By Gary Myers
A long, long time ago ... the Beatles and the Rolling Stones came across the Atlantic in search of fame and fortune. What's more, they succeeded by any standard. Most music fans enjoyed both bands, while some of them picked a side if asked who they preferred.
Naturally, there was a way for outsiders to cash in on the argument. The odd magazine popped up on the newsstand entitled "Beatles vs. Rolling Stones." That sounds like there was a big competition between them, which would be an overstatement, even if such publications were an excuse for young fans to cut photographs out and paste them on scrapbooks
Such magazines came to mind when I saw the title of a football book, "Brady vs. Belichick," and the discussion is still light-hearted but a bit more serious than the musical version 60 years ago. In 20 seasons, the New England Patriots won six NFL championships, played in nine Super Bowls and 13 AFC championship games, and won 17 division titles. That's the greatest run in league history, and there were two major common denominators in that stretch: Quarterback Tom Brady and head coach Bill Belichick. (Owner Bob Kraft also was involved, naturally, but had less direct involvement in the fate of the team on the field.)
But which one deserves the lion's share of the credit for the dynasty? That's the task veteran football writer Gary Myers takes on with this book, which is a rather thankless job. After all, both Brady and Belichick are at worst in the discussion as the greatest person to work at their respective occupations.
To review the situation, Myers essentially writes something of an informal history of the dynasty, jumping through specific episodes of the Patriots' past. With two decades to cover, there's plenty of material available to review.
On the good side, it's been five years since Brady fled to Tampa Bay and ended the relationship with the Patriots. (Tom spent three years with the Bucs before retiring, winning one more Super Bowl along the way.) That means some football people are more open about expressing opinions. Myers talked to some former players, opponents, coaches, etc. in his research. That means there are some good stories and opinions that come out now that are "safe" to discuss.
Belichick comes off with single-minded devotion toward making the team better each and every day he was the coach. He didn't exactly spare his feelings along the way, often criticizing everyone from Brady all the way to the last man on the roster. It doesn't sound like anyone was too anxious to come to work, even if they liked the end result. It's easy to think of a comment made about Scotty Bowman, who coached the dynastic Montreal Canadiens teams of the 1970s. It was said that the players hated Bowman on 364 days of the year, and liked him after they won the Stanley Cup.
Brady, meanwhile, was smart enough to realize that he needed to be one of the boys in the locker room no matter how wealthy and famous he became. Brady probably left millions of dollars on the table in his contracts in an attempt to try to have a better team around him. He also won over the offensive lineman by showing respect for their efforts and never thinking he wasn't "one of the boys" at heart.
Myers winds his way through tales of the dynasty in a leisurely way, jumping around a bit in the process. Perhaps the biggest problem with the book is that the premise expressed in the title is unanswerable. Basketball coach John Wooden once summed up his thoughts on such as things by saying, "No coach can win without talent, but some coaches can't win with it." In other words, it takes coaches and players working together in order to have a chance at something special. The answer to the "Brady or Belichick" question - who was more responsible - depends more on your orientation than anything else, and we know that from page one. I would guess this won't change many minds, either way.
The Patriots' great run hasn't exactly been underreported over the years, and you can be excused for being a little wary of the subject at the point and not needed to know more. But fans of those teams probably have an insatiable appetite for information and stories about the era, and they'll enjoy the insights offered in "Brady vs. Belichick"
Three stars
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