It might sound odd, given that heĆ¢ĀĀs headed to Tampa Bay. But make no mistake Ć¢ĀĀ this isnĆ¢ĀĀt about taking it easy for Tom Brady.
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[FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS]
In todayās FOX Sports Insider: Tom Brady aims to bring his winning ways to a franchise that could desperately use a culture shock ... Freddie Freemanās young son learns the harsh lessons of life (and baseball) in an adorable moment ... and we look at NFL Draft wagers one month out from the marquee event.
It is far from unusual for successful East Coasters, from New York and Boston and D.C. and so on, to relocate to the warmer climes of Floridaās Gulf communities.
They do it after theyāve had their triumphs and made their money, and they do so in search of a slower, easier, more relaxed life.
Tom Brady is 42 and a multi-millionaire, but he doesnāt have much in common with the typical southbound sunchasers. Brady isnāt headed for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as an initial, lucrative step towards retirement. Incongruous as it might sound on the surface, heās doing it to win.
[STORY IMAGE 1](
Sure, in leaving the New England Patriots and trekking to Tampa, Brady is essentially going from first to worst. Heās coming from a franchise that has been beyond compare in collecting regular season wins and Super Bowl titles under his watch; heās heading to one that has the weakest winning percentage of any current professional sports team.
But this isnāt a play about tradition. It is about a small window of time in the National Football League, because thatās all that Brady has left. It is about two years of trying to sign off his career in the same way he has played out most of it, by collecting victories.
If it was someone else, it might have been different. Plenty of professional athletes have made late-career moves for reasons that were wide and varied and often didnāt have much to do with winning. On its barest surface, it looked like this could be one of those.
[STORY IMAGE 2]
Heās giving up the frost of New England for the balmy pleasantness of the Sunshine State. Heās heading to a place with no state income tax and getting a contract worth up to $59 million, $50 million of it guaranteed, for a couple of yearsā work.
Heās going to a team that hasnāt been to the playoffs since 2007, has had just one winning season since 2010 and whose sole Super Bowl triumph in 2002 sticks out as a glaring anomaly.
However, Brady has spent his entire career being quicker in thought than opposition defenses ā and now, heās using those same smarts to get ahead of the doubters. He knows that expectations for this coming campaign will be tempered somewhat just because we are so accustomed to the Bucs being mediocre that we assume they must always be so.
[STORY IMAGE 3]
Yet while we are fans of the sport, Brady is a student of it. In a Tampa Bay Times feature by Rick Stroud, [it was revealed that the Bucsā courtship of Brady]( got flipped on its head. When the veteran quarterback spoke for 90 minutes last week with team general manager Jason Licht and head coach Bruce Arians, he was the one asking most of the questions.
He had already watched reams of tape and therefore knew what on-field qualities elite wideouts Mike Evans and Chris Godwin brought, but he wanted to know if they were good guys, the kind he could forge a cheery rapport with. They are, he was told.
His research was deep enough that he had also noted Tampaās greatly improved defense under Todd Bowles. He rattled off players' names and dug for more information. He wanted to understand the culture because he knows, from all his time at Foxborough, that sustained success depends on it.
āHe spoke a lot about winning,ā Stroud wrote. āAnd it was obvious to Licht and Arians that Bradyās competitiveness burns white hot, and the three-time league MVP still thinks he has something to prove. Maybe to Patriots coach Bill Belichick. Maybe just to himself.ā
[STORY IMAGE 4](
As talks progressed, Brady didnāt bring up money or try to squeeze out more of it. He asked for his new teammates' phone numbers, so he could get things rolling.
āHe is going to be all-time hungry,ā [FOX Sports' Skip Bayless said on Undisputed.]( āYou will never have seen him as driven as he is to get to a Super Bowl before Belichick does.ā
A lot can happen with a big move like this, and in the NFL more than anywhere, past reputations count for nothing. As much as Brady craves more glories, fate and fortune will have their say on how things play out.
With his approach to the most talked about departure professional football has ever seen, however, Brady has already proven one thing. A retirement tour this is not.
[STORY IMAGE 5]
Hereās what others have said ...
Albert Breer, Sports Illustrated: āAs [Arians] looked at Bradyās tape, the veteran coach ā whoād historically worked with big-armed Clydesdales like Ben Roethlisberger, Carson Palmer and Andrew Luck ā saw a quarterback who could make every throw his offense required. He also saw where Brady was being held back. The feeling was that with more speed and explosiveness around him ā which the Bucs could give him with Mike Evans, Chris Godwin, O.J. Howard and Cam Brate ā Brady wouldnāt be forced to hold the ball like he had his last year in New England, where he had slower skill position talent on hand.ā
Rick Stroud, Tampa Bay Times: āHis preparation, as usual, was next level. He knew all about Ariansā offense and was eager to operate it. He could recite, by position, the list of the Bucsā offensive weapons. He was intrigued by the notion of having two Pro Bowl receivers, Mike Evans and Chris Godwin. He didnāt ask about them as players. He wanted to know, āAre they good guys?ā The best, Licht assured. ... Brady never asked for control of the offense. He knew that Arians, offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich, quarterbacks coach Clyde Christensen and special assistant Tom Moore would collaborate with him on game plans.ā
Seth Wickersham, ESPN: āNobody knows what motivates great athletes. It's as mysterious and unique as their own DNA. Brady has struggled to explain it for himself. Sometimes the motivation came from anger that he was draft pick No. 199; other times from understanding and learning from why he was pick No. 199. But in interviews with people close to Brady, team and league executives, coaches and owners involved in the Brady sweepstakes, it's clear that there's a feeling he is chasing, and has been chasing for years. Not just to prove the Patriots wrong, but to find ā no, rediscover ā an essential version of himself.ā
[IN OTHER WORDS]
- Had LeBron James really closed the gap on Giannis Antetokounmpo in the MVP race? [ESPNās Tim Bontemps surveyed]( 70 of the leagueās media members, and the result was a landslide.
- There can be only one champion in sports ā most of the time. [MLB.comās Eric Chesteron tells]( the story of how baseballās second ever world championship ended up down the middle.
- The Bucs landed the biggest catch of the offseason, but [theyāre not on Bleacher Reportās list]( of the six teams that have improved the most in free agency so far, by Marcus Mosher.
[THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]
[THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED](
Weāre not sure which was more crushed: that ball, or Freddie Freemanās sonās spirit. Weāre kidding, of course ... but on the other hand, watch that video just for the reaction from the little one. The way he looks into the distance, then back at his dad, then back to the general vicinity of the ball, then hurls the rest of the balls to the ground in disgust ā itās all just a perfectly adorable way to start the week.
[VIEWER'S GUIDE]
WWE Monday Night Raw (USA, 8 p.m. ET)
Will Randy Orton accept Edgeās challenge of a Last Man Standing match at WrestleMania 36? And after a stunning beatdown at the hands of Drew McIntyre, WWE Champion Brock Lesnar returns to Raw.
MLB on FOX: Safe At Home (MLB on FOX social platforms, 8 p.m. ET)
Alex Rodriguez, Frank Thomas, and Kevin Burkhardt break down the upcoming MLB season, talk baseballās Opening Day delay in the face of COVID-19, and answer fan questions in this exclusive show.
NFL Game Pass (On demand, multiple platforms)
In case you havenāt heard, the NFL is making its extensive digital library of football programming [available to fans around the world free of charge]( as we all try to stay inside and fight the spread of the coronavirus. Check it out, and in the days ahead, weāll identify some of the best games and moments for your viewing pleasure.
[BET OF THE DAY]
[BET OF THE DAY](
Odds provided by [FOX Bet](
QBs drafted in the 2020 NFL Draft First Round: Under 4.5 (-500)
Weāre just one month from the 2020 NFL Draft, friends, and we have good news for the sports fan desperately in search of a wager these days: FOX Bet has dozens upon dozens of draft-related props, from the odds on specific teams drafting specific players to how many QBs, CBs, RBs, TEs, and more will get picked in the first round. Weāre highlighting the signal-callers here because, well, [in our most recent first-round mock]( by Jason McIntyre, four QBs went off the board in the first 32 picks ā Joe Burrow, Justin Herbert, Tua Tagovailoa, and Jordan Love. So take that for what itās worth.
[WHAT THEY SAID]
"Winning isnāt everything, but it beats anything that comes in second.."
ā Bear Bryant
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