PROOF All sports are fixed. | Page 2 | FinHeaven - Miami Dolphins Forums

PROOF All sports are fixed.


The article isn't written or even affiliated with infowars or Alex Jones...

To believe that professional sports are not somewhat fixed, if not completely rigged is insane.
 
What bothers me is Commissioner Goodell's rulings are never overturned EXCEPT when Brady gets suspended.....and then you find out the judge who overturned Goodell was at Robert Kraft's birthday party a little while before this happened. That is total BS.

Goodell has lost every single one of his court cases in the last half decade.

He was even overruled by his former mentor and boss Paul Tagliabue when Goodell brought him in for Bountygate.
 
If you want people to take you seriously. ..don't post things that are associated with Alex jones. Ever.

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The stuff Alex Jones spews out is so bat**** crazy I honestly can't even believe that he believes it, just getting dip****s to keep reading his garbage so he can keep eating lobster at night
 
The article isn't written or even affiliated with infowars or Alex Jones...

To believe that professional sports are not somewhat fixed, if not completely rigged is insane.

Decided to take a screenshot of the pages in the OP's link:

WSTwJHA-1.png


6AjWOOR-1.png




Nothing to do with infowars or Alex Jones indeed.
 
Same people thinking that the NFL cannot be fixed or at least have outcomes influenced also probably believe Qatar got the World Cup fairly. FIFA curruption shows the tip of the iceburg.
 
It's completely normal for corruption to exist in power structures, especially with so much money involved.. It's actually more rare to not have corruption when any kind of incentives are involved.
 
Decided to take a screenshot of the pages in the OP's link:

WSTwJHA-1.png


6AjWOOR-1.png




Nothing to do with infowars or Alex Jones indeed.

He's been on VICE. Coast to Coast etc. He promotes his stuff there and i'm guessing Infowars sell his book because it sells and brings more traffic their way.. He's not affiliated with them though.
 
How can a game be fixed? Do the refs know that the next play is going to be 'fixable' and send out a signal to get everyone ready?

Do they knowingly get every player and coach on board with the conspiracy?

Do the teams get together and script out the game like the WWF?

I get as fustrated as everyone else does when calls go bad but it's impossible to fix a game that way. Even the way the pats are treated is not enough to support a conspiracy theory.

In a team sport there a to many intangibles to successfully pull off a 'fix'.

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Interesting stuff.

The next logical question to this mass conspiracy is; how does it tie in to aliens?

resized_ancientaliensinvisiblesomethingm-1.jpg
 
Sports in general may be rigged but why would the NFL give a **** about the Bills? Rex Ryan's fat ass?
 
NFL refs being incompetent doesn't mean anything is fixed. The refs didn't run for 266 yards against us today.
 
Unfortunately i believe it...seen too many instances to think otherwise...
 
NFL refs being incompetent doesn't mean anything is fixed. The refs didn't run for 266 yards against us today.

Blame that on your mike lb play...a lot of it is we are just god awful at mike...these decision makers are idiots on this staff...i cant wait til they all are gone

Buffalo just murdered us exposing the mike
 
If you dont think players like brady and rodgers get special treatment then youre one gullible SOB...

heres an example from the nba but it is also the case in the nfl

Relationships between NBA players and referees were generally all over the board — love, hate, and everything in-between. Some players, even very good ones, were targeted by referees and the league because they were too talented for their own good. Raja Bell, formerly of the Phoenix Suns and now a member of the Charlotte Bobcats, was one of those players. A defensive specialist throughout his career, Bell had a reputation for being a "star stopper." His defensive skills were so razor sharp that he could shut down a superstar, or at least make him work for his points. Kobe Bryant was often frustrated by Bell's tenacity on defense. Let's face it, no one completely shuts down a player of Kobe's caliber, but Bell could frustrate Kobe, take him out of his game, and interrupt his rhythm.

You would think that the NBA would love a guy who plays such great defense. Think again! Star stoppers hurt the promotion of marquee players. Fans don't pay high prices to see players like Raja Bell — they pay to see superstars like Kobe Bryant score 40 points. Basketball purists like to see good defense, but the NBA wants the big names to score big points.

If a player of Kobe's stature collides with the likes of Raja Bell, the call will almost always go for Kobe and against Bell. As part of our ongoing training and game preparation, NBA referees regularly receive game-action video tape from the league office. Over the years, I have reviewed many recorded hours of video involving Raja Bell. The footage I analyzed usually illustrated fouls being called against Bell, rarely for him. The message was subtle but clear — call fouls against the star stopper because he's hurting the game.

If Kobe Bryant had two fouls in the first or second quarter and went to the bench, one referee would tell the other two, "Kobe's got two fouls. Let's make sure that if we call a foul on him, it's an obvious foul, because otherwise he's gonna go back to the bench. If he is involved in a play where a foul is called, give the foul to another player."

Similarly, when games got physically rough, we would huddle up and agree to tighten the game up. So we started calling fouls on guys who didn't really matter — "ticky-tack" or "touch" fouls where one player just touched another but didn't really impede his progress. Under regular circumstances these wouldn't be fouls, but after a skirmish we wanted to regain control. We would never call these types of fouls on superstars, just on the average players who didn't have star status. It was important to keep the stars on the floor.

Allen Iverson provides a good example of a player who generated strong reaction, both positive and negative, within the corps of NBA referees. For instance, veteran referee Steve Javie hated Allen Iverson and was loathe [sic] to give him a favorable call. If Javie was on the court when Iverson was playing, I would always bet on the other team to win or at least cover the spread. No matter how many times Iverson hit the floor, he rarely saw the foul line. By contrast, referee Joe Crawford had a grandson who idolized Iverson. I once saw Crawford bring the boy out of the stands and onto the floor during warm-ups to meet the superstar. Iverson and Crawford's grandson were standing there, shaking hands, smiling, talking about all kinds of things. If Joe Crawford was on the court, I was pretty sure Iverson's team would win or at least cover the spread.

Madison Square Garden was the place to be for a marquee matchup between the Miami Heat and New York Knicks. I worked the game with Derrick Stafford and Gary Zielinski, knowing that the Knicks were a sure bet to get favorable treatment that night. Derrick Stafford had a close relationship with Knicks coach Isiah Thomas, and he despised Heat coach Pat Riley. I picked the Knicks without batting an eye and settled in for a roller-coaster ride on the court.

During pregame warm-ups, Shaquille O'Neal approached Stafford and asked him to let some air out of the ball.

"Is this the game ball?" O'Neal asked. "It's too hard. C'mon, D, let a little air out of it."

Stafford then summoned one of the ball boys, asked for an air needle, and let some air out of the ball, getting a big wink and a smile from O'Neal.
 
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