The counting methodology is explained, if you bothered to read it. A 'hit' isn't just counting sack numbers. Keep thinking that your eyes are more accurate than reality.
No it is not explained fully. It says HIT WHILE THROWING. It does not define what 'hit' means. Is that tackled, brought to the ground, hit with a shoulder, or simply any contact including a pat on the shoulder by an engaged pass rusher being driven past the QB.
We know that it DOES NOT include hit AFTER the throw, or being sacked, nor being hit PRIOR to throwing, but escaping.
This stat is the most narrow definition of hit available, hit WHILE THROWING.
If you wish to have ANY credibility at all here, you need to admit that the title that Brady was the most hit QB in the NFL is anywhere from misleading to inaccurate to unproven.
Until you can add sacks, and other hits not included you are arguing based on a stat that doesnt show what you are arguing.
It is akin to arguing that if Randy Moss had the most pass interference calls against him he is the most hit WR in the league. Get it, hit WHILE catching doesnt answer the question.
For some reason you seem to want to take a stat that doesnt show what you say it shows and make me out to be wrong to not accept that it means what it doesnt mean. Truly bizzare.
Did you notice by the way, that contrary to your argument in 2007 Brady was 'hit' less than in 2006 when the Patriots spread the field and threw the ball aggressively less often?
Its in the article you have chosen as your Bible.