SALEM – With Led Zeppelin’s “Kashmire” blaring from the Rockett Arena sound system and a sold out crowd cheering as if it were a late-December playoff game, New England Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick walked up to the podium and began what ranks as one of the rowdiest editions in the 26 year history of the Salem State College Speaker Series.Facing a sea of energetic fans donning blue and white replica football jerseys, the “Football Genius,” as Salem State President Patricia Maguire Meservey introduced him, did not stray from the subject he has mastered through a lifetime of study. The bulk of the coach’s speech focused on the Patriots past and present and Belichick’s past coaching ventures, with a few words of motivation for the students looking to graduate from the school and head in to the workforce mixed in for good measure.”To all of the young people, it is important to follow your heart and do what you love. Take a shot and see if it works out,” he said. “I never got in to football for the money, although that has worked out?When we are looking (to draft new players) as we did this past weekend, what we look for is someone who really loves the game of football. Do what you love to do”Belichick provided insight in to his methods for obtaining new players, whether it be through the NFL rookie draft, or trades such as the deal that sent Randy Moss to the Patriots for a fourth round pick at this time last year.While Belichick focuses much of his attention on the skill of the player, that player’s desire to win and ability to individually do what is best for the team are the most important attributes to the coach.”There may be no ?I’ in team, but there is an ?I’ in win,” he said, invoking yet another rousing ovation. “The ?I’ stands for ?individual performance.’ Everybody has to do their job, go out there and perform and compete with the team on the other side of the field. It is not your opportunity that will carry you, it is your individual performance after the opportunity that will carry you.”Known for his short-tempered answers to questions from the media, Belichick did touch slightly on some controversial topics, including the camera “spying” scandal that hit the team last season.Belichick used the incident, without going in to too much detail, as an example of leadership, noting that by telling the players to defer all questions about the alleged spying in his direction helped the team concentrate on blowing out the San Diego Chargers the following weekend.”When you are in a lead position and you tell someone what to do and they don’t do it, you know that guy is going to be a problem,” he said. “If you don’t say anything and somebody does something that you don’t wan them to do, then you find yourself saying ?I wish he didn’t do that.'”Having a positive attitude is the key to being a positive leader for the team in his mind, no matter that player’s particular personality or style of motivation.”Do your job, put the team first and do whatever it takes to help the team,” he said. “Troy brown is one of the best leaders I have ever had the pleasure of coaching and he is probably the quietest guy in (the locker room)? It is the Randy Moss attitude ?What do you want me to do coach?'”More of a coach than a public speaker, by his own admission, Belichick even broke out some game film mid-way through the speech, illustrating how practice can truly benefit on game day.Belichick found time to show off his dry sense of humor and now-famous smirk, as he kept his speech light with stories of players like Vince Wilfork and Matt Light catching punts to secure a night off during training camp for the team, and the day he realized after yelling and swearing for months, that the best way to keep players from jumping off-sides was to make the whole team run every time it happened.A question and answer session yielded a small bit of variety to end the speech, although the six chosen questions from Salem State students, such as who is th