Guess you don't put any weight onto coaches that actually came out and said that, then? Pats were the first to get caught after the memo said to knock it off, but it was fairly common beforehand. Even with that, you're down to arguing technicalities. Filming on the field was legal, and could point it pretty much wherever you wanted. The guy doing it for the Pats wasn't standing in the right marked off box. That's the meat of the complaint. And the 'superbowl walkthrough' thing has been thoroughly debunked, even the guys that got busted doing the filming denied that one, and when the tapes were turned over, that one never came up. Someone in the media had a copy of the tapes, and he never went with that story either, for what that's worth.
If you want to bitch about a 1st round pick and 750k being a slap on the wrist, though, guess you could ask why the Broncos only got fined 50k and no draft pick for when they did the same thing in 2010, 3 years after spygate...
In general, NFL staff and national media don't like Belichick, so shit with him gets blown out of proportion. Things that would get the Pats vilified don't even get a passing mention when other teams do them. The "spying" above an obvious example. No one appears to give a shit about the Falcons at the moment because they suck, but same week as Deflategate, turns out the Falcons got busted for piping in fake crowd noise to gain a competitive advantage when playing other teams. Kinda funny there's no outrage there, no cheating discussion, etc, huh? And not a one-time thing, came out there's at least 2 years of history there
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...ut-falcons-noise-piping-scandal-is-much-worse
And as for Deflategate? Despite all the targeted leaks, almost all of those stories have since been recanted or proven false. For example, the 2 psi per ball that supposedly the Pats balls were under, you know, the part that made them cheaters? Latest report is that 11 of those 12 balls were actually in the 12.3 or 12.4 range, which is MORE than perfectly obviously a weather factor thing, since they are filled and measured indoors. Yes, if Pats had filled to 13.5 vice 12.5 they would have stayed in range, but no one (that NFL could think of) has ever measured one during a game if it was legal at the start, so funny there. That 12th ball was the only one significantly under, around 2 psi. Can't speak to which ball and chain of custody, etc, but if that's the one the Colts had, and it wandered a bit before getting checked, kinda funny that only one was way under, no? And that the team that reported it may have had it a while first? Maybe they tweaked it to help prove their point, hoping the rest might be lower than they turned out to be? Either way, fishy that only one was affected. And hard to say Pats did that one on purpose, because if it makes a difference, it would mess them up to keep swapping them every play and have one that's off.
Another fun one, turns out the Browns got busted for someone up in the box texting in play calls during a game. Again, Browns, so no one gives a shit. Very obviously illegal, no? Do play calls affect integrity of a game? Hard to say no.
So, when you look at the meat of Deflategate again, why is that one a big legacy-tarnishing scandal, and the others not mentioned? Other than people hating the Pats, that is? If they did something, fine with getting called on it, but BS witch hunts are getting kinda laughable at this point. Especially when the media and the country blantantly ignore larger and more obvious cheating issues to debate about whether it's fair that Tom Brady may have tied his shoe laces right over left instead of the traditional left over right, gotta be an unfair advantage, no?
On a semi-related note, maybe it'll make Peach feel better if she knew 2 Pats players, including Gronk, got fined for their role in the fight at the end of the game. As well as 2 Seahawks that were caught up in it. And the douche WR that mimed taking a dump on the ball was obviously fined as well.