Fencer
Pro Bowl Player
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2006
- Messages
- 14,296
- Reaction score
- 3,986
We all know that the NFL has been wildly inconsistent in disciplinary matters under Goodell, and has lost some court/neutral arbitration cases when disciplinary matters have gotten that far. But I'd like to raise a difference between Deflategate and most of those other cases, and ask people -- especially those of the shyster persuasion -- whether or not they think it's significant.
In most other NFL disciplinary cases, the facts are rather settled.
In this case, the facts themselves are in doubt.
In most other NFL disciplinary cases, the facts are rather settled.
- That's generally true by the time they penalize somebody for domestic violence, DUI or other non-football-related crimes.
- It's also true of the Saints bounty case and the Dolphin bullying problems. In both those cases, locker room talk went too far, and scope of disagreement was about whether that's a small deal (locker room is hyperbolic under any circumstances) or a big one (some of the things said and done were, in a vacuum, pretty awful, so is the normal locker room hyperbole really any kind of excuse?).
In this case, the facts themselves are in doubt.
- The penalties assume a pattern of sticking needles into footballs to deflate them below allowable pressure levels.
- In fact, there's negligible evidence that such deflation ever happened.












