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Looks like I'm alone in the who gives a **** club. I just don't see it as a big deal.
Looks like I'm alone in the who gives a **** club. I just don't see it as a big deal.
CP might have already linked it, but John Madden is now saying only the QB can get the ball done up like that.
Madden can be considered a mouth piece for the Shield.
maybe we're seeing the plan if this keeps snowballing.
Marsha get's suspended.
Looks like I'm alone in the who gives a **** club. I just don't see it as a big deal.
And I feel bad why???
Looks like I'm alone in the who gives a **** club. I just don't see it as a big deal.
Looks like I'm alone in the who gives a **** club. I just don't see it as a big deal.
I don't feel bad. Makes me feel pretty good actually.
yeah cheating to gain a edge isn't a big deal
yeah repetitive cheating in a sport that I love isn't a big deal
possible causing the team that I love a few SB appearances isn't a big deal
ruining the sport that we love, isn't a big deal
as in making a mockery of the sport I have loved since childhood isn't a big deal
if cheating is acceptable why watch?
sometimes what is acceptable in life just reminds me how people have changed over the decades
yeah Goodell is a tool and ******* up our sport
yeah the Patriots have done every thing they could to cheat and get away with it
yeah we can do little about it
but I will continue to have morals and standards
I will continue to want punishments handed down
and I will continue to call them on their foolery
and I will make it known my displeasure whenever the opportunity arises
I am not a sheep I do not follow the easy way
it is easy to say **** it and not care
harder to stick up for what you believe in whats right
I will continue down the harder path
and in the process I will know that if they get a ring it means nothing
and wait for the day that either Goodel &l, Billacheat steps down or is fired
or I keel over whichever comes first
go Steelers **** cheaters
skialta;100694. The old adage of "if you're not cheating said:Herein lies the rub ! EVERY sport ( and most every business ) has a certain element of " competitive advantage " that can be used to enhance performance. In my yout we spent a lot of time on the drag strip trying to " enhance " anywhere and everywhere we could...legal or not. NASCAR continually finds ways the clever people find to enhance their vehicles.
Football is no different, teams, coaches and players constantly are looking for that edge.
Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers likes to overinflate the football. When the Packers and Patriots played on Nov. 30, CBS broadcaster Phil Simms relayed a conversation he had with Rodgers.
“He said something which was unique. ‘I like to push the limit to how much air we can put in the football, even go over what they allow you to do, and see if the officials take the air out of it,’” Simms said of Rodgers. “Because he thinks it’s easy for him to grip. He likes them tight.”
Rodgers defended the practice Tuesday on his radio show on ESPN Milwaukee.
“It’s not an advantage when you have a football that’s inflated more than average air pressure. We’re not kicking these footballs,” he said.
It’s unclear how often the NFL investigates ball issues. In another incident this season, the NFL reminded all 32 teams that they cannot warm the balls with sideline heaters during cold games, after the Panthers and Vikings did it in their Nov. 30 game in Minneapolis, drawing a warning from officials.
Being a Cheatriot hater is easy for us Steel City dwellers but facts be known...this wasn't that big a deal.
On the first play from scrimmage after the opening kickoff of the third quarter, the officials held up the game for a minute and ultimately switched out the game ball.
The Pats scored most of their points in the second half, after the ball fiasco was uncovered and that alone takes a lot of air outta the crime.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/2...d-footballs/7UlPZI3eotRTBadM89saeO/story.html
I thought I read somewhere that when the balls were checked after the game they were underinflated again? Can't find a link though.Herein lies the rub ! EVERY sport ( and most every business ) has a certain element of " competitive advantage " that can be used to enhance performance. In my yout we spent a lot of time on the drag strip trying to " enhance " anywhere and everywhere we could...legal or not. NASCAR continually finds ways the clever people find to enhance their vehicles.
Football is no different, teams, coaches and players constantly are looking for that edge.
Being a Cheatriot hater is easy for us Steel City dwellers but facts be known...this wasn't that big a deal.
The Pats scored most of their points in the second half, after the ball fiasco was uncovered and that alone takes a lot of air outta the crime.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/2...d-footballs/7UlPZI3eotRTBadM89saeO/story.html
Aaron Rodgers may have a point, strangely enough, about liking the ball over-inflated. Madden (I bring him up respectfully) said he doesn't get Aaron Rodgers. So, since the dirty old Raiders from by-gone years have back-doored their way into the controversy, the Helium Football deserves an honorable mention:
http://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/mythbusters/mythbusters-database/football-helium-fly-farther/
And, the simple explanation in common everyday language, especially to all you football fans out there:
"Newton's Second Law states that an object's force is equal to its mass multiplied by its acceleration. The greater the mass, the greater the force (or inertia). Therefore, the slightly heavier air-filled football actually pushes through the air with greater force, flying slightly farther than a lighter helium-filled football."
See, even a four year old can understand that.