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Belichick Told Kraft that Brady was Washed in 2019!


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(Thought this article was deserving of its own thread, but feel free to merge with one of the other Belichick vs. Brady Legacy threads)

 

Since I can't get enough schadenfreude watching NE's recent yearly implosions, how about this--

 

In his most recent FMIA article, Peter King references a piece by Seth Wickersham & Wright Thompson (behind ESPN + paywall), where Kraft is quoted as saying privately: "Bill had told me he couldn’t play anymore, and then he goes out and wins the f------ Super Bowl."

https://www.espn.com/nfl/insider/insider/story/_/id/39290103/it-was-patriot-way

 

That's the first I've really heard confirmed of Belichick being so dismissive of whatever he felt Brady had left (or didn't) in the tank, and why he pushed Kraft to let him jettison Brady when he did. This is just further evidence of Belichick's lacking personnel evaluation skills (poor drafting, questionable free agent hires) which were largely covered up when Tom was there, not so much after his departure as we all have seen, imho.

 

The Wickersham article has some great additional quotes:

 

"His seventh title meant Bill and Bob were now fighting not to be blamed. Both men sent Brady congratulatory texts, but they had lost control of the narrative of their own careers -- and they both knew that the team celebrating a seventh title should have been their team, and that wound began to fester."

 

"Belichick had sent clear signals internally for weeks that he thought he was coaching his final games for the Patriots. He also made it clear that he was ready to move on, telling confidants that Robert Kraft and his son, team president Jonathan Kraft, had eroded the culture he had built over two decades.

Belichick believed the erosion had been going on for a while, at least since Brady's last season in New England. Belichick and Kraft met multiple times after this season ended, which is custom, but this year's series of meetings was different. Both men had lists of things that needed to change. And both men knew it was unlikely they'd find a way forward. Three days after losing to the Jets, Belichick had started to move items out of his office."

 

Had no idea that long before 2019, there was already a stirring by Belichick that he wanted to win a SB without Brady:

 

"From 2006 to 2013, the Patriots plateaued at the highest level -- losing Super Bowls in the final minute to the Giants -- and relationships started to fray. Belichick internally discussed trading Brady and talked openly to associates about wanting to win a Super Bowl without him. Kraft, trying to manage the two of them -- trying to do what Jerry Jones couldn't and keep a dynasty together -- struck a quiet deal with Brady in 2010 that if Belichick ever decided to move on from him that he would give the quarterback a say in his next destination."

 

"A year later, in 2014, Belichick provided Kraft a study detailing how even the greatest quarterbacks drop off in their mid-30s. Belichick drafted Jimmy Garoppolo in the second round, setting him up to succeed Brady.

Brady found another gear, like his boyhood hero Joe Montana did after the arrival of Steve Young. Brady turned to friend and trainer Alex Guerrero and an obsessive anti-aging regimen to prove Belichick's study wrong. With the conflict between his two most important employees now out in the open, Kraft took on the job of making Brady happy, offering connection and compliments and joy in an otherwise dour Belichick atmosphere." 2 more SBs followed after that.

 

Sounds to me like one of those careful what you wish for type of things for Bill Belichick, as he's never been able to replicate what he was able to do with Tom at the reigns. It's almost as if Brady became who he was despite having Belichick as his coach? Don't know, but seems crazy to think that any other franchise may and I underline the word may, have enjoyed similar dynastic success with Tom as NE? 

 

Anyway, I for one believe that with Josh Allen, we have another unicorn goat in the making, who will deliver multiple titles before it's all said and done--and it doesn't appear at least surface level--that we have near the distracting intrigue between coach and owner as what was happening in NE. 

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Great stuff.   The article doesn't quite say it, but I remember there was reporting at the time that Belichick wanted to move forward with Garoppolo.  It was Garoppolo's contract year, and something had to be done.   Bill wanted to go with his QB of the future, and Brady didn't want to go.  Kraft decided Brady would stay.  The year Jimmy left, the Pats lost the Super Bowl to the Eagles.   The following year, still with Brady, they won it over the Rams.  

 

Now, some would like to say that history proved Kraft was right, but I think it's important to remember that Belichick had a long history of letting his top talent go after their peak but before they were ready to retire.  Lawyer Milloy was the first, but there were a lot of guys along the way.  Belichick was always moving younger guys into the lineup, and that's what kept him on top.   He wanted to do it with Brady, because he thought he could get it done with Garoppolo, and maybe he was right.  If he WAS right, the Pats would still have a franchise QB at the top of his game.  (I know, Jimmy hasn't gotten it done elsewhere, but there are a lot players who played their best football when they played for the Patriots.)  

 

Thanks for posting this.   It's interesting.  

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10 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

Great stuff.   The article doesn't quite say it, but I remember there was reporting at the time that Belichick wanted to move forward with Garoppolo.  It was Garoppolo's contract year, and something had to be done.   Bill wanted to go with his QB of the future, and Brady didn't want to go.  Kraft decided Brady would stay.  The year Jimmy left, the Pats lost the Super Bowl to the Eagles.   The following year, still with Brady, they won it over the Rams.  

 

Now, some would like to say that history proved Kraft was right, but I think it's important to remember that Belichick had a long history of letting his top talent go after their peak but before they were ready to retire.  Lawyer Milloy was the first, but there were a lot of guys along the way.  Belichick was always moving younger guys into the lineup, and that's what kept him on top.   He wanted to do it with Brady, because he thought he could get it done with Garoppolo, and maybe he was right.  If he WAS right, the Pats would still have a franchise QB at the top of his game.  (I know, Jimmy hasn't gotten it done elsewhere, but there are a lot players who played their best football when they played for the Patriots.)  

 

Thanks for posting this.   It's interesting.  


part of that was contract costs for cap management.  They only kept a handful of veterans and replaced others snd went out to UFA to target certain talent levels.

 

I understand the logic of moving on at QB to a new person.

 

I also know Bellichek really want to prove he was the winner without Brady

 

maybe he felt as an outsider for not getting included in the Kraft  “side sauce”

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Just now, Man with No Name said:

Brady didn't do all that DESPITE bill belichick. He did it TO SPITE bill belicheck. He's the michael jordan of football. Take It Personally Michael Jordan GIF

The motivational gift/tool that kept on giving for the Patsies way, way too long. You're probably on to something there.  

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20 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

Great stuff.   The article doesn't quite say it, but I remember there was reporting at the time that Belichick wanted to move forward with Garoppolo.  It was Garoppolo's contract year, and something had to be done.   Bill wanted to go with his QB of the future, and Brady didn't want to go.  Kraft decided Brady would stay.  The year Jimmy left, the Pats lost the Super Bowl to the Eagles.   The following year, still with Brady, they won it over the Rams.  

 

Now, some would like to say that history proved Kraft was right, but I think it's important to remember that Belichick had a long history of letting his top talent go after their peak but before they were ready to retire.  Lawyer Milloy was the first, but there were a lot of guys along the way.  Belichick was always moving younger guys into the lineup, and that's what kept him on top.   He wanted to do it with Brady, because he thought he could get it done with Garoppolo, and maybe he was right.  If he WAS right, the Pats would still have a franchise QB at the top of his game.  (I know, Jimmy hasn't gotten it done elsewhere, but there are a lot players who played their best football when they played for the Patriots.)  

 

Thanks for posting this.   It's interesting.  


Belichick wasn’t right.

 

The Patriots never would have accomplished what they did during Garopplo’s time there if he was the starter. No way, no how.

Edited by Beast
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of course, then there's the other question: did Belichick looking to replace Brady in his mid 30's cause him to turn into a freakishly obsessed avocado smoothie and yoga guy that he wasn't before?

 

Maybe if that never happened Brady doesn't decide in his mid 30's that he is going to make those types of sacrifices and we all could have been saved a lot of heartache and trouble. 

 

Yet another reason to be annoyed with Bill

 

 

 

 

Edited by TheFunPolice
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41 minutes ago, Shaw66 said:

Great stuff.   The article doesn't quite say it, but I remember there was reporting at the time that Belichick wanted to move forward with Garoppolo.  It was Garoppolo's contract year, and something had to be done.   Bill wanted to go with his QB of the future, and Brady didn't want to go.  Kraft decided Brady would stay.  The year Jimmy left, the Pats lost the Super Bowl to the Eagles.   The following year, still with Brady, they won it over the Rams.  

 

Now, some would like to say that history proved Kraft was right, but I think it's important to remember that Belichick had a long history of letting his top talent go after their peak but before they were ready to retire.  Lawyer Milloy was the first, but there were a lot of guys along the way.  Belichick was always moving younger guys into the lineup, and that's what kept him on top.   He wanted to do it with Brady, because he thought he could get it done with Garoppolo, and maybe he was right.  If he WAS right, the Pats would still have a franchise QB at the top of his game.  (I know, Jimmy hasn't gotten it done elsewhere, but there are a lot players who played their best football when they played for the Patriots.)  

 

Thanks for posting this.   It's interesting.  

Actually, I think it started long before this. When BB was in Cleveland, he benched a very popular Bernie Kosar for Vinnie F'ing Testaverde who at that point in his career was a complete bust. As it turns out, Kosar was done and BB was right and Vinnie had a decent back half of his career with the Browns and Jets.

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Belichick is Rex Ryan without Brady. He's no genius.

 

 

Sorry, I sold Rex short. Rex has a much better win/loss record than Bill without Brady. Bill is a bum

Edited by KDIGGZ
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38 minutes ago, djp14150 said:


part of that was contract costs for cap management.  They only kept a handful of veterans and replaced others snd went out to UFA to target certain talent levels.

 

I understand the logic of moving on at QB to a new person.

 

I also know Bellichek really want to prove he was the winner without Brady

 

maybe he felt as an outsider for not getting included in the Kraft  “side sauce”

Is it true Brady took less money than he was worth to build the team, but once he actually wanted to get paid they pretty much told him to go pound sand?

Edited by Gman10
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1 hour ago, KDIGGZ said:

Belichick is Rex Ryan without Brady. He's no genius.

 

 

Sorry, I sold Rex short. Rex has a much better win/loss record than Bill without Brady. Bill is a bum

I hate to use the word genius, but BB is a great defensive coach, maybe the best defensive coach ever. And, he had the good sense to allow Brady to flourish for many years which many defensive coaches would never do. In the year Bledsoe got injured and they won their first SB, as I remember the Patsies were predicted to get the first pick in the draft the next year and BB would be fired. The defense would have kept them from coming close to that but replacing Bledsoe with Brady was the only way they became good enough to make the playoffs and ultimately beat the Lambs.

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Bill knew the odds. If he came to that conclusion every time he'd be right a hell of a lot more than he was wrong. In New England, Brady was the centerpiece of the team around which everything else revolved. In Tampa he was just the final piece of the puzzle - not unlike Stafford with the Rams. He did win one Super Bowl, then had a career season and then promptly looked like a shell of himself. It was worth it for Tampa. Would it have been for New England? I guess Kraft says yes, which is easy in hindsight.

I don't fault a coach for looking at an all time great player and deciding that he has more years behind him than in front. It was Bill's job to make sure the team is perpetually in a state to win, not just year by year.

Edited by BullBuchanan
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The thing with this is that he wasn't necessarily wrong.

 

It's not like Brady was dominant during his time with the Bucs, even when they won the SB in 2020 during his first season there it was behind a physical team that ran the football extremely well (i.e. Playoff Lenny) and a defense that caught fire at the right time. Remember Bucs were 7-5 coming off a loss to the chiefs at home before winning out, including 3 straight road games as a WC, then dominating the Chiefs the 2nd time around in the SB.

 

I think what Belichik underestimated is that even though Brady was well past his prime, you can never truly measure his leadership and how he went to a brand new team and made everyone around him that much better.

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2 hours ago, Beast said:


Belichick wasn’t right.

 

The Patriots never would have accomplished what they did during Garopplo’s time there if he was the starter. No way, no how.

Well, yes, Belichick probably was wrong about Garoppolo.   I think that's an open question, thought, because Garoppolo's failures in the league were based on his team's expecting him to be more than he was.  Part of Belichick's gift was to win by building around guys who were good and consistent, and by not asking them to do things they couldn't do.  There's no way to know whether Garoppolo would have succeeded under Belichick's tutelage. 

 

But my point wasn't that Belichick was right or wrong about Garoppolo.  My point was that Belichick's system was to move on from talent a few years too early rather than a year or two too late.  He did it with Gilmore and with the stud corner before him.   Someone else, said that he also did it for cap reasons, which is true.   But the point's the same - Belichick was willing to move on from talent before they were done.  Look at Wilfork.  They were paying him $7 million a year, declined their option for another year, and he signed with Houston for $4.5 million per year.   So, they presumably could have kept him for $4.5 million and didn't bite.    

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