The team will take a hit of some sort and Tom, given his public non mea culpa, will likely take one as well. Doesn't diminish his greatness at the position, but it does, I think, permanently undo the nonsensical greatest ever conversation. If here, then what else, to what extent and how often? And in a career where so much of their success came by inches and a fg...it has to taint his and the team's legacy.Well....it appears Tom Brady and the Patriots will forever be known as cheaters.
There will always be an asterisk next to Tom Brady, and always an asterisk next to the Patriots Super Bowl victories.
Brady should be suspended for at least a year.
There's no precedent for that long a suspension and Bill was found guiltless, as was Kraft. The funny thing is that Brady really didn't get a competitive advantage when you look at how he performed after the balls were properly inflated. If anything, the advantage went to the rbs who could hold onto the ball better and so the Pats had an unprecedented run of fewest fumbles by far in the NFL.They should've suspended Brady for a year and banned belichick from the league.
I don't care for the cumulative notion. This was, by all accounts, between a few people who will suffer for it, though Brady least of them, really. Except in terms of his reputation.The should've also suspended anyone who touches the ball on a consistent basis and the whole coaching staff for at least 8 regular season games.. The pats have been caught cheating multiple times. Its time to make an example of them
The funny thing is that Brady really didn't get a competitive advantage when you look at how he performed after the balls were properly inflated.
and Bill was found guiltless
A liar, a cheater, and a murderer walk into a bar.........the Patriots must be in town.
Thanks to a combination of Indy whining, officiating incompetence, and the demonstrably shady activities of two equipment grunts, the greatest quarterback (shut up, TH: I am in no mood) of his generation's been dragged through the mud and a team that was exonerated on one hand has been slapped with penalties far and above whatever possible transgression was committed.
The Colts might not be able to tackle, block, run, or pass against New England, but golly: They can tattle like no one else. Well done, Indy. Well done. You're acting as classy as your ownership.
The NFL's officials might have gotten a memo, might have lost track of footballs, and might have used them anyway in a game when they should have been on the highest of alerts. They may have had to rely on the confused recall of one Walt Anderson, who screwed up in a pretty significant fashion on a pretty big stage. Well done, boys. Glad you all brought your A-game.
This all makes me think of tall poppy syndrome. Sustained success galls. Inability to take down the king infuriates lessers. And so, finally, in this age of mediocrity, when parity is defied and when success is assured only to a handful of teams (and even then, only truly to one head coach/QB combo), the league decides in its own arrogance and envy to drop the hammer.
This is a bunch of mediocrities gritting their teeth and finally getting their way because they can't figure out how to solve a simple problem: Beat Belichick and Brady on the field, do it convincingly, do it consistently, and end them fair and square.
Instead of play on the field, they decided to bring in the lawyers.
What an obscene, foul, stinking, reeking, laughable, despicable, asinine fiasco.
You seem to forget about Spygate.
Belichick and Brady have a history of cheating.
So, the million dollar question is: have they been successful because they cheat?
Sorry Granite, but there's always going to be an asterisk.
To be clear: Spygate had nothing to do with Brady
You don't know that.
If they had illegal video of another team's defensive scheme, and they showed the video to Brady before the game, and Brady was able to recognize the scheme before the snap during the game, then the illegal video made Brady a better QB.