoached, and a sore loser

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FROM THE PHOENIX AIRPORT — Some final comments on Super Bowl 42:

– No surprise that Bill Belichick walked off the field with one second remaining in the game. Belichick is a known cheater, which means he doesn’t respect the game or the spirit of competition. So of course he would be a sore loser. Of course he would disrespect the game once more. Of course he lacked the guts to stand with his team until the end, to watch it all go down.

– That said, it was pathetic the way Belichick ran off on his team, to leave the old guys on the defense to go out there and stand for one final snap. Whatever happened to the idea of a coach and players being in it together, win or lose? Not Belichick. They lost and he was outta there.

– Belichick’s aging defense couldn’t stop Eli Manning and the Giants on two crucial fourth-quarter possessions. They didn’t have the legs to keep up. I can’t help but think that all the blowouts., all the times that Belichick ran up the score, played a role in this. So many times this season, the Patriots kept their starters on the field much longer than they needed to, as Belichick tried to humiliate other coaches in some bizarre act of revenge for being fined for his cheating. Well, on Sunday night in the Valley, the age and the arrogance finally caught up to Belichick and his defense.

– Belichick and staff were outcoached. The Giants had better tactics on both sides of the ball. The Pats never adjusted to the Giants’ decision to go after Tom Brady, who was sacked five times and smacked around all night. And the Patriots were surprisingly flat, considering that they had a perfect season and a another Super Bowl championship on the line. “The Giants had a better game plan than we did, they came ready to play four quarters,” Patriots wideout Randy Moss said. “I think their intensity from the beginning to the end was higher than ours. It surprised me, because of all the work we put in the last two weeks.“It’s hard to explain. I don’t really have words for it.”

– The New York media is already mythologizing the Giants victory. Here’s the truth: it wasn’t the best Super Bowl ever. It was a clunky, sluggish game for three quarters. It was a tremendous fourth quarter, as good as any. But overall, this wasn’t a great game. Just a great, scintillating finish.

– Eli wasn’t Joe Namath in Super Bowl 3. He was better than Namath. The New York media keeps framing this as Manning shocked the world the way Namath shocked the world. No, this isn’t so. Yeah, Namath guaranteed a Jets win over the Colts, who were favored by 17. And that was shockling. But Namath did not play a major role in the game. The Jets won because their defense feasted on turnovers, and they won on the strength of Matt Snell and Emerson Boozer and a bruising running game. Eli Manning did something that Joe Willie didn’t do in Super Bowl 3: Manning brought his team back twice in the fourth quarter to win the biggest game of his life.

– That Manning scramble and the pass to David Tyree … Yeah, it realy was one of the great plays, and most memorable plays, in Super Bowl history. We’ll be talking about that one forever.

– I know they are overexposed with the commercials and nonstop interviews and everything, but the Mannings really are nice people, and gracious people. I am happy for their success.

– I dont know if the Giants put on the best defensive performance in Supe history; I tend to doubt it, given that all of those unbelievably intimidating Steelers defenses won four of these games. But for one night only, what the Giants did to the Patriots - who scored a record 589 points in the regular season - ranks right near the top.

– Rams coach Scott Linehan can learn something from Giants coach Tom Coughlin. Give Coughlin credit for improving his player relations by empowering the players to state their views and have a voice in how the team was being run. Coughlin’s “Player Council” was a good idea and Linny should do the same.

– Patriots fans, including ESPN.com’s Bill Simmons, are saying now they know how Rams fans felt after Super Bowl 36. NO YOU DON’T. The Rams may have been cheated out of that win. I don’t think the Giants cheated to beat the Patriots.  So spare me this nonsense.

That’s all for now. Time to fly and make my way back to the STL …

Thanks for reading.

-B

75 comments

Comments are closed.

#36 Great points…Didn’t care about Seahawks vs. Pitt, but objectively Seahawks got shafted in that game…Fixed or not, it was sweet to see PATSIES go D
O
W
N

— Cardiger
11:20 pm February 4th, 2008

Great blog, Bernie. Patriots definitely do not know how Rams fans felt after SB 36, but as a Rams fan, that loss does now feel a little less bitter. Does anyone remember when Belichick coached the Browns? I don’t remember him being that great of a coach back then and then all of a sudden he becomes the next Vince Lombardi w/ the Patriots winning 3 SB’s and coming w/in 1 win of perfection? Seems supspicous to me.

I was listening to Gordo’s show on the way home from work tonight and a caller called in calling St. Louis fans hypocrites because we support LaRussa, but criticize Belichick when they are the same person. I do think that there are some similarities between Belichick and LaRussa, but I don’t think they are the same person. LaRussa has always seemed to have a lot of respect for the other team and usually the other team’s manager. He also seems like he is always willing to give credit to the other team when credit is due. Belichick seems to have no respect for the other team or other coach at any point. Not once in his interview did I hear him say that the Giants played a great game last night.

— dgl75
1:23 am February 5th, 2008

Bernie,

Great blog! Unfortunately being on the East Coast I get to see many of the Pats games. Belichick has always showed he has no class! From his insincere handshakes at the end of the games to his arrogant post game interviews. The man is hated by many, and the more information that comes out about his possible cheating the better. I always thought the penalty he and the team received did not fit the crime. It was great to see him get his come uppance.

— djjr11854
8:33 am February 5th, 2008

Yeah, the Larussa-Belichick comparison is way off…Larussa is respectful to a fault when it comes to the other team (as he showed again this year by flying off the handle about that silly Cub’s article in the P-D last summer). Belichick has won 3 Super Bowls this decade so you would think he’d handle his one loss with a certain amount of grace. But I seriously believe Belichick thinks himself above the small matters of “decorum”, “sportsmanship” and “rules”. He completely ignored the referee trying to restore order, said a few words to Coughlin, and then was gone. What was really unsurprising the next day was ESPN doing their best to play down the whole incident.

The Boston media has been fairly complementary to the Giants so far, but just about every writer has qualified the win with a big nod towards “luck”. The Pats had their fair share of luck during that game (Manning’s missed hookup with Burress at 8:32 of the 4th which would have been at the least a very long completion, comes readily to mind), as well as their own previous Super Bowl wins. Every team needs some luck to get this far, but it’s up to them to capitalize on it…and the Giants did that big time.

— Josh
10:18 am February 5th, 2008

I am NOT a Belichick fan at all; but, why didn’t you mention the fact that Belichick and Coughlin shook hands when everyone thought the clock had run out. Granted, Belichick should have stayed on the field but it’s not like the Mizzou Tigers who refused to shake hands after the game with the Hawks.

— GT
11:55 am February 5th, 2008

Ok, lets say that the Patriots didnt cheat in any super bowl they have ever played in, in fact lets say that spygate never happened. Lets just completely forget about all of that stuff, the bottom line is that the Giants won. They played better than the Patriots. The fact that Belichick ran off the field just shows that he is nothing more than a piece of human excrement who thinks he is better than everybody else. Its funny that you mention Bill Simmons. He is, in my opinion, the worst sports journalist in the world. Its amazing to me how fast a group of fans can go form noble and die hard to spoiled little female dogs. I guess birds of a feather really do flock together.

— Brad
11:55 am February 5th, 2008

Speaking of Super Bowl 36, any word on what happened to those 2 or 3 seconds that were left after Vinateri kicked the field goal? Nobody ever talks about that for some reason, but with this year’s Super Bowl being ended with everyone on the field prematurely and then being forced to play that one last second, it just highlighted the insanity for me all over again.

Go back and watch the tape. There were clearly 2 or 3 ticks remaining AFTER Vinateri’s kick sailed through. Just one more way the Rams got screwed.

— Josh in STL
1:05 pm February 5th, 2008

1.what is a small brown taco?
2. to fawq there was NO CURSE of the Bambino, the Boston RedSox were just a terrible team, belonging to a terrible organization, located in a terrible city.
The Cardinals may have gotten swept by the RedSox but add up the totals Mr. Math…..

— MGSJr
1:09 pm February 5th, 2008

Hi, just a word of thanks concerning your comments. I agree. Who am I to root for the Giants, but that was true Sunday. Maybe it was more rooting against the Patriots. How did they so quickly go from America’s team in 2001, to the world of cheaters today? Serves them right, I say.

Go Cardinals

— Mike McGhee
1:39 pm February 5th, 2008

Cardinals all-steroid/drug/alcohol team?

(It looks like we are heading down the same path the Cardinals took during the 70’s before Whitey showed up and cleaned house). And these are just the ding bats who got caught.

1B McGuire (Steroids); Hernandez (Cocaine)
2B Vina (Steroids)
SS Templeton (Cocaine)
3B Glaus (Steroids); Spezio (Drugs/alcohol)
CF Ankiel (Steroids)
RF Gonzalez (Growth Hormone); Green (Alcohol)
LF L. Smith (Cocaine)
C Simmons (Cocaine); Porter (Alcohol)
P Josh Hancock (Alcohol died)
Relief P Ryan Franklin (Steroids)

Manager: Tony LaRussa (DUI—asleep at the wheel)

— Brad Howenstein
1:52 pm February 5th, 2008

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