When the 2 pounds report, the deflator text and the ballboy in the bathroom were reported, I thought the pats did it.
Then two things happened. The actual measurements came out and the drop could be explained by the ideal gas law.
But the text and the bathroom visit still looms and the coincidence is tough to swallow.
So let's say that brady conspired in the scheme, that means that either:
A) the deflator takes the balls in the bathroom and decides that for some reason he's not going to take air out this time
B) the deflator takes maaaybe .01 out of the balls
If you believe in the ideal gas law AND you believe that brady is guilty then you must believe in A or B. So which is it?
Option B is ridiculous.
Option A means there is no violation, at least for this game.
Is there an option C? What am I missing?
C) he took a leak
Not sure why that is hard to believe.
Im with you. I want to hear from the people who think brady is lying. I think I just want people to admit that there wasn't even a violation. That seems to get lost in this mess.
On one hand, you have poorly done measurements that don't prove or discount that a violation occurred. On the other hand, you have a number of texts that imply that such a violation was occurring. You can't really ignore that any more than you can ignore the ideal gas law arguments.
I guess it's about interpretation:
• If (as Brady did after the Jets game) a QB complains that the footballs were overinflated and he wants them deflated—not necessarily to illegal levels, but softer than the illegal 16 psi they were before (guess the league doesn't have a problem with overinflated footballs) ...
• and let's say that QB gets on the equipment guy's case about it ...
• and the equipment guy (as happens with so many of us on the job) gets a little annoyed with that and complains to a co-worker, in the course of which he jokingly refers to himself as Brady's "deflator" ...
then I see nothing that sets off a red flag, nothing that doesn't make sense or seems out of place given the context in which the texts occurred.
If using the word "deflator" is enough evidence for the NFL's high court to conclude that footballs have not simply been brought down to lower (but acceptable) PSI levels, but have in fact been changed to illegally low levels (again, remembering that the NFL apparently has no problem with illegally
overinflated footballs), and thus deserving of a severe penalty, then that's a judicial system in need of serious reform.