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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.But he’ll be 32 this summer. He’s coming off the first serious injury of his career. He should be financially set for life. He’s married to one of the glamorous women in the world.
In the fiercely competitive world of the National Football League, does Brady still have the drive to excel, to be the best?
There’s no reason to think he doesn’t still have the same talent. But is he still the same guy?
Or has he become somebody who spends more time thinking about Dolce and Gabanna than he does about the Jets and Dolphins?
The thing about the Great Ones is that they always want to win.
There's nothing wrong with asking the question. The problem is that it's a 1-2 sentence question and not worth an entire column.
I must be missing something. I just don't see the relavence of even the question. I mean you could ask this of hundreds of scenario's.
Maybe Brady is just a victim of how hard has worked to get him to the point he is at now? It would have been better if he didn't have to work so hard and just F'd off all day. Then it wouldn't matter.
There's nothing wrong with asking the question. The problem is that it's a 1-2 sentence question and not worth an entire column.
In other words, women weaken legs.
Anytime someone has a significant life change, there's a possibility that their outlook on things is altered. Now that he's married, is the traveling wife going to want him in her entourage during the offseason, or will he be 'allowed' to participate the way he used to? Questions like that arise from these situations, and I see no problem in wondering about them. As I noted, I don't think it's worth a column, but many a single man has found his life dramatically changed after the "I do" ceremony.