the league won't find any evidence of anything,
under inflated footballs are evidence
and
you have to hold the coach responsible for what goes on
so
the only question is
how serious is this?
it is not that serious
but
hatred for belichick is
the league won't find any evidence of anything,
You mean except for the dead body that was kept in a trunk on the Patriots side of the field?
That's evidence. The thing itself establishes the violation prima facie. The only question is who benefits and who was directly responsible. In the absence of proof on the latter the former is established in sufficiency (under your control/altered) to invite sanction and establish guilt.To quote Mr. Spock: I sympathize, TH. But I need evidence.
The only question is who benefits
That's evidence. The thing itself establishes the violation prima facie. The only question is who benefits and who was directly responsible. In the absence of proof on the latter the former is established in sufficiency (under your control/altered) to invite sanction and establish guilt.
Some observations from the talking heads over at WEEI, the Pats's flagship station (and home of the boom-or-bust Red Sox):
They have no case. The burden of proof is on the league and they have no case. Which is why the guys from PSI: Foxboro have been chasing their tails all week. I’m saying right now the officiating crew never inspected the footballs before the game. Let he who has never told his boss he did something on his checklist that he didn’t really do because he didn’t feel like it cast the first stone.
Was it Fauria or Merloni?
Thornton said:-At the end, Brady should’ve said “I am Iron Man.”
Right. There's a much higher threshold/burden in a courtroom.But this isn't a courtroom.
Sure, but that's no real argument on point. It's on par with, "Look how they did after the deflation was corrected". Doesn't have much to do with anything. Nixon part two.In the court of public opinion, there's a big contingent that will always believe the worst about New England. No changing that.
Well, no. The balls themselves establish a rules violation. The fact that the difference existed on one side and with the balls in their keeping.When it comes down to the league establishing actual, cold, hard, tangible guilt...so far, nada.
Pro forma. Like a state trooper asking, "Were you speeding?"There's no body, no Zapruder film, not even an interest, apparently, in speaking directly to the man who literally had the evidence in his hands all night.
No, officer. I feel completely comfortable saying I wasn't speeding.What we have, instead, is this:
a) a head coach and quarterback who stuck their necks out and emphatically denied all allegations
Given what was happening they really had to. It was the only way to make sure they could push this past the Super Bowl.b) a team known for being notoriously tight-lipped who's openly addressed and dismissed the entire issue
What do you want to know, the PSI of each ball? I wouldn't mind knowing that too.c) a curious lack of transparency on the part of a league that swore itself to rectify that very issue in light of its foolish ways this season
Like every politician caught in a public scandal. Get ahead of it and push your agenda. So it depends on how you look at it.Bottom line: Tom Brady and Bill Belichick are acting like men with zero to hide.
Why not? So long as he's sure there's no tape and no one who doesn't stand to lose who has anything to do with it.If Belichick knew there was something amiss, there's no way he doubles down at his presser or allows Blount, Wendell, and others to speak about the issue.
Neither did the Saints.The Pats aren't acting guilty of anything, like it or not.
His track record is a good bit of the reason that only one state in the latest ESPN poll gave either him or his qb a passing grade on believability.And given Belichick's track record--and character--that leads me to believe the Pats are likely as interested to know what really happened as everybody else.
Sure, but that's no real argument on point. It's on par with, "Look how they did after the deflation was corrected". Doesn't have much to do with anything. Nixon part two.
Well, no. The balls themselves establish a rules violation. The fact that the difference existed on one side and with the balls in their keeping.
Given what was happening they really had to. It was the only way to make sure they could push this past the Super Bowl.
What do you want to know, the PSI of each ball? I wouldn't mind knowing that too.
What doesn't depend would be those balls, for one team, being deflated in accord with the record stated preference of the team's qb.
Why not? So long as he's sure there's no tape and no one who doesn't stand to lose who has anything to do with it.
His track record is a good bit of the reason that only one state in the latest ESPN poll gave either him or his qb a passing grade on believability.
Don't blame you. But it works. Who else made one?Hoo boy but I'm sick of the Nixonian comparisons.
An oversight on 11 of twelve balls on only one team in the contest within the context of that stated preference.Or an oversight on the part of the officials.
Who, no, but the rest I think was established pretty definitively.Whether the league likes it or not they haven't been able to establish who, where, or exactly when tampering occurred.
Wouldn't have been in their best interests. Public sentiment was running pretty strongly against them and the noise wasn't dying down.They easily could've stonewalled.
It is literally a rules violation on its face. And the measurements took place during the game. That's why the second half had properly inflated balls. Before then and after the officials did the initial testing the responsibility for the property rested with the controlling party, the Pats.Which still doesn't prove anything. At all.
Or maybe they'll say, "It was in your hands after we tested it and it came back altered. You're responsible. And if the coach doesn't know and Tom doesn't know well, we do and we'll say to them what we said to New Orleans."Or maybe the league will start fining teams and docking draft picks based on rumors, speculation, and losing a decade-long popularity contest. That oughta go over well.
How many people do you think he'd need to have know about it and manage it? Could be one guy, the guy who gets and hands the ball to the official. Who knows? But if I'm that guy the last thing I'm going to do is rat myself out and the team that pays me. What's the upside?How sure could he possibly be that not a single ball boy or equipment grunt doesn't spill?
lain: Not really helping.They don't have an in-house Hernandez to deal with rats. (Or so I assume.)
It clears up why they got out in front of it. The NFL and its merchandising is driven by public perception.Well thank God the ever-scientific polls provided by ESPN are here to clear this all up.:rotfl:
Don't blame you. But it works. Who else made one?
An oversight on 11 of twelve balls on only one team in the contest within the context of that stated preference.
Who, no, but the rest I think was established pretty definitively.
Wouldn't have been in their best interests. Public sentiment was running pretty strongly against them and the noise wasn't dying down.
It is literally a rules violation on its face. And the measurements took place during the game. That's why the second half had properly inflated balls. Before then and after the officials did the initial testing the responsibility for the property rested with the controlling party, the Pats.
Or maybe they'll say, "It was in your hands after we tested it and it came back altered. You're responsible. And if the coach doesn't know and Tom doesn't know well, we do and we'll say to them what we said to New Orleans."
How many people do you think he'd need to have know about it and manage it? Could be one guy, the guy who gets and hands the ball to the official. Who knows? But if I'm that guy the last thing I'm going to do is rat myself out and the team that pays me. What's the upside?
It's a good answer, but I hadn't heard it before I wrote it. Not surprised. It works for, "Why would they?" Another good or disturbing answer, given Brady saying it felt normal, would be "habit".At this rate a few thousand talking heads, armchair psychologists, and assorted pundits. This is football, we're talking, not the guy with access to a nuclear one.
Given the NFL has a vested interest in as clean a contest as possible it would have been in their interest to have cut this story off at the knees with that if it had been the case. They've publicly cut the legs off officials before and it would be far better than the ongoing for the shield.Assuming they were in fact inspected at all. Wouldn't be the first time the officials plain screwed up.
They care about the commissioner's office's response and he's not a fan of their coach.Yes, and we all know how much they've cared about public perception and noise before.:chuckle:
Because all that can be demonstrated is that someone did it. Absent a smoking gun they're dulling the edge of public sentiment that is driving an already bloodied NFL front office.They've essentially guaranteed an end to their careers as they know it if you're right. Why would they do this?
I don't have to. Neither does the commissioner. All he has to do is say what I wrote in my last and a version of what was said to the Saints, ignorance is no excuse, a variation of institutional control speeches.Then give me a who, where, how, and when.
They never tied the coach to a thing. He sat out a year.Know what? They know it happened but after that everything remains speculation. The league will be nailing them lacking cold hard facts and evidence, which at least they had with New Orleans.
Again, this doesn't have to go beyond one guy and Bill or, more likely, one guy and Tom. It's not like a bounty scheme with players and coaches involved.What was the upside of the grunts who talked long and loud about Spygate? Not Mangini, mind you--the guy doing the actual taping for the Pats.
Spite, slights imagined or otherwise, guilt, a subpoena...
Given the NFL has a vested interest in as clean a contest as possible it would have been in their interest to have cut this story off at the knees with that if it had been the case. They've publicly cut the legs off officials before and it would be far better than the ongoing for the shield.
Because all that can be demonstrated is that someone did it. Absent a smoking gun they're dulling the edge of public sentiment that is driving an already bloodied NFL front office.
I don't have to. Neither does the commissioner. All he has to do is say what I wrote in my last and a version of what was said to the Saints, ignorance is no excuse, a variation of institutional control speeches.
When, they know. Where, they know. Who is the mystery and I can't see that one being solved.