Cam Newton didn’t bother softening the edges when he sat down with The California Post on Thursday. He got straight to the point. When the former NFL MVP, and New England Patriots quarterback was asked how Bill Belichick — the architect of the modern Patriots dynasty — could possibly miss the Pro Football Hall of Fame on the first ballot, Newton sounded genuinely stunned, like a man staring at a scoreboard that simply didn’t add up.
“What we’ve seen now with Bill Belichick, I don’t know what a first-ballot Hall of Famer is nowadays,” Newton said, shaking his head as the conversation unfolded ahead of Super Bowl 60 in Santa Clara. “In the hearts of his former players? He’s first ballot. No question.”
Newton, who played under Belichick in New England after years battling him as a Carolina Panther, spoke with the authority of someone who lived on both sides of the legend. He faced Belichick as an opponent, prepared for him as a student, and came to understand the myth only after standing inside it. To Newton, the omission wasn’t just baffling — it was disorienting.
Belichick’s shadow looms large this week. His former team, the Patriots, are back on the Super Bowl stage Sunday against the Seattle Seahawks, and the Hall of Fame debate has become unavoidable noise around Radio Row. Even Tom Brady, the face of the dynasty and owner of seven Super Bowl rings — six with Belichick — admitted he’s now “concerned” about his own Hall of Fame prospects.
Newton didn’t dodge that topic either.
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“That’s such a tricky question,” Newton said, leaning in. “We will never see another Tom Brady. What he’s accomplished in professional football isn’t realistic for most athletes. It’s like a basketball player wanting to be like Michael Jordan.”
Newton didn’t sound angry. He sounded incredulous. As if the sport itself might be forgetting how rare true dominance actually is — and how foolish it looks to argue with history.
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: nypost.com








