'A lot of mediocrity': Tom Brady criticizes level of NFL play
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[December 16, 2023]
From coaching to development of young players to schemes, Tom
Brady did not hold back on what he thinks of the quality of today's
NFL.
"I think there's a lot of mediocrity in today's NFL. I don't see the
excellence that I saw in the past," Brady said on the "The Stephen
A. Smith Show" Monday.
"I think the coaching isn't as good as it was," Brady said. "I don't
think the development of young players is as good as it was. I don't
think the schemes are as good as they were."
Brady, 46, retired earlier this year after a 23-year career in which
he won seven Super Bowls with the Patriots (2002, 2004, 2005, 2015,
2017, 2019) and Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2021). He also became the
NFL's all-time leader in passing yards and touchdown passes, among
many other records.
Brady said one of the biggest reasons for the league's decline is
certain side effects of recent rule changes.
"The rules have allowed a lot of bad habits to get into the actual
performance of the game," Brady said.
He pointed to rule changes that were intended to protect players
from injury, but he says have resulted in a "carefree" attitude on
the field.
"Offensive players need to protect themselves. It's not up to a
defensive player to protect an offensive player. A defensive player
needs to protect himself. ... I think a lot of the way that the
rules have come into play have allowed this -- you can essentially
play carefree and then if anyone hits you hard, there's a penalty."
Brady cited Ray Lewis, Rodney Harrison and Ronnie Lott as examples
of past players who would be challenged to play under today's rules.
.".. Every hit they would have made would have been a penalty,"
Brady said. "You hear coaches complaining about their own player
being tackled and not necessarily -- why don't they talk to their
player about how to protect himself? ... We used to work on the
fundamentals of those things all the time. Now they're trying to be
regulated all the time."
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New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady speaks at Salem State
University in Salem, Massachusetts, May 7, 2015. REUTERS/Charles
Krupa/Pool/File Photo
Brady also blamed development at the college level
-- not the athletes themselves changing -- for an NFL that's seen a
decline in scoring the past four seasons, with teams combining to
score just 43.3 points per game this season, down from 45.9 in 2021.
"I actually think college players were better prepared when I came
out than they are now," he said. "Just because so many coaches are
changing programs, and I would say there's not even a lot of college
programs anymore. There's a lot of college teams, but not programs
that are developing players.
"So as they get delivered to the NFL, they may be athletic, but they
don't have much of the skills developed to be a professional. When I
played at Michigan, I essentially played at a college program that
was very similar to a pro environment. When I see these different
players come in, they're not quite as prepared as they were, and I
think the game has shown that over the last 12 to 13 years. I think
things have slipped a little bit."
--Field Level Media
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