Newsletter Subject

🏈 One More Matchup For The Ages

From

foxsports.com

Email Address

reply@email.foxsports.com

Sent On

Fri, Jan 15, 2021 10:30 PM

Email Preheader Text

Tom Brady & Drew Brees have faced countless big occasions before, yet Sunday’s game between the

Tom Brady & Drew Brees have faced countless big occasions before, yet Sundayñ€™s game between the Bucs and Saints feels different. [View in browser]( [FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS] In today’s FOX Sports Insider: As Tom Brady and Drew Brees go head-to-head for a ninth and probably final duel on Sunday, it is as fitting as could be that this one, of all of them, matters the most ... we take a look how Draymond Green has started a trend of tough-minded bruisers in the NBA ... and we wish our good friend Urban Meyer good luck in his new role as the head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars. A long, long time has passed since Tom Brady and Drew Brees first met on a football field. Sure, not quite long enough for the two timeless quarterbacks to yet resemble their images in that [tremendous History Channel meme]( cooked up by Brady’s social media crew. But a long time. As Brady and Brees go head-to-head for a ninth and probably final duel on Sunday (6:40 p.m. ET on FOX), it is as fitting as could be that this one, of all of them, matters the most. Brees’ New Orleans Saints are seeking to give their inspirational leader the perfect sendoff before he is expected to stride away in the direction of a commentary booth and a future position in the Hall of Fame. Brady is hunting down sports immortality, attempting to add to the six Super Bowl rings he won in New England by reimagining the modern history of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. [STORY IMAGE 1]( The pair are friends, record-breakers and mutual admirers - and perhaps no one else understands what it has taken the other to reach this point, still chugging at ages 43 and 42. But only one man can emerge from this weekend with those late-career dreams still alive, the other must nurse the sour tang of disappointment. Everything is at stake, yet divisional round week has brought plenty of nostalgia and no shortage of humor, memes notwithstanding. “We were texting on Monday,” Brees said. “Just kind of chuckling at this whole scenario. There’s 85 years and a lot of football experience that’s going to be on the field on Sunday.” “I’ve known (Drew) for a long time,” said Brady, during the Bucs’ media availability. “I’ve always had a great amount of respect for him, going all the way back to his Purdue days.” [STORY IMAGE 2] It was during Brees’ college career at Purdue that the QBs first encountered each other, with Brady’s Michigan Wolverines coming out on top, 38-12, on Oct. 2, 1999. There is some irony that their matchups started when the world at large didn’t know them, in front of 111,468 at Michigan’s Big House, and will end with them as famous as any athletes in America, but playing before a limited Superdome crowd of around 3,000. “It was loud that day,” Marcus Knight, Brady’s leading receiver in the Purdue game with 136 yards and a touchdown, told me via telephone this week. “The Big House was always loud.” Brees went into the game with Heisman aspirations and a growing reputation, and with Purdue ranked No. 11 and Michigan No. 4. Brady was in the midst of a quarterback battle with freshman teammate Drew Henson. “Brees was already Brees, but we weren’t that worried about Tom to be honest,” Matt Mitrione told me. Mitrione, a hard-hitting mixed martial artist with Bellator and previously the UFC, was part of the same incoming class at Purdue as Brees, and started 35 consecutive games at defensive tackle. “We figured our bigger problems would come from (running back) Anthony Thomas.” However, Brady stood tall, and after Michigan burst into an early lead, there was no looking back. [STORY IMAGE 3] “The Purdue offense with Drew Brees was spread out and very dynamic,” Knight remembers. “We knew we had to put a lot of points up to help our defense out. “This was the year when Tom was really getting the first opportunity to prove himself. You could see it in his eyes that he was looking for the respect he was due. There were other quarterbacks people were talking about, and he wanted to make everyone take notice.” Knight said Michigan benefitted from the shock and awe factor of the huge crowd, with Brees throwing for 293 yards but also tossing a key interception and coughing up a fumble in the first quarter. Knight, who played 21 games for the Oakland Raiders from 2001-02 before spending time in NFL Europe, is now the wide receivers coach at Indiana State and frequently uses the example of Brady’s college struggles when mentoring young players. “I tell them to look at what he has done,” Knight said. “If you can come through adversity, believe in yourself when not everyone does, make the most of your moment when it arrives and grasp it, then it is even more of a blessing than if you’d had it easy. That’s the story of Tom Brady.” Brady’s TB12 regimen has become legendary, but, according to Mitrione, Brees’ attention to detail and competitive spirit has always been just as fanatical. [STORY IMAGE 4] “We butted heads sometimes in college, I was a partier and he was much more conservative, but I could never throw shade at him because of how hard he worked. Everything was maximum intensity. He would set up these garbage cans to practice deep balls and if he didn’t sink them he would get furious with himself. “Competition is his vice. I’ve never met anyone in sports with the same mental aptitude for competition as him. We would do Ultimate Frisbee for cardio and they eventually had to tell Drew to stop playing for his own safety. He’d be full-length diving over offensive linemen to try to catch the frisbee. He had to win that badly. When you see that, it’s not so surprising he’s been as successful as he has.” There are lessons to be had in those stories for all of us, yet neither Brady nor Brees are ready to become a fully-fledged part of NFL folklore just yet. There is still serious business at stake and two legacies that can still be further polished. “(Brady) has the most to gain,” [former All-Pro Brandon Marshall said on FS1’s First Things First]( when discussing what this postseason means to the remaining quarterbacks. “It is almost like Kobe and Shaq. If Tom Brady goes to win a Super Bowl without Bill Belichick, now we are not talking about him as the greatest football player of all time, I think that thrusts him in the conversation as the greatest competitor in all of sports.” However, Tampa Bay will go in as underdogs ([+3, per FOX Bet]( and Brees also has the career edge, having bested Brady on five of the eight times they’ve played, including a 38-3 beatdown on Nov. 8. Both superstars have faced countless big occasions like this before, yet this one feels a little different. For time is ticking on both of them, and if things don’t work out, there is a long time to think about it afterwards. [STORY IMAGE 5] Here’s what others have said ... Michael Rosenberg, Sports Illustrated: “We see them now, near the end of their careers, and marvel at how long they have lasted. But the best way to understand why their journeys lasted so long is to go back to how they began. Brees and Brady were both overlooked Big Ten quarterbacks who needed time, opportunity and the right coaching to get here. They were not overlooked because coaches were dumb, but because their finest qualities are not easy to spot on the practice field or in the weight room: accuracy and poise under pressure, and the ability to process information quickly with large angry men bearing in on them. Brees and Brady are still standing because they could both absorb hits and avoid them—and because mental acuity lasts longer than physical gifts. Both quarterbacks are smart enough to understand their place in history is firmly established—and both are driven enough to go after the next like it’s their first.” Cameron Jordan, New Orleans Saints: “We know they have one of the greatest quarterbacks ever, and we need to be able to have a game plan that affects him. Yeah, he's been playing football since 1980-something. He's seen every look that you can give. I saw the meme of [Brady and Brees] facing off on the History Channel. And I didn't even laugh. I thought that was going to happen. I thought that was just a serious event.” Skip Bayless, Undisputed: “Tom Brady is facing the greatest challenge in his NFL career. Drew Brees has owned Tom Brady in their head-to-heads. If Tom Brady could turn this around and win this game, I believe it would be the greatest beatdown, turnaround I’ve ever seen.” [IN OTHER WORDS] - Willie Cauley-Stein, who became a father in July, was the sixth overall pick in the 2015 draft and is now on his third team in six seasons. That journey, he says, is represented in his art. [ESPN’s Anthony Olivieri]( introduces us to the artist known as Willie Cauley-Stein. - Urban Meyer is jumping to the NFL for the first time, but he’s been doing his homework for years. [Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer]( explains why Meyer knows what he’s getting into in Jacksonville. - Draymond Green has started a trend of tough-minded bruisers who use angles, IQ and strength to make up for their height. [Seerat Sohi of Yahoo Sports]( explains why undersized bruisers are ideal in today’s NBA. [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED] [THE INTERNET IS UNDEFEATED]( We here at FOX Sports want to take this opportunity to wish our former colleague Urban Meyer good luck in his new role as the head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars. “Urban has been a great teammate, and while we will miss our coach on BIG NOON KICKOFF, we are excited for his next chapter,” FOX Sports CEO Eric Shanks said of Meyer. “He will always have a place to call home at FOX Sports.” Congratulations, coach! We’ll miss you! [VIEWER'S GUIDE] Friday Night SmackDown (FOX, 8 p.m. ET) Find out what Roman Reigns has in store for Adam Pearce this Friday on SmackDown. Los Angeles Rams at Green Bay Packers (Saturday, FOX, 4:35 p.m. ET) Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers host Aaron Donald and the Los Angeles Rams in a much-anticipated NFC divisional playoff game. Baltimore Ravens at Buffalo Bills (Saturday, NBC, 8:15 p.m. ET) Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens travel to Buffalo to take on Josh Allen and the Bills. Cleveland Browns at Kansas City Chiefs (Sunday, CBS, 3 p.m. ET) Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs host Baker Mayfield and the Cleveland Browns. Tampa Bay Buccaneers at New Orleans Saints (Sunday, FOX, 6:40 p.m. ET) Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers travel to New Orleans to battle Drew Brees and the Saints in a much-anticipated NFC divisional playoff matchup. [BET OF THE DAY] [BET OF THE DAY] Odds provided by [FOX Bet]( The second round of the NFL playoffs is a matchup nirvana. We've got future Hall of Fame quarterbacks, dominant running games, suffocating defenses and prolific passing attacks. FOX Sports NFL analyst Geoff Schwartz gives his favorite picks for each game along with a confidence meter with that wager below! Here’s a look at Geoff’s picks for each divisional playoff game: Spread: Los Angeles Rams +6.5 at Green Bay Packers Wager: Green Bay -6.5 Confidence level: 7/10 Spread: Baltimore Ravens +2.5 at Buffalo Bills Wager: Baltimore ML +120 Confidence level: 6/10 Spread: Cleveland Browns +10 at Kansas City Chiefs Wager: Kansas City Chiefs over 32.5 Confidence level: 9/10 Spread: Tampa Bay Buccaneers +3 at New Orleans Saints Wager: Under 52 Confidence level: 5/10 [WHAT THEY SAID] “Anyone can see the adversity in a difficult situation, but it takes a stronger person to see the opportunity.” — Drew Brees [FOLLOW FOX SPORTS] [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( Download FOX Sports App: [Fire TV]( [Roku]( [Google Play]( [App Store]( [Fire TV]( [Roku]( [App Store]( [Google Play]( Also available on these devices: [fireTV | AppleTV | ROKU | Google Chromecast | XBOX ONE | SAMSUNG Smart TV] [fireTV | AppleTV | ROKU | Google Chromecast | XBOX ONE | SAMSUNG Smart TV] Trademark & Copyright Notice: ℱ and © 2021 Fox Media LLC and FOX Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Please do not reply to this message. If you do not wish to receive emails like this in the future, please [unsubscribe](. FOX Sports respects your privacy. Click [here]( to view our Privacy Policy. Fï»żoï»żxï»ż.ï»żcï»żoï»żm Business & Legal Affairs - Manager Digital Media Pï»ż.ï»żO. Bï»żoï»żx 9ï»ż0ï»ż0 Bï»żeï»żvï»żeï»żrï»żlï»ży Hï»żiï»żlï»żlï»żs, Cï»żalï»żifï»żorï»żniï»ża 9ï»ż0ï»ż2ï»ż1ï»ż3-0ï»ż9ï»ż0ï»ż0

Marketing emails from foxsports.com

View More
Sent On

30/05/2024

Sent On

29/05/2024

Sent On

28/05/2024

Sent On

27/05/2024

Sent On

26/05/2024

Sent On

25/05/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.