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originally posted by: Sremmos80
a reply to: OccamsRazor04
Ya it is just 'probable' that they did.
They cheated but it didn't have much affect on the game. He was better in the second half with the balls that were not the ones in question.
originally posted by: Sremmos80
a reply to: OccamsRazor04
I won't deny other qbs do it.
And have said repeatedly that it didn't change anything.
But I am under the impression that there was an effort to alter the balls to the likeing if Brady and it may have been below the standards set.
originally posted by: Sremmos80
a reply to: OccamsRazor04
Cause the Colts called attention to it. I know it wasn't the guy that got the interception.
IIRC he gave it one of their equipment guys that noticed and it was a higher up that made the call.
And it is debatable if every QB does it outside the guidelines.
And you do know that Goodell and craft are like buddy buddy right?
WCVB-TV reports that suspicions first arose when Indianapolis linebacker D’Qwell Jackson intercepted a Tom Brady pass early in the second quarter of the game. Jackson noticed the ball felt deflated and mentioned something to the team’s equipment manager, who brought up the subject to Colts head coach Chuck Pagano. Pagano told the team’s GM Ryan Grigson, who called the league.
Speaking to the press following a Pro Bowl practice on Thursday, Jackson said; 'I'm a linebacker, I'm a defensive guy. If anybody recognized anything it definitely wouldn't come from me.'
originally posted by: Sremmos80
a reply to: OccamsRazor04
That is why craft was so mad about the report right? Cause it shows they did nothing at all?
I know the guy that intercepted it said he didn't say anything, but some one else did.
Show me where it is all shown a lie.
originally posted by: hutch622
So let me get this right , you have a competition that must be worth billions of dollars if you add everything up and the championship balls are provided by one of the teams . Not the governing body . Reminds me of underage basketball here in Australia where you turned up and hoped someone had actually brought a ball along . Or have i missed something .
originally posted by: Sremmos80
a reply to: OccamsRazor04
Tom Wells said if was more probable then not it happened.
We do not believe that the evidence supports a conclusion that there was any deliberate effort by the Patriots to circumvent the NFL‟s Playing Rules with respect to the kicking balls used during the AFC Championship Game. We have reached this conclusion for a number of reasons.
"We have concluded that it is more probable than not that Jim McNally (the Officials Locker Room attendant for the Patriots) and John Jastremski (an equipment assistant for the Patriots) participated in a deliberate effort to release air from Patriots game balls after the balls were examined by the referee.
Jastremski: Ugh…Tom was right. Jastremski: I just measured some of the balls. They supposed to be 13 lbs… They were like 16. Felt like bricks
Read more at: nesn.com...
originally posted by: HorusChrist
a reply to: Sremmos80anyone that knows football knows that it's easier to run the ball when your passing game is doing great. Can't have 8 men in the box. And the deflated footballs for years helped new England running backs fumble less. Asterisk time for the record books.
Ironically, out of 32 NFL teams, the Patriots come away looking like the least likely team to have a home-away discrepancy in football quality. New England has actually fumbled more frequently at home than on the road since 2007!
Comparing this to Sharp’s original table, the data shows that the Patriots still have an advantage in ball security, even when comparing the same players. However, it’s nowhere near the 88% increase that Sharp claims – it’s closer to a 23% increase.
occams razor says they cheated, it showed they fumbled less at home, sorry.
originally posted by: OccamsRazor04
originally posted by: HorusChrist
a reply to: Sremmos80anyone that knows football knows that it's easier to run the ball when your passing game is doing great. Can't have 8 men in the box. And the deflated footballs for years helped new England running backs fumble less. Asterisk time for the record books.
Except it's proven the Pats fumble MORE at home, and less on the road. That means the pats success comes when they have no opportunity to tamper with the balls, ergo you are uninformed and keep spouting proven lies.
Ironically, out of 32 NFL teams, the Patriots come away looking like the least likely team to have a home-away discrepancy in football quality. New England has actually fumbled more frequently at home than on the road since 2007!
www.backpicks.com...
You do know it's a proven fact none of the balls were even deflated and the NFL lied to hide that and just went on with their persecution right?
The fumble analysis you reference can only be taken seriously if you have an agenda, it's junk.
Comparing this to Sharp’s original table, the data shows that the Patriots still have an advantage in ball security, even when comparing the same players. However, it’s nowhere near the 88% increase that Sharp claims – it’s closer to a 23% increase.
insidethepylon.com...
regressing.deadspin.com...
regressing.deadspin.com...