Tom Brady’s seventh Super Bowl win burnishes an already glittering legacy

about 3 years in The Irish Times

Every experiment sets out to prove a hypothesis, and Tom Brady formulated an outrageous one last March, when he chose to flee the empire he helped build in New England to sign with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Going from a franchise with whom he had won six titles to one that had won a total of six playoff games, Brady believed that, at age 43, he could master a new offense, acclimate to a new team and conquer a new conference, all while the pandemic limited in-person activity.
The most precious of NFL baubles is the Super Bowl ring, and each of Brady’s – seven, the latest secured on Sunday night – reinforce an indomitable truth: when he has something to prove, he is just about unbeatable.
Flicking away the Kansas City Chiefs’ dynastic aspirations and the quarterback who poses the most credible threat to someday matching him, Brady guided the Buccaneers to a 31-9 romp that recalibrated his own standard for greatness in front of a partisan crowd at their home field, Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida.
This Super Bowl win was, for Brady, almost certainly his hardest, his sweetest and his strangest, too, captured at the end of the most improbable season in NFL history. The final game is always an exhausting, exhilarating conclusion to the NFL calendar, but never before had so many events surrounding the field of play threatened to pause America’s most popular sport.
Brady left New England behind and did not comment this season on the red Make America Great Again hat seen in his locker there in 2015, but he did say his relationship with Donald Trump became “uncomfortable”. As Trump’s term came to a close, with some of his supporters leading an armed attack on the US Capitol, Patriots coach Bill Belichick declined to accept a presidential medal of freedom from him, citing his conversations with the team “about social justice, equality and human rights”.
For this untidy heap of a season even to reach Sunday’s capstone, it was as if the NFL struck a cosmic bargain: in exchange for ploughing through a full 256-game slate – and without creating a closed environment in which to play – it would be granted the most tantalising quarterback match-up in the Super Bowl era, Brady and Patrick Mahomes, the best of all time against the best of this time.
The past two Super Bowl-winning quarterbacks had never faced each other, and in some circles the game had been distilled in rather crude, and imprecise, terms, as a referendum on each of their legacies – as if Brady’s would be tarnished with a defeat, or if four seasons into a glorious career, Mahomes’s was somehow linked to the outcome.



Rob Gronkowski and Tom Brady celebrate Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Super Bowl victory over Kansas City Chiefs at the Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida. Photograph: Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images


In delivering Tampa Bay’s second title and his seventh – more than any NFL franchise, more than John Elway and his boyhood idol, Joe Montana, combined, more than Michael Jordan in the NBA – Brady joined Peyton Manning as the only starting quarterbacks to win Super Bowls with multiple franchises.
“We came together at the right time,” Brady, who went 21 of 29 for 201 passing yards and was selected as the Super Bowl’s most valuable player for the fifth time, said on the field afterwards. “I think we knew this was going to happen now, didn’t we?”
Mahomes had won 16 of 17 starts this season, but he and his team collapsed amid a deluge of penalties, drops and pressure from the Buccaneers, who, exploiting the Chiefs’ diluted offensive line, revelled in it, inflicted it, even embraced it. At half-time, Mahomes had 67 yards and Kansas City trailed 21-6.
“They beat us pretty good,” Mahomes said. “The worst that I think I’ve been beaten in a long time.” The only other time Mahomes’s team had been behind by that many points across his three seasons as Kansas City’s starter occurred in October 2018, in a loss to Brady at New England. Brady spent two decades there, where he and Belichick were the immovable objects of the postseason, winning six championships as the most famous quarterback-coach tandem of this generation.
What Belichick must have been wondering Sunday night as New England wept, watching Brady throw each touchdown to a former Patriots team-mate – two to Rob Gronkowski, who came out of retirement for the chance to play again with his old pal, and one, just before half-time, to Antonio Brown.
Brady’s time in New England will forever be a part of him, but now he wears a skull and crossbones on his helmet, can dress in shorts to practice in the winter and reports to a 68-year-old coach, Bruce Arians, who, coming out of retirement to coach the Buccaneers, represents the stylistic antithesis of Belichick.
When asked recently about pursuing Brady during the offseason, Arians responded with a rhetorical question: “Do you sit and live in a closet trying to be safe, or are you going to have some fun?” He added: “I think I’d have been smoking something illegal to really imagine this.”
Brady’s arrival in Tampa reflected a certain harmonic convergence, a confluence of foresight, audacity and serendipity largely alien to the Buccaneers, who hadn’t won a playoff game since capturing their only title in the 2002 season. Their quest was nicknamed Operation Shoeless Joe Jackson, a wink to the prophesy from the movie Field of Dreams: “If you build it, they will come.”



Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes manages to get an incomplete pass off to avoid a sack by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the fourth quarter of the Super Bowl. Photograph: CJ Gunther/EPA


Brady valued how general manager Jason Licht had assembled a team that solved problems around him instead of asking him to solve them himself. “They were an organisation ready to win,” Gronkowski said of the Buccaneers. “The players here were ready to win.”
The Buccaneers loaded up on playmaking receivers, linebackers who excelled in coverage and aggressive defensive backs who matured as the season progressed. Before it even started, their cornerbacks coach, Kevin Ross, wrote on a board all the quarterbacks they would be facing – Matt Ryan, Drew Brees, Aaron Rodgers and Mahomes, who torched them in week 12 for 462 yards and three touchdowns.
But that defeat proved to be an inflection point for the Buccaneers, who had moonwalked through the first three months, going 7-5, shuffling forward at the same time as they drifted backward. They closed the season by winning their last four, then defeated three consecutive division champions – and two of Brady’s elite quarterbacking peers, Brees and Rodgers – on the road to advance to their first Super Bowl in 18 seasons.
That team, like this one, teemed with defensive talent and needed an outsider, coach Jon Gruden, to synthesise it into a champion. Brady conferred the Buccaneers with hope and credibility and possibility.
“Brady, there’s nothing that he can’t do ,” said defensive end Shaquil Barrett, who had four tackles and a sack. “New team, new scheme, first year, going to the Super Bowl and winning it all. He’s the GOAT [greatest of all time] for sure.”
This championship belongs to Brady, who, 10 Super Bowls down, has already started plotting his offseason objective: he wants to get faster.
As he smiled the other day, Brady said he wanted to catch up with the younger generation of quarterbacks. Really, though, it is they who are trying to catch up with him, always and forever. – New York Times

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