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Source: Brady's testimony "not entirely credible"


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Soul_Survivor88

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Let the leaks begin....

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...action-to-tom-brady-testimony-not-as-glowing/

Those paid to exonerate Patriots quarterbackTom Brady were wowed by his performance at Tuesday’s appeal hearing, #asexpected. Those who suspended him in the first place weren’t. #Asexpected.

Per a league source, Brady simply reiterated his denial regarding any involvement in or knowledge of whatever it was that John Jastremski and Jim McNally may have been doing with the team’s footballs. When pressed on certain facts relating to Brady’s potential knowledge or involvement, the answers were regarded by some in the room (i.e., some who aren’t paid to exonerate Brady) as not entirely credible.

Apparently, Brady’s case hinged heavily on attacking the science, under the broader umbrella of taking the position that: (1) he didn’t do anything wrong; and (2) Ted Wells can’t prove that Brady did. The question then becomes whether the NFL is willing to throw out the entire Wells report based on the flaws in the science (and the science is definitely flawed), or whether the NFL continues to be troubled by the Jastremski-McNally exchanges and Brady’s answers to questions about his interactions with either or both of them.

Most importantly, it’s unlikely that the Commissioner will fully exonerate Brady because the Commissioner nearly lost his job last year by not going far enough in disciplining a player. When the Commissioner goes too far, eventually having his decisions overturned by some independent party, he suffers little or no P.R. fallout.

That dynamic alone should tell us all which way the wind is howling on this one. And it provides further proof for the notion that last year’s Ray Rice debacle has left the Commissioner hopelessly conflicted in every single one of these cases.

With one path jeopardizing his job and the other path not triggering even a peep of substantial criticism, the smart play for Goodell will always be to uphold a suspension and let the player and his union fight for further reduction or outright elimination of it in court. And that’s the kind of inherent conflict that arguably makes Goodell unfit to be the final decision-maker in any of these cases.

Brady's Reaction: See you in court motherfu.cker!
 
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Figures there would be back and forth reports.
 
Most importantly, it’s unlikely that the Commissioner will fully exonerate Brady because the Commissioner nearly lost his job last year by not going far enough in disciplining a player.

No, he nearly lost his job because his discipline was wildly inconsistent with the infraction and willfully ignored critical facts. Whether it was too far or not far enough is irrelevant.
 
This is stupid in homeric proportions. If the science says nothing happened (and it does), it does not make any difference if McNally and Jaz texted that they were going to flatten every ball in the league. Nothing happened. No offense occurred. This all stems from some grievance-mongering football meatheads in over their depth on trivial HS science and a herd of gossip-mongering sports "journalists" who make the football meatheads look like Einsteins.
 
What people don't understand is it really does not matter much whether Brady did or did not do anything wrong. The real issue is whether the Wells Report provides proof that he did anything wrong. And I would say it doesn't. There are too many other factors that could account for what happened to those footballs. It's easiest for the league to find a lack of credibility in witness testimony which can't be tested and corroborated or falsified. That's why the league needs to look to the only hard evidence they have, the science, and make their determination based on that. Otherwise it's a he said/she said, which does not prove anything other than supporting underlying biases for each side.
 
I guess that answers the question as to whether Goodell invited Wells to essentially throw him under the bus (i.e. his report's been torn to shreds, Goodell could use a good Brady performance coupled with Kessler destroying Wells as an 'out' to say Wells screwed up and he was being fair in reducing Brady's penalty).

The answer: hell no.

Brady's response better be: see you in court, d.ckhead.
 
Of course now the NFL will use its leaks after the NFLPA used theirs. So much for confidentiality agreement.
 
Those who were not paid to exonerate brady were of course unbiased and independent.

Which is why this whole appeal process is a sham .... why should anyone have to answer to the presumption of guilt? I can't think of anything more un-American
 
The misinformation, spin, and general BS put out there by "sources" on this story is staggering.
 
Leaks and counter leaks and probably over a month to receive news that the suspension has not been reduced. So bored with this ****.
 
This kinda gets at what annoys me. The media is reporting that Brady's argument was "the science doesn't prove that we deflated balls". That's not even half of it. In actuality, the science pretty clearly indicates that they didn't deflate balls. Those are two very, very different statements.
 
I guess offering to testify under oath when there was no compulsion to do so and saying you didn't do anything is deemed "not credible".

Frame up, cover up or witch hunt.
 
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Schefter: Brady offered an explanation to everything per source

Florio: Per a league source, Brady simply reiterated his denial regarding any involvement in or knowledge of whatever it was that John Jastremski and Jim McNally may have been doing with the team’s footballs.

Direct contradiction of Schefter's report.....was this a trap laid by Brady's camp???
 
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