Brady heaps praise on 'endearing' Bucs coach Arians
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[January 29, 2021]
By Amy Tennery
(Reuters) - Hopefully New England head
coach Bill Belichick is not the jealous type.
Ten months since leaving Belichick's Patriots, with whom he won six
Super Bowl rings over two decades, Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback
Tom Brady heaped praise on his new head coach Bruce Arians as they
prepare to face Kansas City Chiefs in the NFL Championship game on
Feb. 7.
"He's a great man, he's a great leader, he's a great person, he's a
great friend (and) he's very loyal," Brady told reporters on
Thursday.
"There's nobody that ever would say anything bad about (Arians).
He's just so endearing to everybody and I think everyone wants to
win for him."
The Buccaneers will vie for their second title against the reigning
Super Bowl champion Kansas City in front of a limited
22,000-spectator crowd in Tampa, the first time a team will vie for
the title on home turf.
Peyton Manning is the only quarterback to start and win a Super Bowl
with two different teams but four-time Super Bowl MVP Brady is
determined to share that distinction.
On the heels of what Brady called a "magical year" in which he threw 40
touchdown passes, the most he has put up since 2007, the 43-year-old is
out to prove his decision to swap New England for Tampa was the right
one.
The move has not been without its challenges, with three straight losses
at home -- including a 27-24 defeat to the Chiefs -- marring an
otherwise stellar 11-5 season.
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Tampa Bay Buccaneers
quarterback Tom Brady (12) and coach Bruce Arians embrace after the
game against the Las Vegas Raiders at Allegiant Stadium. The
Buccaneers defeated the Raiders 45-20. Mandatory Credit: Kirby
Lee-USA TODAY Sports
Health restrictions put in place to limit the risk of COVID-19 has
also limited Brady's interactions with some of his own team mates
and he said that had affected the camaraderie.
But under the circumstances, they were all doing as best they could.
"For me as a player to switch teams, that takes a lot," said Brady.
"To move my family, to go to a different conference, to keep
building the way we did and develop a rapport with the guys that we
have here – so much of football is about the relationships that you
get with your team mates (and) coaches.
"The fact that we're still playing feels really good for me."
(Reporting by Amy Tenery in Gaithersburg, Maryland; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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