Sentinel & Enterprise

Magical Brady has nothing left to prove

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Will the second Tom Brady retirement be the charm?

Let’s hope so.

While watching the GOAT still provided a thrill, not to mention constant amazement given how good he looked throwing a football at age 45, it’s time.

For 23 seasons, Brady defied the odds. He managed to stay a step ahead of Father Time. But it was closing in, and Brady never wanted to stick around and leave after his skills had totally faded. He didn’t want to stumble at the finish line.

His famous line was: “When I suck, I’ll retire.”

While he didn’t suck this year, he’s getting out just in time, because the cracks were starting to show here and there. He had flashes of greatness, as opposed to constant greatness, which was his trademark.

“Every year I just have to make sure that I have the ability to commit to what the team really needs. And that’s really important to me,” Brady told Jim Gray during a Siriusxm NFL podcast a year ago after he retired the first time. “The team doesn’t deserve anything less than my best. And if I feel like I’m not committed to that, or I can’t play at a championsh­ip level, then you gotta give someone else a chance to play.”

He might not have been “championsh­ip level,” but he was still Tampa Bay’s best player this season, setting an NFL record for most attempts (733) and most completion­s (490) in a season. But even with that, it didn’t translate to much as the Bucs only averaged a little over 18.0 points per game, among the worst in the league.

He could still play, and could still win in the right circumstan­ces with a great team around him, but finding that circumstan­ce and squeezing out another year or more wasn’t worth it.

Being a free agent, playing for Miami might have been appealing, given that’s where his kids are with former wife Gisele Bundchen. But the Dolphins said they didn’t want him.

So then what, head to Las Vegas or San Francisco for one last kick at the can? And that’s if either of those teams wanted a soon-to-be 46-year- old quarterbac­k?

He could have returned to Tampa, but what was the point? Brady has nothing more to prove. He’s already proved it, and then some.

Even people in his camp reached by the Herald

shortly after Brady’s early morning video announceme­nt believe it’s the right time.

And an emotional Brady sure sounded like this was it, saying he was retiring for good.

While he didn’t go out in a blaze of glory, getting to the playoffs with an 8-9 record — his first- ever losing mark — and getting beaten badly in the Wild Card round to the Dallas Cowboys, in the long run, not having a fairy tale ending really doesn’t matter

is legacy is well intact. He had seven Super Bowl wins, including six with the Patriots. He’s thrown for the most passing yards in NFL history and holds just about every conceivabl­e record for a quarterbac­k.

Whether it’s most Super Bowl wins (7), most playoff starts (48), most playoff wins (35), most playoff touchdown passes

(86), and most completion­s overall, you name it, Brady’s name is attached.

The fact that he led the

NFL with 5,316 passing yards and 43 touchdowns at age 44 last season is mind-blowing. It won’t happen again. He also won a Super Bowl with a second team at age 43.

Robert Kraft’s response to Brady’s second retirement announceme­nt was heartfelt and warm. The Patriots owner put out a three-minute video on the team’s site expressing what Brady meant to him and the organizati­on.

“There’s 50,000 or 100,000 players who played the game, and we have had the No. 1 player in the history of the game play for the New England Patriots,” said Kraft. “We were really lucky to have him.”

Earlier in the day, Kraft offered a quicker summation, getting right to the point, saying there was no one like him, and that’s not about to change.

“I don’t believe in the 100-year- old history of the NFL, there’s been a quarterbac­k of Tom’s ilk,” Kraft initially told ESPN’S Mike Reiss. “I would have trou

ble ever believing there would be another one.” He’s right.

While the current rage is to say Patrick Mahomes will unseat Brady as the greatest ever, the Chiefs star still has a long, long, way to go before getting into the GOAT’S neighborho­od.

Mahomes is certainly great, and the best quarterbac­k in the game right now. And he’s headed for more greatness.

But Brady won four championsh­ips in his first five seasons. Ma-. homes has won one, and might have two after six. Brady is among the greatest winners of all time in any sport. Right now, Mahomes is just scratching the surface. Let’s see where he’s at in five to 10 more years, if he lasts that long.

At this point, Brady remains the reference standard. He leaves as the greatest to ever play the sport.

Fans in New England had him for an unforgetta­ble two decade run, pro

viding an unpreceden­ted haul of success and indelible memories during a half-dozen championsh­ip seasons and beyond.

After un-retiring a mere 40 days after his initial retirement a year ago, people weren’t surprised by his return, and were still in awe of his accomplish­ments.

“He just maintains that legacy more and more even though he doesn’t have to,” former teammate Ty Law told the Herald a year ago. “There’s not very many people in the world who can do what he’s doing especially at his age, and playing at such a high level for so long. It’s unheard of. You probably won’t see that again in our lifetime.”

Given that short-lived first retirement, some may have their doubts about Brady staying the course this time around. But this seems like the end, and the close of a magical ride like no other.

There won’t ever be another Brady. That much is for certain.

 ?? MATT PATTERSON, AP ?? Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady waves toward the fans as he leaves the field after a preseason game against the Texans on Aug. 28, 2021.
MATT PATTERSON, AP Buccaneers quarterbac­k Tom Brady waves toward the fans as he leaves the field after a preseason game against the Texans on Aug. 28, 2021.
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