Sports

SPYGATE WON’T GO AWAY

WASHINGTON – Bill Belichick has been illegally taping opponents’ defensive signals since he became the Patriots’ coach in 2000, according to Sen. Arlen Specter, who said NFL commissioner Roger Goodell told him that during a meeting yesterday.

“There was confirmation that there has been taping since 2000, when Coach Belichick took over,” Specter said.

Specter said Goodell gave him that information during the 1-hour, 40-minute meeting, which was requested by Specter so the commissioner could explain his reasons for destroying the Spygate tapes and notes.

“There were a great many questions answered by Commissioner Goodell,” Specter, the senior Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, told reporters after the meeting. “I found a lot of questions unanswerable because of the tapes and notes had been destroyed.”

Goodell said Belichick told him he believed the taping was legal; Goodell said he did not concur.

“He said that’s always been his interpretation since he’s been the head coach,” the commissioner said. “We are going to agree to disagree on the facts.”

Specter, from Pennsylvania, wants to talk to other league officials about what exactly was taped and which games may have been compromised. “We have a right to have honest football games,” he said.

Goodell noted that “we were the ones that disclosed” the Patriots’ illegal taping of the Jets’ defensive signals in Week 1 of last season. Further, Goodell said, they had an admission by Belichick.

“I have nothing to hide,” Goodell said.

Goodell also told Specter that that he doesn’t regret destroying the Spygate tapes or the notes. “I think it was the right thing to do,” Goodell said.

Still, Specter wants to know why penalties were imposed on Belichick before the full extent of the wrongdoing was known and the tapes destroyed in a two-week span. Asked if he thinks there was a coverup, Specter demurred.

“There was an enormous amount of haste,” he said.

Specter scoffed at the reasons Goodell gave for destroying the tapes and notes, particularly about trying to keep them out of competitors’ hands and because Belichick had admitted to the taping.

“What’s that got to do with it? There’s an admission of guilt, you preserve the evidence,” Specter said. “All you have to do is lock up the tapes.”

Goodell also said he reserves the right to reopen the investigation if more information is uncovered. AP