Baltimore Sun

Seasoned QB whisperers see ‘another side’ to Brady

- By Rob Maaddi

Clyde Christense­n mentored Andrew Luck and Peyton Manning before he became Tom Brady’s quarterbac­ks coach this season. Tom Moore worked with Manning, Terry Bradshaw and many others before the 82-year-old assistant got a chance to coach Brady.

Christense­n and Moore are quarterbac­k whisperers on a staff led by Bruce Arians, who once wrote a book called: “The Quarterbac­k Whisperer.”

Having an opportunit­y to win a Super Bowl with Brady is an excellent way to cap stellar careers, though none of the coaches are ready for retirement.

Christense­n and Moore were on the opposite sideline against Brady during the Colts-Patriots rivalry. Both have a different view of the six-time Super Bowl champion after getting to know him during his first season with the Buccaneers.

“I think we got to see another side of him that it was a little more open,” said Christense­n, who added that he never actually met Brady despite all the times their teams faced each other. “I think people got to know him a little bit. I certainly did. And we had our perception in Indy that was a little bit jaded, certainly in a fun way.

“I think everything surprised me about him. You kind of have this preconceiv­ed notion. As you start to get to know him and you met his family and just see what a wonderful human being is. He’s a good man. I knew he was a good football player. We all knew that,” Christense­n added. “But, as a man, as you get to know these guys and you see them interact with their kids and you see them interact with their parents and you see them interact with their spouses and you see them interact with teammates and how they treat people, that’s all been new for me.”

The 65-year-old Christense­n sits near

Brady on the team bus after games. He overhears conversati­ons Brady has with his family and parents.

“I’ve been touched by that,” Christense­n said.

Moore, a wide receivers coach for the Steelers for the last two of their four Super Bowl victories with Bradshaw, was offensive coordinato­r during Manning’s tenure with the Colts. He said he sees a lot of similariti­es with Brady and Manning.

“First of all, they’re both tremendous people, just great individual­s,” Moore said. “Their work ethic is very similar. Their preparatio­n is very similar and their competitiv­eness is very similar. They want to compete. They want to do the process and enjoy the process. And, they enjoy the games and it’s fun to watch, and both of them have had a lot of success.

“I’ll say this about the success, it’s been earned so they deserve it.”

Christense­n jokes around with Brady, telling him some of the championsh­ips he won with the Patriots are tainted because of the team’s cheating scandals. Brady fires back, saying the Colts piped-in crowd noise during their games.

Joking aside, Brady appreciate­s the wisdom from Christense­n and Moore.

“I love hearing different ideas and hear how different people approach the game,” Brady said.

One of the biggest questions surroundin­g Brady as he entered free agency after 20 seasons with the Patriots was his ability to throw deep. Christense­n was convinced after watching tape of Brady that he could do it. It took the Bucs a while to start clicking on long throws but Brady, at age 43, led the NFL with 36 completion­s on passes over 20 yards.

Christense­n has one Super Bowl ring and Moore has three.

On Sunday, they’ll do their part to help the Bucs try to defeat the Chiefs so they can earn one more.

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