The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

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- — The Associated Press

Brady suspension back on the table amid appeal

NEWYORK>> New England Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady could again be facing a four-game suspension for the scandal known as Deflategat­e after federal appeals court judges spent time Thursday shredding some of his union’s favorite arguments for dismissal.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan gave a players’ union lawyer a tough time, with Circuit Judge Denny Chin even saying evidence of ball tampering was “compelling, if not overwhelmi­ng,” and there was evidence to support a finding that Brady “knew about it, consented to it, encouraged it.”

“How do we as appellate judges reviewing an arbitrator’s decision second-guess the four-game suspension?” Chin asked attorney Jeffrey Kessler of the NFL Players Associatio­n.

The appeals court did not immediatel­y rule, but it seemed to lean heavily at times against the union’s arguments, raising the prospect that the suspension Brady was supposed to start last September before a judge nullified it may begin next season instead.

The appeals panel seemed receptive to the NFL’s argument that it was fair for Commission­er Roger Goodell to severely penalize one of the game’s greatest quarterbac­ks after concluding he tarnished the game by impeding the league’s investigat­ion into def lated footballs, including destroying a cellphone containing nearly 10,000 messages. The league had concluded that deflated balls were used when the Patriots routed the Indianapol­is Colts at the January 2015 AFC championsh­ip game before they went on to win the Super Bowl.

Judge Barrington D. Parker said the cellphone-destructio­n issue raised the stakes “from air in a football to compromisi­ng the integrity of a proceeding that the commission­er had convened.”

“An adjudicato­r looking at these facts, it seems to me, might conclude that the cellphone had incriminat­ing informatio­n on it and that, in the teeth of an investigat­ion, it was deliberate­ly destroyed,” Parker said. “So why couldn’t the commission­er suspend Mr. Brady for that conduct alone?”

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