Tom Brady just became the greatest quarterback of all time

By Anindya Dutta / Roar Guru

It is the year 2000, and the young Tom Brady, star quarterback from the University of Michigan, is sitting at the NFL Draft, wearing a crestfallen look.

Five rounds have gone by and no one has picked him. He is what the NFL scouts term a “lightly regarded prospect”.

And then, it happens.

The New England Patriots pick Tom Brady in the sixth round of the draft. He is the 199th player picked to play for the NFL that year.

According to Michael Holley’s book Patriot Reign, the Patriots were considering Brady and Tim Rattay, both of whom had received positive reviews from then-quarterbacks coach Dick Rehbein. Ultimately, the Patriots front office chose Brady.

Usually, being picked this late in the draft means being benched for most of one’s career, a free agent for much of it, and if lucky, a prolonged, stop and start career.

Young Tom Brady, however, is having none of that. He has made it to the NFL, and he intends to make a statement.

But let’s not get ahead of our take, and go back to where it all started.

Brady grew up in California, hero worshipping Joe Montana, just like any kid who was a 49ers fan in the 1980s and 1990s. He was a good football, baseball and basketball player in school. So good in fact, that the Montreal Expos, the Major League Baseball team, drafted him in 1995 in the 18th Round.

However Tom Brady wanted to play football.

He played college football for the University of Michigan from 1995 to 1999. He was a backup quarterback for his first two years, while teammate and future NFL quarterback, Brian Griese, led the 1997 Wolverines to an undefeated season, capped by a victory in the Rose Bowl and a share of the national championship.

The two seasons that Brady started at Michigan, he posted a 20–5 record, including his two largest victories at the Citrus Bowl (1999) and the Orange Bowl (2000). He finished his career ranking third in Michigan history with 710 attempts and 442 completions, fourth with 5,351 yards and 62.3 completion percentage, and fifth with 35 touchdown passes.

But this was all in the past, and in 2000, Tom Brady was only looking ahead to his tryst with destiny.

At the Patriots, Brady was backup to Drew Bledsoe, one of New England’s best quarterbacks ever. So, as the understudy, Brady expected to play second fiddle for a long time. But he was willing to learn. And be patient, biding his time.

In fact, at the start, Brady was the fourth choice quarterback. But well before the end of the season, he had moved up to be the second choice behind Bledsoe, based on the depth chart.

The, in his second year with the Patriots, Bledsoe picked up an injury.

Brady took over and led New England to the Super Bowl that year.

In the Super Bowl, despite being heavy underdogs, the Patriots played well, holding the Rams’ high powered offense in check through the first three quarters. The Rams rallied from a 17–3 deficit to tie the game with 1:30 left in regulation. The Patriots then got the ball back at their own 17 yard line with no timeouts remaining.

Sportscaster and former Super Bowl-winning coach John Madden said he thought the Patriots should run out the clock and try to win the game in overtime.

Instead, in what would become a habit of doing the unconventional, Brady drove the Patriots’ offense down the field to the Rams’ 31 before spiking the ball with seven seconds left. Then kicker Adam Vinatieri made a 48-yard field goal as time expired to give the Patriots a 20–17 win and their first ever league championship.

Tom Brady was named MVP of Super Bowl XXXVI while throwing for 145 yards, one touchdown, and no interceptions, becoming the then-youngest quarterback to ever win a Super Bowl.

Since that fateful day in 2001, Brady has led the New England Patriots to six Super Bowls and won Ffur of them.

He holds every record in the NFL that is available to a quarterback.

He has been adjudged Super Bowl MVP thrice, the NFL’s MVP twice, and made Eleven Pro Bowl appearances, among other things.

Today, 16 years after he first started with the New England Patriots, Tom Brady completed his 201st victory in the NFL as a quarterback, in his 264th game.

It was perhaps fated, and insanely poetic, that the victory was against the Los Angeles Rams, his hapless opponents in his very first Super Bowl.

This is an incredible achievement which no quarterback has ever managed, and no one is likely to better in the foreseeable future. Peyton Manning at 200 (in 293 games) and Brett Favre at 199 victories, are both retired.

Tom Brady is inarguably, from every angle imaginable, the greatest quarterback in the history of the NFL.

And at 39, when most quarterbacks are enjoying their retirements, Tom Brady is fighting fit, steadily increasing his yardage (he last week crossed 60,000 yards) and throwing 5161 passes.

With an incredible completion percentage of 63.8, is just warming up for a go at his seventh Super Bowl appearance, and if all the stars are aligned, his fifth Super Bowl ring.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2017-02-06T04:17:49+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Ok folks. I take a bow on behalf of Brady today. Unbelievable comeback.

2016-12-08T00:07:30+00:00

Kasey

Guest


As a Seahawks fan it pains me to give a boost to the 40-whiners in any way but Joe Montana will always be #1 in the QB stakes for me. I just cant give the major props to Brady with the Deflate-gate scandal and Spy-gate before that. Of the modern class under Centre..the man I most enjoy watching is Russell Wilson. Amazing ability to keep plays alive and when he's healthy, the Seahawks O is incredibly exciting. Probably needs a second SuperBowl Ring to elevate him to great status though( Damn you Malcolm Butler!!)

2016-12-07T07:21:13+00:00

NFLFan29

Guest


IMO Montana can't be beat with an 11:0 TD:INT ratio in Super Bowl career and his comeback abilities

AUTHOR

2016-12-07T05:37:17+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Fair enough. These articles re about views so I guess subjective is fine!

2016-12-07T05:08:50+00:00

no one in particular

Roar Guru


Winningest is objective, greatest is subjective. There is no doubt about one, plenty of debate about the other

AUTHOR

2016-12-06T12:08:02+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


You are right. I stand corrected.

AUTHOR

2016-12-06T12:07:02+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


I don't personally like that term, and prefer Greatest, which I think he is. But it's clearly a matter of personal opinion.

2016-12-06T10:53:58+00:00

monday QB

Guest


Just a quick note that Brady does not hold every QB record. If fact he doesn't hold a lot of them, including for things like passing yards (Manning), passing completions (Favre), passing TDs (Manning).

2016-12-06T09:04:23+00:00

no one in particular

Roar Guru


Winningest, not greatest

AUTHOR

2016-12-06T04:06:08+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


That sounds like a superb day to be a sports fan! You should really move to Boston though since you are a Red Sox and a Patriots fan! That will actually put you closer to NY to see Djokovic as well!

2016-12-06T02:59:22+00:00

Prakul

Guest


Let me recount a very special 24 hour period for me on a certain October day in 2013. Big Papi's clutch play, hitting a home run to give the Red Sox a 6-5 victory over Detroit to equal the ACLS was sooo sweet. Earlier that night, Tom Brady had honed in on rookie wideout Tompkins 17 yards away in the end zone with barely five seconds on the clock to give Patriots a very famous win. And a little earlier that day Djokovic had overcome the beast Del Potro in a tight three setter to win the Shanghai Rolex Masters. He would go on to with the Paris Masters and the World Tour Finals later that year beating two spaniards Ferrer and Nadal respectively.

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