primetime
Pro Bowl Player
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I'm going to go out on a limb here and assume that rule is there because #ThereWasAnIncident.
Yeah, almost certainly.
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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.I'm going to go out on a limb here and assume that rule is there because #ThereWasAnIncident.
I'm not implying anything, and I'm not talking about the specifics of this particular case. I'm saying that what police claim, what gets charged, and what gets argued by proscutors in court is not always 100% identical or 100% accurate, so PatsFan2 doesn't know what the hell he's talking about when he says that Kraft doesn't have a prayer, because he hasn't seen the evidence.
He can do literally whatever he wants in terms of punishing players due to Article 46 of the CBA and the precedent established by the league winning the Brady case. But the CBA only governs the working relationship between the league and players - it's an agreement reached between the league and the players' union.
Article 46 does not apply to the league's working relationship to the teams. That's a whole separate issue, which frankly should have been tested harder after Deflategate but Bob decided it was better to roll over "for the the good of the 32"
Actually the last time I was really embarrassed as a Pats fan of off the field stuff was in the 80s when Zeke Mowatt shook his junk at Female reporter Olsen in the locker room during the Kiam years
Bart's CTE symptoms are showing.
It’s not about a misdemeanor charge. We had a guy who freaking murdered people. Other teams have had women beaters, guys with guns and drugs, etc.That's not true.
Roger can do LITERALLY whatever he wants
However, I dont think he will in this case over a misdemeanor charge.
The Korean girls who work in NY were hookers in Korea. When they get older, their client base shrinks so they come to NY to continue working. After a few years, they either cash out or open a place of their own.
He has PDS
(Patriots Derangement Syndrome)
Do you think sex trafficking just generally isn't a thing? Because women being lured illegally to the USA under false pretenses only to end up working as sex slaves in seedy massage parlors is, sadly, a not-uncommon story.
Yea. You tell irsay that.
It’s not about a misdemeanor charge. We had a guy who freaking murdered people. Other teams have had women beaters, guys with guns and drugs, etc.
Are those crimes severe enough to warrant Article 46 discipline? Yes. TO THE INDIVIDUAL.
Look no further to the Jim Irsay example. There wouldn’t be any need to punish the team for an executive’s poor judgment in his personal life, nor has it ever been done before.
This is the saddest thing I've seen all day. I hope the women get justice. I also hope that if Kraft really did involve himself, that he hands over the team to his son and removes himself from the public eye. I have to remind myself that I root for the players, not for the owner, but it still doesn't make me feel good about the Patriots at the moment.
In the case of GB the league could go after the functional owners (i.e. the people who actually run the team) and still can fine the team $. I believe the league already has GB-specific language for many things (i.e. saying what GB front-office person is treated as an "owner" for all the purposes where NFL rules refer to an "owner").b) the owner of the Green Bay Packers is like 10,000 people, including me and probably several posters on this board who paid for novelty shares during the last stock offer, which would make policing the action of owners in the bylaws impossible (as opposed to policing the conduct of the franchise, since the Packers are run by an executive board elected by ownership)
24 pages so far on this thread, so yeah.Does anyone really give a **** about this?
The police have reported they have video evidence of Bob Kraft on 2 separate occasions.
Its over.