- Joined
- Mar 25, 2005
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He did what all great leaders do. Against adversity, with his back against the wall, with the slightest chance of victory, he came through and won it off his own back.
1 year removed from an injury that rocked the Patriots universe, the mental scars still evident in his performance today and enough rust to coat the Golden Gate Bridge, he came through.
People can harp on about McKelvin's moment of stupidity. Fine, Hines Ward had one too. Pros make mistakes. The thing is, you have to capitalize on those moments when they present themselves. Surprise surprise... Tom Brady did capitalize on that moment.
What I know for sure is, I'd rather have Tom Brady than any other quarterback playing for the Patriots and it's going to be a sad day when he retires. We're watching probably the greatest player to ever play the game. Don't ever underestimate how special that is.
What he did is partially responsible for what ST did. That's what seperates him. He didn't only elevate the offense. He elevated an entire team. They showed him for just a couple of seconds after Buffalo scored to go up 11 and he was immediately marching up that sideline informing anyone who would listen that this wasn't over and they better not assume so. And then he showed them why it's not just sideline rhetoric here. A refresher for some and an awakening for the newbies. An identity for a team wondering just what there's is going forward.
They've got some stuff to work on. His timing and mechanics, his top receivers focus, protection (which Matt and Todd Light could get their identities hashed out...), the defense... They got a lot of that back in those last 5 minutes.











