Of course Miller is correct that the crime itself is not a huge deal. Something to be nicked for? Yes. But not a huge deal . HOWEVER, because of Brady's own actions the whole episode cannot be viewed as being solved with a slap on the wrist. The window for that opportunity for Brady closed in late January and he did not take advantage of it.Well if the great Jim Miller says so then there is no reason to discuss any further.anyone hear Jim Miller's take on NFL Sirius XM today?
Patriots kicked the Colts' ### after halftime once the balls were all re-inflated.
it's a non-issue.
Pats cheated, they will take their fine and move on.
i can't believe what a huge deal a lot of you are trying to make this out to be.![]()
I do agree that the team and Brady will get fined and that will be the end of it. There is no way that pretty boy gets suspended.
Instead, when confronted with this problem Brady tragically chose the wrong path. He chose to deny and cover up. The media dared him to raise the stakes and Brady made the poor choice to double-down on his "innocence", pass the buck to low-level employees, and continually deny.
The result? Jim Miller's point is hopelessly outdated and essentially useless. Brady should and will be punished with far more than a slap on the wrist.
<--- edit
My mind was on the radio talk show host I was listening to who was talking about there being "no way this is equal to domestic violence or drug use" and saying that anyone who thinks he deserves 6 games or more is crazy - referring to Whitney Mercilus's comments about Brady deserving an 8 game suspension.