Should Patriots' Super Bowls Have an Asterisk?
SodaHead Sports
2012/05/02 20:00:00
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62 votes
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60 votes
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Before the New Orleans Saints hurt the NFL's image with BountyGate, there was the "Gate of all Gates" in 2007: SpyGate. It was revealed back then, after a complaint from then-New York Jets head coach Eric Mangini, that the New England Patriots were revealed to have been spying and video taping other teams' practices since the early 2000s.
Keep in mind, Mangini was on the Patriots' coaching staff during that time. This was largely an afterthought since then, until Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh opened his mouth in a recent interview, saying the Patriots' three Super Bowl titles in the 2000s should have an asterisk next to them. The NFL's investigation in 2007 rocked the league's image and tainted the Pats' three Super Bowl championship titles, but many detractors quickly focused on what went on after that.
That season, the Patriots went undefeated throughout the regular season and playoffs. At least until they ran into the New York Giants in the Super Bowl. As for the Patriots' punishments, well at the time, they were pretty stiff: a $250,000 fine to the Patriots organization and $500,000 to Patriots head coach Bill Belichick. Those were some of the major punishments that were made public by the NFL.
Were the tapes the NFL found damning enough to think the Patriots gained a considerable advantage? If you're going by recent history, the answer is no, considering Belichick and his team just made it to the Super Bowl this past season. However, we'll never know as the NFL destroyed the tapes. In hindsight, that might not have been the best idea, since even five years later, questions remain unanswered. The Patriots have the talent to win Super Bowls, but how could seeing what your opponent practices not help give you an edge? Was Harbaugh out of line or just saying what everyone else in the NFL is thinking?

Keep in mind, Mangini was on the Patriots' coaching staff during that time. This was largely an afterthought since then, until Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh opened his mouth in a recent interview, saying the Patriots' three Super Bowl titles in the 2000s should have an asterisk next to them. The NFL's investigation in 2007 rocked the league's image and tainted the Pats' three Super Bowl championship titles, but many detractors quickly focused on what went on after that.
That season, the Patriots went undefeated throughout the regular season and playoffs. At least until they ran into the New York Giants in the Super Bowl. As for the Patriots' punishments, well at the time, they were pretty stiff: a $250,000 fine to the Patriots organization and $500,000 to Patriots head coach Bill Belichick. Those were some of the major punishments that were made public by the NFL.
Were the tapes the NFL found damning enough to think the Patriots gained a considerable advantage? If you're going by recent history, the answer is no, considering Belichick and his team just made it to the Super Bowl this past season. However, we'll never know as the NFL destroyed the tapes. In hindsight, that might not have been the best idea, since even five years later, questions remain unanswered. The Patriots have the talent to win Super Bowls, but how could seeing what your opponent practices not help give you an edge? Was Harbaugh out of line or just saying what everyone else in the NFL is thinking?


















Doesn't make it fair.
I am a Baltimore guy and heard Harbaugh's 98 Rock interview in total and there was nothing wrong with what he said and I agree with it; word for word.
Besides there's nothing that has an * next to it, not even in baseball. Otherwise, you could put an * by the Islanders 1980 Stanley Cup (* won because of bad refereeing), not to mention the 1919 World Series, and dozens of other events.
But Football is NOT Baseball.......
Profootballtalk.com is reporting that photos of a Jets staff member have been seen on the sidelines during the New York Jets – New England Patriots holding a camera and pointing it towards the Patriots sideline.
The image was seen at the start of the second quarter and appeared briefly.
Profootballtalk references the NFL Game Operations Manuel in that “no video recording devices of any kind are permitted to be in use in the coaches’ booth, on the field, or in the locker room during the game,” and “all video shooting locations must be enclosed on all sides with a roof overhead.”
Occurring more than four years after the Spygate scandal in which the Patriots had their own cameraman on the sidelines for the Jets game, what do the Jets have to say for themselves?
Bottom line is that they broke the rules as an organization to gain a competitve edge as far as wins and losses are concerned. Theres no doubt they have a great brand of football and would have been perfectly successful without taping, I don't doubt that at all.
But given the nature of football with 16 game seasons and one and done playoffs how can we know for sure that taping didn't help them gain a game or two in the regular season? How do we know that one of those three very closely contested Super Bowls (particularly 36 where we know taping happened and it was down to the wire) weren't won because of an illegal edge?
The image doesn't help since they've been caught and have lost the two following close Super Bowls they played in. The conclusion could be that they could no longer get that unfair edge and because of that they couldn't convert those games into titles.
I think this is more insidious and more asterisk worthy than steroid use by far.
It is my opinion that Belichick never had to pay his half million dollar fine because he engineered a Super Bowl loss. By having the Patriots accept the penalties and lose the Super Bowl, the league can save face by allowing another team (that the...
It is my opinion that Belichick never had to pay his half million dollar fine because he engineered a Super Bowl loss. By having the Patriots accept the penalties and lose the Super Bowl, the league can save face by allowing another team (that the Patriots throttled earlier in the season) to win instead of the 'tainted' Patriots.
If anyone is bored, have a look at some of this coincidental information and draw your own conclusion. The one question I have about all this is, is there a way to know where the penalty cash went and is there specific documentation of it going there? My guess is no since IMO Belichick never had to pay it off.
Anyhow, there's your conspiracy nutjob theory for the day...enjoy! :)
besides, they have Brady, and if you cheat in a relationship, OR COURSE you cheat at work.
There are a lot of teams who haven't won a championship since spy gate, and the patriots have been a lot more competitive than most of the league.
Are we really supposed to believe that the Patriots and the Saints are the only teams to push the envelope? Or does the NFL just make strong examples of teams who get caught in lieu of launching a league wide investigation?