It seems to me that you believe the NFL ruling when it suits your argument.
I don't know why they decided to kick the guy out...but apparently, he was doing nothing illegal...that according to the NFL
And you ignore the NFL ruling when it doesn't suit your argument.
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Do you really believe that the Pats gained no competitive advantage by taping opponents signals? If so...why would BB risk getting busted and the consequences...to do something that gave him no advantage? I guess he is no genius...but a complete moron.
So which is it? Is an NFL ruling to be believed ( ie. no Jets cheating, no Patriots advantage gained from tapes )?Or do you get to decide which ruling has merit and which doesn't?
I cannot say the Jets cheated...as the NFL has cleared them for that.And from what I recall, what the NFL said was that the tape they have created no advantage for that one Jets game.
If I am wrong...please supply a quote saying they never had an advantage because of their taping.
Again...I asked a question....does anyone really think that BB got no competitive advantage from videotaping?
I don't have a quote handy. I recall, during the flurry of stories at the time, the NFL making a statement about no competitive advantage, and I know that no further penalties were handed down after receiving the totality of the Patriots tapes. I guess, to me, logic followed that the NFL found nothing in the collection that expanded the penalty already handed down.to answer your question... There is an advantage to stealing signals, absolutely. Every team, every sport tries to decipher what the other side is doing. You study game film, you try to catch a defensive call, you look for patterns.
If you are asking did any of the taping impact the game in which it was taped, I would say no. I don't believe that an advantage was gained during the current game.
Was the tape used to extract tendencies from the opponents, which will give an advantage, then yes... I believe he did get that advantage. Its one more detail to add to the prep.