Tom Brady apparently has at least two demands for any team that wants to sign him in free agency

If any NFL team is interested in signing Tom Brady this offseason, they might want to check out his list of demands first, because apparently, the Patriots quarterback is asking for a few things that no other free agent has ever really asked for. According to Dianna Russini of ESPN, Brady has two big “wants” that he’ll be looking for in his new team.

“Some of the things Brady wants: Control over roster [and] he wants to be part of making decisions on the play calling,” Russini said this week on ESPN’s “Get Up.”

Apparently, any team that wants to sign Brady the quarterback is also going to have to agree to take on Brady the general manager. A player asking for any type of control over the roster is absolutely unheard of, but in Brady’s case, it actually makes a little bit of sense. Brady knows he only has one or two seasons left, and you can bet that he doesn’t want to waste away on a team that mismanages its roster. By demanding some roster control, Brady can push his new team to go out and acquire players who can help them win.

For instance, if Brady signed with the Chargers and thought they needed offensive line help to win, he could use his new roster control power to implore the team to sign or draft an offensive lineman. From a general manager’s perspective, if Brady’s decision to bring in a lineman doesn’t work out, you basically have plausible deniability with the team’s ownership, “Hey, Brady’s plan didn’t work out, but he’s now retired, so let’s go back to my plan.”

If Brady had roster control in New England last season, it’s a virtual guarantee that he would have used it to go out and add a few weapons to the Patriots lackluster offense.

Speaking of New England, that’s also the one place where Brady isn’t going to get any control of the roster. Patriots coach Bill Belichick has the final say on all roster matters and there’s basically a zero percent chance he’s going to give any of that control to Brady, which is probably at least one reason why Brady hasn’t re-signed with the Patriots just yet.

Even if Brady isn’t going to get any type of roster control, he’d probably at least like to get some assurances from Belichick that the team plans to make some offensive improvements this offseason, which could be an issue, because Belichick doesn’t seem like the kind of guy who likes to share his offseason building plans.

As for Brady’s second demand, it isn’t that surprising and it’s something that most teams should be willing to allow. If Brady wants a say in play calling, then you give him a say in play calling. No one reads a defense like Brady and he’s proven over his 20-year career that he can put his offense in the best position to succeed. As a matter of fact, if I’m an NFL coach, I’d be more than happy to give Brady whatever play-calling decisions he wants to have.

So are there any teams out there that would actually agree to these demands? Russini specifically mentioned one.

“I talked to Tampa Bay. They would love to have Tom Brady,” Russini said. “They are willing to give Tom Brady the things he needs, he wants.”

The Buccaneers make a lot of sense for a lot of reasons, and if you’re wondering why, you can click here to find out. If you don’t feel like clicking, here’s a brief summary:

They have a lot of offensive weapons, they have a lot of salary cap room to add any piece Brady needs and they have a 67-year-old coach who wants to win now. The next Super Bowl is also being played in Tampa, which would give Brady a chance to do something that no other player has ever done: Play a Super Bowl in their home stadium.

Anyway, if you want to stay up to date on every rumor about Brady between now and the start of free agency on March 18, make sure to click here to check out our free agency hub for the Patriots quarterback.

Tom Brady’s odds of returning to Patriots ‘not looking good’

INIDIANAPOLIS — The Patriots have yet to contact Tom Brady’s camp about renegotiating his contract and the odds of a reunion are “not looking good,” according to a person with knowledge of the situation.

Even though there was a report the Patriots and Brady’s agent Don Yee were expected to meet at the NFL’s Scouting Combine, as of Thursday morning, the Patriots hadn’t “reached out” to the Brady camp about a meeting or anything else, the Herald has learned.

The two remaining years on Brady’s deal are set to void on March 18. As of now, Brady is prepared to hit free agency, and hear what other teams are prepared to offer. He agreed to a restructured contract in August that gave him a raise for the 2019 season and prohibited the Patriots from applying the franchise tag on him this offseason. Brady, 42, is one of several quarterbacks expected to hit the market in a year unusually flush with available veteran passers.

Yee, speaking with reporters Thursday prior to an agent’s meeting at the Indiana Convention Center, declined to share what discussions, if any, have been held with the Pats with regards to a new contract.

It is unclear how significantly ongoing CBA negotiations have affected or could be affecting negotiations. If a new CBA is reached before free agency, Brady and the Patriots could again tack void years onto a potential new deal. Heading into the final year of the current CBA, teams cannot strike new deals that include such years, which exist to allow teams to spread out cap hits they incur from handing out large bonuses.

Several agents noted at the NFL Scouting Combine the CBA uncertainty has caused certain free-agent negotiations to stall. Players are expected to vote on a CBA proposal in the coming weeks, which would determine the league’s revenue split over the next 10 years.

Last season, Brady posted his lowest QB rating since 2013 and second-lowest of the past 14 years. He completed 60.8% of his passes for 4,057 yards, 24 touchdowns and eight interceptions.

Earlier Thursday, ESPN insider Jeff Darlington said he would be “stunned” if the six-time Super Bowl winner returns to New England. Brady is expected to have multiple suitors in free agency. The Titans, Raiders and Chargers are the teams with the most reported interest in signing the future Hall of Famer.

Most coaches and GMs of prospective suitors were coy on Tuesday in responding to questions about Brady. But given current quarterback uncertainty with several of those teams, it seemed fairly obvious Brady would be in the mix once free agency officially begins.

Why It’s No Surprise to See Drew Brees and Tom Brady Playing Into Their 40s

Tom House was a pitching coach for some Texas Rangers who kept throwing well into their 40s. As a throwing coach for Drew Brees and Tom Brady, he has them uniquely positioned to keep doing the same.

A half-decade ago, when Drew Brees and Tom Brady told anyone who’d listen they wanted to play into their mid-40s, it was a wild, far-off hypothetical, that many filed away at the time as just one of those things athletes say.

But those guys were dead serious. And now the hypothetical has become reality.

Brees made the call this week to go forward for another year, his 20th in the league and 15th with the Saints, at age 41. Brady, meanwhile, has been consistent in saying that retirement wasn’t even part of the equation for him looking toward the 2020 season, before which he’ll turn 43. And that means, in the century pro football has been played, these two are among six quarterbacks to have reached 20 NFL seasons, joining George Blanda, Earl Morrall, Vinny Testaverde and Brett Favre.

They’re also the second and third, after Favre, to get there as entrenched starters, though Favre had bounced to the Jets and Vikings by then, whereas Brees and Brady have a chance to remain with their longtime teams. And if you look at what they were saying six or seven years ago, you’ll realize it’s not an accident, either.

And believe it or not, the lab for all this was the clubhouse of the late ’80s/early ’90s Texas Rangers. Tom House, Brady and Brees’s throwing coach, was the pitching coach for those teams. Those groups were generally nondescript—hovering around .500 over that time—but for one interesting phenomenon. Their older pitchers were really holding up.

“There were a bunch of them that kind of got it right. They hit the crease perfectly between old school and new school, to where it wasn’t just going out and throwing and building arm strength. It was actually training to pitch, recovering to pitch, metabolic management and mental/emotional management to pitch,” House said Wednesday. “In other words, we kind of debugged the process when I was with the Rangers, without know what we were doing.”

The elder statesmen on that staff, Nolan Ryan and Charlie Hough, both pitched until they were 46, and the younger guys learned being around them. Kenny Rogers went until he was 43, Kevin Brown until he turned 40 and Darren Oliver got to 42. Jamie Moyer—or Crazy Jamie Moyer, as House calls him—made it to 49.

Through trial and error, House developed a system. As part of it, the Rangers would throw footballs during warmups, the reason being that House figured out that you can’t throw one wrong and make it spiral. Which made him realize that the principles to quarterbacking were similar to pitching. Which has made it so some of the answers he had for Ryan and Moyer and the rest of them could also work for Brees and Brady.

So here we are.

This is really the last quiet week for a while in the NFL—the combine starts next week, and we’ll be off-and-running from there—but there’s still plenty for us to touch on in this week’s GamePlan. So here we go…

• We’ll give you a ranking of prospects to get you ready for Indy

• We’re going to cover the trouble with the expanded playoffs

• What Greg Robinson’s run-in tells us about the Browns

But we’re starting with Brees and Brady, and how their throwing coach sees them as they get deeper into their 40s.

Truth is, House’s foray into quarterback training—he and his partner Adam Dedeaux work with more than half the NFL’s starters at 3DQB in Orange County—happened by accident. His old neighbor in San Diego was former Chargers offensive coordinator Cam Cameron, and Cameron asked House if he’d work with Brees. Likewise, Brady came via reference. His backup, Matt Cassel, played baseball at USC, where House was the pitching coach.

Brees’s work with House ramped up after he hurt his shoulder in 2005. Brady’s interest was piqued when Cassel brought him to House’s facility, and he ran into Brees and Alex Smith. By the time House got them, his program was well-developed, and both now have been working with him for a long, long time, so he knows both exceedingly well. As such, he’s not surprised they’ve made it here, because he saw it happen in baseball 30 years ago.

“It’s 100 percent applicable,” House said. “The only difference, quarterbacking is, I think, a little bit more dangerous to the overall body, because they’re not just on a rubber throwing a ball to home plate. They’re trying to throw it as efficiently as a pitcher does, but they’re running for their lives all the time.”

Brady and Brees have coaches for those pieces of the equation (strength and conditioning, nutrition, etc.) too—each has surrounded himself with a team of experts, of which House is a part. What House can explain is where they’re at physically, as throwers, based on what his study of each told him from 2019.

“They’re both still at the top of their games,” House said. “With our metrics, and again I can’t share them 100 percent, I think Brady threw the ball better last year than he has the last three or four years. Now, the outcomes weren’t satisfactory, even to Tom. But by our metrics, he threw the ball as well last year as he has any time in his career. And except for the injury time and the coming back, and the little rust that was involved after the injury with Brees, he threw the ball as well as we’ve seen.

“I think, and I’m not sure, that one game he put up was the best quarterbacked game in the history of football? And remember, it’s not just the quarterback by himself, there’s a supporting cast, defense, special teams, there has to be receivers to throw to, there has to be an offensive line. There’s a lot more involved than just the statistics in a win or a loss. That’s why our health and performance metrics, looking at muscle, nerve, skill acquisition and skill retention, their numbers are still up there in the elite range.”

Over a good, long conversation on Tuesday, House and I covered a bunch of other parts of where Brees and Brady are going into 2020. Let’s dive into that …

Both guys are different. House knows, just as guys like Alex Guerrero around Brady and Todd Durkin around Brees know, that there is a part of what the quarterbacks have that’s unteachable. Which gives every one of their coaches, inside football and out, a pretty good starting point.

“It’s their commitment to excellence,” House said. “They have this overwhelming need to get better at something every day. Their persistence in the face of everything that says they shouldn’t is what separates them. I saw it in Nolan Ryan. It’s out there. And I’m sure it exists, I don’t have the same exposure to other sports, but the elder statesmen that continue to be competitive, they love the game, but they commit to being the best they can be every day, and to figuring out ways they can improve themselves.”

Another key is how open they’ve been to change. House asked me whether I was familiar with confirmation bias. I said that of course I was. He then said one of the things that most impressed him with Brady and Brees was their ability to fight that off.

“A lot of these guys are so good that eventually they only listen to things that only confirm what they know and do,” said House. “The unique thing about the Drew Breeses and the Tom Bradys and the Nolan Ryans and even Crazy Jamie Moyer, who was a less talented individual but had the same commitment to excellence, is they’re not stuck in that box. If it makes sense to them, they’ll give it a shot. The greatest right all these athletes have is the right to change, the hardest thing to do is change.

“For them to actually embrace change, there has to be a compelling reason.”

The number’s still 45. That Brady and Brees use that number—and other quarterbacks have too—isn’t a mistake. Even now, House says, comparing older clients with younger ones, Brady and Brees continuing “requires a different level than what a Dak Prescott or a Jacoby Brissett are doing … [because] as they get older, they’re not quite as crisp as they were physically and neurologically when they were 25.”

Along those lines, there is an expiration date for everyone.

“I captured data on movement, on wireless EMG, without knowing what I was capturing it for, and what I saw was the diminishing returns curve for pretty much everyone. It starts, no matter what you do, at age 45,” House said. “That seems to be whatever you’d call it, the crest of the wave. From there on out, no matter what you do, you’re going to get less than.”

House’s role. Both Brees and Brady entered the offseason with massive decisions to make. Brees has made his, Brady’s is coming. And while House acknowledges that those are “extremely hard,” he thinks it best if he involves himself only if asked.

“Kind of think of me as the goofy uncle,” he said. “I don’t care about politics, I don’t care about contracts, my relationship with them is obviously, first, on the professional side, to help them be the best they can be, and on the personal side, just to be a nonjudgmental friend, be a support system for them.”

To that end, House recalls the things that then Rangers GM Tom Grieve and manager Bobby Valentine used to do to accommodate Ryan, and other older players, too. They made players’ kids batboys, they made the weight-room family friendly, they allowed for sons and daughters to fly with the team and stay with their dads on the road.

House’s son, in fact, was his roommate on the road for three summers as a teenager.

Seeing that gave House insight into what Brady and Brees are going through, now having to balance family life with professional realities, and aging to where some teammates are part of a different generation all together—in fact, House has put Brady and Brees in touch with Ryan to try and give them a first-hand resource to work with. It’s also fair to say the information they’re getting as a result probably plays into the big decisions these quarterbacks have to make.

“One of the reasons why Nolan played as long as he did, is the organization made the clubhouse, the weight room, the field, everything except game-time on-the-field stuff, a family affair,” House said. “And I think that’s one of the hardest things that Tom and Drew are going through right now, they’ve got kids that are growing up, they’re both family men, it’s family, football, faith and affiliation, and they’re trying to find that balance.

“There’s a different pull on a 43-year-old with three kids than there is on a 25-year-old that’s just worried about music he’s listening to.”

So it has been that Brees has stayed consistent, at least in my talks with him, the last few years, in saying he thinks he can keep going, but isn’t sure there won’t come a time when he simply wants to walk away. And so it will probably play into the decision Brady makes next month on where he wants to play his 21st NFL season.

Next year, to be sure, there’ll be more big decisions to make.

But for now? That both of them are still here is pretty amazing.

POWER RANKINGS

I gave you guys the lowdown last week: We’ll keep the power rankings in the column, and have random rankings each week. Last week, we did the 2020 draft class’s top quarterbacks. This week, we’ll give you the top five non-quarterbacks.

1) Chase Young, DE, Ohio State, junior: Duh.

2) Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn, senior: I had a couple of scouts tell me in the fall that Young and Brown were on their own tier in this year’s class. And I had my old NFL Network colleague Daniel Jeremiah on the podcast this week, and when I asked if there’s separation between Young and the next prospect, he immediately raised Brown’s name, and said he’s a better prospect than Quinnen Williams was last year.

3) Jeffrey Okudah, CB, Ohio State, junior: Okudah progressively improved over his three collegiate seasons. And because of that, and his size-speed ratio, it’s fair to wonder if he’s got a lot more room to grow—which is a scary thought, given he was widely seen as the best corner in the country this year.

4) Isaiah Simmons, LB, Clemson, redshirt junior: Simmons is a fun prospect in the way Tremaine Edmunds was fun two years ago and Josh Allen was fun last year—each profiles as a freak athletically, and the biggest question becomes how you plan to use them. Simmons would be great in a Patriots-style defense, and two teams running those have top five picks.

5) Javon Kinlaw, DT, South Carolina, senior: I could’ve put Georgia’s Andrew Thomas or Alabama’s Jedrick Wills here, but the tackle group is muddled, with each guy having considerable upside and a big question mark or two. So I’m going with the safe, versatile defensive lineman here, a four-year player in Columbia, to round out the top five.

THE BIG QUESTION

What will the fallout of 13th and 14th playoff teams be?

The idea of expanded playoffs have been a part of CBA talks from the start, and it’s not hard to understand why: It’s another example of owners creating inventory, creating a new element for the schedule basically out of thin air. In this case, it isn’t as damaging for players (a low number would be affected every year by it), so it’s been assumed for months that one would get through.

But should the players let it? An interesting point was raised to me by players last night. In an environment intense and probably more high-risk than the regular season, the great majority of players get less than half what they would in a normal game check to play in a wild-card playoff game. So the league will make hundreds of millions on it, and the players who make it there don’t feel the benefit the NFL will for putting the games on.

In essence, the owners generate new revenue without conceding anything financial to the players, other than the normal percentage of what they’d get.

In the end, I think this one will be like the franchise tag, which is to say it affects too few players and is too important to the owners not to get through. But the players would be smart here to approach it like the owners would—pull it back and use it as a chip. And if you want an example, look at marijuana testing. That wasn’t a big deal for owners, but they knew it was for the players, and so they held it forever to get more for giving it back.

That’s how negotiations work. And as the owners try to throw this one in the “inventory” pile, with Thursday Night Football, the return to L.A., London and a 17-game season, it certainly seems like there’d be a way here for the players to play the owners’ game.

WHAT NO ONE IS TALKING ABOUT

An interesting element of the Greg Robinson situation. I had my fun, and I know I wasn’t alone, with his Amateur Pablo arrest this week. But to those who’ve been around him, it’s not exactly a shocker that Robinson has found himself in trouble. Accountability’s been a problem forever for the former second pick. Even last year, as Cleveland’s starting left tackle, he was late so often that it became a running joke in the facility.

What’s not as funny? This is how the Browns have built their team. They’re different reasons, obviously, but there was a reason why the wildly talented Robinson was available, just like there was a reason why Kareem Hunt was available, and why Odell Beckham Jr. and Jarvis Landry were available. And so the way last year went, in retrospect, probably shouldn’t come as a surprise to any of us on the outside.

You can take risks building a team. Take too many, and they become who you are.

It also probably shouldn’t be a shocker that Baker Mayfield went the way he did in Year 2, and that’s not to absolve him of any blame—he’s accountable, too. Thing is, most fast-developing young quarterbacks are surrounded with strong vets, who help bring the best out of them. What Mayfield had around him brought out, well, something far less than that.

Anyway, it’ll be interesting to see what the new Browns regime, led by Andrew Berry and Kevin Stefanski, do to amend all this.

THE FINAL WORD

Heed what ex-Patriots linebacker Rob Ninkovich says.

“It’s going to be difficult to try and bring everybody back. I would think if Tom comes back, one of those other players comes back,” Ninkovich said, to the Boston Herald’s Karen Guregian. “But if Tom doesn’t come back, I don’t know if those guys are going to want to stick around. Because what’s the outlook for the team? Is it a rebuilding phase? What happens moving forward? That would be a hard sell.”

Ninkovich’s point is that the Patriots have long benefited in getting discounts from ring-chasers. If Brady’s not there? Harder, as Ninkovich says, to sell the idea.

And that’s before you even get to the fact that some in other parts of the organization may look to get out ahead of the post-Brady-Belichick era. We’ve got an interesting few weeks ahead for the greatest dynasty the NFL has ever seen.

Tennessee Titans ‘The Favorite Right Now,’ Patriots Ranked Third In Pursuit Of QB

Today in As The Tom Brady Turns …

ESPN’s Adam Schefter was a guest on The Rich Eisen Show, and during the course of that interview, Schefter relayed information passed along to him by fellow ESPNer Jeff Darlington. Schefter said that Darlington told him that the Titans appear to be “the favorite right now” in the Tom Brady Sweepstakes of 2020.

Here’s exactly what Schefter told Eisen:

This is going to be the most interesting question of the offseason. … Jeff Darlington is a lot more connected to that particular situation than I think a lot of people realize. And in talking with him yesterday — and my eyes were opened to this. I mean I always thought this was possible but I got even more of a hint that it’s more possible. Jeff Darlington basically … I mean, handicapped the Titans as the favorite right now. Which I was like, ‘Whoa. OK. I knew that Tennessee was an option,’ but he made it out to be more of an option than I realized it to be.

And in his mind, to rank the teams right now, would be Tennessee, Las Vegas, and New England.

And his explanation on the podcast was very interesting. And so my takeaway from that was, I think we all need to play a little bit more attention to Tennessee here than we thought, and Tennessee is more viable as a potential Tom Brady destination than we thought. And Tennessee, I expect to be in the mix. Las Vegas, I expect to be in the mix. I think the Chargers will try to be in the mix, I don’t know if they’ll be able to get it done.

And the question is, of course, is does he go back to New England?

The real interesting one on Tennessee is this. They have Ryan Tannehill. And if you franchise Ryan Tannehill … it’s very hard to go get Tom Brady. I don’t think you can do that. But do you take the risk of not franchising a guy that played like a franchise quarterback last year, and try to get Tom Brady, running the risk that you could lose both? Or do you go ahead and franchise Tannehill, and remove the Brady option off the table, when it certainly sounds like a possibility?

OK, well, nobody cares about the fate of Ryan Tannehill. We care about Tom Brady, dangit.

So, the committed internet reporter that I am, I did the one that nobody evvvvver wants to do: I checked out the man’s podcast.

Here’s precisely what Darlington told Schefter on the podcast, which is thankfully no longer named “The Know Them From Adam Podcast”:

I put the Titans and the Raiders right now as the front-runners for Tom Brady’s services.

Tennessee has to be considered one of the bright spots when you consider what Tom Brady is looking for in free agency, whether it is the team itself and what they possess personnel-wise, whether it’s the ability to potentially collaborate with the head coach and have some say in game planning and personnel, I quite frankly think the Tennessee Titans make a lot of sense for Tom Brady.

If you’re asking me to put odds on this thing, I say Titans and Raiders, and then I say Patriots, and then I put down the list, teams like the Chargers, the Dolphins, and some of those other names. The wild cards. The field. And I would put the Patriots, though, somewhere pretty close — behind though — the Titans and the Raiders, if you’re asking me to put odds on this thing.

I think that that’s something that has been very difficult in my assessment of the reactions — every time I mention this — for sports fans to digest. It’s as if people think it’s so unfathomable that he would leave New England, and as a result they just sit there and say it’s not going to happen. Where we need to wrap our heads around the idea of Tom Brady leaving, because he is considering exactly that. That is not speculation. That is fact. Whether they can get on the same page in the next 30 days — that is the Patriots and Tom Brady — and figure this thing out, and it is a tall task from a number of different levels. Unless they can figure it out in the next 30 days, Tom Brady is gone.

Football-wise, Tennessee has always made the most sense (provided they sign Derrick Henry). The head coach is a boss, he rocks an occasional mustache, and he’s good pals with Brady (Tom used to throw him TDs back when the Patriots really felt like bullying opponents, ya know?). The receiving trio of A.J. Brown, Corey Davis and Adam Humphries is solid. The tight ends are good. The line is good. The team has some … moxie.

Lifestyle-wise … the idea of extending the TB12 brand into Nashville is not quite as sexy as, say, Los Angeles, or New York, or Miami, or even Dallas (maybe).

So all of that, when taken together, lands on the scale of being interesting. It doesn’t necessarily advance the story anywhere, as it’s still largely based on reading tea leaves and making an educated guess. Nevertheless, that is where we are on this day, with free agency less than a month away.

Once the NFL cognoscenti descend upon Indianapolis next week for the scouting combine, that’s when we can really start to get hot and heavy in Speculation SZN™.

Until next time, on “As The Tom Brady Turns”

‘It’s more likely than not that Tom Brady leaves the Patriots’

The smoke-filled free agency future of Tom Brady continues to fire up the internet and talk radio.
Listen to your team news NOW.

There have been plenty of reports that TB12 will indeed test free agency and could very well move on to a new team after two decades in New England.

ESPN ramped up that rhetoric on Thursday with a report that it’s “more likely than not” that Brady will move on from the Patriots this offseason.

“Often times when I talk about Tom Brady leaving New England – ‘He’s not leaving New England’ – because people can’t wrap their head around the idea of him leaving. It’s time to wrap our heads around the idea of Tom Brady leaving New England because it is a very real, VERY real possibility,” ESPN’s Jeff Darlington told the Golic and Wingo Show. “It’s more likely than not that Tom Brady leaves the Patriots. That’s not saying that he couldn’t still stay with the Patriots, but it is more likely than not that he leaves the Patriots.”

Brady is set to have his contract void and hit free agency for the first time in his career on March 18. He negotiated into his reworked deal last summer that the Patriots could not use their franchise tag or transition tag him this offseason.

Tom Brady to be a free agent 2020: Best landing spots, projected contract, latest updates, rumors and more

Tom Brady has been the quarterback of the New England Patriots for his entire career, but for the first time since being selected in the sixth round of the 2000 NFL Draft, he will become an unrestricted free agent this March. That doesn’t mean the Patriots are going to just let their 42-year-old franchise quarterback walk, but it means there’s a chance that we could see the six-time Super Bowl champion depart from New England, the only team he’s ever known in his NFL life. Given Brady’s stature of being arguably the greatest quarterback to ever suit up in the NFL, his every move will be put under the microscope, dissected and hot-take’d until he ultimately makes his decision on his future.

We would argue that Brady clearly still has some magic left in the tank, but the only question remains is where those final years of Brady magic will ultimately take place. Of course, he could easily re-sign with the Patriots when the dust settles, but there will be plenty of teams lining up with hopes of plucking him out of Foxborough and placing him with their franchise going forward.

Hey, if Joe Montana, Peyton Manning, and Brett Favre can all leave the teams they’re most recognized with, so can Brady.

With that in mind, we’ve decided to compile a hub for all the Brady-related news as free agency inches closer. Here, you’ll find every update on TB12’s movements, what he’s projected to earn on the open market, potential landing spots, and a lot more. We’ll start by breaking down Brady’s top landing spots, his projected contract value, and a brief scouting report on what he currently offers. After diving into that, we’ll provide the latest updates and rumors as they happen.

“Let’s go!”

Tom Brady is going to have a number of suitors waiting for him when he can legally speak to other clubs. After all, the team that ultimately signs Brady will immediately have a championship window open for them almost in a similar fashion to how Peyton Manning transformed the Denver Broncos back in 2012. Earlier this offseason, CBS Senior NFL writer Will Brinson highlighted all the possible landing spots for Brady this offseason, which includes these teams below.

Outside of heading back to the Patriots, the Chargers and Raiders have been the most heavily linked teams to Brady, while the Buccaneers were also dubbed a “sleeping giant” in the sweepstakes by NBC Sports’ Peter King.

Earlier this offseason, I ranked the possible destinations for Brady, strictly based off of what they have on their respective rosters and what they could bring aboard in free agency. In that ranking, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers earned the top spot thanks to their already in-house weapons of Mike Evans, Chris Godwin and O.J. Howard, along with their solid defense and a top-10 offensive line. It’s admittedly a stretch that Brady ends up moving to Tampa Bay, but they currently make an appealing destination simply due to their talent on the roster. The New England Patriots ranked fifth on that roster-based list.

The folks over at Spotrac, one of the leaders in NFL contracts and salary cap information, have projected Brady’s market value this free agency period. They project that the veteran quarterback could see a contract offer that is for two-years and around $67.8 million, which equates to around $33.8 million annually. From an AAV standpoint, that deal would put Brady ahead of Jared Goff, Aaron Rodgers and Ben Roethlisberger. Russell Wilson, meanwhile, would only be about $1.2 million above Brady.

“Me and Matt texted him, ‘What’s the deal? You going or you staying?’ And this is what we got back: An emoji,” Affleck said, while mimicking a shrugging “I don’t know” shoulder emoji. “So I really have no information for you.”

Like most Patriots fans, Affleck admitted that he hopes and prays that Brady will remain in New England.

Monday, Feb 17: With only a month remaining until the start of free agency, NBC Sports Boston’s Tom E. Curran reports that it’s unlikely that Brady will have a coast-to-coast free agent tour. Instead, Curran reports he’s hearing that the quarterback will “try to set up meetings at one location instead of creating a circus.”

Curran also noted that the Patriots will not be super-vigilant when it comes to tampering as they’re not worried about other team’s financial pitches. Really, they are focusing on building a roster on the offensive side of the ball that would entice Brady to return to Foxborough for 2020 and possibly beyond.

Friday, Feb. 14: According to Larry Fitzgerald Sr., a longtime NFL reporter, the Las Vegas Raiders are prepared to offer Brady a two-year deal worth $60 million. Of course, this report should be taken with a grain of salt as Fitzgerald Sr. isn’t exactly known for breaking NFL news of this caliber. Still, the Raiders will be a team that will certainly try to catch Brady’s ear when he hits the open market in mid-March.

Vegas has been a team — along with the Los Angeles Chargers — that has most often been linked to Brady as a possible threat to pry him out of New England. The Raiders could clear $13.6 million off their cap by cutting current QB1 Derek Carr, so they do have some flexibility to go after Brady if he’s willing to listen. That contract number floated out by Fitzgerald Sr. also jives with what has been rumored to be the magic number for Brady from an AAV standpoint.

Monday, Feb. 10: Patriots owner Robert Kraft was attending Elton John’s AIDS Foundation Academy Awards viewing party and was asked once again what he hopes will be the outcome of Brady’s free agency. To that, Kraft simply said, “You know what I want.”

Clearly, he’s hoping that his six-time Super Bowl champion signal-caller to remain at the same post he’s been in for the past 20 years.

Report: Raiders ready to offer Tom Brady two-year, $60 million deal

The quarterback carousel already is spinning.

Nearly two weeks after a report emerged that the Raiders will target Patriots quarterback Tom Brady in free agency, a new report puts some monetary meat on the bone.

Larry Fitzgerald Sr., a long-time member of the media in Minnesota and the father of future first-ballot Hall of Famer Larry Fitzgerald, reports that the Raiders are ready to offer Brady $60 million over two years.

Although this one (like the Bernie Smilovitz report of Matthew Stafford trade talks) doesn’t come from someone with an extensive track record of breaking NFL news, my knee-jerk reaction is to believe it, for several reasons. First, I

know Fitzgerald Sr. and I’m prepared to say that, if he’s saying it, he’s definitely hearing it from someone who would know. Second, he’s in position to have heard it from someone who knows what’s going on, given the people he knows in the broader NFL structure, thanks both to his own connections and his son’s. Third, although the window for talking to agents about pending free agents doesn’t open until March 16, there are too many teams and too many quarterbacks for the process of preparing and making offers not to have already begun.

The number isn’t surprising, not with the market for quarterbacks at $35 million per year. For Brady, the bigger question will be fit, with team, coaching staff, city, and offense. It’s a new football city in a new football stadium

and, for Brady, a new offense with a new coach who has a reputation for being more than a little aggressive with his quarterbacks.

When Simms and I recently addressed the possibility of Brady to the Raiders, Simms explained that Gruden long has been in awe of Brady, explaining once that Brady looks cool simply walking off the field. (Hopefully they won’t go rock climbing.) Gruden seemingly has restrained his profane rants while coaching Derek Carr for fear of having him crumble under the weight of Gruden’s aggressive vocabulary. If Gruden is coaching the greatest quarterback of all time, it would probably be much easier to hold the F bombs.

But will Brady (and his family) want to live in Las Vegas? Will he want to play in the same division as the Chiefs, which means he’d face Patrick Mahomes and be called old by Chris Jones at least twice per year, and the Broncos,

especially in light of his repeated struggles in games played at Denver?

So for now it’s an option for Brady, one that he’ll have to consider along with the Patriots and any other team that pulls up to the table and drops $30 million or more per year on top of it. And for Carr, it may be time to start thinking about lining up a new seat in the game of quarterback musical chairs, because it feels like — one way or ther other — he’s never going to be living in that house that he built next door to Jon Gruden’s in Las Vegas.

Which Patriots way? Building offseason plans with and without Tom Brady

With Tom Brady’s contract set to void on March 17th, the day before the 2020 league year begins, the Patriots now have two months to decide which direction they’ll go and there are two very different and distinct paths.

Do they pull out all their salary cap tricks and bring Brady back, give him some new offensive toys to play with and go all in on making another Super Bowl run? Or do they bite the bullet and let Brady walk, eat $13.5 million in dead cap space and begin anew at the most vital position? It’s the hardest decision the Patriots have had in the last 20 years, complicated by limited overall cap space and a number of other major players who are also set to hit free agency.

The offseason plan will be quite different in the two scenarios and finding a balance between winning now and building for the future will be difficult.

Let’s take a look at both paths and how the offseasons might unfold after the initial decision on Brady is made.

This is easier said than done and it’s critical that Brady understands he can’t ask for a $30 million-plus salary and still expect the Patriots to have the resources to give him upgraded weaponry and fill the significant defensive roster holes. 2020 cannot be the year Brady finally decides he wants a market-value deal because the trickle-down effect on the team would be crippling. Based on the money the Patriots owe him, an additional $6.75 million would be the minimum additional cap hit to whatever Brady’s salary is.

Per Sportrac and Over the Cap, the Patriots will have around $42-$47 million in cap space at the start of the 2020 league year and, along with the huge question at quarterback, they need to replace starters at guard, defensive tackle, outside linebacker, defensive end/edge and safety, along with some critical special teamers.

Even if you get Brady to take a team-friendly deal around $20 million (which would be a $27 million cap hit) it doesn’t leave much room to not only fill the holes elsewhere on the roster, but bring in any significant veteran weapons to pair with Brady.

A very real debate to have is whether a $10-ish-million-per-year contract is better spent on Devin McCourty or external free agents like Emmanuel Sanders, A.J. Green or Tyler Eifert. Of course, they’d have to be convinced to take a moderate deal to play with Brady. If Brady returns it makes it unlikely that any of the Patriots high-profile free agents return, including Joe Thuney, Kyle Van Noy and McCourty.

So, we’ve got to make some cuts. Let’s start with Jason McCourty, replaced by J.C. Jackson or JoeJuan Williams, and Rex Burkhead, replaced by Damien Harris. This opens $6 million more in cap space and seems like a good decision regardless since there are younger, cheaper players waiting in the wings. But that kind of quality depth doesn’t exist everywhere on the roster.

Duron Harmon could potentially take over for Devin, but it might be a stretch to expect Chase Winovich to play the every-down role Kyle Van Noy played. Danny Shelton could be back on a cap-friendly deal, while an original round tender for restricted free agent Adam Butler would cost $2.1 million if another team doesn’t swoop in. Elevate Ja’Whaun Bentley and John Simon’s roles and it’s an okay defensive base to fill out with some low-range free agent deals and draft picks, but it’s certainly not the same kind of three- level stacked unit they had in 2019 and does little to address how old the defense is getting.

The salary push and pull between the offense and defense/special teams will be a delicate balancing act. The only position groups the Patriots are in the top-10 in salary spending are defensive backs (2nd) and running backs (3rd). Their allocations to defensive line (28th), linebacker (24th), offensive line (26th) and tight end (29th) are all near the bottom of the league.

This plan relies heavily on convincing Brady and proven NFL vets like Green, Sanders and Eifert to take team-friendly deals and runs the risk of mortgaging the future to squeeze another run or two out of the dynasty. The defense will be the most heavily hit as it would seem nearly impossible to put forth an improved unit on the field unless ancillary players take a big jump forward. This approach also does little for the long-term development of the roster.

It would give Brady and the offense a boost on paper, but would that boost ultimately be enough to also offset the dropoff by the defense as they begin to turn over? And relying on expensive veterans, many of whom have extensive injury histories, is risky.

Enjoying time away from game, Tom Brady’s uncertain future just ‘not my concern at this point’

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, who is scheduled to be a free agent on March 18, said Saturday that he isn’t putting a timetable on making a decision about his future plans.

“The contract things, a week after the season, I would say these things haven’t even started to pick up. It’s really not my concern at this point,” Brady told host Jim Gray in his weekly interview with Westwood One. “It’s been about decompressing and resting my mind a little bit and resting my body and spending time with the people who have supported me over the last six months.”

Patriots owner Robert Kraft told Peter King of NBC Sports that his “hope and prayer” is that Brady, 42, either plays for New England or retires.

In his Westwood One interview, Brady once against asserted his plans to play in 2020. When asked about Kraft’s remarks, Brady said, “I love playing football. I love playing for this organization. I really don’t know what it looks like moving forward, and I’m just taking it day to day.”

“We are a week removed from the end of our season,” Brady continued. “There is a lot of time to figure these things out. I don’t think any player or team is ready to make any commitments at this point, and I’m sure as the offseason progresses those things will take care of themselves.”

Brady agreed to a revised contract with the Patriots in August, and sources said the sides haven’t had any substantial talks about an extension since that time.

In his season-ending news conference, Patriots coach Bill Belichick acknowledged that Brady is an “iconic figure in the organization” before adding that any decision about his future will come in time and involve multiple people. Belichick also said, “Nobody respects Tom more than I do.”

Brady was asked about continued speculation on his future in the Westwood One interview.

“I can only say how I feel, and that’s what’s the truth to me and what’s authentic to me,” he said. “And I have no decision that I have made, and there won’t be for some considerable time. So I know there is speculation. There always is. That’s just part of being in professional sports. That’s part of being a professional athlete.

“When people aren’t talking about this season, they want to talk about next season, and the reality is that next season is quite a ways away. I have some other things that are happening at this time. Like I said, spending some time with my family, my loved ones and giving them the time they need. And then as people begin to plan for next season, like I said, these things will take care of themselves.”

On Wednesday, Brady posted a thank-you message to Patriots fans in which he wrote that he has more to prove. He was asked what that might be.

“It’s always been proving it to myself and being motivated internally to push myself to the limits. Sometimes the limits push back. I’ve experienced that,” he said in the radio interview. “But I also think I’m inspired by so many people who push the limits. I love watching documentaries of incredible human feats. They’re inspiring. People climb these mountains and do things that people never thought were possible. I’m at a certain point in my career where people think what I’m doing is to a degree impossible.

“For me, it’s about continuing to prove to myself that I can lay it on the line, and we can still try to achieve the ultimate goal, which is winning Super Bowls.”

Tom Brady Is No ‘Tom Terrific.’ Any New Yorker Can Tell You That.

Tom Brady is very, very good at his job.

But, according to New Yorkers, Boston-haters and one crucial federal agency, he is decidedly not terrific.

Indeed, on Thursday, no less an adversary than the United States Patent and Trademark Office pinned a big L on Mr. Brady, the superstar quarterback of the New England Patriots, when it declined his application to trademark the term “Tom Terrific” — a moniker long associated with Tom Seaver, the beloved New York Mets right-hander who helped pitch the team to a World Series championship in 1969.

The decision was blunt in its assessment of Mr. Brady’s case for the nickname, saying it could “falsely suggest a connection” with Mr. Seaver, who the office stressed was “uniquely and unmistakably” the only person associated with the nickname.

“Tom Seaver is so well known that consumers would presume a connection,” the office wrote.

Mr. Brady has been a mainstay in Boston for two decades, and his six Super Bowl wins have left some rabid Patriots fans calling him “Tom Terrific” as well, a nickname he has said he doesn’t like. Both he and his representatives insisted that their attempt to trademark the moniker was to prevent third parties from capitalizing on the unprotected nickname, both to his and Mr. Seaver’s detriment.

“A situation arose, unfortunately, where we had to consider an immediate defensive and protective action,” said Donald H. Yee, Mr. Brady’s agent, on Friday. “There is no intention ever to impact Tom Seaver’s legacy.”

But the news of the trademark attempt had provoked the ire of Mets fans, who were happily celebrating its downfall on Friday.

“I don’t buy the ‘I was protecting Seaver’ story,” said Mike Stuto, a longtime Mets loyalist. “Seaver and his family can protect his legacy without Tom Brady’s help.”

The decision also seemed to have accomplished an even more astounding feat, uniting Yankees and Mets fans in a moment of told-you-so schadenfreude in relation to Boston, New York’s archrival in everything from sports to marathons.

“Someone at the U.S. Patent Office must be a Mets fan,” Dana Monks, a self-described lifelong Yankees fan, wrote on Twitter.

The defeat at the hands of the patent office comes even as many New York sports fans have been gleefully watching the struggles of various Boston franchises: the Boston Bruins losing the Stanley Cup, the Celtics crashing out of the second round of the N.B.A. playoffs and — of course — the world champion Red Sox, who are 15 games behind the Yankees and unlikely to make the playoffs.

At the same time, Mr. Seaver’s own Mets have been surging, causing a spike of pride in Queens and dreams of a Subway Series, an intracity championship showdown last experienced in 2000.

Of course, considering Mr. Brady’s dominance in the N.F.L., the joy was hardly confined to the tristate area. Matt Talansky, an exiled Mets fan living in Los Angeles, practically cackled at Mr. Brady’s legal fumble. Mr. Talansky recalled how Mr. Brady was suspended following a 2015 championship game for his role in a scandal involving deflating footballs in a playoff game.

“Has anyone ever even called him ‘Tom Terrific’?” Mr. Talansky said. “Was ‘Vainglorious Cheater’ already trademarked?”

It was also being shared by fans of such long suffering franchises as the Cleveland Browns, a team that has never appeared in the Super Bowl. “Even the government knows that Tom Seaver is the true ‘Tom Terrific,’” wrote one such Ohioan, in all capital letters, on Twitter.

Mr. Brady’s actions were also seen as insensitive by some considering Mr. Seaver’s declining health; in March, his family announced that the Hall of Famer, now 74, was suffering from dementia and was retiring from public life.

Mr. Brady himself had expressed regret about pursuing the trademark, telling reporters in June that “I wanted to make sure no one used it because some people wanted to use it, ” Brady said, calling it a “good lesson learned.”

“I’ll try to do things a little different in the future,” he said.

Still, for New York sport fans, who have often been on the bad end of Mr. Brady’s good days, his loss this week seemed even sweeter.

“As a Mets/Jets fan,” said Cory Dann, 42, a die-hard from Brooklyn, “it’s nice to finally beat Tom Brady at something.”