Even if Brady were involved, I also don't see how anyone could prove it.
I agree. And I see that as a negative for Brady in terms of how his career would be perceived IF the infractions plumb the lowest possible depths. He'll be forever soiled with the residue of this in the minds of many people. Even if he didn't explicitly know about the cheating, he'd definitely be a primary beneficiary and his accomplishments will be called into question, as will the accomplishments of the Pats in general.
I think plenty of people hate him already for his ability to date women that the rest of the real world can only hope to see on screen or in lingerie catalogs.I see this entire situation getting blown out of proportion at this stage and like most other things once it is resolved it will go away and years from now this whole story will be nothing more than a footnote to Brady's career.
Wow, did we get sucked back into the Vick threads? Sure looks that way.
Are you comparing the maiming and torturing of dogs with some guy videotaping some guys fingers?
Yeah, one actually affects the NFL, one affects their image. The Pats situation IF they were cheating and relaying information in the game as it happened, is incalcuably worse than the Vick deal. Not looking to hijack this, maybe that debate deserves its own FFA thread, but you are wrong to think Vick is worse than this.
From an ethical standpoint, I disagree completely - animal cruelty is worse than the vast majority of acts that can happen with intention in the NFL (intentional injury is up there, I guess).From an NFL standpoint, I agree. I've moved from resentment, to grudging respect, to outright admiration for Tom Brady over the last 5 years. I think his single greatest strangth is his ability to read defenses and make the right pass at the right time. Needless to say, I'm pretty concerned about these allegations. IF they are true (probably are), and IF the technology was consistently used to advantage in order to relay real-time information about the defensive calls (not sure about this AT ALL, and I'm skeptical), then:1) There is no way in hell that Brady did not know what was going on, plausible deniability or no2) It is cheating, with an immediate effect far greater than performance enhancing drugs. It would be the equivalent of using a parabolic mic to hear what is being said in the huddle or intercepting helmet communication and then using that information to set the defense.3) It really tarnishes Brady's legacy in my mind, because what I consider to be his single greatest strength - his reads - will seem to have been the result of the booth, not his ability. (Yes, I know he has great accuracy, but his reads set him apart from everyone else - even Peyton - in my mind, at least.)I hope this is not the case. I'm not a Pats fan, but as a fan of the game, I don't want to feel like I've been snookered.It probably sounds like I'm over-reacting, but I remember the 2001 Colts/Raiders game, when Biekert figured out Manning's audibles in the middle of the game and the Oakland D dominated the fourth quarter, adjusting to every audible. I'm not arguing that was illegal - actually, I thought it was great MLB work & perfectly legal. But it was the deciding factor in the game, and stunning to watch. I just bring it up to point out the effect of fore-knowledge on the game.