All things off season 2015.


skinsfan69
05-12-2015, 08:09 PM
What cracks me up is the NFL actually spent millions on this, put in numerous amounts of hours, all cause a ball was deflated 1.2 psi. Think about how really stupid that is, and how ridiculous it is that they would go to those lengths to prove something so minor.

To me it just should have been handled with a simple phone call by someone in the league office to the head coach. A warning should have been given and be done with it.

Schneed10
05-12-2015, 08:58 PM
What cracks me up is the NFL actually spent millions on this, put in numerous amounts of hours, all cause a ball was deflated 1.2 psi. Think about how really stupid that is, and how ridiculous it is that they would go to those lengths to prove something so minor.

To me it just should have been handled with a simple phone call by someone in the league office to the head coach. A warning should have been given and be done with it.

Yeah. You're an idiot.

What does the NFL sell? Incredibly competitive football games. So competitive that they draw in the emotions of millions of fans willing to pay tons of money to attend those games, watch them on TV, buy concessions, buy jerseys, etc. etc.

But as soon as the competitiveness of the very product they're selling is compromised, you're talking about risking the Golden Goose.

The time and money spent on the Wells report pales in comparison to protecting the immense revenue stream their competitive games generate.

JoeRedskin
05-12-2015, 09:14 PM
Yeah. What Schneed said. Seriously, for everyone saying it's no big deal, it the same reason they pay guys to make sure players tuck in their shirts and fine players for tiny uniform infractions.

It's a brand. Brands don't get eroded by big violations but rather by small infractions which undermine the brand's uniformity and integrity.

Plus. Brady is rat ass liar.

Sent from my VS985 4G using Tapatalk

DYoungJelly
05-12-2015, 09:25 PM
Yeah. You're an idiot.

What does the NFL sell? Incredibly competitive football games. So competitive that they draw in the emotions of millions of fans willing to pay tons of money to attend those games, watch them on TV, buy concessions, buy jerseys, etc. etc.

But as soon as the competitiveness of the very product they're selling is compromised, you're talking about risking the Golden Goose.

The time and money spent on the Wells report pales in comparison to protecting the immense revenue stream their competitive games generate.


He isn't an idiot. The 1.2psi had zero impact on the outcome of that game.

If competition is the rationale, the league should have punished the Colts for playing terrible.

Defensewins
05-12-2015, 09:27 PM
Yeah. You're an idiot.

What does the NFL sell? Incredibly competitive football games. So competitive that they draw in the emotions of millions of fans willing to pay tons of money to attend those games, watch them on TV, buy concessions, buy jerseys, etc. etc.

But as soon as the competitiveness of the very product they're selling is compromised, you're talking about risking the Golden Goose.

The time and money spent on the Wells report pales in comparison to protecting the immense revenue stream their competitive games generate.

Brilliant! Could not have said it better myself.
The integrity of the game is more important to a $9 Billion a year league than the cost of a thorough investigation. The NFL pays their commissioner $32 million a year. So what. What the fuck does the cost of the investigation have to do with this?
There is video evidence that the game balls were illegally taken into a bathroom stall and tampered with after the refs checked them. There are text messages that Brady refused to release to the investigation. I wonder why?

Defensewins
05-12-2015, 09:32 PM
He isn't an idiot. The 1.2psi had zero impact on the outcome of that game.

If competition is the rationale, the league should have punished the Colts for playing terrible.

The punishment is not so much about the 1.2psi. It is about not cooperating with a serious NFL investigation on a team that has cheated and been caught before. Why did Brady not give up his texts? Why did the Patriots not make the ball guy available one more time after the investigation had discovered new evidence and wanted to ask him about it?

DYoungJelly
05-12-2015, 09:49 PM
Brilliant! Could not have said it better myself.
The integrity of the game is more important to a $9 Billion a year league than the cost of a thorough investigation. The NFL pays their commissioner $32 million a year. So what. What the fuck does the cost of the investigation have to do with this?
There is video evidence that the game balls were illegally taken into a bathroom stall and tampered with after the refs checked them. There are text messages that Brady refused to release to the investigation. I wonder why?

Integrity?

Couldn't help but chuckle a little.

We're talking about the league that facilitates prescription drug proliferation and addiction?

The league that went to the ends of the earth to cover up concussion related information until they couldn't?

The league whose officials were caught on the Dallas Cowboy party bus with a bunch of future Hooters' waitresses?

The league who didn't realize knocking a woman out cold was really bad until the news media told them it was after they botched the punishment?

The league who knows Jerry Jones is talking to other teams' running backs and determines the tampering rules don't apply to the Cowboys?

The league who creates a "Commissioner's exempt list" out of thin air?

The league who penalized the Redskins 30+ million dollars for violating cap rules that didn't exist?

This league does whatever it wants with no consistency.

Every team breaks rules and most of those violations end exactly like the post above says, with a phone call that says we know what you're doing, quit.

Brady's punishment is a farce. Zero impact on the competitiveness of that game.

Intentionally roughing the passer has more of an impact on the outcomes of games than deflating a ball 1.2 psi. Suspend those guys. They are intentionally breaking a rule that impacts the competitiveness of the game.

DYoungJelly
05-12-2015, 09:54 PM
The punishment is not so much about the 1.2psi. It is about not cooperating with a serious NFL investigation on a team that has cheated and been caught before. Why did Brady not give up his texts? Why did the Patriots not make the ball guy available one more time after the investigation had discovered new evidence and wanted to ask him about it?

I would guess because there were incriminating as hell.

Darrell_Green_28
05-12-2015, 10:04 PM
He isn't an idiot. The 1.2psi had zero impact on the outcome of that game.

If competition is the rationale, the league should have punished the Colts for playing terrible.

That's like saying, Yeah I ran the red light/stop sign, but I didn't cause an accident. Why should I get a ticket?

DYoungJelly
05-12-2015, 10:10 PM
That's like saying, Yeah I ran the red light/stop sign, but I didn't cause an accident. Why should I get a ticket?

Ummm no it's not. It's like saying I shouldn't spend the next year in jail for running the light.

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