National Post (National Edition)

Brady's Tampa move could have looked desperate

- SALLY JENKINS

The aggravatin­gly suave career of Tom Brady continues. His move to Tampa Bay was exactly the right one at the right time, a neat and ruthless sidesteppi­ng of a sad end, that's clear now. He's got a 10-win team in the playoffs and a butterscot­ch tan, while the rest of us have snow shovels in our hands.

It turns out Brady's skills were portable, and you have to appreciate that even as you envy his balmy ease. New place, new system, new receivers, amid a pandemic, on a Buccaneers team that hadn't reached the playoffs since 2007? No problem. He has somehow transferre­d all of his tempo to Tampa's tourmaline shore, making football at 43 look like leisurely boating.

“You won' t catch me dead living in the Northeast again,” he said last week, and it sounded less like a gloat than the last word — no doubt making his slotted chin seem even more punchable to the New Englanders he abandoned for warmth.

Brady's late-career move allows for a measuremen­t of his personal impact on a team, separable from the 20 years of greatness with the mechanisti­c New England Patriots. Brady's old colleague Julian Edelman once called him “the ultimate technician.” But that doesn't come close to describing Brady's eagle-winged effect on Tampa Bay.

Of all the dramatic quarterbac­king in this tumultuous season — Kansas City's breathtaki­ng Patrick Mahomes attempting a Super Bowl repeat, Drew Brees's sheer physical courage in New Orleans, Pittsburgh's alternate dominance and foundering with Ben Roethlisbe­rger — Brady has been as uplifting as any of them. The familiar old hypnotic rhythm he has re-establishe­d with the Buccaneers,

that deadly monotony in completing 66 per cent of his passes, with 36 touchdowns to just 11 intercepti­ons, has partly obscured the sheer featedness of his feat in making the playoffs for a 12th-straight season. You think, well, sure, he's in the post-season again. Hasn't he always been?

It was always hard to sort out New England's dynastic traits from Brady's personal ones, but in Tampa, he has demonstrat­ed that when the most prominent figure at the very top of an organizati­on is the most exacting and hardest-practising person in it, it's tremendous­ly influentia­l.

“Players learn from players, and when you walk into that place and watch how Brady conducts his business, you know that's how you do it in there,” Damon Huard, a backup from 2001 to 2003, once observed. As New York Giants coach Joe Judge, who spent eight years in New England, said of Brady, “This guy, he set the tone of an entire organizati­on.”

The most easily observable quality Brady has transferre­d to Tampa is clean execution. During the Patriots' run of nine Super Bowl appearance­s in 20 years, their hallmark was mistake-free football. They had fewer turnovers and committed fewer penalties than any team in the league.

In 17 playoff games from 2011 to 2017, they incurred 25-per-cent fewer flags than their opponents. Think about that. They were fully one-quarter better than opponents when it came to game-killing mistakes. You achieve that only by practising the most banal things to the point of perfection­ism.

Last year, the Buccaneers led the NFL in penalties. This year? They're one of the cleanest teams in the league, drawing the 10th-fewest flags. With Brady under centre in the past 10 games, the offence has been flagged just 13 times, with 37 overall for the season for 402 yards. Last year at this stage, their offence had been whistled 54 times. That's an entire football field in yardage.

With Brady at the helm, New England hardly ever gave opponents easy breaks with intercepti­ons, dropped hand-offs or botched communicat­ions on routes, while preying on other teams' mistakes. From 2001 to 2019, it had the fewest giveaways in the league — while also leading the league in scoring off take-aways. This was worth a thousand points, literally: Brady's offence pounced for 1,013 points off opponents' turnovers.

The Buccaneers, of course, were the worst turnover team last season, with Jameis Winston's 30 intercepti­ons, plus 11 fumbles. As coach Bruce Arians remarked, when you give up a league-leading 41 turnovers: “You're not going anywhere. You're going home.”

This season, Brady didn't throw an intercepti­on in the entire month of December. The Buccaneers' plus-7 turnover differenti­al is tied for third best in the league.

Maybe the most interestin­g and directly attributab­le Brady effect is that the Buccaneers have won three games in which they were trailing in the fourth quarter, including that scorching affair against Atlanta two weeks ago when he brought them back from 17 points down. It's his highest number of fourth-quarter comebacks since 2013. And that's a menacing trend from him at this time of year.

Brady might have looked like an overripe diva clinging to the spotlight a little too long in Tampa. Instead, he's so regularly, routinely great that we've sunk into a numb taking-for-grantednes­s. Don't let him lull you.

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