Not sure what your answer has to do with what I said above. Seems a non-sequitir.
I was proven wrong. But it really doesn't matter. I was saying I thought Klemm was crazy for attacking Wolf. Whether it was Wolf or our pro personnel guy Groh really isn't the point. I was saying that in retrospect, Klemm doesn't seem so crazy.
I was wrong about it being Wolf. But I still stand by the general gist of what I was saying.
As for Kraft, if a guy is a liar, that's on him. Not me.
AND I readily say there are decisions that are obviously Belichick's, like Harry. But then there are people like Callahan who report internal discussions, like Belichick wanting to wait for a 3rd rd QB in '21, or preferring Jakobi over JuJu.
Are we supposed to ignore these things?
Lastly, Belichick had absolute control for 20 years. Then Kraft said he met with Belichick and that things were going to change.
We know absolutely that Kraft ignored Belichick's wishes when he reinstalled Guerrero despite the objections of the assistant coaches. There is a pattern here, as much as people want to wash it aside and ignore ot. It's actually plain and evident.
But the sequence is key. Belichick went from total control, to then being told things would be done differently, and we have Callahan using instances of when Belichick's assessment did not win the day.
Whatever the dynamic is, things changed in 2020. That much is known and acknowledged by all. It could very well be that it was expected that Bill would accede to the scout/personnel team's wishes at times, even while remaining in control.
What he couldn't do anymore is run the thing by making imperious decisions, whether that meant banning Guerrero to appease the assistant coaches or making every single personnel decision even if against the wishes of the scouts/personnel.