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Posted: 1/19/2015 9:05:17 AM EDT
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Colts would have had the same advantage,no ? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Depends I guess - 36 footballs used for outdoor games and 24 for indoor. Each time a new ball is used they could be swapped. NFL rules for footballs. The home club shall have 36 balls for outdoor games and 24 for indoor games available for testing with a pressure gauge by the referee two hours prior to the starting time of the game to meet with League requirements. Twelve (12) new footballs, sealed in a special box and shipped by the manufacturer, will be opened in the officials’ locker room two hours prior to the starting time of the game. These balls are to be specially marked with the letter "k" and used exclusively for the kicking game. |
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Colts would have had the same advantage,no ? View Quote It depends. Yes the Colts would have played with the same balls, but if the patriots planned this, they easily could have practiced with deflated balls all week, thus giving them an advantage. That being said, it's not why the Colts lost. |
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It depends. Yes the Colts would have played with the same balls, but if the patriots planned this, they easily could have practiced with deflated balls all week, thus giving them an advantage. That being said, it's not why the Colts lost. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Colts would have had the same advantage,no ? It depends. Yes the Colts would have played with the same balls, but if the patriots planned this, they easily could have practiced with deflated balls all week, thus giving them an advantage. That being said, it's not why the Colts lost. Yep. Colts got their asses handed to them no question about it - but if the Patriots got caught cheating AGAIN, it would really say something. Since it was wet out, deflated balls would be a big advantage. |
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Deflated balls is why McCarthy didn't go for those 2 fourth and short goaline plays in the first quarter against Seattle yesterday.
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It depends. Yes the Colts would have played with the same balls, but if the patriots planned this, they easily could have practiced with deflated balls all week, thus giving them an advantage. That being said, it's not why the Colts lost. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Colts would have had the same advantage,no ? It depends. Yes the Colts would have played with the same balls, but if the patriots planned this, they easily could have practiced with deflated balls all week, thus giving them an advantage. That being said, it's not why the Colts lost. but don't they have home team balls and visiting team balls? I thought each team played with a ball with their team's logo on it, or is that just in the superbowl? |
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but don't they have home team balls and visiting team balls? I thought each team played with a ball with their team's logo on it, or is that just in the superbowl? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Colts would have had the same advantage,no ? It depends. Yes the Colts would have played with the same balls, but if the patriots planned this, they easily could have practiced with deflated balls all week, thus giving them an advantage. That being said, it's not why the Colts lost. but don't they have home team balls and visiting team balls? I thought each team played with a ball with their team's logo on it, or is that just in the superbowl? Home team provides all the balls (at least it looks like, in the quote I posted up top). |
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Cheating?!?!!? Againg !?!?!
Didn't do anything wrong the first time, seriously doubt they would start now. |
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How is the NFL going to prove it?
I would assume that there would be a calibrated meter that the officials would use to check the ball's pressure prior to being rotated into the game. |
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They gave up 4 TD's on the ground...deflated balls don't matter much in this instance.
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How is the NFL going to prove it? I would assume that there would be a calibrated meter that the officials would use to check the ball's pressure prior to being rotated into the game. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
How is the NFL going to prove it? I would assume that there would be a calibrated meter that the officials would use to check the ball's pressure prior to being rotated into the game. I believe the article said they pulled at least one ball during the game and weighed it. I'm sure they weighed the rest after? Quoted:
They gave up 4 TD's on the ground...deflated balls don't matter much in this instance. Prevents fumbles. |
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Let's see, air up balls indoors with 75 deg air. Then haul them outside into the cold. Air molecules compress due to temp change. Yep, definitely cheating, not science or anything. My car tires cheat every winter. Maybe they should use nitrogen so people quit whining.
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Wait for a neutral reporter to get info from a league source. All balls should have been confiscated if they suspected anything. All balls should be in the sole custody of the refs the entire game regardless.
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Let's see, air up balls indoors with 75 deg air. Then haul them outside into the cold. Air molecules compress due to temp change. Yep, definitely cheating, not science or anything. My car tires cheat every winter. Maybe they should use nitrogen so people quit whining. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Let's see, air up balls indoors with 75 deg air. Then haul them outside into the cold. Air molecules compress due to temp change. Yep, definitely cheating, not science or anything. My car tires cheat every winter. Maybe they should use nitrogen so people quit whining. Air pressure varies 10-12% from 70 degrees down to 32 (according to tire pressure pages). The NFL rules 12.5-13.5 PSI. It's not going to feel obviously deflated at 12 psi. Even if they filled them to the bare minimum and went outside it would be about 11psi. Quoted:
Wait for a neutral reporter to get info from a league source. All balls should have been confiscated if they suspected anything. All balls should be in the sole custody of the refs the entire game regardless. Similar article from NFL.com. Source is an NFL Spokesperson. link |
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The Colts could have played with a soccer ball, a tennis ball, or an under inflated inner tube with the same result today.
eta: the local radio guy said it best this evening. "Asking who I want in the Super bowl, is like asking who I want between Rosie O'Donnell and Whopie Goldberg" |
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Wonder if we'll ever see a day again where people take responsibility for their actions? They lost badly. Just accept it. Nope instantly "they cheated". Sad..
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I believe the article said they pulled at least one ball during the game and weighed it. I'm sure they weighed the rest after? Prevents fumbles. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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How is the NFL going to prove it? I would assume that there would be a calibrated meter that the officials would use to check the ball's pressure prior to being rotated into the game. I believe the article said they pulled at least one ball during the game and weighed it. I'm sure they weighed the rest after? Quoted:
They gave up 4 TD's on the ground...deflated balls don't matter much in this instance. Prevents fumbles. Weighed the balls? Are you saying an inflated ball weighs more or less than an un-inflated ball? Physics much? |
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Weighed the balls? Are you saying an inflated ball weighs more or less than an un-inflated ball? Physics much? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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How is the NFL going to prove it? I would assume that there would be a calibrated meter that the officials would use to check the ball's pressure prior to being rotated into the game. I believe the article said they pulled at least one ball during the game and weighed it. I'm sure they weighed the rest after? Quoted:
They gave up 4 TD's on the ground...deflated balls don't matter much in this instance. Prevents fumbles. Weighed the balls? Are you saying an inflated ball weighs more or less than an un-inflated ball? Physics much? I don't know what they did. I'm just posting what is in the article. "The league has guidelines on how much pressure the ball must have — between 12.5 and 13.5 pounds per square inch, weighing between 14 and 15 ounces." Tweet from one of the reporters "I'm told at one point the officials took a ball out of play and weighed it. Should hear more tomorrow on this subject." |
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They weighed the balls to check for under inflation, eh?
Me thinks this guy might not be the best source for information. I'd LOVE to be able to bag in the Pats, for doing something else fucked up, but I'm not sure this is it. Even IF the balls WERE under inflated, the Colts needed a hell of a lot more than a little more air, to get into that game. |
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They weighed the balls to check for under inflation, eh? Me thinks this guy might not be the best source for information. I'd LOVE to be able to bag in the Pats, for doing something else fucked up, but I'm not sure this is it. Even IF the balls WERE under inflated, the Colts needed a hell of a lot more than a little more air, to get into that game. View Quote That guy may not be - but an NFL spokesperson confirmed they were investigating. Maybe instead of weighing the ball they checked the air pressure. Either way the ball left the field of play. I don't think anyone is saying it would have helped the Colts win - but cheating is cheating. |
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Let's see, air up balls indoors with 75 deg air. Then haul them outside into the cold. Air molecules compress due to temp change. Yep, definitely cheating, not science or anything. My car tires cheat every winter. Maybe they should use nitrogen so people quit whining. View Quote Air is up to 78% nitrogen. They are using nitrogen. |
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I don't know what they did. I'm just posting what is in the article. "The league has guidelines on how much pressure the ball must have — between 12.5 and 13.5 pounds per square inch, weighing between 14 and 15 ounces." Tweet from one of the reporters "I'm told at one point the officials took a ball out of play and weighed it. Should hear more tomorrow on this subject." View Quote Yeah, the guy reporting this either doesn't know what he's talking about or doesn't know what they were checking for. |
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That guy may not be - but an NFL spokesperson confirmed they were investigating. Maybe instead of weighing the ball they checked the air pressure. Either way the ball left the field of play. I don't think anyone is saying it would have helped the Colts win - but cheating is cheating. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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They weighed the balls to check for under inflation, eh? Me thinks this guy might not be the best source for information. I'd LOVE to be able to bag in the Pats, for doing something else fucked up, but I'm not sure this is it. Even IF the balls WERE under inflated, the Colts needed a hell of a lot more than a little more air, to get into that game. That guy may not be - but an NFL spokesperson confirmed they were investigating. Maybe instead of weighing the ball they checked the air pressure. Either way the ball left the field of play. I don't think anyone is saying it would have helped the Colts win - but cheating is cheating. I'm not saying cheating isn't cheating, but I AM saying the guy reporting this doesn't have a clue as to what he's talking about. Goes to credibility. What other stuff does he have wrong? What else is he leaving out? I have no issues with believing the Pats might have done something against the rules, but I'm not taking just this guy's word on it. |
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^^ He is just a reporter - you don't have to take his word for it. The NFL spokesperson is the one you should listen to - and he confirms that there was something fuck-y and there's an investigation going on.
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I just find it ironic that there is such blatant disregard for weights and measures nomenclature on a website where people take hostile offense at misidentifying a magazine as a clip in casual plinking when the topic here involves literally BILLIONS of dollars in endorsements and advertising.
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Article says the ref's checked the balls at half time, and allowed play to continue. Should be nothing to see here and if there is, I'd love to know why the refs didn't find it at half time. Officials contol the balls for the game, not the teams, so they should have been able to check any time.
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As the great Jimmy Johnson once said, " If you ain't cheatin, you ain't tryin."
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That guy may not be - but an NFL spokesperson confirmed they were investigating. Maybe instead of weighing the ball they checked the air pressure. Either way the ball left the field of play. I don't think anyone is saying it would have helped the Colts win - but cheating is cheating. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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They weighed the balls to check for under inflation, eh? Me thinks this guy might not be the best source for information. I'd LOVE to be able to bag in the Pats, for doing something else fucked up, but I'm not sure this is it. Even IF the balls WERE under inflated, the Colts needed a hell of a lot more than a little more air, to get into that game. That guy may not be - but an NFL spokesperson confirmed they were investigating. Maybe instead of weighing the ball they checked the air pressure. Either way the ball left the field of play. I don't think anyone is saying it would have helped the Colts win - but cheating is cheating. A wet pigskin ball will change the weight more than air pressure changes. Then mud in the laces. Goes on and on. About as lame as the drilling on Oak Island. |
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Air is up to 78% nitrogen. They are using nitrogen. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Let's see, air up balls indoors with 75 deg air. Then haul them outside into the cold. Air molecules compress due to temp change. Yep, definitely cheating, not science or anything. My car tires cheat every winter. Maybe they should use nitrogen so people quit whining. Air is up to 78% nitrogen. They are using nitrogen. Yes. And 22% other gasses that are easily compressed. Thanks for the 5th grade science lesson. |
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haters gonna hate Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile I see what you did there. Shake it off |
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the colts got their asses whipped...
that said, I wouldn't be surprised if the pressures were "adjusted" - and even if they weren't, this will become part of the media build up to the game... |
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Did you know that if you put 75lbs. of air into all four of your pickup truck tires, you also have to remember to reduce your payload by 300lbs.?
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i've always wondered if for cold, outdoor games, they air them up in the ambient temp they'll be playing in to get the right psi or if they use. seems that kick-offs in cold weather dont have that 'pop' that they do indoors
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I hate the Pats as much of the next guy, but the Colts earned that score.
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Did you know that if you put 75lbs. of air into all four of your pickup truck tires, you also have to remember to reduce your payload by 300lbs.? View Quote Good tip, Also if you might be hauling too much an are in a fatal accident (killing someone else obviously) Always let the air out of all your tires first to reduce the risk of being over weight. It also helps if you are close to the limit or possibly slightly over and come up to a weigh station, just let some air out. |
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