From a nearly forgotten sixth-round draft pick to the greatest quarterback – if not NFL player – ever, Tom Brady’s storied career has been nothing short of remarkable.
But, after all the ups and down, it all came to an end on Wednesday after he announced he would be calling time on his 23-year career – this time for good.
This may all seem like déjà vu with Brady initially retiring in February 2022 then reversing his decision to play one more season for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
But this time, the GOAT (greatest of all time) seemed to put a definite end to his glittering career in the sport.
“I’m retiring for good,” he said in a short video posted to Twitter.
“I know the process was a pretty big deal last time, so when I woke up this morning, I figured I’d just press record and let you guys know first.
“It won’t be long-winded. You only get one super-emotional retirement essay, and I used mine up last year.”
Over the course of his legendary career, Brady has won seven Super Bowl rings – more than any individual NFL franchise – six with the New England Patriots and one with the Buccaneers in 2021.
His last season in the league may not have gone to plan, both on and off the field, but he leaves behind an unrivaled legacy of success.
“Thank you guys for allowing me to live my absolute dream,” he said in the short video. “I wouldn’t change a thing.”
The ‘Comeback Kid’
Brady’s story is one of determination and drive.
Born in California, Brady grew up a huge San Francisco 49ers fan as someone who regularly attended games at Candlestick Park.
In fact, as a four-year-old, a young Brady was in attendance for one of the most memorable moments in NFL history, when Joe Montana threw “The Catch” to Dwight Clark in the 1981 NFC Championship Game against the Dallas Cowboys.
A great high school baseball player too, he committed to the University of Michigan in 1995.
However, when he arrived in Michigan, it wasn’t plain sailing for Brady. He was nowhere near starting for the team, and such was his frustration, he sought out Greg Harden who was assistant athletic director at the school.
Brady remembers Harden used to tell him: “If you don’t believe in yourself, then why is anyone else going to believe in you?”
In 1998, he finally became the starting quarterback, setting new Wolverines records for most pass attempts and completions in a season.
The following year, despite sharing time with Drew Henson early in the season, he eventually won the job outright, earning himself the nickname “Comeback Kid” due to some – what would become trademark – late fight backs in games.
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Despite posting a 20-5 record at Michigan in his time as a starter, as well as victories in the 1999 Citrus Bowl and the 2000 Orange Bowl, Brady wasn’t a highly sought-after prospect coming into the 2000 NFL Draft.
While he had attributes teams liked, there were others scouts deemed a knock against him. An iconic picture emerged, a rather unflattering photo taken in the months before the draft.
Despite the scouting reports, Brady and his family thought he might be taken between the first and third round.
But as the picks came in, Brady’s name wasn’t among them. “We were led to believe that he was going to be drafted, possibly second round, probably third round,” Tom Brady Sr. said in the ESPN documentary ‘The Brady 6.’ “They kept calling quarterback names, and we kept being stunned.
“We were very distraught. With each name, it was becoming worse and worse.”
Brady even recalls going for a walk with his parents, such were the levels of emotion going through him at the time.
Eventually, he was drafted in the sixth round, with the 199th pick, by the New England Patriots with a compensatory pick, a pick in the draft earned by ending up with “more or better qualifying free agents lost than gained in a particular year,” the seventh quarterback to be taken overall.
And it didn’t get much easier once he arrived in the NFL. But it was just one more obstacle to fight for the “Comeback Kid.”
Going pro
Patriots owner Robert Kraft remembers the first time he met Brady.
“I still have the image of Tom Brady coming down the old Foxboro stadium steps with that pizza box under his arm, a skinny beanpole, and when he introduced himself to me and said: ‘Hi, Mr. Kraft,’ he was about to say who he was, but I said: ‘I know who you are, you’re Tom Brady. You’re our sixth-round draft choice,’” Kraft told CBS Boston in 2012.
“And he looked me in the eye and said: ‘I’m the best decision this organization has ever made.’ It looks like he could be right.”
Despite his confidence, he began his rookie season as the fourth quarterback on the roster behind starter Drew Bledsoe and backups John Friesz and Michael Bishop. The Patriots finished 5-11 and missed the playoffs for the second season in a row.
It would be the last time the team finished with a losing record for 20 years. The main reason? Brady’s rise to starting quarterback.
He began the 2001 season on the bench, while Bledsoe started the Patriots’ opening week defeat to the Cincinnati Bengals. But during the Week 2 clash with the New York Jets, Bledsoe suffered internal bleeding. Although he briefly returned, Brady replaced him for the final series of the game.
Brady was named the starter for the Patriots’ third game of the season, which the Pats won 44-13. And the team didn’t look back from then on, with Brady starting the rest of the season, leading the team to a final record of 11-5 and qualifying for the playoffs.
But Brady wasn’t just satisfied with that. He wanted more.
He was the mastermind behind the Patriots’ run to Super Bowl XXXVI where, against the explosive St. Louis Rams – nicknamed ‘the Greatest Show on Turf’ – a late Adam Vinatieri field goal gave New England their first ever Super Bowl title.
Besides affirming Brady’s place as starter, the 2001 NFL season was the beginning of one of the greatest NFL careers ever.
The greatest ever
With Brady at the helm and Bill Belichick as head coach, the Patriots grew into the most successful team in the NFL.
During his 20 years with the team, Brady won six Super Bowl rings, five Super Bowl Most Valuable Player (MVP) awards and three NFL MVP awards.
And as if that wasn’t enough, during his time in Florida, he won yet another title with the Bucs.
Brady has been named to the Pro Bowl on 15 occasions and won the NFL’s comeback player of the year in 2009 after returning from a torn ACL suffered in the season opener of the previous season.
And everything he achieved, he did it all while being a standout teammate.
As his backup between 2009-11, Brian Hoyer, once said during a weather-enforced stop in Rochester, New York Brady showcased a hidden talent to his Patriots teammates.
“The whole team is there. And it turns into a beer-chugging contest. You have linemen, Julian Edelman, they all think they are going to win,” Hoyer told ESPN.
“Then someone says: ‘I heard Tom is really great at chugging a beer.’ We don’t usually get to experience him like this, but we finally coax him into doing it. He does it, and let me tell you, you couldn’t have poured out the beer faster into a glass. It was unbelievable. And he slams the mug on the table and puts both fists in the air.
“He walks away with a look on his face that said: ‘You really thought you were going to beat me on this?’ The place went nuts.”
In 20 seasons with the Patriots, and three seasons with the Bucs, Brady has broken almost every NFL quarterback record there is to break.
Here is a list of just some of the records Brady holds: most NFL championships by a player, most career wins, most career passing attempts, most career passing completions, most career passing touchdowns, most career passing yards and most pass completions in a season.
There have been lows, including injuries and two heartbreaking Super Bowl losses to the New York Giants, but they pale into insignificance when you appreciate all the highs.
In an interview with 60 Minutes in 2005, a 27-year-old Brady told correspondent Steve Kroft that retirement was the thing that scared him the most, saying, “Not that it’s easy to work, not that’s easy to show up every day and do the job, but you’re focused. You know, you’ve got a goal, you got something you’re trying to accomplish.
“And when that’s done, you don’t have 80,000 people screaming your name. What’s it gonna be? I mean, I don’t know, I’ve heard a lot about astronauts who go to the moon and come back and they’re so depressed because there’s nothing they can do in their lives that ever can fill in the way that that does.”
Now, in 2023, it’s time for Brady to conquer his biggest mountain yet.