Apparently, Tom Brady and staff had 4 hours [lasted over 11 hours] to present
their appeal case to the current high commissioner of NFL football. This
happening has been called “deflategate” by the press. Did Brady have a hand in
the so-called deflating of footballs in the AFC championship game? According to
NFL rules, a fine of $25,000 is punishment for tampering with footballs. That
$25,000 fine is not what the NFL punished Tom Brady and his Patriot team. The
NFL Commissioner acted as judge and jury, and handed out a non-commensurate
fine of suspensions, millions of dollars, and loss of draft picks.
There was an enlightening article in the June 14, 2015 edition of
The New York Times written by authors associated with the American Enterprise
Institute. This impartial group made its mark when it evaluated “Bountygate” in
2012. According to the NFL, the New Orleans Saints were guilty of offering
bounties that resulted in injury to opposing football players on other teams.
To make a long story short, the data collected by the NFL indicated just the
opposite. In fact, in 2009, the New Orleans Saints ranked either at number 30
or number 31 on the list of injuring other players- in other words, they were
at the bottom of the 32 team league. That evidence was presented to the High
Commissioner and the New Orleans Saints suspensions were quickly vacated the
following month.
The impartial American Enterprise Institute evaluated the
non-impartial Ted Wells report [he was paid $3 million for his deflategate
investigation]. The summary per the American Enterprise Institute: 1. The
referees used two different air pressure gauges. This is significant because
these gauges did not measure PSI equally. 2. Each team provided its own
footballs. 3. A football exposed to the cold weather conditions have a lower
PSI compared to a football in a warm heated room -it has a higher PSI. 4. All
11 “cold weather” Patriot footballs were measured. Only 4 “room heated “Indianapolis Colt
footballs were measured. 5. Referees did not remember which air pressure gauge
were used to measure any of the footballs. 6. The Patriot balls were measured
in the cold temperature- deflated [PSI] by about the expected statistical
significance. 7. On the other hand, when the Colts balls were measured the PSI
measurement - were statistically higher than expected. In other words,
statistically significant, the changes in air pressure of the two teams balls
was not because the pressure of the Patriot balls were too low, but because the
Colts balls were too high. 8.It’s more than likely that the Patriots began the
game with their footballs that had too little air. 9. Unfortunately, the Wells
report did not address points 1 through 8.
So Brady was expected to prove his innocence. I naïvely thought that
the burden of proof was on the accuser. How silly was my thinking. Because the
High Commissioner did not recluse himself, how impartial and transparent is
Roger? After all, he paid Ted Wells $3
million and Wells was expected to defend his “more probable than not”
conclusion that the Patriots footballs were deliberately doctored, thus
breaking an NFL rule.
This current information suggests that a sloppy and inaccurate evaluation
regarding the footballs was made by Wells. Not only that, the cold-warm
conditions, the PSI measuring devices, the referees measuring all 11 footballs
from one team, and only 4 from the
other, and the referees, not knowing there were PSI gauge differences and they
didn’t care to remember which gauges
were used on which football was not considered. Is this a bad dream?
High Commissioner Roger states that he’s all about defending the integrity
of the NFL. I don’t believe that for one minute. He’s more concerned about
defending his integrity and keeping his multimillion dollar job. Well, he can
do that by changing his stripes regarding the over-the-top punishments. If he
doesn’t, I would fire him and ask Wells to return the 3 million. Otherwise,
there seems to be an apparent collusion between Roger G and Ted W. And, they’re
just covering their own asses. Thank goodness there was an impartial group that
evaluated this $3 million boondoggle.
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