I was not alone in surprise that Butler effectively did not play in the Super Bowl. Even not starting, as Nick Foles continued to keep just out of reach in the back and forth, passing for 373 yards, 3 TDs, 1 TD rec, but when the Eagles seemed to lose some momentum and then lost the lead - fresh legs of one of their top defenders seemed like a easy choice. Yet Butler played one snap and that was on special teams. His tears during the National Anthem make much more sense after the game.
Rumors have swirled and now some thread of truth seems to be working its way out even through the Patriots are tight-lipped and Butler has not said anything behind their reasoning either.
Ian Rappaport has tweeted
Sickness and practice aside, Belichick is a well-known stickler for the rules, so Rappaport's use of 'minor' does not have much context outside of what Belichick thinks.
Now Brandon Browner has posted to Instagram yesterday saying (bold mine):
If true - if - then wow!
I don't know if this is the popular opinion however I can respect Belichick sticking to his guns on this. Tactically, this may have been the same as a great general falling on his own sword instead of making use of ever resource available to achieve victory. This is ironic considering the... oh, how to put this discretely?... questionable actions the Patriots have been involved in, most notably during Spy Gate.
People have a way of compartmentalizing, even justifying some behavior while not allowing other behavior. If anything, BB seems to like to flirt with the boundaries of what is allowed - find that edge where things are greyish, and exploit it.
With respect to Butler this seems totally in character for Belichick. To him this is not a grey area. Some rules are so black and white, so absolute, that 'minor' is irrelevant. He has a reputation of being stubborn, a reputation of demanding people 'just do their job', you fumble on the field and you sit. This isn't a secret to New England that we are just now hearing about, everybody knows this. Everybody.
Butler said the team gave up on him. Browner much as says the same. Many people are pointing the finger at Belichick for making the wrong decision.
If this is true, shouldn't the question be whether Butler gave up on the team - letting them and his coaches down?
I don't know what I would have done in that situation, but then I've never been nor will ever be. BB has been in the SB eight times now and, who knows, might be again. You don't get there that many times for being soft and pushed over. Tactically, it was the wrong choice. But in the bigger picture? It sums up everything that has made BB who he is as a 5-time SB winning coach.
Rumors have swirled and now some thread of truth seems to be working its way out even through the Patriots are tight-lipped and Butler has not said anything behind their reasoning either.
Ian Rappaport has tweeted
My understanding is the benching of #Patriots CB Malcolm Butler happened because of a perfect storm of issues: Sickness, a rough week of practice, and a minor rule violation believed to be related to curfew. A complicated matter.
Sickness and practice aside, Belichick is a well-known stickler for the rules, so Rappaport's use of 'minor' does not have much context outside of what Belichick thinks.
Now Brandon Browner has posted to Instagram yesterday saying (bold mine):
He not the first to get caught with weed, 🤷🏾*♂️, curfew also meant we are not allowed to have guest especially women. I’ve ate chicken(Popeyes) in the room with a player and his wife after curfew. Bill seen that look in Toms eyes last night and thought we can win without our role players. Tom played the greatest game last name in super bowl history (statistically). But when you do wrong, nothing good can come out of that. Tom did everything he could do last night. Tom Brady was the goat last night. Malcolm’s presence was missed and felt last night. #facts
If true - if - then wow!
I don't know if this is the popular opinion however I can respect Belichick sticking to his guns on this. Tactically, this may have been the same as a great general falling on his own sword instead of making use of ever resource available to achieve victory. This is ironic considering the... oh, how to put this discretely?... questionable actions the Patriots have been involved in, most notably during Spy Gate.
People have a way of compartmentalizing, even justifying some behavior while not allowing other behavior. If anything, BB seems to like to flirt with the boundaries of what is allowed - find that edge where things are greyish, and exploit it.
With respect to Butler this seems totally in character for Belichick. To him this is not a grey area. Some rules are so black and white, so absolute, that 'minor' is irrelevant. He has a reputation of being stubborn, a reputation of demanding people 'just do their job', you fumble on the field and you sit. This isn't a secret to New England that we are just now hearing about, everybody knows this. Everybody.
Butler said the team gave up on him. Browner much as says the same. Many people are pointing the finger at Belichick for making the wrong decision.
If this is true, shouldn't the question be whether Butler gave up on the team - letting them and his coaches down?
I don't know what I would have done in that situation, but then I've never been nor will ever be. BB has been in the SB eight times now and, who knows, might be again. You don't get there that many times for being soft and pushed over. Tactically, it was the wrong choice. But in the bigger picture? It sums up everything that has made BB who he is as a 5-time SB winning coach.
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