Tom Brady’s greatness undeniable whenever retirement day comes

Mets can't afford to hire wrong team president

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As Tom Brady ponders whether to call it a career or not, it’s important to remember where Brady started, and how he became the greatest quarterback who ever played the position. It isn’t just the seven Super Bowls he won, six for New England, one for Tampa. It isn’t just that he threw for more yards (84,520) and more touchdowns (624) than anyone else, or that he was 35-12 in the playoffs. It’s where he came from.

It’s going from the 199th pick in the 2000 draft, buried on the Patriots’ depth chart, to his status as the GOAT. In its way, it is a story that mimics that of another elite resident of American sports, Michael Jordan, who, legend has it, was cut from the varsity at Laney High School in Wilmington, N.C., and used that as fuel all the way to immortality.

Both stories ought to come with context: Jordan was placed on the JV team as a sophomore. He had time to rebound become a High School All-American, start at North Carolina as a freshman at a time when that was as rare as a Honus Wagner baseball card. Brady’s draft stock might not have been impressive, but he was a starter for the University of Michigan; he didn’t sneak into the league out of Sheboygan State.

“I don’t feel I was ever given anything, ever, on a football field,” Brady said a few years back, during media day at his final Super Bowl as a Patriot. “I know that I’ve had to work for everything good that’s ever happened to me. And I know I need to keep working if I want that to be the case for as long as I play.”

Tom Brady's greatness made all of his teammates and coaches better, The Post Mike Vaccaro writes.
Tom Brady’s greatness made all of his teammates and coaches better, The Post Mike Vaccaro writes.
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