Tom Brady’s Behavior Not Square with Honesty

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I don’t believe Tom Brady.

In the interview above, his behavior is truly supportive of someone who is less than honest, and here is why.

The interviewer asks, “Has this detracted from your joy of winning the super bowl?”

Tom replies as he soaks up the attention from his fans, “Absolutely not.”

Tom continues about the report, “I don’t really have any reaction. It’s only been 30 hours, I haven’t had much time to digest it fully but when I do, I’ll be sure to let you know how I feel about it.”

Only 30 hours?  Come on…

It’s not a new accusation, Tom. It’s been around for four months and you have no reaction?

Could it be there is nothing you can say to get you out of this so denial is your best option?

Imagine being accused of something you did NOT do–publicly–that if true tarnishes your hard earn accomplishments. Are you just going to ignore it?

You will not. I assure you.

Honest people will be offended by anyone who attacks their hard earned credibility, and at a minimum will clearly  and emphatically deny involvement. But not Tom.  No, he just sits there and soaks up the attention–ignoring everything.  And it makes sense. If he is guilty, pushing it away for as long as he can to soak up his stardom seems like the only good choice.   Deny, deny and deny until you have no other option.

When the moderator says there is an elephant in the room, listen to Tom deny it again.  It’s a joke.

Honest people don’t ignore things like this. They address it even if in the simplest of terms.

Tom eerily reminds me of Bill Cosby and his thinking:  If I ignore it, it will go away.  And sometimes it does.

The fact that Tom won’t share his phone, text messages or emails also supports Tom has something to hide.

Tom is arrogant and as I always say nothing good comes from arrogant people.

4 replies
  1. Cody Plummer
    Cody Plummer says:

    Thank you for speaking about this. If only the “experts” protecting him (aka his buddies on the NFL and ESPN networks) could be honest… Its clear as day that he’s lied like you said.

  2. Brent
    Brent says:

    Well done Eyes.
    It is disingenuous of him to suggest that he doesn’t have any reaction.
    After looking at more and more coverage he appears to be more like the engineer behind the deflation.

  3. Keith D.
    Keith D. says:

    I didn’t have much of an opinion on this one other than the probability being in favor of their cheating, but I saw this on Twitter last night and after reading a few of the links that were mainly about them and their representatives defending themselves against the accusations– it was so obvious to me that it’s not just probability that’s not in their favor. The “denials” were pure textbook guilty if you ask me. All the usual tropes were there, like, “there was no evidence”, “it was all based on circumstantial evidence”, “but other people this or that”, all of them were there. I couldn’t believe it.

    I guess thanks, NFL guys, for making the truth apparent. I’m glad I’m not a football fan, but boy does almost that entire organization stink from top to bottom. I mainly feel bad for whatever honest people are involved with the NFL, because they’re all tainted by the plethora of bad apples around them. If it were me, I’d call George Washington to just come and chop it down– he at least wouldn’t lie about it. 😉

  4. Jane Doe
    Jane Doe says:

    I am so over these pro sports players getting away with shit.

    He should be fired. Anyone involved should be fired. If I was doing shady crap at work I would lose my job.

    Why is there such a exception in the sports world.

    I’m over it.

    Fire them. It’s not like they haven’t made more money than most of us will in our lifetime. They are set already. But to allow them
    To continue to make millions while cheating.

    It’s just a joke.

Comments are closed.