Brady’s “legacy” (a word that should be buried in the sports lexicon graveyard, right next to “respect”) is completely and totally intact. Brady has been in the league for 12 seasons and played in five Super Bowls. Since becoming a starter in 2001, he has played in the Super Bowl for 45 percent of his career. Much seems to be made of the fact that the Patriots haven’t won a Super Bowl in seven seasons – a statistic that underscores just how awry the culture has gone. True New Englanders remember tearing down goal posts for just making the playoffs. Moreover, as the culture moves toward assessing who failed instead of respecting the athletic battleground, the games themselves lose value.
Negativity about New England Patriots loss in Super Bowl XLVI is alarming – ESPN
I’m glad to see a few of these articles popping up today. I was beginning to think it was just the Patriots homer fandom in me that made me feel that everyone was piling on this Patriots team that exceeded expectations of even a few weeks ago.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/bradys-legacy-a-word-that-should-be-buried-in/
Being too hard on the Patriots – ESPN
Being too hard on the Patriots – ESPN
Rick Reilly, fairly likely voice of reason. This is one of the most enjoyable reads I’ve had since Sunday. I’ve long since given up trying to convince all fans to be positive and seek out the the silver lining that the Patriots are actually still a good team. Even when they occasionally lose.
Everyone uses sports for their own means and I’d much rather have someone taking out all their anger and negativity on professional athletes/teams than say, their family or friends. I get it. Sports are a release for a lot of people and I learned a long time ago to just let the ignoramuses spout off about whatever they want without trying to interfere.
But at some point you just wish those who are most upset would just get off the bandwagon. Because you know they’ll all be back next year, bitching and moaning about every little thing despite fielding one of the best teams in the NFL.
A little decaf, folks: The Patriots lost the Super Bowl on the last play of the game when a tipped ball failed to stay in the air another quarter second longer so a one-legged Rob Gronkowski could possibly catch it. If it had, all three of these writers would be hailing Brady, Belichick and Welker as just slightly greater than Lincoln. How fickle are you people? “There is no fall as far as when you lose the Super Bowl,” says John Elway, who lost three of them. “The second you lose, you drop all the way back to the bottom, down there with every other team that played that season. It’s like you did nothing. The minute it’s over, they literally start bumping you out of the way to set up the ropes and the award stand. It’s like, ‘Uh, can you move, please? We’ve got some people to celebrate here.’” Elway is lucky he didn’t play in Boston. People would’ve pelted him to death with Starburst and never seen him win his last two.
New York Giants, New England Patriots face offseason after Super Bowl XLVI – Don Banks – SI.com
New York Giants, New England Patriots face offseason after Super Bowl XLVI – Don Banks – SI.com
Well this will make you feel a little bit better…
Once again, New England is in position to be a major player (or trader) in April’s draft. The Patriots have both the No. 27 pick they earned via last April’s first-round trade with New Orleans (which took Alabama running back Mark Ingram with New England’s second first-rounder in 2011, No. 28 overall), and their own No. 31 pick that comes with losing the Super Bowl. In addition, the Patriots own a pair of second-round picks, at No. 48 (obtained from Oakland) and No. 63. Belichick loves to wheel and deal with that much draft capital stored up, but this could be the rare year where he sits tight and picks off four players to help upgrade a defense that was near bottom-of-the-barrel status statistically in 2010. New England’s defense was 31st overall this season in yards allowed, surrendering more than 400 per game. The Patriots need help in the front seven, or at cornerback, so all options appear on the table. If there’s one instant impact defensive star the Patriots have a conviction on in the top half of the first round, having two first-rounders might allow New England to go up and get him. If there’s anything this season illustrated, it’s that the Patriots lack a Von Miller or Aldon Smith-like young playmaker in their front seven.
Curran: ‘Bottom liners’ completely miss the point
Curran: ‘Bottom liners’ completely miss the point
I think Tom Brady is the best quarterback that’s ever played. He’s played in five Super Bowls in 10 seasons and won three. In the two he lost, he led a go-ahead drive in the closing minutes and – in the other – he was a very good catch away from being in a position to salt away the win. I believe he’s personally done enough to be 5-0 in Super Bowls.
- 3x Superbowl Champ
- 5 Superbowl appearances
- 2x Superbowl MVP
- 2x NFL MVP
- 2x NFL Offensive Player of the Year
- Most touchdown passes in a regular season (50)
- Highest touchdown-to-interception ratio in a single season (9:1)
- Highest single-game completion percentage
- Regular season or postseason (26/28, 92.9%)
- Most consecutive pass attempts without an interception (358)
- Most consecutive regular-season home wins (31)
- Highest winning percentage of any quarterback during his first 100 starts (76 wins)
- Most completions in one Super Bowl (32)
- Longest streak of games with 3 or more touchdown passes (10 games)
- Most career completions in Super Bowl history (100)
- Most touchdown passes in a quarter (5)
- Most touchdown passes in a half of a playoff game (5)
- Most touchdown passes in a playoff game (6, tied)
- Fourth-fastest player to reach 200 career passing touchdowns (he did so in 116 games)
- First ever to reach this mark before throwing 100 career interceptions (he had 88)
To just name a few…
https://www.patspropaganda.com/kaityminaj-3x-superbowl-champ-5-superbowl/