Daily Kos

In Praise of Bill Belichick the Progressive

Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 03:31:32 PM PDT

I wrote a diary on Mr. Belichick after the Patriots' last Super Bowl win. It was received with resounding applause. To my sad dismay, Belichick was yesterday found guilty of an act akin to the infamous attempt to smear a sitting Virginia Senator last year. Our own Democratic tracker cheated when he went after George Allen with a video camera, got audible evidence of Allen's macaca comment, effectively stealing Allen's coded signals to his wink, wink white audience.

Be that as it may, I'll forgive Belichick for behaving as Allen's tracker did. And I'll sing his praises instead with the ole diary.

The guy has 5 Super Bowl rings, 3 as head coach. But there's a lot more to him than that.

When we look to sports for a political metaphor, I tend to get a little squeamish, especially as sports jargon invades the language of politics, but when I think about Bill Belichick, the coach of the New England Patriots football team, I marvel at how a thoroughly progressive man with a progressive plan has come to dominate NFL football, on of the reddest of

Some background on Belichick. He grew up in North Carolina and Annapolis, son of a Navy guy. On a trip to New England as a young kid, he fell in love with the region. He decided to go to school there, Wesleyan (our most liberal liberal arts school). He was an excellent student, graduated with a dual degree in Lit and Economics. Back in his long-haired days he was also quite the political activist. Although he is on record as being a Democrat (one of the few in football management), he made a few token gestures of support for Kerry. He was not very active by any means.

OK, so why am I bothering with a diary about Belichick? Well, he did win the Super Bowl last night, but more than that: A few years ago when the Patriots went to the Super Bowl, the team entered the stadium and refused to be recognized individually as the Rams were. They insisted they be recognized as a team. This was part of the Belichick ethos. The individual must subsume himself for the common good if the team is to be a great success. Well, that little idea was quickly pounced upon by right-wing commentators all over the country. I was astonished that Rush Limbaugh and Michael Savage would take the opportunity to blast Belichick the next day. Literally, the politicos took an afternoon to bash Belichick's idea of teamwork. Limbaugh branded him Unamerican.

At the time, I thought it was funny. Talk about mixing metaphors. But now I've come to appreciate Limbaugh's sense that somehow the metaphor between football and civics is apt, at least as much as it concerns Belichick.

In the last 4 years, the Patriots have proven themselves the class of the league. They have won three Super Bowls, are 32-2 i their last 34 games, won 21 games in a row, an NFL record. And much to the astonishment of fans and media in this salary cap era, they seem to do it without a large contingent of the requisite stars on the team. They win with Everyman and the team concept. Sure, there are a few bonafide excellent players on the team. But when you look at their paychecks, you begin to notice something special about the Patriots. All of them have willingly taken less money to play for Bill Belichick. They have bought into a theory which says, if you're not greedy and if you work for the common good, you will be a success. No wonder Limbaugh is incensed. Is this Communist football or what?

Here's the deal on how the Patriots are constructed: in the NFL's salary-cap era, you are only allowed to pay your 60 players a total of $70 million a year. Most teams pay lots of money ($5 to $10 million) to several players while the rest are left to fight over what's left. On the Patriots, the top players take less. That allows the Patriots to spread out more money to the players who aren't stars. They have developed depth and versatility by offering ordinary players a good salary, players who would not make that kind of money anywhere else in the league. There is very little disparity between the Patriots top earners and the bottom earners. They're kind of like Japan, with CEOs who make a modest amount compared to their American counterparts. Even the entry-level players are quickly compensated fairly for their toils once they have proven themselves. In this manner, the Patriots have been able to develop an almost fanatical loyalty to the team. Sure, a few of the players have walked away for more money (C Damien Woody to the Lions) but the great number of veterans have stayed and taken less money than they could have elsewhere (just this year LT Matt Light and LB Tedy Bruschi.)

OK, so now how does all this socialist football benefit the style of play on the field? Well, with all the players being compensated well, and with their welfare looked after, they tend to focus on the task at hand. Winning. Some of the rancor and jealousy that exists on other teams is non-existent. But the best reason is this: since the Patriots can afford to compensate the average football player (average lunchpail guy) pretty well, they attract average players who give their all. These players are generally regarded as hard workers, with less physical talent, but with an understanding of the game and their relative role within it. They are versatile and knowledgeable. In fact, the Patriots boast more college graduates than any other team in the NFL. The most succesful NFL team is also the best educated NFL team. Is it any wonder?  In short, the Patriots have depth. If someone drops the ball, there's always someone else there to pick it up. They are a tight community and they work well together.

I could mention a few more factors. Belichick is a disciplinarian who insists on following the rules. Players are well-behaved and rarely do they get into trouble. In Belichick's tenure, I can only think of one player who was brought up on charges. A top draft choice played a prank on a personal assistant by throwing scalding water on him while he was on the toilet. Belichick threw him off the team, and the player in question is out of the NFL. So, Belichick combines discipline, sound economics, with the concept of teamwork, and out comes a great football team.

Most NFL observers will credit Belichick simply for outsmarting other coaches. He's known to devise a great gameplan. His strategies are the most complex gameday strategies in the NFL. And for this, he is considered a kind of "genius." While it is true that Belichick is very smart and a tireless worker, I believe most NFL observers are missing the point. Belichick doesn't win by being smarter than everyone else. He wins by installing a system which Limbaugh derides as Communist.

Lastly, I'll end by saying that Belichick still has a bit of community activism in him. Ask Jim Brown, one of the NFL's all time leading rushers,  about Belichick. Brown, a virtual pariah in the NFL community for his strong stances on discriminatory practices in the league and for his dabbling with the Black Panthers, works with Belichick in the offseasons. Where do they spend their time? Belichick goes into the jails and works with convicts. This isn't the typical United Way NFL community service stuff. No one knew about it until the story burbled up from Brown years after Belichick had been doing it.

I'll simply end by saying that Belichick has learned a lot about life, economics, sacrifice, community, compassion, hard work, discipline, education, and he's come up with a system that seems to instill these values into his football team. And this is exactly why right-wing commentators are incredulous and downright pissy that these progressive and democratic values could come to dominate one of the reddest of our cultural icons, one that has been repeatedly compared to the military, the NFL.

The sad thing is that Belichick could never get elected with all these qualities (by "elected," I mean, installed as a head coach due to positive perceptions of him in NFL circles). The media and many in football hated him because of his dour personality. Indeed, Belichick is more dour than John Kerry. Put them on the dance floor, and Kerry gets all the girls (or guys, as the case may be). The media holds up their noses when Belichick steps to the podium, since he gives the most boring press conferences ever. He had to be handplucked by an owner who believed in him to get another shot in the NFL. One thing is for sure, he doesn't win by the force of his personality. This is a true man of substance.

Tags: belichick, gamesmanship, smears, football, doo abides, democrat, wesleyan, good man, misunderstood, visionary (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 23 comments

  •  Unfortunately, Dick Cheney and the Coach (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    smkngman, dgone36, Son of Beale

    have a lot in common:

    They have an utter disdain for the rules that get in the way of their ultimate goals.

    •  You have a fixation on the rules. (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      howd

      Shouldn't we pay attention to what the actual rule is?

      Last year when the Phins were caught cheating against the Patriots by stealing signals taken from a  videotape, the NFL's Steve Alic responded, "That's football." So, when the Republicans do it (Wayne Huizenga) no one cares. Not least our Republican NFL commissioner. And especially this new one, son of a Republican senator from Buffalo. But when the Democrats do it (Belichick, Kraft) suddenly the media starts howling in hysterics as they apply their double standard. Pretty funny stuff.

      That rule that you're citing is so full of holes, especially since the actual act of cheating is never addressed. It forbids people from making videotapes. When you use a tape to steal signals, however, suddenly the NFL takes care to note that there's no rule against it. That's how the Phins got off.

      There's enough gray area in that rule to drive an elephant through it. Perfect for Republicans that want to maintain a double standard.

      Look at these people! They suck each other! They eat each other's saliva and dirt! -- Tsonga people of southern Africa on Europeans kissing.

      by upstate NY on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 03:54:16 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Interesting read (0+ / 0-)

    And not without ironies...

    I could mention a few more factors. Belichick is a disciplinarian who insists on following the rules. Players are well-behaved and rarely do they get into trouble.

    Except for using HGH.

    "'Shit' is the tofu of cursing" --David Sedaris

    by LiberalVirginian on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 03:33:12 PM PDT

  •  Sorry.... (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    dgone36, Son of Beale

    Belichick is a disciplinarian who insists on following the rules.

    Rovian drivel!

    "All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent."T.J.

    by smkngman on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 03:41:27 PM PDT

  •  He should have been suspended for the year (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Son of Beale

    some role model for kids, cheating, steroids, and amphetamines winning is the only thing to these megamaniacs and I'm a big Pats fan!

    •  I suggest you watch another sport. (0+ / 0-)

      How can you be a fan of football and be against steroids, HGH, cheating, and amphetamines?

      That's like saying I enjoy beach volleyball but all the T&A sets a bad example.

      Look at these people! They suck each other! They eat each other's saliva and dirt! -- Tsonga people of southern Africa on Europeans kissing.

      by upstate NY on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 03:55:48 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  steroids, HGH, cheating, and amphetamines (0+ / 0-)

        How can you be a fan of football and be against steroids, HGH, cheating, and amphetamines?

        You're absolutely correct. I haven't watched a single NFL game for five seasons now. This will be season six. Haven't missed a thing.

        The Grasshopper Lies Heavy

        by FrankFrink on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 04:04:34 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  OK, gotta go spend quality time with the tykes. (0+ / 0-)

    I'll be back if anyone cares.

    And of course I'm joking in the opening half, but the bottom half is true.

    Oh, and I do believe he cheated. It's too bad though that the NFL is ok with cheating, and they've said so explicitly. What isn't permitted however is testing the Emperor's, um, excuse me, Republican commissioner's dictates issued in a memo. For that Belichick deserves to pay. After all, Belichick never realized, he is not the ultimate DECIDER.

    Look at these people! They suck each other! They eat each other's saliva and dirt! -- Tsonga people of southern Africa on Europeans kissing.

    by upstate NY on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 03:58:12 PM PDT

  •  I find it interesting that the only groups (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    upstate NY, howd

    frothing at the mouth over this and screaming "CHEAT! CHEAT!" are media pundits and fans of other teams.  Other owners, coaches, players - not so much.  Why?

    Brett Favre casually admitted in an interview the other day that everybody tries to read and interpret (i.e., steal) the opposing team's signals, but that video-taping them "may have crossed a line."

    Video-taping the opposing team during a game is not against any rule if it's done from certain prescribed locations and the tapes are used ONLY AFTER the current contest has ended.  There are no rules governing trying to read the opposing team's signals and benefiting from that read during the game. As another (non-Patriots) player stated, "Any team that does not use false signals from   time-to-time during a game or that doesn't change its signals with each game, is being stupid."

    At the last owners' meeting, the recommendation that coaches have been pushing for for years - to allow a defensive player to wear a communications helmet on the field like every quarterback wears and, thus, eliminate the need to use interceptible hand signals - was again rejected.

    The rule that Belichick was judged to have violated was that against specifically video-taping the opposing team's signals, potentially to be able to be used during the game in progress.  That's it.

    But pundits are calling for the Patriots to be banned from NFL competition for a year, to have their SuperBowl victories taken away.  Sells newspapers and advertising I suppose, but it's still bullshit.

    Some folks prefer a map and finding their own route. Others need someone to tell them where to go.

    by sxwarren on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 04:05:44 PM PDT

  •  he a dem? (0+ / 0-)

    i thought i heard he was a republican?

    "There is nothing wrong with America can't be cured by what is right with America" -Bill Clinton

    by SensibleDemocrat on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 04:06:42 PM PDT

  •  Media didn't hate him for his dour personality (0+ / 0-)

    I was a Cleveland Browns fan prior to Belichek and Modell destroying the team. The reason the media hated him is because he was uber-controlling and incompetent. -- he berated Kosar publicly once because Kosar had run a different play than he had sent in, resulting in a TD. His defenses were without peer, and he was one of the first defensive coordinators to solve the West Coast offense. But in those days he hadn't matured as a coach.

    Thanks for showing me this other side of Belichek.

    Michael

    •  I wasn't paying attention in his Cleve days,. (0+ / 0-)

      All I know is that Belichick's Browns knocked my team, Parcells' Pats, out of the playoffs.

      That being said, from outside the situation, I gave BB a pass back then because Modell put him in an impossible situation, and, let's face it, Kosar was washed up. Testaverde went on to play another decade.

      Look at these people! They suck each other! They eat each other's saliva and dirt! -- Tsonga people of southern Africa on Europeans kissing.

      by upstate NY on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 04:14:12 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  I admire the guy but absolutely hate his persona (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    upstate NY

    yuck!
    But great diary

  •  I don't admire anyone who cheats. He's tarnished (0+ / 0-)

    his whole team, and put into question every so-called win, including the Super Bowls.

    If you have to cheat to win, you're a loser.

    Beyond that, on field, he's abusive to his players.
    Off the field, he's an adulterer.

    How does that make him a man of substance?

    yes I know its spelled wrong but I can't figure out how to change it: triptych triptych triptych.

    by tryptich2 on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 04:35:32 PM PDT

    •  An adulterer? (0+ / 0-)

      Sounds like an agenda to me. The guy was separated from his wife, now divorced.

      People hop on the blame wagon without asking, for one, does the NFL condone using tapes to steal signals? Yes. Google the name Steve Alic, a NFL spokesman, and then he words, "That's football." Cheating is when you break a rule that upsets the competitive balance. He never did that.

      Second, you say it calls the Super Bowls into question. Are you aware that the rule against taping was instituted in 2006?

      Abusive to his players? Huh? Where have you seen that? He's the most even-keeled coach on the sidelines. Not abusive at all. Not in comparison to Cowher, Shottenheimer, Gibbs and a dozen others.

      Look at these people! They suck each other! They eat each other's saliva and dirt! -- Tsonga people of southern Africa on Europeans kissing.

      by upstate NY on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 05:01:23 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  It's no agenda. It's what happened. (0+ / 0-)

        Go Google it.  It was all over the internets, maybe six months ago.

        yes I know its spelled wrong but I can't figure out how to change it: triptych triptych triptych.

        by tryptich2 on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 08:28:09 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  It was all over the New York Post. (0+ / 0-)

          The tabloids.

          He's been separated/divorced from his wife for over 3 years now. The woman who he supposedly had an affair with in NY wasn't even his girlfriend, as he's been seriously dating a 48 year old former newscaster for 3 years after separation.

          My main point is: what does adultery have to do with anything? This is his personal life. I mean, my God. The number of people who are heroes to the left who were adulterers is legendary, from Kennedy to Martin Luther King Jr to Clinton, and hundreds of others in between.

          Seriously, why would you bring that up, especially when he was separated?

          Look at these people! They suck each other! They eat each other's saliva and dirt! -- Tsonga people of southern Africa on Europeans kissing.

          by upstate NY on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 08:58:05 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

  •  He sent a guy back on the field with a concussion (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    tryptich2
    •  Got anything else? (0+ / 0-)

      This is a sick rough sport. I can name you about 60 guys that have PCS.

      And I bet you didn't even know that Johnson called Belichick up last December when Seau went down, asking about the possibility of rejoining the team. What does that tell you?

      Look at these people! They suck each other! They eat each other's saliva and dirt! -- Tsonga people of southern Africa on Europeans kissing.

      by upstate NY on Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 08:54:18 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

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