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Again you are doing the same thing goodell/wells did.
They were supremely confident that the patriots knew they were breaking the rules. They knew the patriots had a history of not caring about rules. The balks were taken into a bathroom. By cheaters. The colts caught them with the int ball. They measured and the balls were under psi. They proceeded to treat them as guilty criminals BECAUSE THEY ARE THE PATRIOTS.
You can justify doing the same thing all you want but it is the same thing. You think you are right because you know how dishonest the league is. Exactly kensils approach to the pats.
Doesn't mean you are wrong but means you are disinterested in facts. That makes out fan base look no better than the boobs behind the shield.
You are frustrated that our fan base is in lynch-mode with any entity (NFL, Indy Peyton, NYJ) that has wronged the Pats in the past. I get it.
To say that I am not interested in the facts is BS. Ive been pretty consistent in spelling out what the WSJ article has detailed and applying my own professional experience to the matter and coming up with my interpretation of what they did/didn't do. I can assure you there isn't a shred of vindictiveness in my analysis.
The facts are pretty straightforward and maybe unlike others I am not treating this like Deflategate.
1) NFLPA auditors discovered the accounting discrepancy
2) The NFL denied it hadn't done anything wrong. However...
3) The CBA tells us that...
A.Players get 40 percent of ticket sales
B. Players get 45 percent from sponsorship revenue
C. Players get 55 percent from media deals and cash from NFL.com, the NFL Network and other such entities.
D. The league has several exemptions from the revenue sharing like money from personal seat licenses, premium seating, etc. The NFL/owners is allowed to take those funds any allocate them to revenue expenditures or earmark them for capital expenses. At any rate there is a process and governance involved as it relates to how financials are documented and reported. I'm assuming that the league's accounting practice is pretty standard for a F500 corp.
4)The audit found the NFL created an exemption it called the “waived gate” exemption, one that isn’t delineated in the agreement when in actually the revenue was from ticket sales. Are you going to make the claim that the NFL/owners bean counters did not know that money was from ticket sales and mistakenly created a "brand new" journal entry? Creating a new journal entry is not something that is randomly done by a single individual. Keep in mind by mislabeling the revenue there are also tax benefits/ramifications that the teams realize by doing so. My point: this was calculated and well-thought out. Plus how they classify revenue in the CBA is pretty straightforward. They did it properly for everything else and screw up on just this? Meh...
5) The NFL, refusing to act in good faith challenged the NFLPA's interpretation of the journal entry and seeing that they weren't getting to a satisfactory resolution took them to arbitration.
6) The NFL lost in a manner consistent to Tyson/Spinks in 1988 because it was so obvious to what they were doing.
If you want to categorize this event as the NFL taking advantage of a gray area and an honest mistake go ahead. I categorize it as the NFL (the owners really) knew exactly what they were doing and they did it for tax benefits and because they have a fundamental belief that they are entitled to the money to fix their stadiums when need be and it shouldn't come out of their pocket but rather the players and not some simple accounting oversight.
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