The report that helped ignite Deflategate was wrong — and the Patriots want to know why the NFL let it happen
(CBS)
In the wake of the NFL's decision to uphold Tom Brady's four-game suspension for his involvement in Deflategate, the New England Patriots are blasting the NFL for its handling of the entire saga.
Specifically, the Pats want to know why the first report about the air-pressure levels of New England's footballs from its win over the Indianapolis Colts in AFC Championship game — which the Wells Report later disproved — was never corrected by the league.
"I will never understand why an initial erroneous report regarding the PSI level of footballs was leaked by a source from the NFL a few days after the AFC Championship game was never corrected by those who had the correct information," Patriots owner Robert Kraft said in a statement to the media on Wednesday.
Kraft is referring specifically to a report from ESPN's Chris Mortensen that helped launch the Deflategate scandal. After the AFC Championship game, Mortensen tweeted:
Because Mortensen is so well connected and the NFL never came out to refute these numbers, this report was more or less taken as fact. Over the next few weeks and months, everyone operated under the assumption that the balls were significantly underinflated by at least 2 pounds per square inch — which would rule out the possibility that atmospheric conditions caused the deflation and strongly suggest they were tampered with.
But when the Wells Report came out four months later and the official PSI measurements were made public, it showed that only one of the Patriots balls was 2.0 PSI under the legal minimum of 12.5 PSI. All the balls were illegally underinflated, but not by as much as Mortensen's report said.
Here are the official PSI levels at halftime from the investigation. (The balls were inflated to at least 12.5 PSI before the game.)
(courtesy of the Well's Report)
The 20,000-word Wells Report rebuttal website that the Patriots published in May argues that the balls could have deflated to those levels naturally, though that's not what the Wells Report concluded using the same data. The consensus in the scientific community is that atmospheric conditions probably still couldn't have deflated the Patriots balls to the levels they were measured at halftime. In addition, the Colts balls were found to be inflated to between 12.15 and 12.70 PSI at halftime — well above the Patriots balls that were subject to the same environmental conditions.