The story began with a startling report that Bill Belichick had been left off the Pro Football Hall of Fame ballot. ESPN sources told reporters that Hall voters had been circulating an effort—allegedly led by former rival Bill Polian—to delay voting on Belichick because of the Patriots’ Spygate and Deflategate controversies, effectively suggesting voters “wait a year” before deciding.
After the piece ran, Polian immediately pushed back. He told Sports Illustrated he did not take part in a plot to punish Belichick and said he had voted for him. But when ESPN’s reporters followed up, Polian’s account shifted: he could not be certain he had actually voted for Belichick, though he did confirm he supported Patriots owner Robert Kraft and had spoken on Kraft’s behalf. Polian also acknowledged hearing other voters suggest postponing Belichick’s induction, but he denied originating that idea.
Polian’s wavering comments have intensified the debate that erupted after Belichick’s omission, with fans, former players and some voters expressing disbelief that the coach who led teams to eight Super Bowls—six as New England’s head coach—was not elected. The Hall’s committee includes 50 voters and requires 40 affirmative votes for induction; Belichick’s failure to reach that threshold means at least 11 voters opposed him. Whether Polian was among those who withheld a vote remains unclear, and his mixed statements have only deepened the controversy.
A bit of background helps explain the tension. Polian ran the Indianapolis Colts as GM and president from 1998 to 2009, overseeing much of the Peyton Manning era and a Super Bowl title. During that stretch the Colts and Belichick’s Patriots developed one of the NFL’s defining rivalries; New England prevailed in several of their most consequential meetings. After the 2003 AFC Championship, when Patriots cornerback Ty Law intercepted Manning multiple times, Polian—then on the league’s competition committee—pushed for stricter enforcement of defensive contact rules, a change widely linked to that game’s outcome.
The Spygate and Deflategate scandals came later: Spygate emerged in 2007 while Polian was still with the Colts (the Colts were not implicated), and Deflategate centered on the Patriots’ 45-7 win over the Colts in the 2014 AFC title game, well after Polian had left Indianapolis. ESPN’s report suggested lingering bitterness from those episodes may have influenced some voters’ thinking, but it does not prove that Polian orchestrated a campaign to block or delay Belichick’s Hall of Fame induction. In the end, Polian’s denials and subsequent hedging did little to quiet the uproar.
Fan Take: This matters because Hall of Fame voting is supposed to honor achievement above personal grudges; if feud-driven politics influence enshrinement, it undermines the institution’s credibility. For NFL fans, the episode raises concerns about transparency and whether controversies—not just on-field records—are being used to gatekeep the sport’s legacy.

