22 seasons, 7 Super Bowl wins: NFL quarterback Tom Brady retires
In the field of American football, there has never been and may never be a greater quarterback than Tom Brady – who announced his retirement at age 44 after more than two decades as a professional in the sport.
The superlatives of his career are unmatched; seven Super Bowl victories, five Super Bowl Most Valuable Player awards and three National Football League MVP awards. Now, after his Tampa Bay Buccaneers to a division title this season but narrowly missing another trip to the Super Bowl, Brady announced his retirement on Instagram.
“This is difficult for me to write, but here it goes: I am not going to make that competitive commitment anymore,” Brady wrote in a lengthy post. “I have loved my NFL career, and now it is time to focus my time and energy on other things that require my attention.”
A vegan who emphasised stretching and flexibility, Brady avoided major injury and sustained his athletic abilities well past when most other NFL players retire. Lately he had expressed a desire to spend more time with his wife, supermodel Gisele Bundchen, and three children, despite still playing – remarkably – at the top of his game.
News of Brady’s pending retirement had begun to percolate on Saturday. His family and the Buccaneers denied that he had made a final decision, and he said on Monday night on a SiriusXM podcast he was not ready to finalise plans. Then came Tuesday morning.
“I’ve done a lot of reflecting the past week and have asked myself difficult questions,” Brady said in his post. “And I am so proud of what we have achieved. My teammates, coaches, fellow competitors, and fans deserve 100% of me, but right now, it’s best I leave the field of play to the next generation of dedicated and committed athletes.”

Brady thanked the Buccaneers organization, his teammates, ownership, general manager Jason Licht, coach Bruce Arians, his trainer Alex Guerrero, agents Don Yee and Steve Dubin and his family in his nine-page post.
Brady led the Buccaneers to a win in Super Bowl LV in 2021 with a virtuoso performance, throwing for 201 yards, completing 21 of 29 passes for three touchdowns.
The win catapulted Brady into the pantheon of North American sporting greats, alongside legendary athletes like basketball player Michael Jordan, baseball legends Babe Ruth and Joe DiMaggio, golfer Tiger Woods, tennis star Serena Williams and hockey great Wayne Gretzky.
“To the Glazer family, thank you for taking a chance on me and supporting me,” Brady said of the Buccaneers’ owners. “I know I was demanding at times, but you provided everything we needed to win, and your ownership was everything a player could ask for.” Read More…