The Phnom Penh Post

Don’t ask why Belichick benched Butler

- Benjamin Hoffman

THERE was a company line among the New England Patriots, and no one was willing to cross it.

“You have to ask the coach,” Stephon Gilmore said when asked why his fellow starting cornerback, Malcolm Butler, was benched enched during the Patri Patriots’ loss to the e Philadelph­ia Eagles in Super Bowl wl LII on Sunday. “I don’t know.”

It was more e of the same from Duron Harmon, on, a safety: “You have to ask coach. oach. Coach makes all the personnel decisions and I just play football.”

Devin McCourty, ourty, also a safety, hardly ly elaborated compared ared to his fellow defensive fensive backs, but he at least acknowledg­ed d that they were not t a l k i n g . “We’re all just there ready to go,” he said. “We don’t talk – it’s a coach’s decision.” That coach, of course, is Bill Belichick (pictured, AFP), the famously tightlippe­d mastermind behind the Patriots’ five Super Bowl championsh­ips.

And the player he benched is not just the starting cornerback, but the hero of New England’s England s victory over the Seahawks in Super Bowl XLIX.

Butler seal sealed that victory with a la late-game intercepti­on of Seattle’s R u s s e l l W i l s o n , cementi cementing his place in New England’s En rich football history.

For some som teams, asking the coach coa might provide some illuminati­on into a controvers­ial cont decision like this one. But with the Pa Patriots, the line of quest questionin­g hit a complet complete dead end. “No,” Beli- chick said when asked if Butler was benched for a disciplina­ry reason. “Yes,” he replied when asked if it was a strictly football decision.

When pushed to offer something more, at least in terms of why Eric Rowe, a backup cornerback, was a better fit than Butler to start against the Eagles, Belichick elaborated ever so slightly. “We put the best players . . . and the gameplan out there because we thought it’d be the best to win,” he said.

Rowe said he found out about the switch just before the game on Sunday. He praised Butler’s talent, and did not shy away from the many missteps that both he and the rest of the team’s secondary made in the game. Asked if Butler could have helped, Rowe said: “Yeah, we could have used anybody.”

Whatever the reason, Butler’s benching backfired. The decision to limit him to special teams play, whether it was based on matchups, unhappines­s with his recent play, or a punishment that Belichick was unwilling to discuss, resulted in the Patriots playing the game without a cornerback who had been on the field for more than 97 percent of their defensive snaps this season, more than any other defensive player.

When you consider that Nick Foles, the Eagles’ backup quarterbac­k, shredded the Patriots’ secondary for 373 passing yards, and the Eagles converted 10 of 16 third-down opportunit­ies, the absence of a stalwart of the defence could not have stood out more as something in need of an explanatio­n.

A visibly distraught Butler discussed the game with ESPN before he left US Bank Stadium and he seemed truly convinced that the team had simply soured on his ability to help them.

“I guess I wasn’t playing good,” he said. “They didn’t feel comfortabl­e.”

But he also added words that likely resonated for every frustrated Patriots fan who watched as the Eagles repeatedly found space in the secondary when he said: “I could have changed that game though.”

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