Tom Brady is used to constantly rewriting the NFL record book. The prolific quarterback sees the weekend enlarging his legacy with a new victory in the divisional round of the postseason, with which he would have 15 at this stage in his brilliant career.
Last weekend the 44-year-old quarterback enjoyed his 35th playoff victory, an amount unmatched by any player throughout history, in fact this record is so impressive that he has more wins than 28 of the 32 franchises. A new victory would leave him with the same amount that the Steelers have accumulated and could also equal the Packers’ all-time mark, if the old Green Bay franchise loses in its game against the 49ers.
Now the Rams appear on the horizon as the obstacle for Brady not to win his fifteenth ticket to a Conference final, of which he reached 13 as a Patriots player.
Last year, in the first at the Buccaneers’ controls, his glow didn’t go away when they went to the Saints’ field to beat them and earn a spot in their first Eastern Conference final, the perfect prelude to then beating Green Bay. and surpass the Chiefs champions in the Super Bowl, to obtain his seventh championship ring in 10 trips to the Super Bowl
The 14 divisional-round wins leading up to this meeting are already one of the toughest-looking marks for someone to beat in NFL history. His dominance has been so overwhelming that only in two trips to this phase has he left with his eyes on the ground after suffering losses to the Broncos (2005) and the Jets (2010).
Brady’s luminous postseason run grows stronger with each outing. His two decades at the highest level since his first title with the Patriots in 2001 have left figures that look impossible to beat for any other quarterback in the playoffs by owning the mark for completions (1,135), passing yards (12,720), touchdown passes (85) and game-winning returns (14), on several of these stats he’s close to twice his closest rival.
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