Brady's suspension upheld by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell (Yahoo Sports)

1NEW YORK (AP) -- Tom Brady's four-game suspension for his role in using underinflated footballs during the AFC championship game has been upheld by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell.
2The league announced the decision Tuesday, with Goodell saying that the New England quarterback told an assistant to destroy Brady's cellphone on or just before March 6.
3Brady met with independent investigator Ted Wells on that day.
4''He did so even though he was aware that the investigators had requested access to text messages and other electronic information that had been stored on that phone,'' Goodell said in his decision.
5The text messages were critical to Wells' investigation because they could have shown details of Brady's messages with equipment managers blamed for deflating footballs.
6Wells' investigation had no subpoena power and Brady was under no legal obligation to cooperate.
7The four-time Super Bowl-winning quarterback was suspended by NFL executive Troy Vincent in May following the Wells report.
8The Patriots were fined $1 million and docked a pair of draft picks.
9The team didn't appeal its penalty, but Brady and his lawyers made their case during a 10-hour appeal hearing on June 23.
10The NFL Players Association has previously said it would challenge the decision in court if Brady's suspension wasn't erased.
11The union said Tuesday afternoon it would have a statement later in the day.
12The Patriots said they had no comment on the decision.
13Brady and the Patriots have denied knowingly using deflated footballs in the AFC title game win over Indianapolis.
14The Patriots went on to beat Seattle in the Super Bowl and Brady was the MVP.
15The NFL announced in late January that Wells would head an investigation into New England's use of underinflated balls against the Colts.
16More than three months later, the 243-page Wells report was issued, saying it was ''more probable than not'' that Brady was ''at least generally aware'' that footballs he used were improperly deflated by team personnel.
17Brady appealed and the union asked Goodell to recuse himself from hearing the appeal because he could not be impartial and might be called as a witness.
18But Goodell said it was his responsibility to oversee the hearing to protect the integrity of the league.
19Scientific arguments were a major part of Brady's defense.
20Brady's lawyers tried to shoot down the findings of an independent firm hired to provide scientific analysis of the air pressure inside the footballs used by the Patriots and Colts.
21Brady, who turns 38 on Aug. 3, took nearly every snap last season.
22But he'll miss the first four games this season unless the case goes to court.
23Jimmy Garoppolo, a second-round pick in 2014, would replace Brady, the two-time NFL MVP and three-time Super Bowl MVP.
24New England hosts Pittsburgh on Sept.
2510 to open the regular season.
26It then goes to Buffalo, hosts Jacksonville, has a bye, and is at Dallas in the last game of Brady's suspension.