correcting my earlier statement, will full supporting information...
What do you ask Tom Brady if he admits that "he did it"?
Q1: Tom, how did you have "the deflator" mark which three of the 11 footballs were going to be made 0.12-0.42 psi too low, which four of the 11 footballs were going to be made 0.03-0.78 psi too high, and which four of the 11 footballs tested were going to be not touched/altered at all?
Q2: Why would you have wanted three types of footballs in the game, in terms of pressure ranges, when you do not even pick what footballs are to be put in play & when (a ref swaps out a football when it seems to him to be too wet)?
Q3: Did you call him "the deflator" 27.3% of the time, "the inflator" 36.4% of the time, and "hey you" the other 36.4% of the time?
Supporting info:
Wells report, page 8, readings of PATRIOTS footballs with the gauge that the ref said he had used in pregame pressure measurements:
Football #1 expect 11.32-11.52, found 11.80 - HIGH by 0.28 psi
Football #2 expect 11.32-11.52, found 11.20 -LOW by 0.12 psi
Football #3 expect 11.32-11.52, found 11.50 - compliant
Football #4 expect 11.32-11.52, found 11.00-LOW by 0.32 psi
Football #5 expect 11.32-11.52, found 11.45- compliant
Football #6 expect 11.32-11.52, found 11.95 - HIGH by 0.42 psi
Football #7 expect 11.32-11.52, found 12.30 - HIGH by 0.78 psi
Football #8 expect 11.32-11.52, found 11.55 - HIGH by 0.03 psi
Football # 9 expect 11.32-11.52, found 11.35 - compliant
Football #10 expect 11.32-11.52, found 10.90 -LOW by 0.42 psi
Football #11 expect 11.32-11.52, found 11.35 – compliant
Note: 11.32-11.52 range was calculated in the Wells report, see page 113: “the Ideal Gas Law predicts that the Patriots balls should have measured between 11.52 and 11.32 psi at the end of the first half”