logo
Bill Belichick fires back at Robert Kraft's ‘big risk' comment in rare move

Bill Belichick fires back at Robert Kraft's ‘big risk' comment in rare move

New York Post5 days ago
It appears there hasn't been any thawing in the relationship between Bill Belichick and Patriots owner Robert Kraft.
In a highly unusual move, Belichick has responded to comments Kraft made last month in which the owner said he took a 'big risk' by giving up a first-round pick to steal Belichick away from the Jets in 2000.
'As I told Robert multiple times through the years, I took a big risk by taking the New England Patriots head coaching job,' Belichick told ESPN. 'I already had an opportunity to be the Head Coach of the New York Jets, but the ownership situation was unstable.'
5 Patriots owner Robert Kraft (l.) and Bill Belichick (r.) during a press conference announcing Belichick's departure from the team on Jan. 11, 2024.
AFP via Getty Images
There was a bidding war for the Jets at the time between eventual winner Woody Johnson and Charles Dolan in the wake of former owner Leon Hess' death.
Belichick noted that concerns also engulfed the Patriots' opening.
'I had been warned by multiple previous Patriots' coaches, as well as other members of other NFL organizations and the media, that the New England job was going to come with many internal obstacles,' Belichick told ESPN. 'I made it clear that we would have to change the way the team was managed to regain the previously attained success.'
5 Robert Kraft speaking on the 'Dudes on Dudes' podcast at Fanatics Fest on June 20, 2025.
Darren Agboh/Shutterstock
During an appearance last month on ex-Patriots stars Rob Gronkowski and Julian Edelman's 'Dudes on Dudes' podcast at Fanatics Fest, Kraft said his decision to hire Belichick, whom he gave roster control to, was the best decision he's made as the team's owner, noting he got questioned for giving up a first-round pick for a coach who had a 36-44 record over five seasons leading the Browns.
'I don't know if there are any Jets fans here. I think getting Bill Belichick to come to the Patriots in [2000] was a big risk, and I got hammered in the Boston area, but he was with us for 24 years,' Kraft told the crowd at Javits Center. 'And we did OK.'
After going 5-11 in his first season as the Patriots' head coach, Belichick led them to a Super Bowl title the following season as Tom Brady emerged as a franchise QB after Drew Bledsoe was sidelined by an early-season crushing hit from the Jets' Mo Lewis.
5 Robert Kraft (l.) and Bill Belichick (r.) after the Patriots won Super Bowl XXXVIII on Feb. 1, 2004.
AFP via Getty Images
Belichick, Kraft and Brady ultimately won six Super Bowls in New England, with Brady earning another ring with the Buccaneers.
The 73-year-old Belichick, now he head coach at UNC after a stunning move to the college ranks, told ESPN he 'appreciated Robert giving me the opportunity' to shake up the Patriots' roster, but said 'you'll have to ask Robert' why he described Belichick's hiring as a 'big risk.'
Belichick makes no mention of Kraft in his book 'The Art of Winning: Lessons from My Life in Football,' which was released in May.
5 Tom Brady (l.) and Robert Kraft (r.) at the FIFA Club World Cup final between Chelsea and PSG at MetLife Stadium on July 13, 2025.
Getty Images
He was asked about Kraft's conspicuous absence in the book during his disastrous 'CBS Sunday Morning' interview in April.
'[The book is] about my life lessons in football and it's really more about the ones I experienced directly,' Belichick said during the interview.
While Belichick's departure from the Patriots following a 4-13 season in 2023 was portrayed as 'mutual,' Kraft has since described the coach's exit as a firing.
Asked about that phrasing during the CBS interview, Belichick said, 'It was a mutual decision.'
5 Bill Belichick (l.) and girlfriend Jordon Hudson (r.) at the NFL Honors in New Orleans on Feb. 6, 2025.
Getty Images
It was after that interview that Belichick's relationship with 24-year-old girlfriend Jordon Hudson became further scrutinized, as Hudson shut down a question about how they met as she loomed off to the side.
'We're not talking about this,' Hudson interjected.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What Ravens fans should know about the Cleveland Browns before training camp begins
What Ravens fans should know about the Cleveland Browns before training camp begins

USA Today

time13 minutes ago

  • USA Today

What Ravens fans should know about the Cleveland Browns before training camp begins

With mid-July fast approaching, we're looking at what Ravens fans should know about the Cleveland Browns before training camp begins. The Ravens still have one of the deepest teams in the NFL after several key departures and the retirement of Michael Pierce during the offseason. Such attrition provides the opportunity for younger players on the roster to assume larger roles while maintaining a Super Bowl window for a team that'll have new starters at several key defensive positions. Over the next two weeks, we will conduct mini-previews of the four AFC North teams as they begin reporting for training camp, with the Ravens' rookies set to report a week from Tuesday. Cleveland is next, with Cincinnati reporting on July 19 and Pittsburgh reporting on July 23. With mid-July fast approaching, we're looking at what Ravens fans should know about the Cleveland Browns before training camp begins. Browns external free agency or trade additions this offseason: LB Jerome Baker QB Joe Flacco WR DeAndre Carter DT Maliek Collins G Teven Jenkins OL Cornelius Lucas CB Nik Needham DE Julian Okwara QB Kenny Pickett (Trade) DE Joe Tryon-Shoyinka Browns external free agency departures this offseason: The Cleveland Browns have seen a few key players depart in free agency this year. Notably, offensive tackle James Hudson III signed with the Giants, wide receiver James Proche II joined the Titans, quarterback Jameis Winston also signed with the Giants, and quarterback Bailey Zappe is now with the Chiefs. Additionally, the Browns released defensive end Ogbo Okoronkwo. D'Anthony Bell signed with the Seahawks. The Browns' remaining unsigned free agents T Hakeem Adeniji - UFATE Jordan Akins - UFAOT Geron Christian - UFARB Nick Chubb - UFAG Michael Dunn - UFADT Michael Dwumfour - ERFARB D'Onta Foreman - UFAFB/C Nick Harris - UFADE James Houston - RFAOLB Khaleke Hudson - UFADT Maurice Hurst II - UFAG Germain Ifedi - UFARB John Kelly Jr. - ERFAS Rodney McLeod Jr. - UFAWR Elijah Moore - UFATE Geoff Swaim - UFAT Jedrick Wills Jr. - UFA Browns key weapons Cleveland's running back room consists of Jerome Ford and Pierre Strong Jr., as Nick Chubb became an unrestricted free agent when the new league began on March 12. In his first season with the Browns, Jerry Jeudy established himself as the top receiver among the corps, leading the pass catchers with 90 receptions for 1,229 receiving yards. They also have young players in Cedric Tillman, David Bell, Jamari Thrash, and Michael Woods II. The tight end room is led by David Njoku, who had the second-most receptions for the Browns in 2024 with 64 for 505 receiving yards and five touchdowns over 11 games. On defense, the Browns signed DE Myles Garrett to a contract extension that goes through the 2030 season, but they also signed multiple players to help fill in their defensive line with DT Maliek Collins and DE Joe Tryon-Shoyinka. The cornerback room is running it back from the 2024 season, with CB Tony Brown II re-signing with the Browns in free agency. The room is led by four-time Pro Bowler Denzel Ward and Greg Newsome II, as well as young players like Cameron Mitchell, Martin Emerson Jr., and Myles Harden, who have found their respective roles in the secondary. Will the Browns' free-agent additions pan out? The Browns added DeAndre Carter, who is likely the favorite to handle return duties in 2025. Cleveland needs explosive plays in the return game after ranking 30th in yards per kick return (24.8) last season. Carter, who ranked second in the league in yards per kick return (31.9), could provide that. Teven Jenkins has started 38 games in four seasons, most prominently at left guard the last two years. With Joel Bitonio returning for a 12th season after contemplating retirement, the addition of Jenkins could also be a move for the future. Tryon-Shoyinka has never registered more than five sacks in a season. His 6.0% pressure rate last season tied for 106th out of 190 qualifying pass rushers. Joe Flacco spent the 2024 season with the Colts, appearing in eight games and starting six of them. He completed 162 of 248 passing attempts for 1,761 passing yards and 12 touchdowns. Flacco returns to Cleveland after joining the Browns in Week 12 of the 2023 season. He started five consecutive games beginning in Week 13, and during that stretch, the Browns went 4-1 with Flacco at quarterback. His tenure was highlighted by the Week 17 win over the Jets on Thursday Night Football that officially clinched their playoff berth – their first playoff appearance since 2020. While in Cleveland, Flacco completed 123 of 204 passing attempts for 1,616 passing yards and 13 touchdowns during the regular season. How did the Browns approach the NFL draft? The Cleveland Browns' 2025 draft class includes: DT Mason Graham (Round 1), LB Carson Schwesinger (Round 2), RB Quinshon Judkins (Round 2), TE Harold Fannin Jr. (Round 3), QB Dillon Gabriel (Round 3), RB Dylan Sampson (Round 4), and QB Shedeur Sanders (Round 5). The Browns traded down from the #2 pick in the first round, acquiring additional picks in the process. They also traded up in the fifth round to select Shedeur Sanders. When does the Cleveland Browns' training camp start? July 18: Cleveland Browns rookies report for training camp July 22: Cleveland Browns veterans report for training campThe rest of the Browns arrive for the start of training camp. They'll undergo medical exams and other preliminary meetings. July 23: Cleveland Browns' first full-squad training camp practiceThe Browns will conduct their first full-squad training camp practice at 4:25 p.m. It's closed to fans.

CBS Sports ranks college football's most intimidating stadiums. Where did LSU rank?
CBS Sports ranks college football's most intimidating stadiums. Where did LSU rank?

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

CBS Sports ranks college football's most intimidating stadiums. Where did LSU rank?

LSU football is annually recognized as one of the toughest places to play, and that isn't changing anytime soon. CBS Sports ranked LSU atop its list of most intimidating venues ahead of the 2025 season. The top 10 follows a release by EA Sports' College Football 26 of the video game's toughest places to play. "Tiger Stadium provides a pressure-cooker feel before every kickoff against SEC competition, especially when the game's played at night -- which happens often," CBS Sports' Brad Crawford said. LSU welcomes Louisiana Tech, Florida, Southeastern Louisiana, South Carolina, Texas A&M, Arkansas, and Western Kentucky into Baton Rouge for its 2025 home schedule. "You get southern Super Bowl vibes before Alabama-LSU or Florida-LSU in Baton Rouge because the games mean so much to a passionate and buzzed fanbase," Crawford wrote. Since 2003, LSU is 129-21 at home. The Tigers generated plenty of hype during the offseason. Head coach Brian Kelly's staff took an aggressive approach to recruiting the transfer portal, which resulted in the highest-ranked class of the cycle. LSU's talent, mixed with a favorable home schedule, has the Tigers riding high into the 2025 season. However, LSU will open the year away from the comfort of Tiger Stadium, traveling to take on Clemson.

Can Jayden Daniels' second act land the Commanders in the Super Bowl?
Can Jayden Daniels' second act land the Commanders in the Super Bowl?

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Can Jayden Daniels' second act land the Commanders in the Super Bowl?

The second act of Jayden Daniels' NFL career will come with high expectations – for himself and the Washington Commanders. In 2024, the Commanders made the NFC championship game, with their rookie quarterback as the main reason. For a franchise devoid of success for more than two decades and a carousel at quarterback, Daniels was more than a revelation. He took on a mystic presence. He was a savior. Now the Commanders will enter the 2025 season considered Super Bowl contenders (fair or not) and Daniels will be on MVP shortlists. An ESPN poll that took the temperature of NFL executives and coaches left Daniels as the No. 5-ranked quarterback in the league. Ahead of him were the powerful AFC quartet of quarterback: Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson and Joe Burrow. 'I gotta go out there and prove myself each and every day, no matter if it was last season, this season, 10, 20 years down the road,' Daniels said in May, 'you have to prove yourself each and every season. 'Outside noise doesn't matter,' he continued, 'have to go there and keep proving yourself.' MORE: Ravens QB Lamar Jackson and the Super Bowl: 'It's on his heart. It's on his mind.' Taken second overall in the new Commanders regime by general manager Adam Peters and head coach Dan Quinn, Daniels carried over his production from Louisiana State to the pros. He rushed for the most yards ever by a rookie quarterback (891). The 2023 Heisman Trophy winner completed 69% of his passes and threw 25 touchdowns – five of which came in the final 30 seconds of regulation or overtime – to nine interceptions. He easily won Associated Press Offensive Rookie of the Year honors. Off the field, Daniels was instrumental in catalyzing the culture change Quinn instilled from the top of the organization down. 'He's an amazing teammate. The amount of work that he puts in that goes unseen here to get ready to play, to learn it, to teach others to, you know, connect the guys … there is no flinch in Jayden Daniels,' Quinn said in May. 'He's as focused and relentless as you could about getting better. And so that's why I said for us around here, like, man, we appreciate that and there's a lot of things that, he and the rest of us are really digging in hard on to say, 'All right, can we get this better?'' Jayden Daniels' 2025 NFL season goals? From learning to mastery Throughout Daniels' first full offseason as a pro, the coaching staff and the quarterback concentrated on taking aspects of his game from 'really good' to 'elite' with the goal of being 'the best at this concept,' Quinn said. The freedom an offseason provides was new to Daniels. Some of that was difficult to navigate, Daniels said, but he leaned on his support system. 'It was fun just to sit back and reflect and figure out how I'm going to move throughout this offseason and move forward,' Daniels said. For offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury, that meant receiving plenty of texts and calls from Daniels, who is a football junkie. Kingsbury didn't have to give him any homework. 'His mind is never very far away from the game, so if he sees something or has a thought, he likes to reach out and talk through it,' Kingsbury said in May. 'And so that relationship has really grown, I think kind of figuring out where we want to continue to get better at. 'That's all he kind of thinks about is how he can get better and watches a ton of film, watches a ton of football overall. And so, that organically really takes care of itself in a way when you have a guy who wants to be that great.' A potential head-coach candidate once again, Kingsbury, quarterbacks coach Tavita Pritchard and assistant quarterbacks coach David Blough were all retained by the Commanders this offseason with the goal of providing a stable 'ecosystem,' in the words of Peters, for Daniels. MORE: Washington Commanders reveal alternate uniforms that nod to their Super Bowl glory 'It's huge,' Kingsbury said of the continuity at Daniels' disposal. 'I think you look traditionally through the NFL, the guys who've had a ton of success have been able to stay in those long-term, all-time greats and just the comfort level and then you being able to take the ownership of it and understand it inside and out, where now you're correcting people, you don't even need the coaches. And he's kind of getting to that point.' Going into Year 2, Kingsbury said, Daniels shifted from learning to mastery of the scheme. Daniels said 'transparency' between he and Kingsbury has improved; he relays what he likes, Kingsbury offers his viewpoints and they agree on the middle ground. 'Just watching him move around, he's not thinking as much, he's playing fast and letting his natural gifts kind of take over and that's what we want to see,' Kingsbury said. 'So, I expect him to take a big jump.' The spotlight will only increase. The Commanders are scheduled to play in 10 standalone windows this season, starting Week 2 against the Green Bay Packers on "Thursday Night Football." Commanders have 'massive opportunity' with Jayden Daniels on rookie contract Throughout last season, Daniels faced questions regarding his durability. The 6-foot-4 passer is listed at a generous 210 pounds. Big hits he took in the first month of the season didn't assuage those concerns. Daniels suffered a rib injury against the Carolina Panthers on Oct. 20 following a long run that affected him for the better part of a month. Neither the Commanders nor Daniels had any specific weight goals or bulking desires for the offseason. Quinn said he's where he expects Daniels to be on the scale, but that working out more has naturally made him leaner. 'He knows what he has to do to protect himself and where he feels comfortable playing,' Kingsbury said. 'But the arm strength, it looks better and you can tell he's stronger, there's no doubt.' While Daniels improved himself, Peters improved the roster. He brought back key veterans who bonded with Daniels in tight end Zach Ertz, linebacker Bobby Wagner and backup quarterback Marcus Mariota. He traded for wideout Deebo Samuel, formerly with the San Francisco 49ers, and left tackle Laremy Tunsil. The Commanders used their first-round draft pick on offensive lineman Josh Conerly. 'We have a massive opportunity, and you know, none of us are taking that lightly,' Commanders owner Josh Harris said regarding Daniels' rookie contract in February after the team's loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFC title game. But Daniels' favorite target, wide receiver Terry McLaurin, and the front office are locked into a contract standoff that has devolved from standard to bitter. In Quinn's mind, whoever Daniels is working with on the field has the benefit of working with a leader who understands the larger goal. 'I know he's worked hard through the offseason, but he's just in command of the things that he wanted to work,' Quinn said. 'He and his teammates, they've really put in a lot of work together. 'You can sense when people are going for it and you know, he's certainly one that is.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store