The Palm Beach Post

Brady didn’t need win for validation but loss hurts

- By Jim Souhan Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s)

Tom Brady is the greatest winner in the modern history of America’s most popular game. He is rich and married to a rich supermodel. He might have the world’s greatest discernibl­e sporting life and when he loses a Super Bowl he is granted no privileges, spared no regrets.

On the final play of the Eagles’ 41-33 victory over Brady’s Patriots on Sunday night at U.S. Bank Stadium, Brady was knocked to the ground. As the Eagles began a celebratio­n that would endanger light poles all over Philadelph­ia, a teammate helped Brady to his feet, and he congratula­ted two opponents.

Security reached him and he walked, head down, to the locker room. Minutes later he appeared at a podium in a concrete space deep within the stadium. Still wearing eye black, his football pants and his knee brace, Brady spoke quietly, calmly.

“It’s tough to lose,” he said. “But if you want to win championsh­ips you have to play in these games.”

Brady passed for a Super Bowl-record 505 yards at the age of 40, with a recently healed right hand and his most talented receiver in the locker room because of a head injury, and his team’s supposed defensive mastermind­s getting embarrasse­d by Nick Foles. He ran a three-minute mile only to discover he was racing a Camaro.

“It stinks,” he said. “But no one’s feeling sorry for us.”

Brady came within a play or two of winning a sixth championsh­ip. He might be the rare quarterbac­k whose reputation can’t be affected by winning or losing a Super Bowl. He completed 28 of 48 passes with three touchdowns and no intercepti­ons, and went home to a handful of Super Bowl rings.

Brady winning another would have been like Michael Jordan hitting .300 in the big leagues — remarkable and not necessary.

“Tom’s a legend,” teammate Rob Gronkowski said. “He’s the greatest, but obviously he wasn’t enough.”

Brady finished his interview, after saying he wants to play for the Patriots again next season and sees no reason why that won’t happen.

The question had to be asked because Brady has said he wants to play another five years, and finds himself at the center of rare stories about turmoil within the hierarchy of the longest-running dynasty in recent

NFL history, after he reportedly went over his coach’s head to demand that his talented backup be traded.

Saturday night, Brady won the league’s MVP award. Sunday night, he looked as if he could play until the end of this decade, or the next.

Brady left the podium and walked to the Patriots’ locker room as it was being stripped like an abandoned car. Most of the players had left, and the last nameplates were being pulled off the lockers. A man walked by with a rack of thin, cheap, wire hangers. Peeled-off athletic tape lay like reptile skins on the floor.

Still in football pants, Brady walked into the trainer’s room. He emerged 15 minutes later dressed like a TV producer’s idea of an assassin, in all black except for a gray coat with a large, upturned collar. He called to an assistant and walked down the hallway, the side protecting players with a thin, black curtain.

Another Eagle rushed to shake his hand, then Brady turned and walked through the loading dock and into the cold, the man who has everything telling himself he has miles to go before he sleeps.

 ?? GREGORY PAYAN / AP ?? Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady shredded the Eagles’ defense Sunday night, throwing for a Super Bowl-record 505 yards in a losing cause.
GREGORY PAYAN / AP Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady shredded the Eagles’ defense Sunday night, throwing for a Super Bowl-record 505 yards in a losing cause.

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