Latest news with #TheArtofWinning:LessonsFromaLifeinFootball


NBC News
17-05-2025
- Entertainment
- NBC News
Bill Belichick addresses 24-year-old girlfriend's 'job responsibilities' amid viral interview fallout
Former New England Patriots football coach Bill Belichick is hoping to set the record straight on his working relationship with his 24-year-old girlfriend, Jordon Hudson. In an interview on 'The Pivot Podcast' to promote his new book, ' The Art of Winning: Lessons From a Life in Football,' on Friday, Belichick spoke in more detail about how Hudson helps him juggle his opportunities off the field. 'As I stay focused on football, some of the other opportunities that come along, Jordon looks at those and can dig into a little bit deeper,' he said. 'But really what she does helps me spend my time on football, and that's what's important to me.' The 73-year-old coach added that Hudson helps him schedule what he described as 'personal opportunities,' such as media interviews or speaking arrangements. He also said Hudson gave him tips on things to exclude or include in his book, such as removing technical terms from certain chapters and dedicating page numbers to certain players and family members. Belichick and Hudson went viral during an interview with 'CBS Sunday Morning' last month in which Hudson herself blocked the now-University of North Carolina football coach from answering a question about their relationship. When CBS interviewer Tony Dokoupil asked how the couple met, Hudson, sitting at a desk in the background, jumped in and said: 'We're not talking about this.' 'No?' Dokoupil said. 'No,' she responded. The uncomfortable exchange appeared to generate more speculation about the information the couple was trying to keep private. Belichick since released a statement saying the couple had nothing to hide about how they met. He also said in jest during the podcast interview that he took up yoga because he is 'trying to stay young.' This week, Belichick got into another terse exchange with an interviewer on ESPN, where he was questioned if his relationship with Hudson would affect his ability to lead the football program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 'That's really off to the side,' he told ESPN on Tuesday. 'It's a personal relationship, and she doesn't have anything to do with UNC football.' Belichick has the most Super Bowl wins of any head coach in American football, with six wins under his belt at the helm of the New England Patriots. He is considered one of the greatest coaches of all time.

Yahoo
30-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Bill Belichick and Jordon Hudson's relationship is everyone's business now
Even without the train-wreck ending, Bill Belichick's interview on 'CBS Sunday Morning' would have drawn a lot of eyeballs. The notoriously gruff and reclusive football coach has always been an object of fascination — especially in the past year, given his startlingly public relationship with 24-year-old beauty pageant veteran Jordon Hudson. Their nearly 50-year age gap has fueled countless headlines since they confirmed their romance last summer, and they appear happy to add to the discourse with red carpet appearances and social media posts. But no tabloid story could compete with what happened when Belichick, 73, showed up on CBS to promote his new book, 'The Art of Winning: Lessons From a Life in Football.' In one brief but excruciating behind-the-scenes moment captured on camera, Hudson interrupted the interview to shoot down a question that host Tony Dokoupil asked the coach. Suddenly, Hudson's increasingly influential role in Belichick's life and career vaulted into the national conversation, thanks to the still-potent reach of broadcast television. 'Bill Belichick Has a Problem Named Jordon Hudson,' warned Fox Sports Radio. CBS Boston chatted with Patriots fans, who called the interview 'weird' and 'cringe-y.' TMZ Sports stationed a videographer outside a New York City hotel where the couple stayed this week. On 'The View,' the Hudson interruption was analyzed as one of the show's hot topics, as Sunny Hostin deemed it 'kind of inappropriate and improper.' 'I don't think you should judge,' Joy Behar cracked. 'Maybe she has a nursing degree.' On Wednesday, Belichick addressed the controversy with a statement released through the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he recently signed a five-year contract to be the head coach of the football program. Belichick said he told his book publicist that he wanted any interviews to just focus on the book, but that 'that expectation was not honored' when Dokoupil asked about 'unrelated topics.' 'After this occurred several times, Jordon, with whom I share both a personal and professional relationship, stepped in to reiterate that point to help refocus the discussion. She was not deflecting any specific question or topic but simply doing her job to ensure the interview stayed on track.' Belichick complained that the aired segment, taken from a 35-minute conversation with Dokoupil, 'presents selectively edited clips and stills from just a few minutes of the interview to suggest a false narrative — that Jordon was attempting to control the conversation — which is simply not true.' CBS said Wednesday that 'there were no preconditions or limitations' placed on the interview. The interview started like the kind of gentle celebrity sit-down that 'CBS Sunday Morning' is known for. Dokoupil ribbed Belichick about showing up in a tattered sweatshirt — his trademark style —and asked about the dynasty he built with the New England Patriots. Things got uncomfortable when Dokoupil noted that Belichick made no mention of Patriots team owner Robert Kraft in the book. Then it took a turn for the incredibly awkward when Dokoupil brought up Hudson, whom Belichick described in the book as his 'idea mill and creative muse.' 'Jordon was a constant presence during our interview,' Dokoupil told viewers, as the screen flashed to a photo of Hudson conferring with Belichick when the cameras were off. As Dokoupil warmly asked Belichick about a relationship that 'everybody in the world seems to be following,' the camera zoomed out to show Hudson sitting to the side of the set, intensely staring at a monitor. Belichick assured him that he has never cared what anyone else thinks. 'How did you guys meet?' Dokoupil asked. That's when Hudson cut in: 'We're not talking about this,' she said, in an exchange CBS enhanced with subtitles. 'No?' Dokoupil said. 'No,' she said. It's a question that has stirred constant intrigue for followers of the Belichick-Hudson relationship. In his statement on Wednesday, the coach reiterated their previous explanation that they met on a flight to Florida in 2021. (Hudson, who was in college at the time, shared this year that their 'meetiversary' was Feb. 11, 2021, when Belichick autographed her logic textbook.) The interview never recovered from Hudson's intervention, even as Dokoupil veered toward a seemingly safer topic — the 'charming' photos, as he called them, that Hudson posts on Instagram. In one, from Halloween, Belichick was costumed as a fisherman and Hudson a mermaid. 'What's the reaction been like?' Dokoupil asked. Belichick looked baffled. After a long pause, he said that while he is on social media, he doesn't follow it. The fallout was immediate and intense. NBC's 'Pro Football Talk" reported that Hudson interrupted the interview many more times than CBS producers ultimately aired, which could explain why they chose to include that brief glimpse of behind-the-scenes drama. (CBS News did not respond to The Post's questions about the interview.) Ultimately, that choice by a respected network news program helped lend mainstream virality — and no small measure of hilarity — to a saga that has been burbling on a smaller scale in sports and tabloid culture for months. In March, a higher education reporter at the Assembly broke the news that Belichick asked UNC communications staff to copy Hudson on his emails. The following month, the Athletic obtained the messages and found that Hudson, despite not being a university employee, shared her thoughts with staff about his public image. On Wednesday, the Athletic reported that Hudson was a key reason that 'Hard Knocks' — the long-running HBO documentary series that follows a different football team each season — decided against bringing production to Chapel Hill. The publication cited sources who said Hudson wanted to be 'heavily involved' in the show. 'This whole thing has changed so drastically in the past three days,' said Charlotte Wilder, who co-hosts 'The Sports Gossip Show' podcast with Madeline Hill, and is a lifelong Patriots fan who has worked in sports media for a decade. 'The CBS interview was a massive inflection point, because it was so strange.' Wilder and Hill latched onto the Hudson drama much earlier than most. They suspected that there was more going on than your typical eyebrow-raising May-December celebrity romance last September when Belichick started an Instagram account, a move that seemed direly off-brand for the famously guarded and offline coach. (Belichick played into this when he announced he had finally joined 'InstaFace.') Both co-hosts surmised this was as much a story about power dynamics as dating, as Hudson seemed to get involved in Belichick's work and public-image management — a hunch confirmed by the UNC emails and reports of Hudson being listed as a manager on some of Belichick's LLCs. Wilder theorized that the CBS interview stood out because it was a rare occasion where Belichick and Hudson were showcased on a platform they do not control, seemingly unprepared for the possibility that the program would use behind-the-scenes footage. And after months of Belichick presenting a new image — Instagram photos of him doing 'AcroYoga' with Hudson on the beach, for example — the Dokoupil interview offered a reversion to the no-nonsense, humorless Belichick persona the public has known for years. Wilder and Hill are hesitant to perpetuate tropes about younger women and older men; they noted that both the coach and his girlfriend have previously shown a certain prickliness in the spotlight. Belichick made no secret of his dislike of journalists during his tenure with the Patriots; on Tuesday, Hudson posted a screenshot of an email from her beau complaining about what he sees as the media's focus on negative aspects of his book. And Hudson often seems braced for combat with their social media 'haters.' 'Cheers!!! To our 3rd midnights' kiss,' she wrote over a New Year's photo of them clinking champagne glasses. 'I can't wait to take punches for you in 2025. Keep swinging, keyboard warriors. Your illusion of righteousness only fuels my authenticity." Here, Hill, who writes the 'Impersonal Foul' sports Substack, sees something of an us-against-the-world attitude. Outwardly, it's business as usual for the couple, who attended the American Museum of Natural History luncheon on Tuesday in New York, where Hudson was seen wearing a substantial ring on her left hand. Next week, the Hancock, Maine, native will compete at the Miss Maine USA pageant.