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A touchdown pass is total yards including passing yards and yards after catch, the quarterback is credited for distance of pass and yards after catch and same stats apply for the receiver.
I seriously suggest you guys go and buy a football if you can find one and throw it around to each other. Not only is it just a fun thing to do, but it'll really give you some perspective on just how insane these long and accurate throws are, it's really difficult. Keep it up though dudes, I love how passionate you are about football now, I can tell you're really getting into it and having a fun time. The season doesn't start until September, but I'm really looking forward to you guys getting to watch it live as new fans.
@@DNReacts You should watch the video of all 23 of Brady's touchdowns to Moss in 2007. It's still the NFL record for most receiving touchdowns in a season and Brady also set the record for most passing touchdowns in a season with 50, although that record has since been broken.
50 td's and 23 for Randy massive season! If you guys loved Randy Moss give Calvin Johnson a look. He was the closest thing to a Randy Moss we've ever seen! He played for the Lions the poor guy but he also put up some insane numbers!
You should look up "The Brady Six." Part of his legend isn't just his winning, his comeback drives, his precision and leadership or being the most clutch player ever, but the fact that he was drafted 199th overall in the 2000 NFL draft. Really illuminates why scouts and coaches underestimated him his entire career and how QB scouting is so hard that they overlooked a guy who became the greatest quarterback of all time.
@@DNReacts Tom Brady and Randy Moss won every regular season game but lost in the Superbowl vs The Giants and you should react to Tom Brady 5 rings and Tom Brady 6 rings before reacting Tom Brady 7 rings
Tom Brady is one of those QBs who, for you to really understand their greatness, you aren't gonna get it through single-play highlights. You need to watch a complete drive or situation unfold. He didn't have a crazy arm or some other raw ability that jumps out on 1 play. It was his football IQ and leadership, the way he could make all the right decisions, conduct his teammates like an orchestra, diagnose the scene and dissect the defense one little papercut at a time.
What foreigners don't understand is this is a game of chess. There's a reason a play accounts for seconds. As a QB you have to figure out the defense. That is not easy.
Brady was never a really flashy qb but he was consistent, could read the defense incredibly well, had great pocket feet, had great ball placement, and was excellent in high pressure situations. He had all the intangibles and in a bunch of games you'd see your team up by a score with 2 minutes left in the game, he'd make that first pass for a big gain and you'd think here we go again. He absolutely terrorized an entire generation of football players like no one else ever did. 7 rings and 35 playoff wins later he is the undisputed greatest to ever do it. For context the next most super bowl wins and playoff wins was by Joe Montana who had 4 rings and 16 playoff wins.
There was also the element of his legend defeating opponents before the score would. It got to the point to where opposing team players were concerned about holding leads against him. When you live rent free in people's heads, you've already taken a huge step to defeating them.
@@DNReacts I think it's worth noting that "placement" and "accuracy" are different terms. Good quarterbacks have accuracy. Great quarterbacks have placement. This is the art of throwing a receiver open, even when they're not, because you put the ball in such a spot that the receiver is forced to adjust in a way that takes them away from the defender. Accuracy is measured in feet. Placement is measured in inches.
Great post, I dont; think he is the greatest because he was not a total package out there, but he surely is one of the greatest, and definitely the winningest ever--which can be said about no one else. And I loved his killer instinct and competitive fire.
Brady's highlights aren't crazy jaw droppers like some freak athlete. He was just extremely consistent and accurate, to an otherworldly level. He was just like a highly efficient football-playing robot -- quickly reading everything on the field and delivering the ball to where it needed to be. Great leader and competitor too.
yards after the catch are included into the QB passing stats. a QB could technically make a 5yd pass and the WR runs it rest of the way 55yds for a TD, its considered a 60yd TD pass etc.
Just to clarify the other half of that debate. A few NFL QB's (Josh Allen, Justin Herbert, Patrick Mahomes etc) can Throw the ball (in the air) about 80 yards!!!
7 time Super Bowl champion, 5 time Super Bowl mvp, the man has more rings than the teams with the most rings(6 Steelers and patriots). Yea that’s Randy Moss.
He has all of the accolades, but he had that mentality and dedication to perfection that can only be compared to so few, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, Kobe Bryant, Roger Federer, Wayne Gretzky, and that's probably about it. Even as a Jets fan (they're in our division and Brady obliterated us for decades), I must admit he is absolutely the undisputed GOAT. His passing is like Kevin De Bruyne at peak form as a QB.
love the reaction. If you really want to understand why Brady is considered the greatest of all time watch one of the joe Vincent Tom Brady videos. I suggest the five rings video by joe Vincent as it is about the comeback you guys were talking about which is historic. It gives really good context around Brady and his legacy as well.
Him and moss played together 2007-2009. In 2007 they broke single season TD records for passing and receiving while the team went 16-0. Then Brady got hurt in 2008 and Moss started to wind down.
Will there be a reaction to The Brady 6 (on the NFL Films RUclips channel, the video with 25 million views)? The video is on the long side (45 minutes) but gives great insight to Tom Brady’s journey to the NFL and the 6 quarterbacks drafted before him. I am amazed how quickly you two have learned all the rules and intricacies of all the major American sports leagues. Congrats on the success of your YT channel! 👍
The length of a pass is measured from the line of scrimmage to where it was down. We have a stat called Air Yards, and that's the line of scrimmage to the catch point, but when someone says, "that was a 60 yard pass," they're saying that the ball was advanced 60 yards. It might have been a 5 yard dump off that the receiver took to the house, or it might have been a long bomb to the endzone.
I'm sad to see him retire. One I'm a Bucs fan and he gave that team hope. 2. He is just amazing to watch. He doesn't dance around the pocket and make flashy throws. He destroys you with his mind and his football IQ I found it funny He spent like 17 years in New England. Goes to Tampa after Patriots basically say he isn't good enough. Wins a superbowl his first year there. Then in New England the following season, he sets the all time passing record against his old team.
Brady is the Truth…I was a huge Drew Bledsoe Fan…. the year in 1999 when Bledsoe got hurt he was a all pro quarterback, NFL superstar, with a bazooka arm, just signed a huge contract…I had his jersey like a lot of people at the time 😅 and to have Brady the 99th pick 😂…to come out of nowhere as his back up😮 win a superbowl and continue on to be the legend he is to be the Tom Brady is or became was insane Bledsoe never got back on the field for the patriots.
Brady's one of those athletes who's so good it's hard to find really flashy plays from him. Most of Brady's genius is in setting up the play and reading the defense so he rarely needs to make a 1-in-1000 throw.
Tom Brady was always a decent QB when he played for Michigan during college, but he was passed over for QB's who were perceived to have more raw talent. In fact Brady himself will even tell you that he never thought of himself as being all that talented. NHL Hockey legend Brett Hull once said that there will always be someone who is more talented than you, so you strive to be the hardest working player. And that can be said of Tom Brady. He was probably one of the hardest working players when it came to being a student of the game. He probably spent more hours every week in film study of his opponents then the rest of the team combined. As a result, he knew his opponents' tendencies better than they did and knew how to beat them. This is what made him so dangerous.
I had the pleasure of having Tom Brady as my qb for 20 seasons. He was a highlight real! I was 9 years old when he signed with the Patriots and watching him win 6 Super Bowls was absolutely incredible. He could read the defense, call the audibles, and throw the ball like an absolute UNIT. It was bittersweet to see him get traded to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers but I'm happy he got his 7th ring. Hope to see more on Brady and the Patriots.
I hated Brady growing up because I was tired of the patriots winning every Super Bowl but at the end of his career I learned to respect the greatness his career was 7 Super Bowl wins is insane
Fun to watch you guys! Look for what they call "throwing them open". Where the receiver isn't, but needs to be to make the catch, the QB (Brady) throws the ball to that area so that the receiver has to move in that direction to get to it. Which pulls them away from the defender, creating separation. Throwing them open. Thanks for great videos!
There was actually another Moss! Santana Moss played around the same time Randy did and was also a wide receiver, he was also pretty good but not on Randy’s level.
Superbowl LI was one of the greatest things I have ever seen. That 34-28 comeback--nobody was expecting that shit. Nobody. I was running around my house when that OT touchdown went down and they won the game. The GOAT team, love 'em or hate 'em, man. What a ride with Brady for 20 years.
You need to react to Rob Gronkowski-- GRONK .One of the best tight ends ever . He played with Brady for his whole career . You don't see a lot of WOW plays from Brady . He was just quietly ,efficiently good for a very long career .
@@AlwaysHalloween000 Who pissed in your cheerios ? You obviously lack reading comprehension skills . I DID NOT say Brady owed it all to Gronk . Your brain is as lame as you falsely accuse my football knowledge of being .
@@AlwaysHalloween000 Who pissed in your Cheerios ? You obviously lack reading comprehension skills . I DID NOT say , or even imply that Brady owed it all to Gronk . Your brain is as lame as you falsely claim my football knowledge is
Brady’s highlight video is great but somewhat misleading. He wasn’t big, fast, and he didn’t have a particularly great arm. He was the king of hitting his receiver exactly in his hands, exactly in stride for an 8 yard gain, even if the guy was well covered. He also had the smartest coach in NFL history calling plays for most of his career. There isn’t much you can do against that.
@@DNReacts Andrew is lying Brady has a long list of haters, he did have the smartest coach, but it was the smartest DEFENSIVE coach, it was entirely Brady's offense
Brady def has an arm but he wasnt gonna throw it 50 yards every down unless he saw somethin in the defense that said it was gonna be a completion or he knew it would cause a defensive interference call
Bill Belichcik in 132 games as ahead coach in the NFL is an absolutely horrendous .478 Win % when Tom Brady isn't his starting QB This M.I.T Grad will be more than happy to provide you with detailed specifics Andrew Gol for it Chump I'm Waiting to eviscerate
I’m a life long Patriots fan, and was before the Tom Brady era. He’s an amazing QB and I miss him already. I actually snuck around when my family wasn’t around and watched Buccaneers games to see him play 🤫
Even tho I didn’t like Brady, he shattered every record and accomplishment. I respect him as the GOAT. And yes, that is Randy Moss. Moss teamed up with him for a few years and in 2007, they broke many QB-WR records.
A few of the things that made Brady the GOAT are : 1. He got rid of the ball faster than almost any other qb in the league. He was making these passes despite having very little time to scan the field, and find the open man. He understood what defenses were trying to do, and always knew the right counter. 2. On a lot of those passes, he dropped the ball into his receivers’ hands at such an angle that no matter how closely they were defended, it was only catchable by the intended receiver. 3. He never hung his receivers out to dry. Lots of qbs throw passes that their receivers can only catch by exposing themselves to being destroyed by a defender right after catching it. Brady didn’t do that, he took care of his receivers and didn’t expose them to bone crushing hits.
In the 2001 AFC Division "win" against the Raiders, Brady and the Pats got A LOT of help from the refs and the infamous "tuck rule". That game will forever be known as The Tuck Bowl.
Brady to Randy Moss WAS a cheat code. They combined for the most passing touchdowns and Receiving touchdowns in history (at the time) during the 2007 season. The Patriots were undefeated that season until they lost in the Super Bowl. As a Patriots fan, it was the most entertaining few years of my life while we had Moss
My dad was obsessed with Tom Brady. We’d have whole conversations about nothing but Tom Brady. It literally got to the point that I wanted to slap someone every time I heard his name. But now that my dad is gone, I just think of him whenever Tom Brady is brought up and it makes me smile. So…thanks Tom Brady. 😊
I'm not sure about the second play in this video, but beware the dreaded "double reverse," a common announcer mistake. A reverse is when the QB hands the ball off to a running back moving parallel to the line of scrimmage, and that running back hands it off to another player. The ball "reverses" direction, but because there are two handoffs involved, many announcers incorrectly call it a "double reverse." A true double reverse (which has happened on a few rare occasions) would involve yet another handoff.
I'm sure it's been brought up before, but in case it hasn't, consider this: Almost any pro-player has been playing since they were kids. Starting in little leagues, then high school, then college, and finally pro level all the while improving through repetition and good coaching. So, saying Brady's throws are almost robotic (around 5:50) could be quite true in that he's most likely been throwing and improving his throws for most of his life and all of that practice has turned his throwing motion into a seemingly robotic one. This also helps in other aspects such as reading defenses and such.
I remember when Randy Moss joined the patriots in 2007. It's only gotten more amazing over the years. I think we took it for granted a bit back then, because the mid 2000's-early 2010's were probably the most talent rich years for football in the sport's history. There were SO MANY legends of the sport actively playing in the NFL back then. It was sort of a weird gray area between "old school" stars meeting with the "new school" stars. A phenomenal time when different play styles were emerging, players were changing, and the sport was still unharmed by corporate softies.
He makes everyone around him better. A lot of players became household names when they played with Brady, but when they left they left to go to another team they faded into the background
Thank you so much for checking out Tom Brady. My team is the New England Patriots & I love Brady. He was just so exciting to watch because he could always pull it out in the end for a win. I loved watching him & Randy Moss together as well. I used to go to the games at Marshall University when Randy was in college. I was very happy when Moss was on the Pats.
The Passing Yards includes the runners yards after catching the ball which is called YAC (Yards After the Catch). They don't normally show Air Yards (which is a tracked stat).
When it is just yards, it is from the line of scrimmage plus the yards gained after the catch. A different stat called air yards measures where the QB is standing to the point of catch.
I am snd always will be a tom brady fan..at age 45 he was third in passing with 4600+ last season lead the league with 700 + pass atte..Brady greatness was his warrior mindset and heart.....able to galvanized his teams in the biggest moments..to strike fear in his opponent...you should listen to the mic'ups of other players talking about brady....it's truly tells the story....Brady played the game bigger than life..I am kinda of hoping he unretires!!!!
Good video but the thing about Tom brady is that 1 play can't show you how great he was. You can see it watching full performances like super bowls 49 and 51, the 2014 divisional game against the ravens, and many many more games. In the biggest moments with the most on the line, he came through every single time.
Accuracy is an interesting idea for QBs. Its always talked about. Completion percentage, decision making, anticipation, and ball placement. Tom brady has ALL of those attributes. He is accurate in every sense
Passing yardage includes the yards gained after the catch. So if the pass is thrown 5 yards and then the receiver runs 55 yards after catching it, that counts as a 60-yard pass.
This guy played so long you can actually see the improvement in visual technology throughout. Brady was not as sensational as others but he's the best ever.
Ok so quick thing to understand. YAC (Pronounced "yack") = Yards After Catch Through the air = yards from passer to receiver If someone says something is an "x" yard pass, they are combining YAC and "Through the Air" yards. The same goes for a QB's passing yards or a receiver's receiving yards. It's a combination of YAC and "through the air". This is because a QB can be just a responsible for throwing his receiver into open space to run as his receiver is for running after the catch. Note how Brady frequently hits his guys in stride they don't break momentum or throw it at the back of their shoulder to force them to spin away from a would be tackler to catch the ball. Look up "back shoulder pass". One last thing (this is getting longer than I thought). For RBs, YAC often means "Yards After Contact". This is a measurement of how far an RB went after first contact with a defender. Beast Mode was by far one of the best YAC RBs I've ever seen.
1:48 Oh yes it is THEE Moss. Randy Moss in his first year with the Patriots absolutely walked all over every defense they played that year. That touchdown you saw was Tom Brady's 50th TD of the year (a record at the time) and it was Randy's 23rd TD reception (still the record for most in a season). They stomped everyone they played that year, set the record (at the time) for most points scored in a season as a team and went undefeated, 17-0, through the regular season.
My older cousin has bet on and been a huge brady fan since 2003 and has resided in St. Petersburg (30 min from Tampa Bay) pretty much all his life. And next thing you know TB goes to TB and wins a ring there 😂 so lucky I envy his football fan journey 😭😭😭
Randy moss retired in the preseason of 2012 after signing with the Tennessee Titans, Randy moss was taken in the first round of the 1998 draft, Brady was taken, famously 199th overall in the 2000 draft
Receiving yards do include all yards, that means a pass 1 yard down field (or even behind the line of scrimmage), will actually be, however many yards the receiver gets before being tackled/etc. Example: Catch ball 3 yds behind Line of Scrimmage but run for another 14 means you will get an 11yd completion. So the receiver gets it as receiving yards and QB as passing yds. The stat known as Yards After Catch (YAC) shows how many yards a receiver averages after catching a ball. It is a good stat to see which players are great with the ball in their hands in terms of gaining extra yards. Not to be confused with another Yards after contact which refers to how many yards a player averages after making contact with a defensive player and is a good measure of a players power running style or elusiveness to escape a defenders grasp/tackle. I do think it is now called Run after catch or RAC so its not as confusing.
The crazy thing about Brady is, yes he had a good team around him for a good part of his career and that's what people remember, but there was a period where he didn't have weapons as receivers and he still would get it done and win games and made those receivers get some big paychecks he made everyone he played with so much better. There were some guys that went to different teams who got huge contracts because of how they played when they played with Tom... He had an amazing career and one I don't think will be rivaled and only one who might break his amount of Superbowls is Mahomes.
One thing to also appreciate in great QBs in the angle of the ball and how it drops into the receiver. The QBs purposely have to handle timing when lobbing the ball to have a more vertical drop behind the defender verses a rocket that is through a window. In football that is the finesse or "touch" on the ball.
What's insane about Tom is how much of an underdog he was coming into the NFL. Picked late in the draft, 199, and was considered "unimpressive" at the scout combine. Look up his combine picture He does not look elite. I think it was force of will that ultimately made him great. I hated him and the Patriots during their reign but Have to admit he was amazing.
Throwing yardage is measured from the line of scrimmage to the point of the person being tackled. So, it does not include the amount of yards behind the line of scrimmage that the quarterback is at at the time he releases the ball which could be another 10 yards added on, but it also includes the yards after catch (YAK) that the receiver puts in. It can be a little deceptive, but many top quarterbacks can throw the ball with accuracy for 60 yards or more.
A 60 yard TD pass measures from the line of scrimmage to where the play ended. The actually pass may be as little as 6 inches, followed by yards after the catch (YAC). If you want to know how far a qb throws it, you have to note where he released it and where it's caught, and do the math. Remember we're not metric. JK. Also, we refer to the people catching passes as receivers, not catchers. That's baseball.
Whenever you see a stat for passing yards, it will be the total yards on the play not just yards in the air. A common criticism of Brady, outside of highlight reels, is that he’s a YAC merchant (yards after catch)
The thing with Brady is his highlights are a hell of a lot better in context. He is 100% the most clutch player in NFL history, maybe even in sports in general.
It was Randy Moss. Joined the Patriots the year that they went undefeated and lost in the Super Bowl. Brady-Moss was pretty much unstoppable that year.
So before 2007, many people, even Patriots fans, said that Brady couldn't make long passes. The claim was that all he could do was short passes and game management. This was after having won several Super Bowls, but this idea was quite strong and used in comparison to Payton Manning who was considered the superior passer (many argued better QB overall). Then the 2007 season showed Brady could throw long just as well as anyone, he just hadn't had an explosive deep threat receiver yet. Your comment about Brady + Moss being a cheat code is great. It truly was, and as a fan, that season was amazing to watch, though the Super Bowl loss to the NY Giants was as emotionally crushing as the undefeated season had been amazing.
If you haven't watched Superbowl 51 or at least a video on it, do it. Also, When you see Tom Brady in a Tampa Bay Buccaneers outfit, keep in mind, the man is 43 years old then. Look at the years on the video from his first catch to that Superbowl 55 throw. There's a reason he's the greatest to ever do it.
I didn't see a comment about how good Brady was at game winning drives. Most of the highlights just show the touchdown, but the drives with little time on the clock were amazing. Check out the Patriots comeback against Atlanta in SB 51.
Sometime QBs “throw” guys open. Meaning they will throw it to where the defender can’t get it. So they’re not aiming to where the receiver will be in the current trajectory, but to an area near by where the receiver has to make the adjustment mid run or air to get the ball. Qb can see defenders past the receiver the receiver might not see keeping an eye on the ball.
Yeah, passing yards always include yards after the catch. If you throw a screen pass for 2 yards from your own 5 yard line and the receiver takes it all the way, you get credit for 95 yards passing.
That was Randy Moss. He played a couple years with Brady. They set records that season where Moss caught the most TDs in a single season while Brady threw the most TDs in a single season. Brady's record was later broken by Peyton Manning, but Moss's record still stands.
One of the clutchest athletes of all time. Most QBs will have a handful of late game Game winning passes in their entire careers. Brady Did it against just about every team.
Brady was great at 2 things, hitting his receivers on time, and "manipulating the pocket" which means taking small steps to avoid pass rushers with pure footwork as opposed to pure athletism, he is the perfect example for how to play QB, you or me could watch Brady to learn how to play QB, which you can't say for the mega athletes like Lamar and Mahomes because no matter how much we practice we will never be able to even attempt what they do, nobody is perfect, but Brady was the closest to perfection as one can get
Great highlight reaction ! If u were looking for a video that shows how he came up getting drafted late in the 6th round ,and the start of the first Super Bowl run he had with the patriots before even playing with moss. The Brady 6 is the video .
That USED to be the biggest comeback. A team came from 33-0 down to win in the playoffs. Super Bowl LI the Patriots were down 28-3 with 17 minutes left. Biggest Super Bowl comeback ever Tom Brady is the greatest football player of all time and arguably the greatest athlete of all time. He played football till he was 45, set every record known. He won more Super Bowls than any TEAM, and the Steelers and Cowboys have won a lot! He's been a lock for the Hall of Fame since forever. He toppled records set by people BEFORE HE WAS BORN, like Roger Staubach. He set records no one ever conceived of before. His induction into the Football Hall of Fame in Canton will be an unimaginable event. There will be an award named after him, but goodness knows what the qualifications for winning it will be. It was a privilege to watch him play. We'll never see anything like that again in any sport because there was nothing like it before he came along
Randy Moss was drafting in 1998, 2 years before Tom Brady. Tom Brady was picked in the 6th round and no one expected him to be a starter, let alone the best starting QB of all time.
The conundrum with Brady is he is not as physically gifted as other great QBs . But he knew what the defense was doing before they did it . Others experienced QBs do this as well but he was more consistent. Football is ALL about identity and execute the correct response.
I don’t know if you’ve done a Randy Moss reaction yet, but if not PLEASE do. The guy was an absolute beast of a receiver. That season with him and Brady was phenomenal. His years with the Vikings even without a Tom Brady … the guy was the best there ever was. And I grew up a 9ers fan in the 80s.
You guys really should have just watched the Joe Vincent minidoc that has millions of views on YT. IT's nicely done, and really pays homage to the career's some of these guys have had. For Tom too, what makes him the GOAT is that he really isn't that spectacular compared to other greats, but it's when he did it and when that really set him apart. You aren't going to see that in his highlight reels, and is the reason he's been the undisputed GOAT for like 10 years now
I'm a life long Raiders fan. I've had moments of despise for number 12, but he's the GOAT. Favre is the most entertaining QB but in this league if you got the most rings as the point guard you are the GOAT.
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A touchdown pass is total yards including passing yards and yards after catch, the quarterback is credited for distance of pass and yards after catch and same stats apply for the receiver.
If you havent heard this already, watch the LOB highlights. One of the best and most feared defenses in NFL history. Oh, and Beast Mode
I seriously suggest you guys go and buy a football if you can find one and throw it around to each other. Not only is it just a fun thing to do, but it'll really give you some perspective on just how insane these long and accurate throws are, it's really difficult. Keep it up though dudes, I love how passionate you are about football now, I can tell you're really getting into it and having a fun time. The season doesn't start until September, but I'm really looking forward to you guys getting to watch it live as new fans.
I know. They only lost ONE GAME all year!😂😂
That is THE Randy Moss! Randy Moss and Brady hooked up for one of the greatest offensive seasons of all-time in 2007.
What a combination that was Roger! Really is a cheat code. Thank you for the comment.
That was a true golden era of football
@@DNReacts You should watch the video of all 23 of Brady's touchdowns to Moss in 2007. It's still the NFL record for most receiving touchdowns in a season and Brady also set the record for most passing touchdowns in a season with 50, although that record has since been broken.
50 td's and 23 for Randy massive season! If you guys loved Randy Moss give Calvin Johnson a look. He was the closest thing to a Randy Moss we've ever seen! He played for the Lions the poor guy but he also put up some insane numbers!
@@DNReacts they had only one loss that year, unfortunately it was the super bowl!
Greatest player of all time!
You should look up "The Brady Six." Part of his legend isn't just his winning, his comeback drives, his precision and leadership or being the most clutch player ever, but the fact that he was drafted 199th overall in the 2000 NFL draft. Really illuminates why scouts and coaches underestimated him his entire career and how QB scouting is so hard that they overlooked a guy who became the greatest quarterback of all time.
And that was at about 1/2 through his career
My favorite thing about the video is the years at the bottom. It’s easy to forget how dominant he was for how long he was
Was my favourite thing about these highlights, how spread out across his career they seemed to be. Thanks for the comment
@@DNReacts Tom Brady and Randy Moss won every regular season game but lost in the Superbowl vs The Giants and you should react to Tom Brady 5 rings and Tom Brady 6 rings before reacting Tom Brady 7 rings
Tom Brady is one of those QBs who, for you to really understand their greatness, you aren't gonna get it through single-play highlights. You need to watch a complete drive or situation unfold. He didn't have a crazy arm or some other raw ability that jumps out on 1 play. It was his football IQ and leadership, the way he could make all the right decisions, conduct his teammates like an orchestra, diagnose the scene and dissect the defense one little papercut at a time.
his greatness is too big for this kind of thing.
Clearly he have an arm that throw those deep passes he chose short passes and he play to the strength of the offense base on what the defense gave him
What foreigners don't understand is this is a game of chess.
There's a reason a play accounts for seconds. As a QB you have to figure out the defense. That is not easy.
@@battlestar1788 Yeah, his arm strength was underrated.
Brady was never a really flashy qb but he was consistent, could read the defense incredibly well, had great pocket feet, had great ball placement, and was excellent in high pressure situations. He had all the intangibles and in a bunch of games you'd see your team up by a score with 2 minutes left in the game, he'd make that first pass for a big gain and you'd think here we go again. He absolutely terrorized an entire generation of football players like no one else ever did. 7 rings and 35 playoff wins later he is the undisputed greatest to ever do it.
For context the next most super bowl wins and playoff wins was by Joe Montana who had 4 rings and 16 playoff wins.
Thank you for the comment and context, appreciate the info
There was also the element of his legend defeating opponents before the score would. It got to the point to where opposing team players were concerned about holding leads against him. When you live rent free in people's heads, you've already taken a huge step to defeating them.
@@DNReacts I think it's worth noting that "placement" and "accuracy" are different terms.
Good quarterbacks have accuracy.
Great quarterbacks have placement. This is the art of throwing a receiver open, even when they're not, because you put the ball in such a spot that the receiver is forced to adjust in a way that takes them away from the defender.
Accuracy is measured in feet. Placement is measured in inches.
Great post, I dont; think he is the greatest because he was not a total package out there, but he surely is one of the greatest, and definitely the winningest ever--which can be said about no one else. And I loved his killer instinct and competitive fire.
Brady was just somthing different hard to compare to any other qb
I am a season ticket holder and had the pleasure of watching Brady be the champion he is.
Love this! Must have been incredible. Thanks for the comment.
Brady's highlights aren't crazy jaw droppers like some freak athlete. He was just extremely consistent and accurate, to an otherworldly level. He was just like a highly efficient football-playing robot -- quickly reading everything on the field and delivering the ball to where it needed to be. Great leader and competitor too.
He was only robotic in his play -- he was also quite skilled at firing up his teammates when things weren't going well.
You guys should check sports science with Drew Brees where they go into the accuracy and other aspects of quarterbacking
vs. Olympic archers, and it's not even close!
Drew Bree's. The quarterback who could only win it all by cheating!
yards after the catch are included into the QB passing stats. a QB could technically make a 5yd pass and the WR runs it rest of the way 55yds for a TD, its considered a 60yd TD pass etc.
Thank you, I knew Nick would be right! When it comes to Football, he’s always right versus me 😂
Just to clarify the other half of that debate. A few NFL QB's (Josh Allen, Justin Herbert, Patrick Mahomes etc) can Throw the ball (in the air) about 80 yards!!!
Brady was the best ever and his stats don’t even begin to tell the story
7 time Super Bowl champion, 5 time Super Bowl mvp, the man has more rings than the teams with the most rings(6 Steelers and patriots). Yea that’s Randy Moss.
Thank you, appreciate the comment and context!
He has all of the accolades, but he had that mentality and dedication to perfection that can only be compared to so few, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, Kobe Bryant, Roger Federer, Wayne Gretzky, and that's probably about it. Even as a Jets fan (they're in our division and Brady obliterated us for decades), I must admit he is absolutely the undisputed GOAT. His passing is like Kevin De Bruyne at peak form as a QB.
love the reaction. If you really want to understand why Brady is considered the greatest of all time watch one of the joe Vincent Tom Brady videos. I suggest the five rings video by joe Vincent as it is about the comeback you guys were talking about which is historic. It gives really good context around Brady and his legacy as well.
Thank you Hayden, really appreciate that! Have got the Vincent videos on our list and we’ll definitely give them a look. Thanks for the comment.
Him and moss played together 2007-2009. In 2007 they broke single season TD records for passing and receiving while the team went 16-0. Then Brady got hurt in 2008 and Moss started to wind down.
Will there be a reaction to The Brady 6 (on the NFL Films RUclips channel, the video with 25 million views)?
The video is on the long side (45 minutes) but gives great insight to Tom Brady’s journey to the NFL and the 6 quarterbacks drafted before him.
I am amazed how quickly you two have learned all the rules and intricacies of all the major American sports leagues. Congrats on the success of your YT channel! 👍
The length of a pass is measured from the line of scrimmage to where it was down. We have a stat called Air Yards, and that's the line of scrimmage to the catch point, but when someone says, "that was a 60 yard pass," they're saying that the ball was advanced 60 yards. It might have been a 5 yard dump off that the receiver took to the house, or it might have been a long bomb to the endzone.
Thank you! Appreciate that!
I'm sad to see him retire. One I'm a Bucs fan and he gave that team hope. 2. He is just amazing to watch. He doesn't dance around the pocket and make flashy throws. He destroys you with his mind and his football IQ
I found it funny He spent like 17 years in New England. Goes to Tampa after Patriots basically say he isn't good enough. Wins a superbowl his first year there. Then in New England the following season, he sets the all time passing record against his old team.
Brady is the Truth…I was a huge Drew Bledsoe Fan…. the year in 1999 when Bledsoe got hurt he was a all pro quarterback, NFL superstar, with a bazooka arm, just signed a huge contract…I had his jersey like a lot of people at the time 😅 and to have Brady the 99th pick 😂…to come out of nowhere as his back up😮 win a superbowl and continue on to be the legend he is to be the Tom Brady is or became was insane Bledsoe never got back on the field for the patriots.
Yardage for a pass play does include the pass as well as the run after the
Thanks Gregory, I knew Nick would be right! 😅
Brady's one of those athletes who's so good it's hard to find really flashy plays from him. Most of Brady's genius is in setting up the play and reading the defense so he rarely needs to make a 1-in-1000 throw.
Tom Brady was always a decent QB when he played for Michigan during college, but he was passed over for QB's who were perceived to have more raw talent. In fact Brady himself will even tell you that he never thought of himself as being all that talented. NHL Hockey legend Brett Hull once said that there will always be someone who is more talented than you, so you strive to be the hardest working player. And that can be said of Tom Brady. He was probably one of the hardest working players when it came to being a student of the game. He probably spent more hours every week in film study of his opponents then the rest of the team combined. As a result, he knew his opponents' tendencies better than they did and knew how to beat them. This is what made him so dangerous.
I had the pleasure of having Tom Brady as my qb for 20 seasons. He was a highlight real! I was 9 years old when he signed with the Patriots and watching him win 6 Super Bowls was absolutely incredible. He could read the defense, call the audibles, and throw the ball like an absolute UNIT. It was bittersweet to see him get traded to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers but I'm happy he got his 7th ring. Hope to see more on Brady and the Patriots.
I hated Brady growing up because I was tired of the patriots winning every Super Bowl but at the end of his career I learned to respect the greatness his career was 7 Super Bowl wins is insane
All the TDs from where he was playing for Tampa Bay, are those of him being in his 40s. That really is beyond impressive.
Fun to watch you guys! Look for what they call "throwing them open". Where the receiver isn't, but needs to be to make the catch, the QB (Brady) throws the ball to that area so that the receiver has to move in that direction to get to it. Which pulls them away from the defender, creating separation. Throwing them open. Thanks for great videos!
There was actually another Moss! Santana Moss played around the same time Randy did and was also a wide receiver, he was also pretty good but not on Randy’s level.
Superbowl LI was one of the greatest things I have ever seen. That 34-28 comeback--nobody was expecting that shit. Nobody. I was running around my house when that OT touchdown went down and they won the game. The GOAT team, love 'em or hate 'em, man. What a ride with Brady for 20 years.
He was a true field general. Another coach on the field
You need to react to Rob Gronkowski-- GRONK .One of the best tight ends ever . He played with Brady for his whole career . You don't see a lot of WOW plays from Brady . He was just quietly ,efficiently good for a very long career .
Yeah, agreed. The Gronkumentary by Joseph Vincent is excellent
Gronk isn't the best TE all time but he was the most dominant
Brady won 4 Super Bowls and 3 SB MVP's without Gronk you lame ultra casual
@@AlwaysHalloween000 Who pissed in your cheerios ? You obviously lack reading comprehension skills . I DID NOT say Brady owed it all to Gronk . Your brain is as lame as you falsely accuse my football knowledge of being .
@@AlwaysHalloween000 Who pissed in your Cheerios ? You obviously lack reading comprehension skills . I DID NOT say , or even imply that Brady owed it all to Gronk . Your brain is as lame as you falsely claim my football knowledge is
Brady’s highlight video is great but somewhat misleading. He wasn’t big, fast, and he didn’t have a particularly great arm. He was the king of hitting his receiver exactly in his hands, exactly in stride for an 8 yard gain, even if the guy was well covered. He also had the smartest coach in NFL history calling plays for most of his career. There isn’t much you can do against that.
Thanks Andrew, appreciate the info.
@@DNReacts Andrew is lying Brady has a long list of haters, he did have the smartest coach, but it was the smartest DEFENSIVE coach, it was entirely Brady's offense
Yeahhh Belichick never called an offensive play once in his career
Brady def has an arm but he wasnt gonna throw it 50 yards every down unless he saw somethin in the defense that said it was gonna be a completion or he knew it would cause a defensive interference call
Bill Belichcik in 132 games as ahead coach in the NFL is an absolutely horrendous .478 Win % when Tom Brady isn't his starting QB
This M.I.T Grad will be more than happy to provide you with detailed specifics Andrew
Gol for it Chump
I'm Waiting to eviscerate
I’m a life long Patriots fan, and was before the Tom Brady era. He’s an amazing QB and I miss him already. I actually snuck around when my family wasn’t around and watched Buccaneers games to see him play 🤫
Even tho I didn’t like Brady, he shattered every record and accomplishment. I respect him as the GOAT. And yes, that is Randy Moss. Moss teamed up with him for a few years and in 2007, they broke many QB-WR records.
Thank you for the comment Jaxon. Appreciate the info. Knew it just had to be Randy Moss 😅
Randy Moss was drafted in 98, Brady in 2000, so they were contemporaries.....
Why didn't you like Brady?
He's not the were. GOAT His teammates were.
A few of the things that made Brady the GOAT are :
1. He got rid of the ball faster than almost any other qb in the league. He was making these passes despite having very little time to scan the field, and find the open man. He understood what defenses were trying to do, and always knew the right counter.
2. On a lot of those passes, he dropped the ball into his receivers’ hands at such an angle that no matter how closely they were defended, it was only catchable by the intended receiver.
3. He never hung his receivers out to dry. Lots of qbs throw passes that their receivers can only catch by exposing themselves to being destroyed by a defender right after catching it. Brady didn’t do that, he took care of his receivers and didn’t expose them to bone crushing hits.
In the 2001 AFC Division "win" against the Raiders, Brady and the Pats got A LOT of help from the refs and the infamous "tuck rule". That game will forever be known as The Tuck Bowl.
Brady to Randy Moss WAS a cheat code. They combined for the most passing touchdowns and Receiving touchdowns in history (at the time) during the 2007 season. The Patriots were undefeated that season until they lost in the Super Bowl. As a Patriots fan, it was the most entertaining few years of my life while we had Moss
My dad was obsessed with Tom Brady. We’d have whole conversations about nothing but Tom Brady. It literally got to the point that I wanted to slap someone every time I heard his name. But now that my dad is gone, I just think of him whenever Tom Brady is brought up and it makes me smile. So…thanks Tom Brady. 😊
I'm not sure about the second play in this video, but beware the dreaded "double reverse," a common announcer mistake. A reverse is when the QB hands the ball off to a running back moving parallel to the line of scrimmage, and that running back hands it off to another player. The ball "reverses" direction, but because there are two handoffs involved, many announcers incorrectly call it a "double reverse." A true double reverse (which has happened on a few rare occasions) would involve yet another handoff.
Another thing I’ve noticed in this video is the amount of GAME WINNING TDs he’s thrown #CLUTCH
I'm sure it's been brought up before, but in case it hasn't, consider this:
Almost any pro-player has been playing since they were kids. Starting in little leagues, then high school, then college, and finally pro level all the while improving through repetition and good coaching.
So, saying Brady's throws are almost robotic (around 5:50) could be quite true in that he's most likely been throwing and improving his throws for most of his life and all of that practice has turned his throwing motion into a seemingly robotic one. This also helps in other aspects such as reading defenses and such.
I remember when Randy Moss joined the patriots in 2007. It's only gotten more amazing over the years. I think we took it for granted a bit back then, because the mid 2000's-early 2010's were probably the most talent rich years for football in the sport's history. There were SO MANY legends of the sport actively playing in the NFL back then. It was sort of a weird gray area between "old school" stars meeting with the "new school" stars. A phenomenal time when different play styles were emerging, players were changing, and the sport was still unharmed by corporate softies.
He makes everyone around him better. A lot of players became household names when they played with Brady, but when they left they left to go to another team they faded into the background
Thank you so much for checking out Tom Brady. My team is the New England Patriots & I love Brady. He was just so exciting to watch because he could always pull it out in the end for a win. I loved watching him & Randy Moss together as well. I used to go to the games at Marshall University when Randy was in college. I was very happy when Moss was on the Pats.
You’re welcome Mindy, really enjoyed this one as well. Brady and Moss together on the same team just isn’t fair 😂 That’s amazing re college too.
The Passing Yards includes the runners yards after catching the ball which is called YAC (Yards After the Catch). They don't normally show Air Yards (which is a tracked stat).
born and raised 1997 in boston and still here. yeah we were spoiled for a good 20 years lol
When it is just yards, it is from the line of scrimmage plus the yards gained after the catch. A different stat called air yards measures where the QB is standing to the point of catch.
with all the Aaron Rodgers news lately, might be worth checking him out, one of the best throwers of the football I've ever seen.
We will be 😀
I am snd always will be a tom brady fan..at age 45 he was third in passing with 4600+ last season lead the league with 700 + pass atte..Brady greatness was his warrior mindset and heart.....able to galvanized his teams in the biggest moments..to strike fear in his opponent...you should listen to the mic'ups of other players talking about brady....it's truly tells the story....Brady played the game bigger than life..I am kinda of hoping he unretires!!!!
Good video but the thing about Tom brady is that 1 play can't show you how great he was. You can see it watching full performances like super bowls 49 and 51, the 2014 divisional game against the ravens, and many many more games. In the biggest moments with the most on the line, he came through every single time.
You guys should react to Brady’s comeback against the falcons in the Super Bowl. UNBELIEVABLE!
Accuracy is an interesting idea for QBs. Its always talked about. Completion percentage, decision making, anticipation, and ball placement. Tom brady has ALL of those attributes. He is accurate in every sense
That throw to Mitchell at 6:10 was amazing
You'll be more impressed by his 1 hour standup generated by AI Dudesy. Tom Brady issued a cease and desist but Qwert reuploaded the full hour. 😂🎉🎉
Passing yardage includes the yards gained after the catch. So if the pass is thrown 5 yards and then the receiver runs 55 yards after catching it, that counts as a 60-yard pass.
This guy played so long you can actually see the improvement in visual technology throughout. Brady was not as sensational as others but he's the best ever.
Ok so quick thing to understand.
YAC (Pronounced "yack") = Yards After Catch
Through the air = yards from passer to receiver
If someone says something is an "x" yard pass, they are combining YAC and "Through the Air" yards.
The same goes for a QB's passing yards or a receiver's receiving yards. It's a combination of YAC and "through the air". This is because a QB can be just a responsible for throwing his receiver into open space to run as his receiver is for running after the catch. Note how Brady frequently hits his guys in stride they don't break momentum or throw it at the back of their shoulder to force them to spin away from a would be tackler to catch the ball. Look up "back shoulder pass".
One last thing (this is getting longer than I thought). For RBs, YAC often means "Yards After Contact". This is a measurement of how far an RB went after first contact with a defender. Beast Mode was by far one of the best YAC RBs I've ever seen.
Lots of different ways to play qb and be successful, but brady was the perfect pocket quaterback.
1:48
Oh yes it is THEE Moss. Randy Moss in his first year with the Patriots absolutely walked all over every defense they played that year. That touchdown you saw was Tom Brady's 50th TD of the year (a record at the time) and it was Randy's 23rd TD reception (still the record for most in a season). They stomped everyone they played that year, set the record (at the time) for most points scored in a season as a team and went undefeated, 17-0, through the regular season.
Santana Moss was a solid WR that played in the NFL for many years. Totally different type of WR though and he's not related to Randy 😂
Lol came to check if someone commented about Santana after they said "they retired that name!"
Thank you Will, had a feeling there may be another somewhere 😅 Appreciate the comment
Funny enough there was another receiver named Moss, Santana Moss. Very good, quick receiver but not at the level of Randy.
My older cousin has bet on and been a huge brady fan since 2003 and has resided in St. Petersburg (30 min from Tampa Bay) pretty much all his life. And next thing you know TB goes to TB and wins a ring there 😂 so lucky I envy his football fan journey 😭😭😭
Randy moss retired in the preseason of 2012 after signing with the Tennessee Titans, Randy moss was taken in the first round of the 1998 draft, Brady was taken, famously 199th overall in the 2000 draft
Receiving yards do include all yards, that means a pass 1 yard down field (or even behind the line of scrimmage), will actually be, however many yards the receiver gets before being tackled/etc. Example: Catch ball 3 yds behind Line of Scrimmage but run for another 14 means you will get an 11yd completion. So the receiver gets it as receiving yards and QB as passing yds. The stat known as Yards After Catch (YAC) shows how many yards a receiver averages after catching a ball. It is a good stat to see which players are great with the ball in their hands in terms of gaining extra yards. Not to be confused with another Yards after contact which refers to how many yards a player averages after making contact with a defensive player and is a good measure of a players power running style or elusiveness to escape a defenders grasp/tackle. I do think it is now called Run after catch or RAC so its not as confusing.
The crazy thing about Brady is, yes he had a good team around him for a good part of his career and that's what people remember, but there was a period where he didn't have weapons as receivers and he still would get it done and win games and made those receivers get some big paychecks he made everyone he played with so much better. There were some guys that went to different teams who got huge contracts because of how they played when they played with Tom... He had an amazing career and one I don't think will be rivaled and only one who might break his amount of Superbowls is Mahomes.
One thing to also appreciate in great QBs in the angle of the ball and how it drops into the receiver. The QBs purposely have to handle timing when lobbing the ball to have a more vertical drop behind the defender verses a rocket that is through a window. In football that is the finesse or "touch" on the ball.
What's insane about Tom is how much of an underdog he was coming into the NFL. Picked late in the draft, 199, and was considered "unimpressive" at the scout combine. Look up his combine picture He does not look elite. I think it was force of will that ultimately made him great. I hated him and the Patriots during their reign but Have to admit he was amazing.
Throwing yardage is measured from the line of scrimmage to the point of the person being tackled. So, it does not include the amount of yards behind the line of scrimmage that the quarterback is at at the time he releases the ball which could be another 10 yards added on, but it also includes the yards after catch (YAK) that the receiver puts in. It can be a little deceptive, but many top quarterbacks can throw the ball with accuracy for 60 yards or more.
A 60 yard TD pass measures from the line of scrimmage to where the play ended. The actually pass may be as little as 6 inches, followed by yards after the catch (YAC). If you want to know how far a qb throws it, you have to note where he released it and where it's caught, and do the math. Remember we're not metric. JK. Also, we refer to the people catching passes as receivers, not catchers. That's baseball.
Thanks for this Scott! We are currently learning 4 different sports so the terminology can be confusing at times 😂
Whenever you see a stat for passing yards, it will be the total yards on the play not just yards in the air. A common criticism of Brady, outside of highlight reels, is that he’s a YAC merchant (yards after catch)
The thing with Brady is his highlights are a hell of a lot better in context. He is 100% the most clutch player in NFL history, maybe even in sports in general.
It was Randy Moss. Joined the Patriots the year that they went undefeated and lost in the Super Bowl. Brady-Moss was pretty much unstoppable that year.
So before 2007, many people, even Patriots fans, said that Brady couldn't make long passes. The claim was that all he could do was short passes and game management. This was after having won several Super Bowls, but this idea was quite strong and used in comparison to Payton Manning who was considered the superior passer (many argued better QB overall). Then the 2007 season showed Brady could throw long just as well as anyone, he just hadn't had an explosive deep threat receiver yet. Your comment about Brady + Moss being a cheat code is great. It truly was, and as a fan, that season was amazing to watch, though the Super Bowl loss to the NY Giants was as emotionally crushing as the undefeated season had been amazing.
If you haven't watched Superbowl 51 or at least a video on it, do it. Also, When you see Tom Brady in a Tampa Bay Buccaneers outfit, keep in mind, the man is 43 years old then. Look at the years on the video from his first catch to that Superbowl 55 throw. There's a reason he's the greatest to ever do it.
I didn't see a comment about how good Brady was at game winning drives. Most of the highlights just show the touchdown, but the drives with little time on the clock were amazing. Check out the Patriots comeback against Atlanta in SB 51.
Someone has probably already said this but that is indeed the Moss
That was THE Randy Moss. Moss played the end of his career in New England.
Sometime QBs “throw” guys open. Meaning they will throw it to where the defender can’t get it. So they’re not aiming to where the receiver will be in the current trajectory, but to an area near by where the receiver has to make the adjustment mid run or air to get the ball. Qb can see defenders past the receiver the receiver might not see keeping an eye on the ball.
Every team, but the Giants!!!!!
Yeah, passing yards always include yards after the catch. If you throw a screen pass for 2 yards from your own 5 yard line and the receiver takes it all the way, you get credit for 95 yards passing.
2001 was the year I graduated Highschool. I believe I was in college when he threw his first NFL td. I'm 40 now lol
That was Randy Moss. He played a couple years with Brady. They set records that season where Moss caught the most TDs in a single season while Brady threw the most TDs in a single season. Brady's record was later broken by Peyton Manning, but Moss's record still stands.
One of the clutchest athletes of all time. Most QBs will have a handful of late game Game winning passes in their entire careers. Brady Did it against just about every team.
1:48 That is THE RANDY MOSS! He played with the Patriots for a bit with Brady
Brady was great at 2 things, hitting his receivers on time, and "manipulating the pocket" which means taking small steps to avoid pass rushers with pure footwork as opposed to pure athletism, he is the perfect example for how to play QB, you or me could watch Brady to learn how to play QB, which you can't say for the mega athletes like Lamar and Mahomes because no matter how much we practice we will never be able to even attempt what they do, nobody is perfect, but Brady was the closest to perfection as one can get
*Not the Giants. He didn’t own the Giants! 🎉
Keep up the fantastic work guys
yards after catch are counted towards passing yards, so when it's thrown 50 yards and the receiver goes an additional 10 yards that's a 60 yd pass.
PS: They DO include the run-after-catch when they say "a 60 yard TD pass". And...he also could and did throw it 60 yards in the air from time to time.
Throwing into the open space is called "throwing the receiver open".
Great highlight reaction ! If u were looking for a video that shows how he came up getting drafted late in the 6th round ,and the start of the first Super Bowl run he had with the patriots before even playing with moss. The Brady 6 is the video .
They didn’t give enough in those captions, many of these were important plays in playoff games or super bowls
Let’s gooooooooo
That USED to be the biggest comeback. A team came from 33-0 down to win in the playoffs. Super Bowl LI the Patriots were down 28-3 with 17 minutes left. Biggest Super Bowl comeback ever
Tom Brady is the greatest football player of all time and arguably the greatest athlete of all time. He played football till he was 45, set every record known. He won more Super Bowls than any TEAM, and the Steelers and Cowboys have won a lot! He's been a lock for the Hall of Fame since forever. He toppled records set by people BEFORE HE WAS BORN, like Roger Staubach. He set records no one ever conceived of before. His induction into the Football Hall of Fame in Canton will be an unimaginable event. There will be an award named after him, but goodness knows what the qualifications for winning it will be.
It was a privilege to watch him play. We'll never see anything like that again in any sport because there was nothing like it before he came along
As a Giants fan I love Brady he helped us win not 1 but 2 superbowls thanks Brady ❤️
Incredible!
Randy Moss was drafting in 1998, 2 years before Tom Brady. Tom Brady was picked in the 6th round and no one expected him to be a starter, let alone the best starting QB of all time.
The conundrum with Brady is he is not as physically gifted as other great QBs . But he knew what the defense was doing before they did it .
Others experienced QBs do this as well but he was more consistent. Football is ALL about identity and execute the correct response.
A 60 yd catch usually refers to the length of the pass + yards after catch.
I don’t know if you’ve done a Randy Moss reaction yet, but if not PLEASE do. The guy was an absolute beast of a receiver. That season with him and Brady was phenomenal. His years with the Vikings even without a Tom Brady … the guy was the best there ever was. And I grew up a 9ers fan in the 80s.
Yeah we’ve seen Moss, video is in the playlist. He was a fantastic watch, we really enjoyed that one.
You guys really should have just watched the Joe Vincent minidoc that has millions of views on YT. IT's nicely done, and really pays homage to the career's some of these guys have had. For Tom too, what makes him the GOAT is that he really isn't that spectacular compared to other greats, but it's when he did it and when that really set him apart. You aren't going to see that in his highlight reels, and is the reason he's been the undisputed GOAT for like 10 years now
I'm a life long Raiders fan. I've had moments of despise for number 12, but he's the GOAT. Favre is the most entertaining QB but in this league if you got the most rings as the point guard you are the GOAT.