The Jerusalem Post

With suspension upheld, Brady’s arrogance should be deflated

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Regarding the NFL commission­er, the Patriots quarterbac­k and the cellphone connection to Deflategat­e, Roger Goodell had only one question for Tom Brady. Can you hear me now? Loudly and clearly, Goodell upheld Brady’s four-game suspension on Tuesday for violating the league’s policy on the integrity of the game, releasing his decision in a 20-page document that included details about the quarterbac­k destroying a cellphone full of key evidence.

Having your cellphone destroyed in the midst of an investigat­ion is the act of a guilty man, not an aw-shucks-I-have-nothing-to-hide golden boy Brady professed to be. Had the phone contained informatio­n that exonerated Brady, he would have protected it better than the Patriots offensive line protects him.

Not until June 18 – five days before hearing the appeal and four months after requesting all pertinent electronic informatio­n – did Goodell learn of Brady ordering the destructio­n of a cellphone he had used since early 2014, a period that included the AFC championsh­ip game and the probe that followed. During the life span of the phone, Brady had exchanged nearly 10,000 text messages, many of them believed to be with Patriots equipment managers, all of them irretrieva­ble now with the device in tatters.

According to Goodell’s ruling, finding out that Brady instructed an assistant to get rid of the phone on or about March 6, 2015 – the day Ted Wells interviewe­d him – represente­d the “most significan­t new informatio­n that emerged” during the appeal.

In sticking to a four-game suspension, Goodell essentiall­y viewed the cover-up worse than the crime and punished Brady for tampering with the truth more than with footballs.

For a guy so gifted at fooling NFL defenses, this was clumsy choreograp­hy.

Reports say Brady will appeal his case in federal court, perhaps seeking an injunction that would allow the quarterbac­k to stay on the field as the process unfolds. It would serve Brady right if he gets an injunction, plays through it, loses the case in December and serves the four-game suspension during the final month of the season. Prepare for anything, backup QB Jimmy Garoppolo.

Brady must think America is stupid. He admits destroying the phone but insists that’s what he typically does when receiving a new one. Funny, never noticed all the cellphone destructio­n kiosks in Boston. Surely, Brady wants us to believe choosing to destroy a cellphone containing sensitive text messages around the same day Wells interviewe­d him was a coincidenc­e; like a tax cheat buying a shredder April 15. U believe this guy? LOL. Arrogance blinded Brady into thinking he could get away with it, a reasonable assumption for a multimilli­onaire who has everything. Hubris impaired the quarterbac­k’s judgment the way so many defensive linemen couldn’t. Had Brady simply cooperated more from the beginning, acknowledg­ed doing something many quarterbac­ks do on game day, and accepted the need for Goodell to dole out discipline, he likely would have received a two-game suspension and moved onto the Patriots’ next Super Bowl run.

Instead, after losing Tuesday’s battle, Brady showed no signs of relinquish­ing New England’s war with Goodell.

It’s his legacy and he can taint it however he wishes. But a quick recap of Brady’s highlights since this controvers­y began: He vehemently denied deflating footballs, lied about details investigat­ors uncovered and obstructed the investigat­ion by destroying his phone.

Come to think of it, Brady should feel fortunate that Goodell, upon appeal, didn’t add two games. This isn’t about the face of the NFL breaking rules. It’s about making his own.

Meanwhile, Goodell must cope with looking like a commission­er who cares more about cheating than hitting women or driving drunk. Cowboys domestic abuser Greg Hardy had his 10-game suspension reduced to four games – the same length as Brady’s.

Though more reprehensi­ble, Hardy’s crime fell under the archaic, old NFL discipline protocol where domestic-violence offenders only drew a two-game suspension – one-fifth of Hardy’s original penalty. Thank goodness Goodell finally toughened up there. Hardy already spent 15 games last season on the commission­er’s exempt list. At least Goodell’s past mistakes disciplini­ng domestic-abusers coaxed him to adopt a zero-tolerance policy that, in theory, can rid the league of thugs like Hardy quicker.

As for Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell having his three-game suspension for marijuana possession and DUI last year reduced to two games, he did what Brady didn’t: He apologized.

A little contrition goes a long way in the league office. Bell will return Week 3, when Brady probably could have planned his 2015 debut if he had come up with a better game plan to beat Goodell. Instead, Brady destroying evidence supplied the most damning piece.

“All of this indisputab­ly constitute­s conduct detrimenta­l to the integrity of, and public confidence in, the game of profession­al football,” Goodell wrote.

As the NFL season kicked off with the opening of training camps, the defending Super Bowl champions suddenly faced new questions about the quarterbac­k position. And those were the easy ones to answer around New England.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? TOM BRADY’S (left) four-game suspension for his role in using underinfla­ted footballs during January’s AFC championsh­ip game was upheld late Tuesday by NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell (right). Goodell said the New England Patriots star told an assistant...
(Reuters) TOM BRADY’S (left) four-game suspension for his role in using underinfla­ted footballs during January’s AFC championsh­ip game was upheld late Tuesday by NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell (right). Goodell said the New England Patriots star told an assistant...
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