On the controversy before the Super Bowl calm
by rick olivares
When I first heard and read about the deflated
footballs post Indianapolis and New England, my first reaction was, “What? New
England again?”
My second was, “On this on the eve of Super Bowl
XLIX?”
Now there are Deflategate cookies, memes, Saturday
Night Live parodies, and countless editorial cartoons (not to mention the barbs
in social media).
Hey, we’ve got the big game coming up!
In case you don’t follow the NFL, Super Bowl Sunday
is between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks on February 1 at
the University of Phoenix Stadium in Arizona, USA.
Now like any self-respecting sports writer, I wanted
to see what evidence came of it. Now fingers are pointing towards the ballboy. You
mean the ballboy had the chutzpah to think of something like this and carry it
out by his lonesome?
Some will defend the integrity of the Patriots and
point out that after they were docked a first round draft pick and
heavily-fined for Spygate, they’d be fools to try anything stupid.
It sounds logical, right?
Wrong.
When you hear reactions to criminals or serial
killers, the common reaction is, “he was such a nice guy” or “he was quiet”
blah blah blah. While it seems such a bizarre comparison, let me just say that
New England has killed opponents on the field of play as they dashed many a
Super Bowl hope.
I think it is also erroneous to say that people with
an impeccable record cannot do any wrong.
Some people cheat because they want to keep their
winning run going. Some people will cheat because they want to win at all
costs. Some will even cheat because they are sick and tired of losing.
Sadly, I don’t think New England Quarterback Tom
Brady didn’t do anyone favors with his answers during the press conference
regarding Deflategate. He not only didn’t sound convincing but he also sure
didn’t seem upset with people questioning his integrity. If I were put in front
of a media horde that is looking to tear the Patriots and mark them as serial
cheaters, I would be upset!
While I have no love for New England or any of its
sports teams (sorry, I’m a New Yorker here), I respect what they have
accomplished. I can accept Red Auerbach fleecing opponents their top players or
draft picks for lemons and forcing opposing players to dribble over the old
parquet floor’s dead spots. I can accept – gulp – the Boston Red Sox reversing
a curse that one of their own labeled as such. But “spying” or even deflating
footballs is low.
In case you do not understand the rules of the game,
each team uses its own balls.
And perhaps like Spygate, the crux of the matter is
integrity. And maybe that’s what is everyone is upset or quibbling about. The
sad thing is it takes away from what should be a great Super Bowl. Hopefully,
this goes away quick because we’d all might be deflated even before the opening
kick-off.
Have you read the analysis of Warren Sharp? http://www.slate.com/articles/sports/sports_nut/2015/01/stats_show_the_new_england_patriots_became_nearly_fumble_proof_after_a_2006.2.html
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