Best Roger Goodell tweet; Pitcher's funny fall

As you know by now, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell announced that he will personally hear Tom Brady's appeal of his four-game suspension for Deflategate. To no one's surprise, this development didn't go over well with NFL fans. This was the best tweet we saw about the news.
Goodell gonna walk into the appeal hearing like: pic.twitter.com/Y8EeDQXBuo
— The System (@tealtalk) May 15, 2015
Yes, the NFL has become very WWE-like.

And now, in the minds of many fans, Goodell gets the same treatment from people as this guy.

After the Rockets pulled off a stunning 19-point comeback against the Clippers Thursday night, thanks in part to Josh Smith scoring 19 point in 26 minutes, his Wikipedia page got a quick update.
Josh Smith wikipedia updated pic.twitter.com/9zjVtzRPHj
— Rockets Social (@Rockets_Social) May 15, 2015
Amazingly, after the Cavs eliminated the Bulls, the Bulls' team page got a similar update.
According to WikiPedia, LeBron James is the owner of the Chicago Bulls! pic.twitter.com/uIuqIxVTA4
— Cavs Nation (@CavsNationNet) May 15, 2015
LeBron and the Cavs celebrated their series win over the Bulls with some singing and dancing on the team plane.
For some reason, it's always funny when someone falls down. The latest person to prove this to be true is Giants pitcher Tim Lincecum, who had this rough moment Thursday night against the Reds.
Jimmy Kimmel did his "Three Ridiculous Questions" segment with David Beckham Thursday night. In addition to the question above, Beckham was also asked, what fruit do you think you could kick the furthest, and what is your favorite spice?
This Cubs fan decided to get decked out in ivy from head to toe for Thursday's game against the Mets.
The Wrigley Field ivy grew legs and decided to watch a @Cubs game from the stands for once: http://t.co/MOpxMEHzau pic.twitter.com/3J21iFjBCF
— Cut4 (@Cut4) May 14, 2015
Chances are you'll be interested in the Big Lead's list of the 25 most powerful people in sports media.
The Patriots tried to explain yesterday that "The Deflator" -- a term that showed up in the Wells report in reference to the man who supposedly doctored Tom Brady's footballs -- was actually a term related to weight loss. Naturally, The Buzzer had to have some fun with this nonsense.
Got a link, comment or question? Email Jimmy.Traina@fox.com.