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Tuesday, February 05, 2008
Thor Tolo :: Townhall.com Columnist
Bill Belichick: More Than Meets the Eye
by Thor Tolo
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Before winning last season’s Super Bowl, Tony Dungy was a coach best remembered for his moving eulogy at the funeral of his son, who had taken his own life a year earlier.

Long before coaching the New England Patriots to 18 straight wins, but losing this year’s Super Bowl, the fiercely stubborn and occasionally boorish Bill Belichick delivered a tribute every bit as emotional.

However, 15 years ago this month there were no television cameras in the room and the only microphone was at the podium from where the young head coach of the Cleveland Browns honored long-time sportscaster Nev Chandler as he began withering away from cancer.

If you had a glass, he said holding up his empty water glass and you put in “a dash of class and a dash of kindness,” stirred in some warmth and his love for family, put in big doses of passion and professionalism, then stirred it all up, “you’d have Nev in your glass.”

He continued, “This man is one of the most decent men I’ve ever met. The world needs more Nevs.”

It was a stunning moment on a cold, snowy night inside a suburban Holiday Inn south of Cleveland. This was a man who had managed to alienate almost everyone—from the team’s owner to the daily newspaper’s beat reporter.

Looking out at the couple hundred folks who had braved a storm to roast the play-by-play voice of Belichick’s team, I saw the same wet eyes Nev was noticing through his own tears.

Sitting back down in the seat next to mine along the dais that evening, the most misunderstood coach in the National Football League smiled and asked how he’d done. Amazed that he asked, I glanced toward Nev and asked the coach to decide for himself.

Belichick looked across the dais, then stared down. I truly don’t believe he had any idea how much his words meant to Nev’s wife and children seated just a few feet away. Nine years later, he did.

On January 29, 2002, Belichick strolled out on the Superdome floor in New Orleans to coach his first Super Bowl with the Patriots. He glanced at my name tag and grinned. Continued...

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About The Author
Thor Tolo is the host of “Live From Seattle.” His program is heard daily on KGNW-AM 820 in Seattle and at KGNW.com.

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Thor Tolo
Thor,
Wow its a long from the St. Peter Herald.
You out kicked your coverage.
Take care
Bense

greatest coach of all time
As I just explained to Thor, he did not authorize illegal videotaping, he authorized videotaping. He didn't think it was illegal,
and if you read the policies, you should agree. It states, to the effect, that changes you make based on the video, can't be used in the game. But, what game, the same game? Or a future game? It doesn't say. Clearly, there's not enough time to make changes at half time based on a video. The video has to be watched, signals deciphered, new plays figured out, and the players taught the new plays. In 10-15 minutes, plus the players have to pee, have a cigarette, Gatorade, whatever else it is they do at halftime. In addition, they have to go over their mistakes in the first half. So the policy must mean future games, right? That's what Bill thought.
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