The Mysterious Ernie Adams

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rams2050

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernie_Adams_(American_football)


Ernie Adams (born c. 1953) is the Football Research Director for the New England Patriots of the National Football League. He is a longtime friend of head coachBill Belichick. With Adams, the Patriots have won three Super Bowls. Adams is known for his eccentric personality and low profile, as well as his extremely thorough analysis of the game.[1]

Early years[edit]
Adams attended the Dexter School in Brookline, Massachusetts. Given his knowledge of football for his age, Adams was asked to coach the school's intramural football team as an eighth grader.[2]

He later attended Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts for high school. While there, he had read Football Scouting Methods written by Steve Belichick, who was then a football scout for the United States Naval Academy. In 1970, Steve Belichick's son Bill enrolled at Phillips Academy for a post-graduate year after graduating from Annapolis High School. Adams, a senior, recognized Belichick's name and the two quickly became friends.[3] At one point, they snuck into a Boston College football practice together to practice scouting.[3]

Beginning in 1971, Adams attended Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. As a freshman, Adams sought a student assistant position for the Wildcats' football team and secured it after impressing an assistant coach with a report on a football formation.[1] He would serve as a scout for Northwestern until his graduation in 1975 with a degree in education.[1]

Professional career[edit]
First stint with Patriots[edit]
After his graduation from college, Adams pursued an unpaid position with the New England Patriots in 1975. After contacting then-head coach Chuck Fairbanks numerous times, Adams received a playbook from assistant coach Hank Bullough to learn; Adams learned it in two days, and was presented with another playbook, which he again learned in two days.[2] Adams was hired as an offensive and administrative assistant, and eventually prepared scouting reports for the team, which Fairbanks said were the most thorough he had received in his career.[2]

New York Giants[edit]
In 1979, Patriots assistant Ray Perkins was hired to be the head coach of the New York Giants. He promptly hired Adams as an offensive assistant, working with the quarterbacks and receivers. Adams then convinced Perkins to hire Bill Belichick as a special teams coach; Belichick had spent the previous eight years as a student at Wesleyan University and then as an assistant coach for three NFL teams. Adams spent three seasons as the Giants' offensive assistant before moving to their scouting department as their pro personnel director.[2] By 1985, he had become frustrated with that job,[2] and took a lucrative job offer as a municipal bonds trader on Wall Street.[1]

Cleveland Browns[edit]
Adams left Wall Street to join the Cleveland Browns in 1991, who had just given Belichick his first NFL head coaching position. Adams was again an offensive assistant, working with tight ends and running backs.[1]However, Belichick was fired by the Browns in 1996, and Adams returned to Wall Street, starting his own investment business.[1]

Second stint with Patriots[edit]
Belichick got his next head coaching opportunity with the Patriots in 2000. This time, Adams joined the team not as a coach, but as "Football Research Director." Adams fills a variety of roles for the team. On gamedays, he assists the coaching staff from the press box, advising Belichick on which plays to issue a replay challenge.[1] He also assists the scouting department in preparing for the NFL Draft in the spring, and builds the team's player value chart for the draft.[1] Finally, Adams works on special assignments for the coaching and scouting staffs, which typically involve breaking down game tape.[1] In 2007, as part of Spygate, it was revealed that Adams received tapes from a "third camera" that recorded opponents' defensive signals against league rules. Belichick confirmed this was the case, but said that they were only a small part of the "mosaic" that were the Patriots' offensive game plans at the time.[4]

Adams (and Belichick) have also been known to have an interest in mathematical analyses of football; Adams once contacted Rutgers University statistics professor Harold Sackrowitz, asking him to evaluate the Patriots' two-point conversion chart following a study by Sackrowitz on the decision.[2][3] Adams also presented Belichick with a study concluding teams punt too often on fourth down.[3]

With the Patriots and throughout his career, Adams is known for keeping a low profile. Former Browns owner Art Modell notably quipped "I'll pay anyone here $10,000 if they can tell me what Ernie Adams does."[2]



The following is from http://cowboyszone.com/threads/the-patriots-and-the-strange-story-of-ernie-adams.258119/


Adams is rumored to have huge power on personnel decisions, and draft day strategy. He supposedly runs the team value chart for trades. But no one really knows.

He is in New England's coaching box during games, and is reportedly in direct communication with Belichick via headset. It's been rumored at times that he's the only person in Belichick's hear during games. But no one really knows.

He's been rumored to have been involved with, or the mastermind of, or the tape-dissector and analyst behind Spygate, the one person who crunched all the tape and info and fed strategy to Belichick. But no one really knows. He's been credited with the Patriots ability to make halftime and in-game adjustments.

Adams is almost completely in the shadows. He's only given two interviews in is football career, once to a Northwestern alumni magazine and once to an author who was writing a bio on Belichick. People around the team say he is the one person that Belichick has absolute trust in, and both are notoriously secretive, so the real story of what he does will probably never be told.

He reportedly has a photographic memory and is the answer man for Patriots players on any questions about league rules, league policy, league history, anything NFl or football related, all questions answered on the spot, no "I'll look it up and get back to you". He and Belichick have been at the forefront of reaching out beyond the football world to bring in mathematicians and statisticians to determine when to throw challenge flags, go for it or punt on 4th down, or when to try two point conversions. The stories are that Belichick consults with him during games on these on-the-spot decisions (as an example, when Belichick decided to try to convert a late-game fourth down in a big regular season game against the Colts a few years back that famously got stopped short).

After the Spygate incident, one former Patriots insider said a videotape of signals wouldn't help the other 31 teams nearly as much because they wouldn't have Ernie Adams there to quickly analyze and process the information.

There is much more online. Here is the ESPN article, which is very good and the most detailed look into his life and his role with the team that I've found: http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/eticket/story?page=adams

and another good article by Les Carpenter of Yahoo Sports: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=lc-carpenter_ernie_adams_patriots_adviser_belichick020212
 

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I have been clamoring on about this asshole being the key to the Pats success for a while now. Dude is like a football Rain Man. :Legend has it that he has a photographic memory and can instantly dissect any defensive/offensive scheme by recognizing the formation(s) if he has seen it before. Total recall, haha. I seriously wonder how much of their success is due to this "eye in the sky". More than most would believe I'd bet.
 

Elmgrovegnome

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Yes I have brought him up before too. A true photographic memory is an amazing tool for an NFL coach to have at his disposal. He was the reason for the second radio wavelength in Bradys helmet that went up to 5 seconds left on the playclock. Adams needed the extra time to see how the defense was going to react to the Patriots offensive formations.

Having a guy with a photographic memory on staff is not illegal but the way the Cheatriots have utilized his skillset is.
 

Elmgrovegnome

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In the end nobody in that organization really cares, because the winning at all cost has made them all millions of dollars.
 

LACHAMP46

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Que intersantes.....Strange lil relationship they have going on...Unfortunately during his early days with Cleveland, he didn't help one iota...None...It took the magician now known as Tom Brady to make his study/info/genius relevant to the Pats success...I'd still like to see a "A Football Life" special on his butt.....
 

Pancake

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Must be nice having a photographic memory. I bet it comes in handy on game day when it's time to recall the opponents signals that were illegally video recorded.
 

Stranger

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Must be nice having a photographic memory. I bet it comes in handy on game day when it's time to recall the opponents signals that were illegally video recorded.
I don't believe he has a photographic memory... that's a ruse to cover the fact that he gets advantage not thru intellect but through deception, which he hides in non-discernible patterns unless one has access to the data and the ability to process reliable statistical forensics. It really is no biggie.