New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft spoke to the media on Tuesday and said that the team would no longer appeal the punishment handed down by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell over the Deflategate scandal.

The Patriots were fined $1 million and two draft picks. He did not say whether or not Tom Brady would continue to appeal his four-game suspension.

In what Kraft described as an “emotionally charged couple of weeks,” he said the one thing that he could conclude, and that everyone could conclude, was “that the entire process has taken way too long.”

“When the discipline came out, I felt it was way over the top,” he said, but pointed out: “I have two options: I can end it or extend it.”

He then said the team would no longer appeal the suspension.

“I’m going to accept reluctantly what he has given to us, and not continue this dialog and rhetoric, and we won’t appeal.”

Kraft cited the length of the investigation and his desire to let the league move on as his reasons for dropping the appeal.

“At no time should the agenda of one team outweigh the collective good of the entire 32.”

The website wellsreportcontext.com, made by Patriots attorneys to contest the allegations made by the Ted Wells report for the NFL, was still online after Kraft’s press conference.