All things Belichick

Nice try, Kyle Shanahan.

It surely would have been a coup if Bill Belichick took Shanahan up on his offer to “do whatever he wanted to do” in joining the San Francisco 49ers coaching staff. Shanahan, despite blowing the decision on the overtime coin toss that enabled the Kansas City Chiefs to win a repeat crown in Super Bowl 58, is one of the NFL’s sharpest offensive minds. Belichick, despite the decline of the New England Patriots under his watch since Tom Brady’s departure, is still a whiz when it comes to designing defenses.

Putting those two heads together might have been some kind of special.

“I threw it out to him,” Shanahan told The Athletic’s Tim Kawakami on “The TK Show” podcast. “He loves football so much that you never know what he…I can’t believe that he’s not a head coach of a team right now.

“I know what I would do if I was an owner, so that shocks me, and the last thing you want to do is insult someone like Bill Belichick. But I know he just loves ball in its simplest form, so I threw it all out to him, whatever he wanted to do.”

At the time, Shanahan was searching for his third defensive coordinator in as many years. The opening was ultimately filled by Nick Sorensen. Even if Belichick was the first choice, the process still would have had to comply with the Rooney Rule. Yet Shanahan can't be blamed for swinging for the fences.

“I was like, ‘Would you be interested?’ “ Shanahan added. “And he was very nice and appreciative, but he politely turned me down.”

New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick walks to the field before the game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Acrisure Stadium.

New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick walks to the field before the game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Acrisure Stadium.
Undoubtedly, as Shanahan alluded to, it is rather weird that as the remainder of NFL teams opened training camps this week, Belichick is absent from the coaching mix after mutually parting ways with the Patriots following the 4-13 finish last season that marked his worst season as a head coach.

Call it one of the biggest surprises from another crazy NFL offseason, even with the personnel stumbles in recent years that Belichick oversaw and the blunder in turning over his offense (and young quarterback Mac Jones) to Matt Patricia and Joe Judge.

Aside from the Patriots, seven NFL teams had an opening for coach and only one team – the Atlanta Falcons – saw fit to even interview Belichick, 72, who is 15 victories from surpassing Don Shula’s record of 347 triumphs and becoming the winningest coach in NFL history. The Falcons, though, picked Raheem Morris over Belichick and others. And the buzz about Belichick during the last coaching cycle was flush with questions about how much control he’d want over personnel, given the autonomy he maintained in Foxborough. And some may also wonder how well he meshes with a younger generation of athletes.

Sure, it’s true, too, that Belichick’s tally of losses is historic. His 165 regular-season setbacks ties with Dan Reeves and Jeff Fisher for most ever, and his 178 losses, including playoffs, leaves him in a dead heat with Tom Landry. Without Brady, Belichick went 29-38 in his final four years in New England, with zero division titles and zero playoff wins.

Take your pick about what apparently scared off so many teams needing a coach. My guess is that it came down to the threat of power plays, with most teams structured to roll with GMs making the call on personnel decisions.

Anyway, rising young coaches including Mike Macdonald (Seattle Seahawks), Antonio Pierce (Las Vegas Raiders) and Dave Canales (Carolina Panthers), and second-shot coaches including Morris and Dan Quinn (Washington Commanders), are running teams this summer instead of the coach who won six Super Bowls during his 24-year Patriots reign. Still a stunner.

Belichick declined an interview request this week from USA TODAY Sports, indicating during a text-message exchange that he’s received more than 100 such requests.

“And if I do one…” he replied.

It would have been ideal to capture Belichick’s thoughts about his sabbatical – and how much his body clock has been thrown off without a camp to run – directly from the source.

Instead, he graciously apologized for being an “inconvenience” for this particular column theme.

Yes, Belichick, does have his sense of humor.

Do you realize the last time this noted historian wasn’t in camp with an NFL team? It was 1974. Kids, that’s the year Derek Jeter was born, Richard Nixon resigned from the White House after the Watergate scandal and Muhammad Ali and George Foreman engaged in “The Rumble in the Jungle." In other words, it was a long time ago.

Make no mistake. Belichick is still hungry to coach again – but hardly so desperate to take on a complementary role with the 49ers. Talk about giving up power. He’s now positioned to recharge his batteries and, well, undoubtedly sharpen his NFL intel from another vantage point, conceivably for use at a later date. His presence on the NFL landscape will still be huge, given the three high-profile media roles he’s signed on for – weekly appearances on “The Pat McAfee Show” that airs on ESPN, the “ManningCast” that provides an alternative on ESPN2 for “Monday Night Football” games and a slot on the “Inside the NFL” show that now airs on The CW Network.

Ironically, the TV gigs might also provide Belichick – nobody’s media darling – an opportunity to display another side of himself that just might appeal to particular fan bases…and perhaps to particular team owners.

In any event, it’s on to must-see TV for NFL fans. And a reminder that Belichick – whose name will pop up as hot-seat speculation emerges – is probably not done yet.
 
@LordSensei1958
would you mind putting the links for stuff? i'd like to bookmark them sometimes. that was a good one.
 
This is behind "The Athletic" paywall:

Bill Belichick landed his first NFL coaching gig in 1975 as a “special assistant” on Ted Marchibroda’s Baltimore Colts. To put that in perspective, it was so long ago that 48-year-old George Blanda — George Blanda! — was still playing in the NFL. It was so long ago that Robert Kraft was the little-known part-owner of the Boston Lobsters of World Team Tennis. It was so long ago that most NFL fans under age 50 have no memory of the Colts being based in Baltimore.

This is the Bill Belichick of 2024: He’s a combination rock star/raconteur on tour, mobbed everywhere he goes as he talks about the inner workings of football (and lacrosse!) and spins tales about his experiences from a half-century in the NFL.

If you’ve ever seen the movie “History of the World: Part 1,” you may remember Mel Brooks saying, “It’s good to be the king.” And so it is with Belichick. It’s good to be Bill. Yes, it must be noted for bookkeeping purposes that Belichick was fired as head coach of the New England Patriots following the conclusion of the 2023 season, but for the time being it looks as though he enjoys being liberated from the stresses of being an NFL sideline boss.

He’s wealthy, and he looks healthy. Belichick, 72, has been spotted in the company of a younger woman, prompting reactions ranging from pearl-clutching to attaboys in the public opinion peanut gallery. He’s been signed up for a smorgasbord of well-compensated media gigs. He was spotted taking in a spring football practice at the University of Washington, where his son Steve is the Huskies’ new defensive coordinator. He attended a Northwestern University women’s lacrosse game against Ohio State.



Oh, and there was that springtime visit with the Nebraska football program, which included a clinic with the players and a long, in-depth skull session with the coaching staff. For those who didn’t catch Cornhusker coach Matt Rhule bubbling over Bill, here are some highlights:

“He is so smart, has seen so much, that he can make the complex so simple, that it humbles you and embarrasses you,” Rhule said. “I was embarrassed yesterday listening to him, how smart he is, how simple it was.

“He went 4 1/2 hours just with the coaches — forget the clinic,” said the Nebraska coach, who was born on Jan. 31, 1975, which is right around the time Belichick was settling at Wesleyan University for the spring semester of his senior year. “He came in and met with our coaching staff. Three-and-a-half hours in, I was, like, ‘Coach, would you like a water? Or coffee? Would you like to use the restroom?’ Because I desperately had to use the restroom.

“And he’s like, ‘I’m fine, man,’” Rhule said. “And I was, like, yesssss sir. Just sitting there and just talking, and his recalls from things 15 years ago … the only reason why we don’t get through more information is because he’s having to slow down to make sure you know what he’s saying.”

See? Good to be Bill. For anyone who thinks he’s locked away on Nantucket, twirling ball bearings in his hand and pining for the glitz and glitter of the NFL, that doesn’t appear to be the case.



View: https://x.com/i/status/1816154110246174790


And yet … it makes sense that Belichick eventually will resurface as a head coach, and sooner rather than later. All it’ll take is one owner to get their blood boiling over an early season, late-in-the-afternoon loss, and then, presto: There’s Bill Belichick at the introductory news conference, saying how happy he is to be the new head coach of (enter team name here).

The what’s-in-it-for-Bill part, besides a truckload of dough, is that Belichick desperately wants to surpass the late Don Shula for all-time NFL coaching victories. That’s mostly true, sure. Shula amassed 347 head-coaching victories (playoffs included) during his 33 seasons with the Miami Dolphins (1970-1995) and the old Baltimore Colts (1963-1969), and Belichick, with 333 coaching victories, needs just 15 more happy postgame handshakes to move into the top spot.



If you’re wondering why I’m putting it out there that this is mostly true, it’s because some context is required. Yes, we all have egos, and as such, geez, to be recognized as the all-time NFL leader in anything is pretty cool.

There’s also the crowd that believes Belichick is looking to reach into the hereafter and deliver Shula some sort of celestial payback. Shula, remember, had some rather unflattering things to say after Belichick’s 2007 Patriots were caught secretly recording defensive signals being relayed by Jets coaches.

“The Spygate thing has diminished what they’ve accomplished,” Shula told the New York Daily News. “You would hate to have that attached to your accomplishments. They’ve got it.”

Shula was also quoted as referring to Belichick as “Beli-cheat.” Not very original, but extra weighty considering Shula’s place in NFL history.

But that very word — history — is why Belichick wants to coach in the NFL long enough to break the record. Keeping in mind Bill hasn’t invited me down to the island so we can talk this over while munching on grilled paillard of king salmon at Ships Inn, I believe it’s the history that calls to him.



We’ve all heard the stories about Belichick and football history, how he owns an extensive collection of weighty tomes on the subject. We’ve heard about his Friday news conferences during the Patriot years and how, with the game plan for Sunday having been mapped out, the media questions having all been asked, the interview room now reduced to sturdy beat writers who actually know a thing or two about football, Belichick would meander to football history. It was Story Time with Bill, and he could tell those stories without notes.

Belichick has already made plenty of history. Good heavens, he’s been the coach of six Super Bowl-winning teams. And it’s eight Super Bowl-winning teams if you count his years as a defensive wizard with the New York Giants under Bill Parcells.


View: https://x.com/i/status/1816093194985013387



We can talk ego if you’d like. We can talk Shula payback. But I say it’s the history that inspires Belichick, that motivates him. Until then, there’s Nebraska football and Northwestern women’s lacrosse, along with “Inside the NFL” on The CW, the “Manningcast” on ESPN and other heavy-coin TV gigs.

It’s good to be Bill, all right. For Belichick, it will be even better when he’s registered his 348th coaching victory.
 

Bill Belichick’s much younger girlfriend, Jordon Hudson, 24, has an “open-minded” parent who manages a sex shop in Provincetown, Mass., The Post can reveal.

Lee Hudson, 60, is the business manager at Toys of Eros, a store which sells lingerie, sex toys, erotic books and even boasts its own sex museum.

Lee is said to be very close to her daughter and supports her relationship with the 72-year-old former New England Patriots head coach, despite the 48-year age gap.

Jordon Judson stands with four fellow pageant contestants on stage8
Jordon Hudson (second from left) has competed in various pageants.Pageantupdate website
Jordon Hudson and Bill Belichick each ride a bike alongside each other in a grassy area8
Jordon Hudson and Bill Belichick have been spotted out together on numerous occasions since their relationship began.Matt Symons for NY Post

“Lee wants her children to be happy, it really is that simple,” a source close to the family told The Post.


“Lee has interacted with Bill on many occasions and speaks kindly about him and their relationship.”

The source added Lee keeps an open mind when it comes to people’s relationships, and pointed to her role as business manager of the LGBTQ-friendly sex shop.

A note on the Toys of Eros website says: “From serious discussions about sexual politics, to consulting with our educators, to downright hilarity and crazy fun, our customers make Toys of Eros all that it is.

“Our store is not just a shopping experience, it’s a sexual education! The purpose of our Sex Museum is to preserve and present the history, evolution and cultural significance of human sexuality.”

Lee Hudson and her daughter Jordon Judson lean in and smile for a picture. Jordon is in a dark blue gown and her mom is wearing black.8
Lee Hudson with her youngest daughter, Jordon Hudson, 24.Obtained by NY Post
8
The Toys of Eros store, located in Provincetown, Massachusetts, where Jordon’s mom, Lee, works.Facebook/ Toys of Eros
Jordon Hudson and Bill Belichick smile on a boat.8
Jordon Hudson’s mom approves of her current partner, Bill Belichick (right), despite their 48 year age gap, according to a source close to the family.Alojzije Jankovic/Instagram
Lee, who declined to speak when contacted by The Post, has worked at the store since 2017, according to her LinkedIn page.

Her current role is very different to how things were for the Hudsons when former Bridgewater State University cheerleader Jordon and her three siblings were children.

Jordon’s parents, Lee and Heath Hudson, previously ran a family business, Frenchmans Bay fisheries, out of their home in Hancock, Maine.

They spent years working on fishing boats and harvesting mussels before facing business instability then bankruptcy when the area they operated from was closed off to fisherman and draggers in 2000, according to archive records by the Maine College of Art.

Heath Hudson looks at the camera while on a fishing boat as his baby Jordon Hudson naps in a carrier on the ground.8
Jordon Hudson as a baby with her father Heath Hudson as he worked on a boat in Maine.Obtained by NY Post
To add insult to injury, their boat later sank.

During that time, Lee worried about “feeding her three daughters and her son,” and relied on neighbors, family and friends to bring them food while “fighting to keep the Frenchman’s Bay fisheries alive,” an article in the records shows.

“Jordon clearly gets her open mindedness, entrepreneurial spirit, and will to promote social welfare from her mother,” the family source added.

It is not clear what Jordon’s father, Heath Hudson, 48, makes of his daughter’s relationship with Belichick as he now lives in a different state and could not be reached by The Post.

Belichick and pageant participant Jordon went public with their relationship following his split from ex-girlfriend, Linda Holliday, last year.

Jordon Hudson in pageant costume 8
Hudson has previously competed in Miss USA and Miss Teen USA pageants
Bill Belichick and Jordon Hudson take a selfie while seated on a flight8
Bill Belichick and Jordon Hudson reportedly met on a plane.TMZSports.com
The two reportedly met on a plane a few years ago and have frequently been spotted enjoying time together recently in Nantucket.

The Post captured the two enjoying a relaxing bike ride last week on the island.
 
"Where did you really meet her, Bill?"

"Remember when I said we were going to poll the 5th graders when you asked me about starting Drew or Tom? She was one of the younger sisters of a 5th grader, so I took some time scouting her and decided this was the year."
 
Back in February the Kansas City Chiefs became the first NFL team since the New England Patriots in 2003 and 2004 to repeat as Super Bowl champions. The next challenge for the Chiefs is winning three consecutive Super Bowl titles -- a feat no team has ever achieved.

The Patriots were the last to attempt it in 2005. Injuries and the defense taking a step back were among the factors in the Patriots failing to three-peat. They won the AFC East division with a 10-6 record (they were 14-2 each of the previous two years) and beat the Jacksonville Jaguars in the AFC Wild Card round before losing 27-13 to the Denver Broncos on the road in the Divisional Round.

The head coach of those Patriots teams was Bill Belichick. He also was the defensive coordinator of the New York Giants when they ended the San Francisco 49ers' three-peat bid in 1990. Belichick was asked Monday during his weekly appearance on the Pat McAfee Show about his outlook on the Chiefs and their quest for a third straight title.

Belichick highlighted a few areas, specifically on the Chiefs defense, that could be a concern.

"Overall as a team, run defense, turnovers, I think that’s an area they’re going to want to improve in," Belichick said. "I just think it’s gonna be tough this year. They’re a good team, don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that. I just think this third year, for it all to fall into place three years in a row, is tough. If anybody can do it, it’s probably Kansas City, but it won’t be easy. It won’t be easy.

"I’m not sure how tough the AFC West is gonna be, but in the end, I think they’re gonna have some tough opponents through the course of the season and the playoffs. But Andy (Reid) will have them ready to go. I think they’ll maybe score more than they did last year. We’ll see if they can hold up defensively. They lost a couple of good coverage players, obviously (L'Jarius) Sneed. We’ll see how all that comes together."


View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1825570384655327236


The Chiefs gave up the fourth-most yards per carry (4.5) last season. They also forced the fourth-fewest turnovers. So Belichick is right about improvements needing to be made in those two areas.

The loss of star cornerback L'Jarius Sneed, which Belichick mentioned, is a huge one for Kansas City. His departure in free agency will put even more pressure on young cornerback Trent McDuffie.

Of course, having the best quarterback (and best player) in the sport -- Patrick Mahomes -- is a massive boost to the Chiefs' chances of winning again. The Chiefs are never out of a game because of Mahomes, and he has proven that with several impressive playoff comebacks, including the Super Bowl in 2019 and 2023. And if the offense is even better this season compared to 2023 -- which is a very real possibility -- maybe it won't matter a whole lot if the defense isn't an elite unit.

But winning the Super Bowl once is hard enough. Doing it two years in a row is extraordinarily difficult. A three-peat has proven impossible to this point. It's hard to bet against the Chiefs, but this will be the toughest challenge the core of this team has ever faced.
 
Back in February the Kansas City Chiefs became the first NFL team since the New England Patriots in 2003 and 2004 to repeat as Super Bowl champions. The next challenge for the Chiefs is winning three consecutive Super Bowl titles -- a feat no team has ever achieved.

The Patriots were the last to attempt it in 2005. Injuries and the defense taking a step back were among the factors in the Patriots failing to three-peat. They won the AFC East division with a 10-6 record (they were 14-2 each of the previous two years) and beat the Jacksonville Jaguars in the AFC Wild Card round before losing 27-13 to the Denver Broncos on the road in the Divisional Round.

The head coach of those Patriots teams was Bill Belichick. He also was the defensive coordinator of the New York Giants when they ended the San Francisco 49ers' three-peat bid in 1990. Belichick was asked Monday during his weekly appearance on the Pat McAfee Show about his outlook on the Chiefs and their quest for a third straight title.

Belichick highlighted a few areas, specifically on the Chiefs defense, that could be a concern.

"Overall as a team, run defense, turnovers, I think that’s an area they’re going to want to improve in," Belichick said. "I just think it’s gonna be tough this year. They’re a good team, don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that. I just think this third year, for it all to fall into place three years in a row, is tough. If anybody can do it, it’s probably Kansas City, but it won’t be easy. It won’t be easy.

"I’m not sure how tough the AFC West is gonna be, but in the end, I think they’re gonna have some tough opponents through the course of the season and the playoffs. But Andy (Reid) will have them ready to go. I think they’ll maybe score more than they did last year. We’ll see if they can hold up defensively. They lost a couple of good coverage players, obviously (L'Jarius) Sneed. We’ll see how all that comes together."


View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1825570384655327236


The Chiefs gave up the fourth-most yards per carry (4.5) last season. They also forced the fourth-fewest turnovers. So Belichick is right about improvements needing to be made in those two areas.

The loss of star cornerback L'Jarius Sneed, which Belichick mentioned, is a huge one for Kansas City. His departure in free agency will put even more pressure on young cornerback Trent McDuffie.

Of course, having the best quarterback (and best player) in the sport -- Patrick Mahomes -- is a massive boost to the Chiefs' chances of winning again. The Chiefs are never out of a game because of Mahomes, and he has proven that with several impressive playoff comebacks, including the Super Bowl in 2019 and 2023. And if the offense is even better this season compared to 2023 -- which is a very real possibility -- maybe it won't matter a whole lot if the defense isn't an elite unit.

But winning the Super Bowl once is hard enough. Doing it two years in a row is extraordinarily difficult. A three-peat has proven impossible to this point. It's hard to bet against the Chiefs, but this will be the toughest challenge the core of this team has ever faced.

The Chiefs have also gotten remarkably lucky on the injury front.
 

The Pro Football Hall of Fame has announced several changes to its selection rules, and one of them could put Bill Belichick in Canton in 2026.
Previously, coaches had to be out of the game for five seasons before they could be inducted into the Hall of Fame. But the new rule announced today is that coaches only have to be out of the game for one season before they are eligible for Hall of Fame selection. The selection process for the Class of 2025 has already begun, so Belichick won’t be eligible to be inducted next summer, but he will be eligible for the Class of 2026 if he doesn’t get another coaching job before then.
Under the old rules, Belichick wouldn’t have been eligible until the Class of 2029.
It’s also possible that Belichick could get selected to the Hall of Fame after the 2025 season and then hired to be a head coach again for the 2026 season, which would result in a Hall of Fame coach actively roaming the sidelines.
Under the new rules, one coach will be a finalist for each Hall of Fame class. Belichick, the six-time Super Bowl-winning head coach, is easily the coach with the best Hall of Fame résumé, so there’s every reason to believe he will be a Hall of Fame finalist as soon as he’s eligible, which will be 2026, if he hasn’t been hired by another team first.
If Belichick is hired by another team, that re-sets the clock on when he would be Hall of Fame eligible. Pete Carroll, who won one Super Bowl and reached another, would be the next-strongest coaching candidate in 2026 if Belichick is back on the sidelines by then.
 

The Pro Football Hall of Fame has announced several changes to its selection rules, and one of them could put Bill Belichick in Canton in 2026.
Previously, coaches had to be out of the game for five seasons before they could be inducted into the Hall of Fame. But the new rule announced today is that coaches only have to be out of the game for one season before they are eligible for Hall of Fame selection. The selection process for the Class of 2025 has already begun, so Belichick won’t be eligible to be inducted next summer, but he will be eligible for the Class of 2026 if he doesn’t get another coaching job before then.
Under the old rules, Belichick wouldn’t have been eligible until the Class of 2029.
It’s also possible that Belichick could get selected to the Hall of Fame after the 2025 season and then hired to be a head coach again for the 2026 season, which would result in a Hall of Fame coach actively roaming the sidelines.
Under the new rules, one coach will be a finalist for each Hall of Fame class. Belichick, the six-time Super Bowl-winning head coach, is easily the coach with the best Hall of Fame résumé, so there’s every reason to believe he will be a Hall of Fame finalist as soon as he’s eligible, which will be 2026, if he hasn’t been hired by another team first.
If Belichick is hired by another team, that re-sets the clock on when he would be Hall of Fame eligible. Pete Carroll, who won one Super Bowl and reached another, would be the next-strongest coaching candidate in 2026 if Belichick is back on the sidelines by then.
i don't like the special rule for coaches. just like i hated the special category that was created so that NaPolian could get in.
 
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