Walsh sends NFL tapes that don't include Rams' walkthrough
AP Sports
Posted: 2008-05-07 22:55:22
NEW YORK (AP) -Former Patriots video assistant Matt Walsh sent the NFL eight
videotapes that show New England violated league rules by recording opposing
coaches' playcalling signals.
The tapes include signals by coaches of five opponents in six games from
2000-02, but don't include video from the St. Louis Rams' walkthrough before
the 2002 Super Bowl.
The NFL said it received a letter from Michael Levy, the lawyer for Walsh,
detailing the tapes that were scheduled to arrive Thursday at the league's New
York offices.
The tapes sent to the NFL show the Patriots recorded signals in
regular-season games against Miami, Buffalo, Cleveland and San Diego, and
against Pittsburgh in the 2002 AFC championship game.
"This is consistent with what the Patriots had admitted they had been
doing, consistent with what we already knew," NFL spokesman Greg Aiello told
The Associated Press.
The New York Times first reported the story on its Web site Wednesday night.
Walsh, who worked for New England from 1997 to 2003, agreed to turn over the
tapes and other evidence by Thursday. He's scheduled to meet with NFL
commissioner Roger Goodell next Tuesday about New England's taping of opposing
teams.
"We're not going to comment," said Stacey James, the Patriots' vice
president for media relations. He added he expected the team will wait to issue
a statement until after Walsh meets with Goodell.
Walsh's name first surfaced just before this year's Super Bowl, nearly five
months after the Patriots were sanctioned for illegally taping the New York
Jets in the season opener - a $500,000 fine for coach Bill Belichick, a
$250,000 fine for the organization, and the loss of a first-round draft pick.
At that time, the Boston Herald also reported an unnamed Patriots employee
illegally taped the Rams' final walkthrough before the 2002 title game, when
New England, a two-touchdown underdog, upset St. Louis 20-17.
Goodell previously has said he was fully prepared to crack down again on the
Patriots if his meeting with Walsh uncovered a tape made of the Rams'
walkthrough practice.
"Mr. Walsh has never claimed to have a tape of the walkthrough," Levy told
The New York Times. "Mr. Walsh has never been the source of any of the media
speculation about such a tape. Mr. Walsh was not the source for the Feb. 2
Boston Herald article."
After more than two months of negotiations, lawyers for the league and Walsh
finally reached an agreement on April 23 on terms that will allow him to talk
with Goodell. They include an agreement by the Patriots not to sue Walsh and to
pay his legal expenses and his airfare to New York from Hawaii, where he is now
a golf pro.
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05/07/08 21:54 CDT