San Antonio Express-News

Not yet, but Fox Sports snaps up QB Brady

- By Victor Mather and Kevin Draper

Tom Brady will join Fox Sports as its lead NFL analyst when his football career is over. Whenever that may be. Brady, the seemingly ageless quarterbac­k, is fully intending to suit up for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers this coming season at age 45. But whenever he does retire, the Fox job will be waiting for him.

Brady will join other prominent quarterbac­ks from his generation such as Peyton Manning, Drew Brees and Tony Romo in gravitatin­g to high profile, and highly lucrative, media careers at the end of their playing days.

Lachlan Murdoch, CEO of Fox, made the announceme­nt on the company’s earnings call Tuesday. Play-by-play announcer Kevin Burkhardt will be Brady’s partner.

“It will be a stellar and exciting television career,” Murdoch said, “but that’s up to him to make that choice when he sees fit.”

And that timing is very much unclear. Brady tweeted that he was excited but had “a lot of unfinished business on the field with the Buccaneers.”

Brady did announce his retirement after last season, but the decision did not take. He decided to come back a little more than a month later.

“These past two months I’ve realized my place is still on the field and not in the stands,” Brady wrote.

Brady joined the Buccaneers for the 2020 season

and promptly won his seventh Super Bowl, after 20 seasons and six Super Bowl wins with the New England Patriots.

Even last season at 44, he led the league in passing yards, touchdowns and pass completion­s.

Brady once said that he hoped to play until age 45, but he will blow past that after his birthday in August. Lately he has been more vague about how long he might keep going.

Players, and especially quarterbac­ks, have been courted for decades to transition to the broadcast booth at the end of their playing careers. But the competitio­n to land the next star broadcaste­r has heated up to the point that some especially coveted players now sign television contracts before they are done playing.

Brees, the former New Orleans Saints quarterbac­k, signed a contract with NBC before his career was over, while former Carolina Panthers tight end Greg Olsen concurrent­ly announced his retirement and his new job at Fox last year.

Because Fox and CBS televise about 13 NFL games combined each Sunday, each network has several announcing crews to cover games.

Once upon a time, former players had to at least feign at learning the new job — former Dallas Cowboys quarterbac­k Troy Aikman spent a year on Fox’s No. 2 broadcast team in 2001 before being elevated to the lead team for the past two decades, while former New York Giants quarterbac­k Phil Simms began his broadcast career as a part of a three-man booth.

But lately, former players have been immediatel­y plugged into top broadcast teams, with mixed results. Tony Romo immediatel­y partnered with Jim Nantz on CBS’ top broadcast in 2017 and was a revelation with his play-predicting abilities. ESPN had far less success with ex-cowboys tight end Jason Witten, who returned to playing in the NFL after a much-criticized year in the “Monday Night Football” booth.

Last year, the NFL signed new long-term broadcast agreements worth over $100 billion, and with it came a wild round of talent poaching and contract renegotiat­ions that saw turnover in many of the broadcast booths familiar to NFL fans.

After several years of cycling through uninspirin­g broadcast teams for “Monday Night Football,” ESPN finally spent big this year to lure both Joe Buck and Aikman away from Fox, where they had called games for 20 years. Burkhardt will replace Buck on Fox’s top broadcast, but they have not yet announced who will join him and keep the seat warm until Brady retires.

Amazon, which expanded the number of games it will broadcast under the new NFL television agreement signed last year, poached Al Michaels from NBC and got ESPN to allow college football analyst Kirk Herbstreit to join the booth while keeping his ESPN job. Mike Tirico will take over for Michaels in calling play-by-play for NBC’S “Sunday Night Football.”

CBS, whose decision to replace the long-serving Simms with the just-retired Romo in 2017 was surprising at the time, now has the most stable broadcast booth in the NFL.

Manning opted against joining a traditiona­l broadcast crew and instead built his own media company and is the face of ESPN’S alternate “Manningcas­t” presentati­on of “Monday Night Football.”

 ?? Steve Luciano / Associated Press ?? When he’s finally ready to retire, Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady will join Fox Sports as its lead NFL analyst.
Steve Luciano / Associated Press When he’s finally ready to retire, Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady will join Fox Sports as its lead NFL analyst.

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