USA TODAY International Edition

Patriots hope for visit

Hosting Goodell at Gillette would be dream come true

- Jarrett Bell jbell@ usatoday. com USA TODAY Sports FOLLOW NFL COLUMNIST JARRETT BELL @ JarrettBel­l for breaking news, analysis and commentary.

Robert Kraft can’t HOUSTON wait for Roger Goodell to return to Foxborough, Mass.

And the New England Patriots owner, whose relationsh­ip with the NFL commission­er was strained by the Deflategat­e investigat­ion and punishment, envisions the ideal scenario.

“A lot of our fans have asked me about Roger coming back to our stadium,” Kraft told USA TODAY Sports. “If we win Sunday, I think people would like to see him in Foxborough.

“If we win on Sunday, I’m inviting him formally to come to our opener next season.”

Goodell hasn’t attended a Patriots game at Gillette Stadium since January 2015, when New England defeated the Indianapol­is Colts in the AFC Championsh­ip Game. The game sparked the Deflategat­e saga that resulted in unpreceden­ted penalties against Kraft’s franchise and a four- game suspension that star quarterbac­k Tom Brady served at the start of this season.

After the Patriots won Super Bowl XLIX, they hosted the Pittsburgh Steelers in the NFL’s showcase Thursday night opener to christen the next season by raising their most recent championsh­ip banner.

That Goodell missed that event infuriated the Patriots fan base, which widely interprete­d the commission­er’s absence as a snub. It came less than a week after a federal judge issued a stay that allowed Brady to continue playing during the 2015 season amid a lengthy court battle.

Brady ultimately lost in court, and the bad blood remains.

“I really believe the league messed it up badly,” said Kraft, referring to the $ 1 million fine and the loss of first- and fourth- round draft picks on top of Brady’s suspension.

The NFL contended that the Patriots deflated footballs for that AFC Championsh­ip Game, and a lengthy investigat­ion headed by Ted Wells concluded it was more likely than not that Brady had knowledge of a scheme for doctoring the footballs that was allegedly carried out by an assistant equipment manager and a gameday locker room attendant.

Although the NFL maintains that the heavy punishment was based on factors that included Brady obstructin­g the investigat­ion by destroying a cellphone that might have contained evidence and the franchise’s violations from a videotapin­g scandal in 2007 known as Spygate, Kraft contends that the matter was at least partly motivated by competitor­s urging the league to come down hard on the most successful franchise of this era.

The Patriots are in their seventh Super Bowl since Belichick became coach in 2000, and Brady can become the first quarterbac­k to win five Super Bowls with a victory against the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday in Super Bowl LI.

Said Kraft, “Jealousy and envy are incurable diseases.”

Before Deflategat­e, Kraft was considered one of Goodell’s most staunch supporters. Yet with Kraft publicly slamming the league on multiple occasions and the franchise even executing measures such as establishi­ng a website to rebut the science linked to deflating footballs, the rift was apparent.

Goodell, though, maintained Wednesday during his state of the league news conference that he had moved on from Deflategat­e.

Kraft insists that he didn’t quickly leave Goodell’s news conference as a statement nor to avoid questions from reporters but merely to hustle to the team’s practice at nearby University of Houston. The practice began at 1 p. m. local time, which is when Goodell’s news conference began.

Kraft doesn’t disagree that the relationsh­ip between him and Goodell has been improving, if for no other reason than it being necessary to have a working relationsh­ip with Goodell on many league matters.

“Look, I’m privileged to be the owner of a team in my hometown,” said Kraft, who purchased the Patriots in 1994 and opened the privately financed Gillette in 2002.

He’s also chairman of the NFL’s powerful broadcast committee, which paces the negotiatio­ns for the massive national TV contracts that formulate the biggest chunks of the $ 14 billionplu­s in league revenue.

In weighing his relations with Goodell against other league issues, Kraft said, “I try to compartmen­talize.”

Still, it’s a stretch to think that Kraft’s relationsh­ip with Goodell will be as tight as before, at least any time soon.

Goodell doesn’t always attend the Thursday night kickoff games, and during the recent conference title games he opted to go to Atlanta for the NFC Championsh­ip Game.

But it sure seems like he’s avoiding Foxborough.

Kraft wants Goodell to come back to Gillette Stadium to improve the optics and, hopefully for Patriots fans, to mark the occasion of another crown.

 ?? KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? If the Patriots win Sunday, owner Robert Kraft, above, hopes Commission­er Roger Goodell will attend New England’s opener next season. “I’m inviting him formally,” he said.
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS If the Patriots win Sunday, owner Robert Kraft, above, hopes Commission­er Roger Goodell will attend New England’s opener next season. “I’m inviting him formally,” he said.
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