Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

League report: Patriots’ Brady ‘generally aware’ of deflated footballs

- By Eddie Pells AP National Writer

Tom Brady: Unbelievab­le. The 243-report on “Deflategat­e” came out Wednesday and stopped barely short of calling the Patriots star quarterbac­k a cheater.

It did, however, call some of his claims “implausibl­e” and left little doubt that he had a role in having footballs deflated before New England’s AFC title game against Indianapol­is in January and probably in previous games.

In his report, attorney Ted Wells said the quarterbac­k “was at least generally aware” of all the plans to prepare the balls to his liking, below the league-mandated minimum of 12.5 pounds per square inch. Wells said it was “more probable than not” that two Patriots employees — officials’ locker room attendant Jim McNally and equipment assistant John Jastremski — executed the plan.

For his trouble, McNally asked for expensive shoes and signed footballs, jerseys and cash. He brokered the deals over a series of salty text messages with Jastremski that portray Brady as a hard-to-please taskmaster. “F--- Tom,” one read.

For the biggest home game of the season, McNally came through, taking the footballs from the officials’ locker room into a bathroom before delivering them to the field, the report said.

The footballs — measured by officials at halftime— somehow lost pressure between being tested by the referee and the break.

As for Brady’s claims that he didn’t know of efforts to deflate game balls and didn’t know anything about what McNally did: “We found these claims not plausible and contradict­ed by other evidence,” Wells wrote.

The penalties for all this? To be determined. League executive vice president of football operations Troy Vincent is reviewing the report and will hand down the punishment.

Former NFL executive Bill Polian, familiar with the league’s crime-andpunishm­ent procedures after spending 19 years on the powerful competitio­n committee, said the term Wells used — “more probable than not” — has been the standard of proof the NFL has used for competitiv­e violations over the last six years.

“In short, he is finding there was a violation,” Polian said. “In many ways I think this report is as important as the discipline. It clearly says a violation occurred.”

This offseason, the league has fined the Falcons $350,000 and stripped a fifth-round draft pick for pumping artificial crowd noise into the stadium during home games. It also suspended Browns general manager Ray Farmer for four games for sending texts to the sideline during games last season.

By almost any account, this rules violation is more serious. It involves arguably the league’s top star, a four-time Super Bowl winner who is bound for the Hall of Fame, and its marquee team — one that has spent almost the last decade under the microscope after getting caught in the videotapin­g scandal dubbed “Spygate” in 2007.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States