USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Is Tom Brady-Roger Goodell drama brewing?

Commission­er can’t avoid QB he punished in Deflategat­e case

- Nancy Armour narmour@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

No more ducking, Roger Goodell.

For two years, the NFL commission­er has been conspicuou­s in his absence from any game involving Tom Brady and the New England Patriots. But no more. Since Goodell won’t come to New England, Brady and the Patriots will take the game to him.

Ever been to one of those uncomforta­ble parties where the host has invited someone while praying that he or she won’t show up — and then the person does? Yeah. Super Bowl LI is going to be just like that, only way more awkward because the entire world will be watching.

“For a number of reasons, all of you in the stadium understand how big this win was,” Patriots owner Robert Kraft said, making not the slightest effort to be subtle and drawing an enthusiast­ic roar in response.

“But we have to go to Houston and win one (more).”

Brady refused to get drawn into the fray, saying his teammates were his only motivation and that he hadn’t heard the fans taunt Goodell with chants of “Where is Roger?” But this entire season, or what he has played of it, has doubled as his revenge tour, designed to force a showdown with Goodell in Houston.

Even for a four-time Super Bowl champion and two-time NFL MVP, Brady is playing at a ridiculous­ly high level. He threw two intercepti­ons in the regular season, the fewest of his career, while completing 67.4% of his passes.

In the 36-17 rout of the Pittsburgh Steelers, he shredded what had been one of the toughest defenses down the stretch for 384 yards, a Patriots postseason record. He finished 32-for-42, with three touchdowns, and became the first player to reach seven Super Bowls.

All that’s left is for Brady to flash that Cheshire cat grin as he accepts the MVP trophy from Goodell on Feb. 5.

And if you’ve followed the Deflategat­e saga at all, you just know that’s coming.

“Tom did what Tom does,” tight end Martellus Bennett said. “He’s fired up and laser-focused.”

For those trapped on a remote island for the last two years, a recap: The Indianapol­is Colts accused the Patriots of using deflated footballs in the AFC Championsh­ip Game in January 2015. Based on fuzzy science and some shadiness by Brady and two New England equipment guys, the NFL decided that the Patriots were, in fact, cheating.

New England was docked a first-round draft pick and fined $1 million — the largest fine in NFL history, mind you. Kraft opted not to fight the punishment imposed in May 2015, hoping Goodell would show some leniency toward Brady. Fat. Chance. Goodell takes the protection of his beloved “shield” personally, and anyone he thinks is playing fast and loose with the rules is going to feel his wrath. Even if that person is a future Hall of Fame quarterbac­k and current NFL poster boy.

Goodell suspended Brady for four games, a harsher sentence than some domestic abusers have gotten. The punishment was delayed while it went through the court system, but Brady finally served it at the start of this season.

For two years, Kraft and Patriots fans have seethed at the injustice of it all, thinking Brady and the Patriots were targeted as payback for all of their success. (Four Super Bowl titles since the 2001 season for those keeping track.) All that vitriol once reserved for the New York Yankees was turned on Goodell.

And don’t think Goodell doesn’t know it.

Once a close friend of Kraft’s — he was a guest at the owner’s pre-AFC Championsh­ip Game party two years ago — he has been avoiding the Patriots as if they have a highly communicab­le disease. He skipped the season opener here in 2015, an unheard- of slight for the NFL’s kickoff party.

After being in Atlanta for the divisional round, fairness would have dictated that he come to New England for the AFC conference championsh­ip. No offense to the Green Bay Packers or Atlanta Falcons, but that rivalry doesn’t compare to Steelers-Patriots.

But to the surprise of no one, Goodell decided it was better that he again go to Atlanta, where he could roam the sideline before the game without fear for his physical safety or wardrobe.

“He’s like Waldo right now,” Bennett said. “He didn’t want to come here.”

But there will be no hiding in Houston. The Rockets aren’t playing on Super Bowl Sunday. The Rice and Houston basketball teams — men’s and women’s — are off that day, too.

No, Goodell is going to have to face Brady, on the biggest stage the NFL has.

“The boys showed up and played today,” Brady said. “We’ve got to do that again in two weeks.”

Where is Roger? Heading to Houston for the Super Bowl, same as Brady.

FOLLOW COLUMNIST NANCY ARMOUR

 ?? WINSLOW TOWNSON, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? A fan at the AFC title game in Foxborough, Mass., holds a sign ridiculing Roger Goodell, who is reviled by Patriots fans because of his suspension of Tom Brady in the Deflategat­e controvers­y.
WINSLOW TOWNSON, USA TODAY SPORTS A fan at the AFC title game in Foxborough, Mass., holds a sign ridiculing Roger Goodell, who is reviled by Patriots fans because of his suspension of Tom Brady in the Deflategat­e controvers­y.
 ?? GEOFF BURKE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Tom Brady celebrates after leading the Patriots past the Steelers in the AFC title game for his seventh Super Bowl trip.
GEOFF BURKE, USA TODAY SPORTS Tom Brady celebrates after leading the Patriots past the Steelers in the AFC title game for his seventh Super Bowl trip.
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