Why do some revel in Brady’s failure?
By John Horgan
Sunday, January 27th, 2008 at 3:28 pm in Uncategorized.
A strange (or maybe not so strange) backlash had been building out there. You may have heard or read about it. Tom Brady is not universally admired. Certainly not in venues like New York and New Jersey, which had a vested interest in seeing the San Matean and his New England teammates falter and flop in the Feb. 3 Super Bowl in Arizona. They got half a wish _ the Patriots were upset by the New York Giants, 17-14, but Brady, true to form, wasn’t the reason. In fact, he led a last-minute drive that produced a 14-10 New England lead. But the Giants, behind their own clutch quarterback Eli Manning, came right back and won the game with under a minute remaining. Those who long to see Brady fall must be gloating today. For these unhappy souls, Brady is simply a bit too much _ too attractive, too happy, too celebrated, too wealthy, too victorious way too often. It’s probably simple human nature. There are those among us who simply hate to see success of such scope and scale. It would be akin to hoping that Warren Buffett goes bankrupt and winds up on food stamps or Oprah Winfrey puts on 250 extra pounds and expands her waistline right off the TV screen. Brady, with just a few exceptions, had been pretty close to perfect for some time. His New England team was 18-0 heading into the Super Bowl. That can be hard to handle if you have chinks in your own personal armor. Fans of former San Francisco quarterback Joe Montana who can’t abide what Brady has accomplished and see it as a threat to St. Joe’s sterling legacy here are certainly in that category. They’d like to see Brady brought down to size. But at least they have a fairly logical reason for their disdain for the NFL star. Montana has been their storied guy for the better part of a quarter-century. The irony is that, as a boy growing up in San Mateo County, Brady idolized none other than, you guessed it, Joe Montana. Go figure. Hey, you can’t please everyone. So why bother to even try?
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January 27th, 2008 at 3:53 pm
[…] John Horgan wrote a fantastic post today on “Why do some want Brady to fail?”Here’s ONLY a quick extractTom Brady is not universally admired. Certainly not in venues like New York City, which has a vested interest in seeing the San Matean falter and flop in the Feb. 3 Super Bowl in Arizona. But there are others who, for whatever reason, … […]
January 29th, 2008 at 5:43 pm
John…how soon we forget! Wasn’t it just three years ago when Tom Brady received a Cadillac Escalade for being the MVP of the Super Bowl and promptly donated it to our high school alma mater to benefit the school’s scholarship fund? The NFL could use more old school players like Tom Brady. I personally hope that the Patriots finish the season 19-0 and Brady throws for 400+ yards. Go Pats! Best Wishes from mt
January 30th, 2008 at 8:04 am
Michael, you are correct once again. Brady is generous indeed. One does hope that his amazing celebrity and worldwide fame, not to mention his fortune, does not keep him and the Patriots from succeeding at this point. Keep the faith.
January 31st, 2008 at 9:34 am
Not too many people like Brady’s head coach, Bill Belichick, who received an absurdly light penalty for cheating earlier this season. I will be rooting for _him_ to fail on Sunday.
January 31st, 2008 at 3:40 pm
And that is certainly your privilege. The Patriots’ mentor is not an easily loved figure by any means.