Author Topic: NFL investigating if Patriots used deflated footballs in AFC Championship game  (Read 1078 times)

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Offline mystery-ak

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http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2015/01/19/nfl-reportedly-investigating-if-patriots-used-deflated-footballs-in-afc/

NFL investigating if Patriots used deflated footballs in AFC Championship game
Published January 19, 2015
FoxNews.com

The NFL has confirmed it is looking  into charges the New England Patriots cheated Sunday night when they clinched a trip to the Super Bowl Sunday night by using deflated footballs.

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy confirmed the probe Monday, following the AFC championship game, in which the Patriots demolished the Indianapolis Colts, 45-7. The charge was first made Sunday night, when an Indianapolis reporter that the NFL had seized at least one game ball from the AFC championship game to examine whether pigskins were intentionally deflated to make them easier to throw and catch.

“The NFL is investigating the possibility,” Bob Kravitz, of WTHR, tweeted, adding that, “at one point the officials took a ball out of play and weighed it.”

    “The NFL is investigating the possibility."

    - Bob Kravitz, WTHR

If the Patriots did cheat, it would not be the first time. The team was penalized a first-round draft pick, fined $250,000 and head coach Belichick was personally fined $500,000 after an investigation by the NFL determined the team had illegally videotaped their opponents hand signals during a 2007 game.

And unsubstantiated accusations of cheating have long dogged the team, stemming from their Super Bowl wins in 2002, 2004 and 2005. The St. Louis Rams claimed the team illegally videotaped their walk-through practices prior to the 2002 game, and players on the other defeated opponents have said the Patriots seemed to have inside knowledge of their playbooks.

The Patriots lost the Super Bowl in 2008 and 2012, both times to the New York Giants.

Deflating footballs would theoretically have made it easier for Brady, who completed 23 of 35 passes for 226 yards and three touchdowns, to throw and for his receivers to catch in the bad weather of Sunday’s game in Foxboro. But it also should have benefited Colts' quarterback Andrew Luck, who had a miserable game, completing 12 of 33 passes for a mere 126 yards.

According to NFL rules, home teams are required to provide 36 balls for outdoor games and make the balls available for testing with a pressure gauge prior to the game.

The Patriots were also accused of flouting the rules in the game before Sunday’s contest, in which they beat the Baltimore Ravens using unorthodox formations that Ravens Coach John Harbaugh said were designed to confuse the officials and his defense.

However, the margin of victory and the fact that the Colts used the same game balls make it unlikely the cheating, if it occurred, had much of an impact on the game’s outcome. If the allegation is proven, the NFL could take away draft picks from the Partriots.

The University of Southern California, under Lane Kiffin, was fined for deflating footballs in 2012 against arch-rival Oregon. Kiffin blamed a student-manager, who was fired.

Super Bowl XLIX takes place Feb. 1 in Glendale, Arizona. The defending champion Seattle Seahawks, who punched a return ticket with a 28-22 win over the Green Bay Packers prior to the Patriots-Colts game, are a two-and-a-half-point favorite in early betting.
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Offline PzLdr

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There's a miasma of slime that clings to Belichick like a chum slick. And, as evidenced by the shenanigans surrounding his signing with New England, he has no honor.
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Offline andy58-in-nh

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What a load of crap. I'd love to see the source for this nonsense, but of course, there is none at the moment. Just more agitated hype from the jealous snipes of Patriot Haters Nation.

All game balls are chosen by the teams themselves, after the quarterbacks have been allowed to handle them, in order to casually rough up the surface and the laces. These balls are then tested by the league before the game, usually two hours prior to kickoff, and they can routinely measure the pressure during the game, and typically, only one or two individuals have direct access to them.

What do they suggest: that someone stuck an inflation needle in one or more game balls during the game, and then somehow manipulated it to overcome its built-in, one-way seal, and did so in a way that no one would notice? Absolutely preposterous, on the face of it. Even then, regardless: it would have benefited both teams equally.

A more plausible theory perhaps might involve the weather - that rain storm yesterday resulted from a strong low pressure system over the area. During the game, ambient air pressure dropped substantially, by over 10 millibars (I researched this on NOAA's regional web site).

Whatever. The Colts' problem yesterday wasn't a soft football - it was a soft defense.
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Offline jmyrlefuller

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The on-field results of a game have never been reversed in NFL history. Unlike the NCAA, which will gladly vacate a game midseason, the NFL simply won't do it. The less scrupulous members of the NFL must have certainly noticed this. Even if they do get caught, the benefits will outweigh the consequences.

Of course, as seen when referees fist-bumped when a team scored in a game earlier this year and everyone in the league openly acted like it was no big deal, there will always be enough "reasonable doubt" for the perpetrators to get away with it anyway.

The NFL is corrupt to the core.
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