brady cheats

“Sadly, it only became more obvious after Brady spoke. And if the NFL finds in the coming days that Brady did have something to do with altering the 11 Patriots footballs reported to be under-inflated, then commissioner Roger Goodell needs to bench Brady for the Super Bowl,” (Tom’s Tale).

He didn’t look right in his press conference. This is a national issue, not something that’s just going to go away, and Brady could feel the spotlight. Both him and Belicheat spoke horsely with nerves in their voices. They’ve been caught, and they know it.

“He looked and sounded weak and in desperate need of a tuck rule,” wrote Ian O’Conner.

“Though he said his friends need not worry: “I tell them I’m going to be OK,” Brady said. “This isn’t ISIS. No one’s dying.””

Great quote, Brady. So, so classy. His lying card may have come when he initially, “admitted that footballs pumped up to 12.5 pounds per square inch are “a perfect fit for me,” yet swore he did not notice a difference in the AFC Championship Game when most of the balls had significantly less pressure.”

The quarterback said more than once that a ball at 12.5 psi felt like magic in his hands, and it made sense. Any elite craftsman or artist or athlete could tell you that the tools of his or her trade are not interchangeable parts.

But Brady claimed that the NFL game moves so fast, he doesn’t have time to worry about the weight or feel of the ball once the bodies start flying. “I get the snap,” he said, “I drop back, I throw the ball.”

Anytime you start down a path of lies, you’re making so much up as you go along that you can’t really look ahead and see if it adds up. Brady started down a road where he really likes the normal weight of a football, so he could lie and pretend he doesn’t like his balls deflated. Therefore, as a connoisseur of regulation sized balls, he should probably be able to tell when his own are lacking in weight.