Kinda reminds me of a debate that seems almost completely unrelated until you think about it.
The debate is about the Sherman tank and the Panther tank in WWII. The Panther tank had a gun with an effective range several times that of the Sherman tank, its gun was far more powerful and far more accurate and armchair historians like to make a big issue of its "superiority." Lost in their parading of this superior attribute is the fact that the Sherman actually won far more battles against the Panther than it lost. Statistically, the superior tank was the Sherman.
Why?
Simply put? The Sherman was more reliable. The Sherman was built to be quickly and efficiently repaired. This meant that there would be more Shermans in a formation than its equivalent enemy would have. The Sherman was built for ergonomics, so its crew could operate at peak efficiency for longer. Most tank on tank battles were happening within the effective ranges of both vehicles when the tanks were shooting at each other.
Most of all the Sherman's gunner had his own periscope instead of just a telescopic sight, because the Americans were the first to figure out that who won a tank battle didn't come down to who had a better tank, it came down to who saw whom first and fired the first shot, something like 8 out of 9 times vision, rather than showy armor plates or gun size, decided victory. A tank with a second pair of eyes was a tank that won battles.
And that's where I think the comparison loops back to Brady. Brady is the Sherman in this analogy. He ticks all the boxes of attributes that actually lead to victory with his superior vision, reliability and dependability on the field. The showy over-scouted quarterbacks are like the Panther. They look good on paper and deceive the casuals. Like the Panther, these quarterbacks are built to show off and to impress the easily impressed. And why shouldn't they? Showing off is how they get their money. Brady is built to compete and win. He doesn't get his money until he can prove he can perform at the same level as these showpieces do. And so he does, by being smarter about the way he does things then the gunshows ever learn to be.