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Retirement to playoffs -- Inside Tom Brady's 22-23 Bucs season

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Retirement to playoffs -- Inside Tom Brady's 22-23 Bucs season

TAMPA, Fla. -- Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady stared at the floor, his face flushed, while his teammates slowly filed out of the locker room following their 27-22 loss to the Baltimore Ravens in Week 8. Backup quarterbacks Blaine Gabbert and Ryan Griffin and quarterbacks coach Clyde Christensen tried to comfort him, but he was inconsolable.

Standing 15 yards from Brady, right tackle Tristan Wirfs looked on and said, "I'd love to play with him forever. I love Tom. I wish everything was going as perfect as possible for him -- if it is the last year for him."

At 3-5, the Bucs had already suffered more losses than during their entire 2021 season. It was also the first time since 2002 that Brady had lost three straight games, and it all came crashing down in front of a national audience on a Thursday night. This wasn't at all how Brady's "Unfinished Business" tour was supposed to go when he ended his 40-day retirement to vie for another championship.

"We've struggled in pretty much everything," Brady said that night. "I don't think you can erase what happened the last eight weeks. We've got to dig deep, see what we're all about, come to work, try to improve ... and give ourselves a better chance to win."

Away from the field, Brady's 13-year marriage was ending. The day after the loss to the Ravens, he finalized his divorce with Gisele Bundchen.

"You try to compartmentalize things and really focus on what your job is. And I think our team -- there's a lot of outside noise and I know people [say], 'Tom, you should have retired. You should have done this, you should have done that.' And that's OK," Brady said on his "Let's Go!" podcast. ... "For me, there's always gratification when you make this commitment, and you have a group of individuals that do the same and you see something pay off."

Fast forward to January, where Brady and the 8-9 Bucs managed to win the NFC South and squeak into the postseason. They are the fourth team in NFL history to win a division and the sixth to enter the playoffs with a losing record. It's also the first time Brady has finished with a losing record in his 23 NFL seasons.

Yet none of that matters, as Brady makes his 14th consecutive trip to the playoffs Monday (8:15 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN/ESPN2/ESPN+) when Tampa Bay hosts the Dallas Cowboys -- a team he's 7-0 against, 2-0 as a Buccaneer.

"Tom is tough," coach Todd Bowles said this week. "He's been around for a long time. There's not a lot he hasn't seen or been through. I don't think every day of his career has been a great day. He's had some rough days here and there, but he works through them, he's resilient ... he led us out of a lot of things."

After winning his seventh Super Bowl ring in his first season with the Bucs, Brady's hopes for an eighth were shattered in the final seconds of the divisional round by the eventual champion, Los Angeles Rams, last season.

Acknowledging the long odds his team faces, Bowles said, "You really can't worry about people counting you out. ... We know we've been in the foxhole since we got to training camp, and we're going to continue to stay in that foxhole and we're going to fight our way out of it."

Here's the story of Brady's season, from retirement to the playoffs and everything in between.



THE TEXT MESSAGE came on March 28. Then-Bucs defensive coordinator Bowles was getting off a plane from New Jersey to North Carolina when he saw Bruce Arians had given him a buzz. It read, "Hit me back."

Arians had been in West Palm Beach, Florida, for NFL owners meetings, but left after a few days because of what team officials said was a "personal matter."

Bowles called Arians back.

"Are you in town?" Arians asked.

"No, I'm in Charlotte," Bowles said.

Arians told him, "I wanted to tell you in person, but I'm going to tell you over the phone. I'm going to step down, and you'll be the next man up."

Bowles said, "I looked at the phone and I said, 'What?'"

Arians asked, "When can you get back?"

Bowles responded with a chuckle, "When do you need me? I've got floor seats to the [Charlotte] Hornets and the [Denver] Nuggets. I'm going to that. It's a week off. I'm like, 'Hey man, I'm going to the game. I'll be back tomorrow.'"

"Initially I thought something was wrong with him," Bowles said after he was hired. "And then the more I got to talking to him, the more we talked about it -- he was at peace and he was perfectly fine. And this was his plan all along."

The timing raised eyebrows. A report emerged late in the 2021 season that Brady had become increasingly frustrated with Arians for changing offensive game plans that Brady and offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich had put together. Brady announced he was coming out of retirement March 13. Now Arians was stepping down to move into a front office role.

"I don't know where that came from," Leftwich said of the report. "That is not what [Arians] has ever done. The good thing about B.A. and him knowing me is I would struggle with that."

A team source did not deny friction existed between Arians and Brady, but told ESPN it was exaggerated. Brady returning was not related to Arians' retirement, according to the source, and Brady was aware of Arians' plans to retire before the quarterback made his announcement.

Arians said he had been contemplating retirement. But when Brady announced he was retiring, Arians didn't want to leave his coaching staff in a bind by essentially having to rebuild without a quarterback. Brady's return allowed Arians to feel more comfortable stepping into a new role.

"I wanted to ensure when I walked away that Todd Bowles would have the best opportunity to succeed," Arians said. "So many head coaches come into situations where they are set up for failure, and I didn't want that for Todd."

Brady said he "loved every minute" of having Arians as a coach.

"He's a big reason why I came here. He's just a great person, he's a great leader, he's obviously a great coach," Brady said. "I have a great relationship with him. I can't say enough good things about him."

While Bowles would continue overseeing the defense and take on head-coaching duties, with Arians' departure, Brady and Leftwich would have total ownership of the offense. In Brady's possible last voyage, he'd be the one steering the ship.



GRONKOWSKI WAS ON the receiving end of 10,575 passing yards and 105 touchdowns from Brady in the regular season and postseason combined.

"I don't think you just put together a team and think that there's another Gronk out there -- there's only one," Brady said.

Gronkowski's arrival in Tampa dramatically shifted the tight end's role in the Bucs' offense. In the year before his arrival, with Arians calling plays and Jameis Winston at quarterback, the tight end served more of a complementary role, with five touchdowns in 2019. With Gronkowski, Bucs tight ends averaged 11 touchdowns during the regular season, despite him missing five games in 2021.

"You'd much rather play with a guy like Gronk than not, but he's not here," Brady said. "We've got to do other things and play to the strengths of the players that we have and not think that they were the [same] strengths last year, but reestablish those things. This is what football is all about."

Since 2010 when Gronkowski joined Brady in New England, Brady's career record (regular and postseason combined) with Gronkowski is 127-36 (.779) and 48-24 (.667) without him. His touchdown-to-interception ratio dropped from 3.92 (365-93) with him to 2.66 (117-44) without him. His quarterback rating (QBR) dropped from 74.0 with to 60.9 without.

In Tampa, Brady was 25-9 (.735) with Gronkowski and is 12-10 (.545) without.

"Their connection was one of the best we've ever seen," wide receiver Mike Evans said.

Who would step up in Gronkowski's absence? Gronkowski often joked he and Brady could finish each other's thoughts.

"This is the first time Tom goes into a season where he doesn't have a best buddy. Gronk was the last of his battle buddies," Brady's longtime throwing coach and friend Tom House said. ... "It's not that he can't perform and it's not that he's physically unable to do something. ... When he goes to the locker room, when he goes to the stadium, it'll be a different feel [because] all his best buds have retired."

Christensen said: "It is a work in progress for us not to have Gronk at all. We watch plays all the time -- 'Aww if that was Gronk, this would have happened.' But it's not Gronk so now we've got to adjust and we've got to fix it."



BRADY WAS NOTICEABLY absent from training camp practice on Aug. 11, having already missed two practices the previous week.

Bowles announced Brady would be taking an extended break -- 11 days total. Brady traveled to the Bahamas during the excused absence, sources close to Brady confirmed. Bowles said Brady had to "deal with some personal things."

Those "personal things" were likely related to his family.

For years, Bundchen wanted Brady to retire and expressed concern over Brady's insistence on playing, which had become a source of tension throughout their marriage.

A Super Bowl LV postgame celebration video that aired in March 2021 on the "Late Late Show with James Corden" captured Bundchen and Brady embracing, with Bundchen asking Brady, "What more do you have to prove?"

Brady told Corden, "I just gave her a big hug. ... I was trying to figure out a way to change the subject really quick."

Bundchen declined to address rumors of marital discord in a September issue of Vanity Fair, but she told the publication she felt misunderstood and believed the public portrayal of her wanting Brady to retire was "sexist."

"Obviously, I have my concerns," she told the magazine. "This is a very violent sport, and I have my children and I would like him to be more present. I have definitely had those conversations with him over and over again. But ultimately, I feel that everybody has to make a decision that works for [them]. He needs to follow his joy too."

She also spoke about the realities of their marriage in British Vogue in June.

"I don't think relationships just happen; it's never the fairy tale people want to believe it is," Bundchen told the magazine. "It takes work to be really in sync with someone, especially after you have kids. His focus is on his career, mine is mostly on the kids. And I'm very grateful that he lets me take the reins when it comes to our family. He trusts my decisions."

When asked about his unexpected training camp hiatus, Brady said, "Everyone's got different situations they're dealing with. ... We all have really unique challenges to our life. I'm 45 years old, man. There's a lot of s--- going on."

Though Bundchen had tweeted, "Let's go @TomBrady! Let's go Bucs!" 26 minutes before the Bucs' season opener at the Cowboys, she was absent from all of Brady's home games in 2022 despite his parents and children attending. To date, it's the last tweet she has sent out.



RECOGNIZING THEY COULDN'T replace Gronkowski's production with one player, the Bucs had selected tight ends Cade Otton (fourth round) and Ko Kieft (sixth round) in the draft. They also signed veteran Kyle Rudolph.

Former All-Pro wide receiver Jones was brought on to help account for the downfield passing game and red zone production. They had also signed ex-Falcons wide receiver Russell Gage in free agency to help offset the loss of Antonio Brown and to buy Godwin more time in his recovery from a torn ACL and MCL in his right knee, which he suffered near the end of the 2021 season.

But Jones suffered a knee injury against the Cowboys in Week 1 and reinjured it against the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 4. He wouldn't suit up again until Week 8. Gage suffered hamstring, back and ankle injuries.

"We know right now injuries have cost us a lot early on, offensively," Bucs assistant head coach/run game coordinator Harold Goodwin said.

With the setbacks, Brady's frustration began to show.

Against the Saints in Week 2, Brady failed to convert on third-and-8 on a deep pass from the Tampa Bay 45 to Scotty Miller as the Bucs trailed 3-0 with 11:01 to go in the third quarter.

Brady walked to the sideline and slammed his blue Surface tablet to the ground in disgust.

Brady and the Bucs would eventually defeat the Saints -- Brady's first regular-season victory at New Orleans as a Buccaneer -- to start the year 2-0. But the offense -- which scored at will in 2021 -- couldn't find the end zone. In 23 possessions in the first two games, the Bucs scored two offensive touchdowns.

Bucs receivers missed a combined 17 games this season because of injury, illness or suspension, not including healthy scratches.

"Obviously with the injuries that you have, we can't be what we were last year, going into the end of last year," Leftwich said.

The Bucs' ground game -- integral in their Super Bowl run in 2020, particularly in the postseason -- also went nowhere. On the season, the Bucs averaged a league-worst 76.9 rushing yards, compared to 98.4 in 2021 and 122.5 in the 2020 postseason. The Bucs lost three straight games -- at the Pittsburgh Steelers and Carolina Panthers and home to the Ravens -- scoring three total offensive touchdowns while surrendering eight in that span.

"We're just not as good right now as we used to be, I guess," Evans said. "I don't know -- [we've] just got to figure it out."



LESS THAN 24 hours after the loss to the Ravens, Brady and Bundchen officially filed for and finalized their divorce, calling their 13-year marriage "irretrievably broken," according to court documents.

Bundchen's announcement read in part, "The decision to end a marriage is never easy but we have grown apart and while it is, of course, difficult to go through something like this, I feel blessed for the time we spent together and only wish the best for Tom always." "You face adversity in your professional life," Brady said on his podcast. "You face adversity in other aspects of life. It all builds resilience and you learn how to deal with the adversities and hopefully they make you stronger."

Brady and Bundchen share joint custody of two children, Benjamin, 12, and Vivian, 9.

When asked how much the divorce has weighed on Brady, Bowles said, "I can't say for sure -- Tom is a very private person. He does his job when he's out here and he smiles a lot and that's really all you can go by. I think everybody -- no matter what profession -- [when] you go through some things, it's how you handle it and come out of it. I'm sure he has something weighing on him when he leaves work."



TEN DAYS LATER, in Week 9 against the defending Super Bowl champion Rams -- the very team Brady said played a big role in his decision to come back, the team that prompted multiple text messages from Brady to Licht that got the ball rolling on his return to football -- Brady was victorious.

After trailing for all but the first eight minutes of the game, Brady and the Bucs got the ball back with 44 seconds left, down 13-9.

Brady first hit a 28-yard deep shot to Otton, before spiking the ball to stop the clock. Brady then went no-huddle, firing off three straight completions before a pass interference call advanced the Bucs from the 7-yard line to the 1. With 13 seconds left, Brady faked a handoff to running back Leonard Fournette as the offensive line veered left and Otton veered right to the flat where he caught the game-winner.

Brady had called the play, and Leftwich, who had come under scrutiny for the Bucs' lack of scoring, with some calling for Arians to take back playcalling, said, "Go for it!"

Brady and Leftwich had a long embrace afterward. It was Brady's first fourth-quarter come-from-behind win since Week 15 of 2021, tying him with Peyton Manning for most fourth-quarter comebacks in NFL history (43).

Brady jogged off the field triumphantly, pumping his fist into the air. For the first time in four tries with the Bucs, he beat the Rams. He also became the first quarterback in NFL history to reach 100,000 career (regular and postseason combined) passing yards. "That was awesome," he said of the win.

"That was f---ing awesome."



BRADY WENT HOME to a hero's welcome when he played at the San Francisco 49ers for just the second time in his career. The only other time he traveled to face San Francisco was in Week 11 of the 2016 season, when the Patriots defeated the 49ers 30-17 on a rainy November day -- when then-49ers coach Chip Kelly joked with Brady during pregame warmup, "Damn, it's a home game for you."

"I always consider myself a California kid," said Brady, who was 4 years old when he witnessed "The Catch" by Dwight Clark in the 1982 NFC Championship Game.

For Brady, this was where the dream began.

"Going to 49er games -- that's where I fell in love with football," he said.

It's also where Brady started nursing the chip on his shoulder, said those who knew him from his days growing up in San Mateo, California, 25 miles northwest of Levi's Stadium.

High school teammate Matt Buzzell remembers a signature moment in the summer of 1993 for Brady. They were heading into their junior year, Brady's first on varsity, riding in the back seat of Tom Brady Sr.'s Lexus on the way home from Bill Walsh Football Camp at Stanford University.

All eyes at the camp were on future Hall of Famer and the son of NFL great Archie Manning, Peyton Manning.

Brady, who had yet to receive a scholarship offer, wasn't happy when Stanford assistant head coach and offensive coordinator Terry Shea handed him an envelope with a report card featuring an assessment that did not meet Brady's standards.

"We got in the car and like, he was really upset. I mean he was mad hurt," Buzzell said. "He was just like, 'This guy will see.' ... and granted, he wasn't Tom Brady, he was just another face and Manning was the big star guy.

"I think that's the reason ... [Tom] is where he is, because of that kind of stuff. It's because that report card's still probably in a locker somewhere."

Brady's return to face his boyhood team, however, ended in a 35-7 loss, the third-worst defeat of his career.

Each time the Bucs appeared to have a breakthrough game this season, they'd stumble backward. Only twice up until this point had they managed to put together back-to-back wins.

"We can't ride the roller coaster forever," safety Logan Ryan said.

Bowles' message was clear.

"We've got to decide what team we want to be. We can't be one set of Bucs and another set of Bucs," he told the team. "It's got to mean something. Either we want it or we don't."



THE PANTHERS DIDN'T seem to give much credence to Brady's deep ball in Week 17, after Brady averaged 1.8 air yards per completion against the Cardinals the week before.

Carolina's defensive scheme called for a lot of man-coverage. Evans hadn't caught a touchdown pass since Week 4 -- the longest drought of his career.

But all of that changed with the NFC South division title on the line.

The Panthers game was the first time since 2016 that Brady had thrown two touchdown passes of 50-plus yards in the same game, according to ESPN Stats & Information, both of which went to Evans. Brady had not thrown a touchdown over 50 yards all season.

What changed? Wirfs had returned from his high ankle sprain the previous week and left tackle Donovan Smith was back from a foot injury. But also, Brady and Leftwich showed more willingness to throw on first down and take deep shots. There was a concerted effort to "cut it loose."

"Tom was just dropping dimes," Evans said.

It was also the 46th fourth-quarter comeback for Brady, after he led the Bucs back from an 11-point deficit to open the final period.

When asked if Brady's play surprised him, Wirfs joked, "Yeah he surprises me. His old ass still threw like what? A 60-yard bomb? Yeah he surprises me."

Wirfs joked about conversations he'll have when his future children ask about playing with Brady.

"I'll just tell 'em he was an old dog. I've loved every second of it."



DALLAS IS WINLESS vs. Brady and hasn't won a playoff game on the road since 1993. Despite that, the Cowboys are favored by 2.5 points on Monday night, according to Caesars sportsbook. The role is a comfortable one for Brady, who's 7-3 as a playoff underdog.

"It's not really who is favored or not favored, it's who plays the best. I've never really paid attention to those things," Brady said. "It's about three hours on Monday night -- and everything's going to come down to what we do those three hours. Nothing in the past...

"I was part of a team that won every game until the Super Bowl and we didn't play the best that day and we lost," Brady said, referring to the Patriots' 16-0 perfect regular season in 2007 that ended with a 17-14 loss to the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLII.

"I've been on the other end of it where I was a big underdog, my first year starting against the Rams, and we played better than they did that day," Brady said, referring to Super Bowl XXXVI. "That's all that matters. That's what single elimination is all about. You've got to be at your best in that moment."

Inside linebacker Devin White added: "We like being down and counted out."

The Bucs believe they're the healthiest they've been all season and they can compete with any team. And they have the experience of getting it done two seasons ago. They point to their Super Bowl victory in 2020 as proof that if they could hit their stride late in a pandemic year with no offseason program, an ascension in 2022 is possible.

Still, the farthest any of the six teams that reached the postseason with a losing record got in the NFL playoffs was the divisional round. That's where Brady and the Bucs were eliminated last year.

"It hasn't always been pretty, but we're all willing to battle with each other," Godwin said. "We're all willing to take it to all zeroes on the clock."

But once the clock hits zero -- not on the game but on Brady's season, then what? His contract with the Bucs expires after the 2022 season. Reports have already surfaced linking him to other teams, although they aren't permitted to speak to him until the NFL's legal tampering period begins March 13.

When asked about those reports this week, Brady said: "I don't know. You guys have got to write something new every day, so I just try to show up and do my job."

According to Roster Management System, the Bucs are $53,279,196 over the salary cap in 2023, although the team has until 4 p.m. ET on March 15 to be cap compliant. The Bucs have committed over the past two seasons to borrowing against the future to keep their window with Brady open.

Licht will make every effort to keep Brady, who said his only focus is on defeating the Cowboys, not on contemplating his future or "smelling the roses." Brady said Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin's on-field cardiac arrest should serve as a reminder that tomorrow isn't promised for anyone.

"We're not promised anything," Brady said on his podcast. "None of us are. Not one play. So just take it for what it is."

Brady has much to think about. He has been adamant that when he chooses to retire again, he will take as much time as he needs to mull the decision and believes it will be for good. When that will come, teammates aren't sure. Some feel this is the last ride while others believe he'll want to continue because he is playing at a high level and enjoying himself.

"You see the passion that he plays with -- it really floods through the whole team," said quarterback Kyle Trask, who spent the past two seasons studying under him.

"He's a guy who could have easily been like, 'Man, this is my 20-whatever year, I could just turn this thing in and just go on about my life,'" inside linebacker Lavonte David said. "His career is already set, he's already a Hall of Famer -- but the way he carried himself, coming to work even through the hard times, being the leader that he is, smiling with everybody, just being Tom -- he never changed. That's why he's our leader."

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