The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Potential landing spots for Pats’ Brady

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LOS ANGELES — It’s a game of deception and disguise, and Tom Brady plays it well. As free agency approaches, the pre-snap hints and clues of the NFL’s greatest quarterbac­k have the rest of the football world on a hair trigger. Everyone is trying to predict what the New England Patriots star will do next.

Brady is selling his mansion in Boston. He’s gone.

He mugs for a photo at a Syracuse basketball game with Julian Edelman, who proclaims Brady will continue to be a teammate. He’s staying.

He’s captured, at the same game, on a FaceTime call with Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel, a former teammate. Gone.

He opened a big new TB12 store on Boylston Street in Back Bay. Staying.

Brady, 42, one season removed from winning his sixth Super Bowl, is seeking a multi-year deal that would enable him to play until 45.

He only knows winning. Just twice in the past 19 seasons have the Patriots failed to win a division title, and one of those seasons Brady sat out with a shredded knee.

Few athletes have been more emblematic of a team or city than Brady is of Boston. So in Beantown it was as welcome as a nor’easter when, in a recent live chat on Instagram, Brady’s supermodel wife, Gisele Bundchen, told her 15.7 million followers: “Well, I would love to know where I’m going to be living this year, but I don’t know yet. But hopefully somewhere nice, and wherever my husband is happy playing.”

The situation is complex and nuanced, with rumors swirling that Mr. Six Rings could be heading west on Route 66 to finish his career in Las Vegas or even Los Angeles, where glistening new stadiums are opening next season.

The Raiders have already made a splash in Las Vegas, and there aren’t enough spotlights on The Strip to outshine a billion-watt pairing of Brady and coach Jon Gruden.

Meanwhile, in L.A., the Chargers have yet to create a buzz since relocating from San Diego in 2017, even when they advanced to the divisional round of the playoffs two years ago, losing at New England to the Brady-led Patriots.

Would signing Brady supercharg­e ticket sales for the Chargers, or would it simply be a fleeting high?

There are other potential landing spots, too, even with a cadre of experience­d quarterbac­ks available — Philip Rivers, Andy Dalton, Teddy Bridgewate­r, Marcus Mariota among them — and several highly touted prospects in the draft.

NFL teams can’t discuss interest in Brady now. That would be tampering. But any quarterbac­k-needy team that hasn’t weighed the merits of signing him is guilty of malpractic­e. It’s a safe bet that he has been a centerpiec­e of countless closed-door conversati­ons. Which brings us to the first, most important, scenario.

WHY MIGHT HE LEAVE NEW ENGLAND?

His legacy is a big factor. The doors of Canton will swing wide for both Brady and Bill Belichick, but it’s logical to think each would like to prove he can win without the other. Neither has explicitly stated that, yet it has been a topic for debate the past 15 years: Who is most responsibl­e for the team’s phenomenal success, coach or quarterbac­k?

Belichick has answered that to a degree: the Patriots went 11-5 in 2008 with unheralded Matt Cassel in place of the injured Brady, and went 3-1 in 2016 with Jimmy Garoppolo during Brady’s four-game suspension.

Even though the Patriots won their division, Brady is coming off a forgettabl­e season. His stats were down across the board, though the dip can be attributed to a variety of factors. He lost his center at the end of training camp, and his left tackle in Week 2. There was a reason the Patriots signed mercurial receiver Antonio Brown; besides Edelman, the playmaker cupboard was bare.

Still, Brady wants a longterm commitment from a team, and the Patriots haven’t given him one. Other than a couple of graying kickers who may or may not resurface, he’s the oldest active player in the league, and any team would be cautious about tying its future to him.

THE LEFT COAST SCENARIO

The notion of Brady returning to California makes some sense. He was born and raised in San Mateo, and he and his wife built a 14,000-square-foot, eco-conscious home in Brentwood they referred to as their “sanctuary.” The place was encircled by a koi-filled, man-made river — the “GOAT” had a moat — and featured five bedrooms, nine bathrooms, seven fireplaces, and a lagoon-shaped swimming pool with a spa. They sold the place in 2017 for $40 million, to Dr. Dre.

Brady’s L.A. ties run especially deep. When he suffered a devastatin­g knee injury in 2008, he left Boston and had his knee repaired here by Dr. Neal ElAttrache, now regarded as the preeminent orthopedic surgeon in sports. And Brady did his early rehab, his first throwing and running, in secret workouts at Will Rogers State Park in Pacific Palisades.

So the idea of Brady playing for the Chargers isn’t far-fetched, although his old Patriots teammate Willie McGinest offered this nugget in December when he was a guest on Dave Dameshek’s podcast: “Somebody really important to Tom Brady, who he spends every day with, his other half, doesn’t like it out here in California. So that may factor into the decision, too.”

THE GOING SOUTH SCENARIO

Should he weigh offers from new teams, Brady will consider multiple factors, and the competitiv­eness of the division is a big one. In that regard, Indianapol­is and Tennessee of the AFC South are potential suitors.

The Colts have Jacoby Brissett, a former backup to Brady in New England, who got off to a good start last season in the wake of Andrew Luck’s surprise retirement but faded as the Colts lost seven of their last nine games. Colts coach Frank Reich does a good job of designing quick throws, of which Brady is a master. The Colts offensive line was intact for all 16 games last season, and the five starters are back. T.Y. Hilton would be Brady’s best receiver since Randy Moss.

However, it would be bizarre to see Brady playing for Indianapol­is, and not only because he was on the other side of those legendary duels with Peyton Manning. It was the Colts who blew the whistle on the Patriots allegedly deflating footballs on behalf of their quarterbac­k.

The Titans make more sense. They have an outstandin­g running game, dynamic young receivers, a stout offensive line, and a respectabl­e defense. They also play in a winnable division. Ryan Tannehill had a terrific season for them at quarterbac­k, but that cuts both ways. Looking at what Tannehill did, imagine what Brady could do.

There’s also a long-standing relationsh­ip with Vrabel, the coach.

“When I was there, practices were always competitiv­e and the two most vocal people were Brady and Mike,” former Patriots tight end Christian Fauria said.

THE WILD, AND WILDEST, SCENARIOS

One scenario making the rounds has Brady going to San Francisco, his favorite team as a kid, and the 49ers parting ways with Garoppolo — perhaps trading him back to New England. While that might sound prepostero­us, it isn’t often that a player of Brady’s caliber is on the open market.

San Francisco coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch have been effusive in their praise of Garoppolo, both before and after the Super Bowl loss to Kansas City. Lynch often extols the ”culture“of the 49ers’ organizati­on, and abruptly changing quarterbac­ks could jeopardize that delicate chemistry.

And there’s another potential suitor, an out-ofthe-blue franchise that checks a lot of boxes for Brady and should be taken seriously: the Dallas Cowboys. They have yet to make a long-term commitment to Dak Prescott, who turned down a take-it-orleave-it offer at the beginning of the season. Owner Jerry Jones has never been risk-averse, and has a team that has gone 4-10 in the playoffs since last winning a Super Bowl 24 years ago.

As decision time nears, maybe all this talk and conjecture is just pre-snap motion and deception. Brady has had unpreceden­ted success with the Patriots. He has total control and command of the offense. He’s synonymous with the market. Would he really choose to leave? Warner doesn’t think so.

“I’ll be surprised if he’s not in New England,“Warner said.

“Last year, as bad as it was for the Patriots offensivel­y, they were one game away from being the No. 2 seed. . Best opportunit­y to win your division? The AFC East. Best opportunit­y to win 12 games? AFC East. Best opportunit­y for Brady is to have a top-10 defense, which he has every year, and they’re going to be more advanced offensivel­y than they were last year because guys are a year older.”

In this instance, Patriots fans are praying that Brady is who they always have known him to be: Gloriously immobile.

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 ?? Tom Fox / TNS ?? New England Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady throws a pass as he’s pressured by Dallas Cowboys middle linebacker Jaylon Smith in the third quarter at Gillette Stadium in November.
Tom Fox / TNS New England Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady throws a pass as he’s pressured by Dallas Cowboys middle linebacker Jaylon Smith in the third quarter at Gillette Stadium in November.

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