Somebody please confirm that this isn't doctored before I get too excited
The sustained booing for Roger at that stadium may have been the greatest booing moment of all time.
Sadly, shopped.
You are projecting hard. All this win does is shine more of the light and rage on Deflategate. People are still talking about Spygate. It was almost 10 years ago. DeflateGate will end when the Patriots suck and not a second sooner.Maybe I am projecting, but this morning it feels like ballghazi has really finally died the death it deserved.
This is so not only because of the sweet taste of revenge, but the victory now clarifies to the world that only sore losers look at the Pats and cry foul.
It never should have been a thing, but now in some ways it will only add to the legacy -- dominant to the point of being framed and they overcame the frame job (sort of) twice.
Soooo, in about 15 years?You are projecting hard. All this win does is shine more of the light and rage on Deflategate. People are still talking about Spygate. It was almost 10 years ago. DeflateGate will end when the Patriots suck and not a second sooner.
Myth?Mythmaking is strong. facts don't matter. Your country is lead by a guy that says there were 3 million fake votes. Most people in my nation think we don't pollute at all, or that our murder rate is the lowest on earth. France teaches in school how hard they resisted the Nazis 1940-43 when they did next to nothing.
Yes. I'm over it now. Finally. All Pats fans should be. But this SB win is just going to aggravate the Haters even more. Owners? Who knows, they may have learned a lesson from Deflategate (I doubt it) but the ex-NE fans, are definitely going to keep harping on the Cheatriots thing. Even the NYT, which eventually got Deflategate right, ran a story by some idiot trying to explain using psychology why New England fans ignore the Patriots cheating ways. I'm already being trolled by my Giants fan friends. I'm ignoring them, for now. But i know somewhere down the road some nitwit will make dumb crack about deflated footballs that'll set me off.You are projecting hard. All this win does is shine more of the light and rage on Deflategate. People are still talking about Spygate. It was almost 10 years ago. DeflateGate will end when the Patriots suck and not a second sooner.
That NYT column by Juliet Macur was an absolute travesty, on super bowl Sunday no less. No facts or research, just thoughtless verbiage. She got both Spygate and Deflategate wrong, which a lot of people have done, but I think Macur is actually a solid reporter and not a hot take artist.Yes. I'm over it now. Finally. All Pats fans should be. But this SB win is just going to aggravate the Haters even more. Owners? Who knows, they may have learned a lesson from Deflategate (I doubt it) but the ex-NE fans, are definitely going to keep harping on the Cheatriots thing. Even the NYT, which eventually got Deflategate right, ran a story by some idiot trying to explain using psychology why New England fans ignore the Patriots cheating ways. I'm already being trolled by my Giants fan friends. I'm ignoring them, for now. But i know somewhere down the road some nitwit will make dumb crack about deflated footballs that'll set me off.
One of the many reasons I am glad I moved from PA to the West Coast. The Philadelphia area's hate for the Patriots is crazy. Like I know people that hate the Pats worse than the Cowboys.I though I was totally over it earlier today. But everyone on my team at work is in PA, and apparently, they don't like the Patriots very much there. I mentioned in the chat that I was tired but super happy because last night was justice for deflategate. My boss responded by quoting the Wells report. It didn't go over well. It took everything I had not to get myself fired, lol.
So, I guess being honest, people being ignorant and judgmental still bothers me in general and always will. But, I will say the bite is mostly out of it.
That's the one. I worked at the NYT a very long time ago. Reporting like that is inexcusable. One of the first things you do, especially on a non-breaking feature story, is to read what's already been written in your paper on the subject. The NYT published at least two articles, one by Joe Nocera, and an op-ed from an MIT prof (IIRC -- I'm not going to check) setting the ball pressure nonsense straight. The Spygate story is not difficult to get right. Maybe the Times has much more lax standards for their sports reporters than the news desks. I'd have been pilloried if I'd made such basic, easily checkable, errors of fact in a news story.That NYT column by Juliet Macur was an absolute travesty, on super bowl Sunday no less. No facts or research, just thoughtless verbiage. She got both Spygate and Deflategate wrong, which a lot of people have done, but I think Macur is actually a solid reporter and not a hot take artist.
It is a dumb move, and hurts him and the pats. All of it was passive aggressive enough to be above the fray, until that shirt. I am sure he still drunk, but a bad move nevertheless.Yeah I was going to post that Patricia picture.
That is awesome but it might not be the best move for him in the long term. I would think you don't want your new head coach to be someone who has publicly tweaked Goodell.
You think Roger might not like the Pats now?It is a dumb move, and hurts him and the pats. All of it was passive aggressive enough to be above the fray, until that shirt. I am sure he still drunk, but a bad move nevertheless.
Not concerned about Roger, he knows where he stands. The Pats looked golden, shunning him like he didn't matter.You think Roger might not like the Pats now?
Nahhh, it's funny. This is sports.It is a dumb move, and hurts him and the pats. All of it was passive aggressive enough to be above the fray, until that shirt. I am sure he still drunk, but a bad move nevertheless.
This is a reboot of the same ad from earlier in 2016"Roger that"
Anyone else noticed which ring sparkled as he pulled it off?This is a reboot of the same ad from earlier in 2016
It's a Barstool shirt. Patricia has worn several Barstool shorts over the years. This one is not that much more overt than the nWo one from a couple years ago.
That is really the only thing I noticed in that picture. He's a legitimately unhealthy dude.Dude likes his caffeinated sugar-beverages.
This is excellent.It is ending.
The haters will still sputter their nonsense, but the media narrative (and, by extension, popular opinion) is already changing irrevocably away from the scandal. It will no longer be Tom Brady, great player dogged by scandal and allegations of cheating, but instead Tom Brady, the best quarterback of all time, period. The singularly gifted athlete who never lost focus throughout his two-year ordeal and put up one of greatest seasons ever by a QB (at age 39!) and culminated this journey by engineering the greatest comeback in football history.
Need a personal angle? How about a loyal son who quietly endured those outrageous slings and arrows along the way while his mother battled cancer? The warrior who spent the immediate aftermath of his greatest triumph kneeling on the field, overcome by emotion and completely spent. The man who faced his biggest accuser in person and could have used the moment to exact a little personal revenge (and, really, who would have blamed him if he did?) but instead took the high road, classy as always.
That is a powerful narrative and it will be irresistible, told and carried forth by the sports media and those who write history. America loves a redemption story and Brady will increasingly be depicted as the guy who was wronged by petty bureaucrats only to rise above it and reach greater heights. The old myths will slowly die off, replaced by this new tale of this greatest NFL player of all time. He will be glorified and celebrated even more from here on out, with constant reminders from football broadcasters and the media to appreciate his greatness while we still can. This is the renewed narrative that will accompany Tom Brady as he closes out his career and then moves on to Hall of Fame legend and beyond.
The haters, those few bitter ex-players and the fans other teams who have been slayed by Brady over the years, they are not going away, of course. Their bitter worldview will no longer carry the day, though, because the more influential members of the sports media will gradually stop catering to them. It's happening already. Though numerous in number still, the influence of these opponents will be minimized and their protestations will be seen as petty. They will eventually become the sports equivalent of those Japanese soldiers still clutching their rifles who were found on Pacific islands years after the end of World War II, figures of pathos if not deserving of pity. We Patriots fans may wince every time we are subject to this whining but it will be a temporary annoyance at worst.
It is ending.
Tom Brady won.
A lot of the Patriots guys are Barstool guys. Hell a lot of people period are Barstool fans. I think it's a simple as he loves their t shirts, it's a way to poke Goodell, and it's something him and his players can bond over/find common ground on.I will never buy that they didn't play better this year because of their anger.
I have reconsidered my criticism of the t-shirts. I did not know it was a readily available item. Hey maybe he even got money for wearing it.