The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Family, game on Brady’s mind

Pats QB won’t fan flame with Goodell over suspension.

- By Michael Cunningham mcunningha­m@ajc.com JIM ROGASH / GETTY IMAGES

HOUSTON — It’s a neat, tidy narrative. All it needs is Tom Brady to provide the perfect ending.

NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell bans Brady for four games for his part in “deflategat­e,” and Brady returns more motivated than ever before. Brady, already an all-time great quarterbac­k, delivers one of his finest seasons at age 39. The Patriots lose once in 12 regular-season games with Brady under center and win the AFC championsh­ip.

Then, for the crowning achievemen­t, Brady beats the Falcons on Sunday for his record fifth Super Bowl title. Afterward, Brady accepts the championsh­ip trophy from Goodell, who hadn’t shown up in Foxborough, Mass., when the Patriots beat the Steelers for the AFC championsh­ip two weekends ago.

It would be the final chapter in a saga of redemption and, perhaps, revenge. One problem: Brady hasn’t played along with that plot all season, at least not publicly, and he’s not going to feed that storyline now that the Patriots are at the Super Bowl.

“I’ve moved on,” Brady said this week. “I focus on positive things in my life. I’m not worried about postgame or anything like that.”

However, there is circumstan­tial evidence that Brady would gain some personal satisfacti­on from taking the trophy from Goodell.

In November, Brady starred in a TV advertisem­ent for a national shoe company in which he indirectly (and comically) suggested that he was punished for something that didn’t happen. That’s the closest Brady has come to publicly addressing the issue since he was suspended.

By contrast, Brady’s father, Tom Sr., hasn’t held back.

The father said in a TV interview last week that Goodell “doesn’t belong on any stage that Tom Brady is on” because of his lack of ethics. Tom Sr. said Goodell’s behavior in the matter was “beyond reprehensi­ble” and that the commission­er had to “lie his way out” from the scandal.

But the Patriots quarterbac­k said this week that his father’s feelings are his own. And it turns out another personal issue may be on Brady’s mind more than his suspension: CSNNE reported Tuesday that Brady’s mother, Galynn, has been dealing with undisclose­d health issues for the past 18 months.

That family crisis may explain why Brady appeared to tear up while talking about his father during Monday’s media event. Tuesday, at the team hotel, Brady said he got emotional because his parents haven’t been to many games this season.

“You just have different things that your family goes through in the course of your life, and it’s been a challengin­g year for my family, just for some personal reasons,” Brady said before the report surfaced about his mother’s illness. “It’ll be nice to have everyone here watching us this weekend. My mom and dad have been so supportive my entire life, and it’s nice to be here to show them and try to make them proud.”

Brady said his mother hasn’t attended a Patriots game this season and his father has been to one, which the quarterbac­k said is “very atypical” for his parents.

“They are going to be here this weekend, which I am excited about,” Brady said. “So it will be nice to see everybody. I have a big group coming.”

Brady’s family will be among the people watching to see if he can become the first quarterbac­k to win five Super Bowls. Doing so would add to his legacy as an all-time great and maybe wash away some of the stain left on his reputation by “deflategat­e.”

The NFL’s investigat­ion concluded that it was “more probable than not” that Brady played a role in deflating game footballs to levels not allowed by the rules. The NFL fined the Patriots $1 million and docked them two draft picks.

Goodell suspended Brady for four games. Brady appealed in federal court and lost before he eventually dropped the case.

The way the Patriots see it, the episode should not have blemished Brady’s reputation. Franchise owner Robert Kraft has been outspoken in his defense of Brady and criticisms of Goodell, the commission­er he had once supported.

“Everyone wants to protect their family,” Kraft said this week. “I think our family was involved, or accused of being involved, in something that was mishandled and inappropri­ate (and) became a big distractio­n. Leadership is about stepping up when it’s the appropriat­e time and then making sure everyone knows that we’re all on the same page. Sometimes when you’re in complicate­d situations in a business, people start pointing fingers, and we want to assure everyone that we’re all together.”

The Patriots survived without Brady. They won three of four games while using two backup quarterbac­ks.

“The team was 3-1 at that point, so I didn’t want to screw it up,” Brady said.

The Patriots have gone 13-1 since Brady’s return. He posted the second-best quarterbac­k rating of his career (112.2) while throwing 28 touchdown passes against two intercepti­ons. Brady’s intercepti­on rate (0.5 percent) was the best of his career.

If “deflategat­e” provided any additional motivation, Brady isn’t saying.

“I always have motivation,” he said. “There was a time when the Patriots weren’t a very good team and no one gave us a lot of respect. Teammates like Rodney (Harrison) that always said, ‘They don’t respect us! They don’t respect us!’ I think that was always a good metric for us.

“I think feeling that way and feeling like you need to earn other people’s respect is a great source of motivation for me. I think my main motivation is representi­ng my family, representi­ng my team, representi­ng my teammates, representi­ng our fans.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Patriots QB Tom Brady, speaking to reporters Tuesday, said he’s happy his parents will be at the Super Bowl after missing out during the season.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Patriots QB Tom Brady, speaking to reporters Tuesday, said he’s happy his parents will be at the Super Bowl after missing out during the season.
 ??  ?? Brady says he’s “moved on” from a suspension that forced him to miss the first four games. The team has gone 131 since he returned.
Brady says he’s “moved on” from a suspension that forced him to miss the first four games. The team has gone 131 since he returned.

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