NFL commissioner Roger Goodell provided another extremely vague update on the status of Tom Brady's appeal of his four-game suspension on Tuesday.

Per the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Goodell stuck to his previous stance that there is no predetermined deadline for a decision. The commissioner hear Brady's appeal at the NFL's New York offices nearly a month ago.

“We are focused on it,” Goodell told the Tribune-Review. “We are obviously being very thorough and want to make sure we consider all aspects of his appeal. We will make a decision as quickly as possible.

“There is no timeline. We want to make sure we have a fair and open process."

The league suspended Brady for the first four games of 2015 after an extensive investigation into the Deflategate controversy by attorney Ted Wells. The report determined the four-time Super Bowl-winning quarterback likely had knowledge of the Patriots using under-inflated footballs during their AFC Championship Game rout of the Indianapolis Colts in January.

In addition, Goodell did not provide any new information on the status of running back Le'Veon Bell's suspension. The star Steelers running back was suspended for the first three games after he was pulled over last August in possession of marijuana and received citation for DUI. Patriots running back LeGarrette Blount was with him in the car, and the NFL gave him a one-game suspension.

Bell reportedly appealed his suspension soon after he heard of it, but there have not been any updates since.

“That appeal is not heard by me, I would have to get somebody else to get a timeline on that,” Goodell said.