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Tom Brady vs. the NFL: The Case for Football's Greatest Quarterback-Sean Glennon

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Showcasing one of professional football’s best players, this book spotlights the life and career of gridiron great Tom Brady. More than just a biography, it relates Brady’s story while also establishing his prominent place in NFL history. By examining his skills and statistics in a variety of categories and comparing him to other great quarterbacks—including Peyton Manning, Joe Montana, Bart Starr, Johnny Unitas, Roger Staubach, Aaron Rodgers, and more—the guide makes a strong case for Brady as football’s best signal caller. Along the way, his best moments as a Patriot are revisited, from championship seasons spanning from 2001 to 2015, to his favorite receivers, to his relationship with legendary coach Bill Belichick and the "Deflategate" scandal in 2015. With detailed sidebars on Brady’s celebrity status, fashion sense, much-talked-about hair, and supermodel wife, this revised and updated edition is a must-have for faithful New England fans and pro football buffs alike.

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If you love NFL football, NFL football history and great quarterbacks throughout the League's history and if you like Tom Brady and the Patriots, you will surely love this book. This is an updated version through the 2015-16 season. It's not up to date to the end of the 2017-18 season, so you won't be reading about the last two Super Bowl seasons. I finished the book and wanted it to continue. I felt like I wanted to go back and read more. The author does a great job of breaking down Brady and the Patriots' seasons with Brady as the starter and provides key categorical comparisons between Brady and about 20 of the top quarterbacks of all time. Obviously, the greatest discussions will always be based on opinions, but the author provide key passing data in column-by-column format. He compiles a lot of stats to go along with his comments and analysis. For those who thinks of Brady as the greatest of all time, you won't want to put the book down. For others or even haters, there is plenty for you to enjoy reading.Highly recommended.
I don't disagree with Sean Glennon's thesis that Tom Brady is the best quarterback ever to play during American professional football's first century. Brady rightly deserves to be listed at the highest echelon of that position, for there were (and are) none better. In his excellent forward to the book, NFL senior analyst, Pat Kirwan, states his belief that "quarterback is the most important position in all of sports," and then persuasively explains why. Glennon builds his case for Brady's greatness in the context of Kirwan's demanding criteria. He largely succeeds, in the process also extolling the virtues of twenty other top quarterbacks, beginning with Sammy Baugh and Sid Luckman and continuing through to the present day with Aaron Rogers, Drew Brees, and the remarkable Russell Wilson, among others.Glennon uses mainly statistical metrics to compare players over the decades, complementing hard numbers with individual awards and team successes (such as playing in and winning the Super Bowl or being voted league MVP). Once or twice, he acknowledges how problematic this approach is, especially when attempting to adjust for major tilts in the playing fields that make statistical comparisons as silly as those that seek to compare fish with bicycles. The rules changes alone since 1978--rules that greatly favor the passing game by limiting what the defense can do against it--put the players of yore at a distinct disadvantage in Glennon's narrative. One does not have to wonder what the likes of Johnny Unitas, Norm Van Brocklin and Sonny Jurgensen (the latter two barely mentioned by Glennon) would have likely accomplished if they had played under these rules. Glennon's thesis might have benefited more had he used something like Paul Zimmerman's U Rating system that first appeared in Sports Illustrated in 2002. The U method deploys six statistical categories and five subjective factors--game management; two minute drill; toughness; accuracy; and arm strength--as a means of arriving at more accurate assessment before any comparisons are made. With this rating system, SI ranked Unitas, who called his own plays, as the top dog, followed distantly by Joe Montana, Steve Young, and Brett Favre.Indeed, Glennon's treatment of Unitas is curious (and suggestive about what is wrong with many of his other accounts/comparisons), withal for the backhanded nature of his compliments, outright gaffes, and failure to give his angel his due. For example, Glennon writes that "Even in his day, Unitas was considered second in that regard [greatest quarterback] to Bart Starr." He couldn't be more wrong. The overwhelming consensus among the cognoscenti of that era ranked Unitas first, Jurgensen, second, Starr, third. The NFL selected Unitas as its top overall player during its first 50 years. It chose Unitas as the second best quarterback behind Montana for its all-time 75th Anniversary team. More recently in 2014, SI ranked Unitas second behind Montana, with Brady third, in its list of the top ten best quarterbacks. I could go on with current and old-timers lists that give Unitas significant pride of place over Starr. Beyond this, Unitas comes off looking as if he was never a league championship game MVP when in fact he had won two of them, just one less than Brady has. By factoring only Super Bowl wins, Glennon insults all those who won the MVP of the only championship game around before 1960, as Unitas did in 1958 and 1959--and as Otto Graham did many times. Moreover, the author might have quoted Luckman, a Pro Football Hall of Fame member who said Unitas was the best quarterback ever. "Better than me," he said, "better than Sammy Baugh, better than anyone." Unitas did have that wonderful sudden-death championship game that made him the face of the NFL for more than a decade. But his career performance transcended that game and made him a quarterback for the ages. (Unlike the redoubtable Joe Namath [another non entity for Glennon] who also had one amazing PR game when he "guaranteed" a win for his Jets in Super Bowl III but who is now not even mentioned as a top-tiered quarterback by anyone outside of New York and Alabama.]Although Glennon also short shrifts the best quarterback in the decade of the 1970s, Roger Staubach, he almost redeems himself by giving due props to Jim Kelly, whose extraordinary achievements for the Buffalo Bills in the 1980s and 1990s are much less known today because Kelly "never won the big one." As Glennon justifiably points out, Kelly led his Bills to FOUR STRAIGHT SUPER BOWLS. And did so in superlative fashion. The guy could do it all, masterfully. Was he as good as Brady? No. Not even Kelly thinks so. Still, he was as good or better than all but a relative handful of others. Kudos to Glennon for reminding us about Kelly's distinguished career.I found Glennon's tributes to Drew Brees and Russell Wilson more than interesting, for they both excel at their positions despite the fact that they're at or under six feet tall--and play outstanding football in a league dominated by bigger, badder, faster, stronger behemoths than those who have ever played the game before. Which naturally (for me) begs one of the big WHAT IF questions about the best quarterback discussion. What if Doug Flutie, arguably the number one NCAA quarterback in its history, had played under the enlightened stewardship of Sean Payton and Pete Carroll, rather than such dunderheads as Ray Berry (coach of the New England Patriots) and General Manager John Butler (of the Buffalo Bills), who never gave Flutie much of chance because Flutie didn't fit their idea of proper quarterback stature. Flutie was a wonder wherever he played (except perhaps for his one season with the late, unlamented USFL). His eight year career with the Canadian Football League eventuated in his being named the best player in that league's history. If I had to name a quarterback to start any critical game and could choose from among history's best, I would think long and hard before I chose anyone, including Tom Brady, over Doug Flutie, all other factors being equal.Having all the requisite skills, experience, knowledge of the game and tendencies of opponents, physical health and conditioning, and a well-honed competitive spirit is mandatory for any aspirant to achieve best ever status. In a team enterprise, however, these are not enough to assure success. The sufficient factor is typically the ability to lead. And the best leadership is one that all team members accede to--because each understands and appreciates how the leadership tide raises all boats, making each better able to contribute to the team's success. In many ways, this has been--is--Brady's hallmark trait throughout his extraordinary career, getting the most out of a range of different players at different times, players typically considered average, hardly stars, and in every instance achieving great team success at the highest level. No other quarterback has done more with less over nearly two decades in a league dedicated to making life increasingly difficult for winning teams. And players.Perhaps this is ultimately the real cause behind the hideous matter of Framegate, which Glennon, in a preliminary chapter, all too flatteringly describes as Deflategate. As he states, there was no unlawful deflation to punish. So why defer to the unjust, inaccurate name the galoots in the NFL and ESPN have accorded this mess? Given its prominence in the popular culture, its effect on the legal system, and the way it challenges our most basic sense of fair play and justice, Framegate cries out for responsible journalists to DO THEIR JOB--WELL. And tell this story accurately, even as Emile Zola did with his J'Accuse during the infamous Dreyfus Affair. Even, especially, if it means exposing their old friends, like Chris Mortensen and Peter King, for the shills they've become for this frame up. Brady did not cheat, he did not destroy his cell phone to obstruct justice, and he is now, characteristically, assuming a leadership role that will end, in a few years, the nincompoopery imposed by the worst commissioner in the history of professional sport.

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