Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Tom Brady wins fifth MVP in seventh Super Bowl victory
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TAMPA BAY — Tom Brady isn’t passing the torch yet.
Brady, the 43-year-old quarterback who came to Tampa Bay for the final chapter in a first-ballot Hall of Fame career, proved he’s still the most dominant quarterback in the league, throwing for 201 yards and three touchdowns as he earned his fifth Super Bowl MVP award and seventh ring as the Buccaneers beat the Kansas City Chiefs 31-9 for their first Super Bowl win since 2003.
With the win, Brady has more Super Bowl titles (7) than any franchise in NFL history, topping the six each won by the Steelers and Patriots. Brady also made history with the fifth MVP title, becoming the only player with five. Joe Montana is second with three.
Brady joked with Chiefs wide receiver Tyreek Hill in July that he would go for his seventh ring after Hill promised a Chiefs’ dynasty with seven of their own. With the win, Brady is 3-2 against Patrick Mahomes, and both of his wins came in games where he built a double-digit lead by half and held off furious Chiefs comebacks.
This time, though, there would be no comeback.
There would just be Brady and the team of weapons he lured to Tampa Bay when he went south to prove he was more than a piece in a Bill Belichick dynasty. The win shows he’s the kind of transcendent player who doesn’t need one organization to build a dynasty.
He can do it any time, anywhere, in any uniform.
He did it with tight end Rob Gronkowski, another former New England Patriot he convinced to come out of retirement with promises of sunshine and another Super Bowl ring, and Leonard Fournette, who he convinced to sign in Tampa Bay after the former first-rounder was cut by the Jacksonville Jaguars.
And he did it with Antonio Brown, the troubled wide receiver who wanted another shot in the NFL and was given refuge by a quarterback who wanted one more weapon in an offense that had almost everything.
Gronkowski followed his friend to Florida and was rewarded with the first two touchdowns of the evening. The first, scored on an option play eight yards from the goal line, and the second on a 17-yard reception, pushed the Buccaneers so far ahead of the Chiefs that their field goal counters weren’t enough.
In a game billed to be the changing of the quarterback guard between Brady, the original GOAT, and Patrick Mahomes, the future GOAT, the veteran was lethal as he efficiently picked apart the Chiefs’ defense. He completed 10 of 13 passes for 90 yards with three touchdowns in the first half, two to Gronkowski and one to Brown with less than a minute to until halftime.
In the third quarter, he completed just four of six attempts for 55 yards, but his 25-yard completion to Gronkwoski in the third quarter set up for a 27-yard Leonard Fournette touchdown a play later.
While Tampa Bay’s young and tenacious defense wrecked Mahomes, the Buccaneers’ offensive line kept Brady nearly unscathed in the pocket. Chiefs defensive end Frank Clark recorded the only sack of Brady, coming in the first quarter.
Though younger, superstar quarterbacks are on the cusp of taking over the league, Brady defied the trend during the regular season and he didn’t stop until he captured his seventh Super Bowl ring in his new home stadium surrounded by fans who embraced the quarterback as their own.