Unblinded with Sean Callagy - Tom Brady: Leadership, Accountability, and the Mindset of a Champion
Episode Date: December 30, 2025In this extraordinary episode of Unblinded with Sean Callagy, Sean sits down with one of the most accomplished leaders in sports history — Tom Brady.Drafted 199th overall, overlooked, underestimated..., and doubted at nearly every stage, Tom Brady’s journey is not a story of instant greatness — it’s a masterclass in preparation, accountability, trust, and service to the team.Brady reflects on the early years that shaped his mindset: growing up as the youngest of four, developing discipline and competitiveness long before anyone labeled him “talented,” and learning the value of family, work ethic, and unconditional support. From not starting on a winless freshman high-school team to redshirting at Michigan, Tom shares how humility and persistence became fuel rather than frustration .The conversation dives deep into defining moments:Throwing an interception on his first college passBeing told by his coach he might never play againEntering the NFL Draft expecting opportunity — only to wait until the sixth roundGetting his chance in New England and deciding, “If they put me in, they’ll never take me out.”Brady offers rare insight into what separated the Patriots’ dynasty from others: a culture where credit was given away, blame was owned by leaders, and the mission always outweighed personal agendas. He explains how Coach Belichick built trust, accountability, and clarity — and why true leadership always prioritizes people and purpose over ego.Beyond football, Tom reflects on life after the helmet: broadcasting, business, community impact, fatherhood, and the daily competition of becoming a better version of himself. His philosophy is simple but demanding — success comes from serving others, honoring commitments, and showing up fully in every role you choose.This episode isn’t about trophies. It’s about how to live, lead, and build something that lasts.Timestamp00:00 Introduction – Why Tom Brady’s Story Still Matters01:45 Being Overlooked & Embracing the Underdog Role04:20 Early Lessons from Family & Competition07:10 Not Starting in High School & Learning Patience10:15 Michigan Years – Choosing the Hard Path13:40 Handling Doubt, Pressure & Internal Competition17:10 Draft Day – Waiting, Humility & Pick #19920:20 Entering the NFL & Learning the Professional Standard23:40 Leadership, Trust & Team-First Culture27:10 Competing Without Ego – “Me vs Me”30:00 Sustaining Excellence Over Decades33:00 Life Beyond Football & Redefining Legacy36:00 Final Reflections on Purpose & ImpactKey Themes CoveredWhy greatness is built through accountability, not entitlement.The power of serving teammates instead of chasing recognition.Trust as the foundation of elite leadership.How humility creates longevity in performance.Learning to see setbacks as preparation, not rejection.Why “we” always beats “me” in business, sports, and life.Resilience, responsibility, and ownership in moments of failure.Competing against your former self — not others.Defining legacy through impact, not applause.Episode HighlightsTom Brady on being overlooked and why it never defined him.Not starting in high school — and why that mattered.The interception that nearly ended his college career.Draft day disappointment and the mindset that followed.Why the Patriots culture worked when others failed.Leadership lessons from Coach Belichick.Giving credit away and taking responsibility as a leader.Serving the mission above personal agendas.Competing with yourself every day.Building legacy through consistency, integrity, and service.🎧 This episode is essential listening for athletes, entrepreneurs, leaders, and anyone striving to build long-term excellence without losing humility or purpose.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Tom Brady did not start winless freshman high school football team.
Sixth round is getting to the very end.
And I'm like, I don't know if I'm going to go anywhere.
You know, maybe I'm going to have to not play football anymore.
Maybe I have to be go sell insurance like my dad.
I throw it to the middle linebacker for UCLA, who goes 45 yards untouched,
interception return for a touchdown on my very first college pass.
I was very much a late bloomer physically.
But there were some intangibles that I had.
Like, that's not normal for kids.
Of course, I'm going to play in college because that's what I want to do.
Like, why would I not?
And then it was like, okay, well, now I'm going to go play pro football.
Of course I'm going to play pro football.
Like, why would I not?
If you push the limits and you try to do things that are very challenging, you're going to fail.
I think the competition is me versus me.
It's myself today versus the version of myself yesterday and the improvement that I can make on a daily basis,
whether it's physically, mentally, or emotionally to live the life that I want to be.
want to live. Welcome to the Sean Callaghan Blinded podcast. We support people and seeing what they don't
see about growing their financial abundance, time freedom, magic, and impact in the world. And we have
the greatest episode yet of the show on Calgary and Blinded podcast. Maybe never be surpassed.
With who, think Nicole Miello is going to introduce the incredible, masterful who.
Imagine this. Tom Brady drafted 199, overlooked and underestimated, steps out onto the field,
not as a chosen one, but as an underdog.
His story echoing the ancient tales
were greatnesses forged in the shadows of doubt.
He didn't just win seven Super Bowls.
He shattered the very idea of limits.
While Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, and Magic Johnson
shared with their iconic coaches,
Brady did the unthinkable.
He left the dynasty he built.
With a new team, new city, a new system,
he conquered again.
That's not just sports.
That's Odysseus, leaving
Ithaca and returning with new kingdoms. Brady's heroic unique identity is not just in his arm,
but in his relentless heart, his obsession with growth and his ability to elevate everyone around him,
on the field, in business, and in giving back. He is the living proof that legacy isn't about where
you start, but how you transform every step back into a stepping stone, every doubt into destiny.
So let's welcome to the Sean Calgary and Blinded podcast. Not only the greatest football player,
all time, but arguably the greatest athlete and leader in sports history, the one, the only Tom Brady.
Wow.
Mr. Brady, thank you.
Thank you.
That was amazing, by the way.
And I think complete accurate and appropriate.
I wouldn't expect you to say that, but I do believe that.
So before we started, I joked about my incredible disappointment in this remarkable place,
the Cardball that you're launching here in Las Vegas literally today.
And again, it's such an honor and privilege to have you here.
but I'm so crushed that my Jets have like one card in the entire store and no helmet here.
So this is a man who's tortured me throughout my life.
And the truth is that I used to root against you.
Yeah.
Beamintly.
And then as I matured and I began to understand mastery, I was inspired.
I was led.
And when you went to Tampa Bay and the transition occurred, I rooted for you so,
deeply in my heart and soul to do what you did.
And I was blown away by what you created.
24 years old, winning your first championship, 43 to last.
Thank you again, Mr. Brady.
And how do you feel about being in your store
and the impact you're creating in all these different ways?
What's on your heart and mind today, please?
Thank you so much for the introduction.
And it's such a unique opportunity for me to be here and talking to you.
And we all have our unique journeys that allow us to get to certain places in our life.
in our career and to connect with people in different ways.
And I was able to do that in one way on the football field,
and I think people could see that on the television screen every weekend.
And my love of the game, my love of the teammates.
And now when you transition to another part of your life where I'm not wearing the helmet
and really engaged with one team all the time,
I'm able to be out there in the community more often
and hopefully making a positive difference in impact in a lot of different ways.
And I do it on television and a broadcasting role.
I do it with different speaking engagements.
I do it through businesses like Cardball where we can connect with people that weren't just football fans, but are fans of sport, fans of community, fans of people that inspire you to do different things.
And I'm only at this place in my life because of the people that came into my life and impacted me in a positive way.
And I've learned from so many people on my journey.
and I just want to give back to the people that have committed to me.
And hopefully if I can continue to inspire people to reach for their goals and their dreams,
well, that's a great legacy to live.
Amen.
And so, Mr. Brady, one of the things that we leave into...
Can't call me Mr. Brady anymore.
Tom, please.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I would never take somebody whose identity is that large and presume anything.
So thank you.
That's gracious of you.
So one of the things we cover a lot.
on the Unblinded Podcast
is the concept of what we call actualization.
The combination of consulting,
telling people what to do,
training and coaching,
what Mr. Miyagi did for Danielson,
what Herb Brooks did for,
of course,
the Amazing Miracle Ice Team.
Mike Tyson Customato,
and of course you have all these folks
you've just noted
that have this impact on you.
I do deep research.
I get very prepared
for the privilege of a moment like this.
I know your dad was one of those people, of course.
Yeah.
and Coach Belichick and many others.
But if we would start there, what do you see now about that journey
that's maybe different than what you saw as a team,
college player at Michigan coming into the NFL?
No, please.
I think perspective is an amazing thing to have in your life,
to look at where you're at,
and then when you reflect back on the different experiences of your life
and the people that came into your life
and how they impacted you and how you realized that you could never accomplish things
in life of significant.
without the help of other people.
And I feel like I've been so fortunate to be on great teams.
And I've had great teammates that push me every day to hold myself to a standard of
accountability that has been very unique.
And I know that accountability is so important because when you wake up every day and you
have great purpose and you're around other people who have great ambition, my only
motivation was, how do I not let the people down that are counting on me? And when it was easy,
when it translated in football, that's your coaches, your teammates, the whole organization,
all your fans, your family, you have a name on the back of your jersey that you represent,
which is your family name, and you have a name on the front of your jersey, which represents
the town you're in, the community that you're a part of and the team that you play for.
And there's nothing that ever changed my motivational period of time. And in fact, because I had
success in my professional career at an early point in my life, I realized that that was the only
motivation that I ever needed. It wasn't about, you know, a contract. It wasn't about anything
material. It wasn't about fame. It wasn't about, it was just, how do I not let the other guys
around me down? And how can I represent my family in the best possible way? And I took that approach
throughout my playing career, I take that approach in my life beyond my playing career too.
And the things that I commit to, I want to do a great job.
I want to commit my full self in those moments to be very present and to go out every day
and try to say, okay, well, this is how I can do my best today.
And, you know, I just, the people that came into my life, and I'm very fortunate to have met
some of the coolest people that have the most unique upbrings and unique life,
And I look at the things that have happened in their life and how they mentored me to teach me things that I never would have known had they not been in my life.
And now I get to meet other people and I get to make an impact.
So whether it's a podcast, whether it's a speaking engagement, a speaking appearance, whether it's something like our Card Vault store here that brings together so many amazing people that I've met that want to be connected to something.
And this is so authentic to who I am because this is what connected me to all the kids in my neighborhood growing up.
was trading cards.
And we would swap cards.
It was a big part of our life growing up.
And I realized the impact that this hobby made in my professional football career.
So it's like, now I get to impact and traveled around the different cities, broadcast games in different cities.
And I just see the impact that kind of we made on a much more of a far-reaching scale.
Thank you for that.
And for all that you have done and continue to do.
And I wish you all the best with Card Vault.
as Las Vegas opens up today.
Yeah.
And we're in the vault, like, hang out.
So growing up, your dad, home, what were the lessons that were there?
How did that sort of merge into what happens at Michigan?
And then we'll come up to Coach Belichick.
And again, service of people.
And this is sort of the frame I come from very often is the moment in the karate kid
where Daniel loses trust for.
for Mr. Miyagi, who has nothing but the best of intentions,
and believes that Mr. Miyagi is using him
for his own devices.
I asked this question of Mike Tyson about Custamato,
and I was shocked.
Mike Tyson said he never lost belief and trust in Custamato.
I was the first time I've ever heard any human say
that went deep on it.
How was that for you growing up?
I know your dad, I know, I'm actually coach Belichick.
What that looked like in the formative years
before you win the first Super Bowl?
So I was the youngest of four kids, three older sisters,
all hugely impactful in my life.
And as a kid, to realize the importance of family
and the stability that it gave me
through the ups and downs of my early athletic career,
of my early childhood.
Like, my parents were so supportive of everything I did.
I was just like the normal American kid
that just loved sports and wanted to play.
And then I had this mom and dad
that was like an unrelenting,
confidence that they had in myself, even when I didn't have it. And I was kind of a late bloomer
to football. I didn't really start playing to high school. I played on the street with my friends
and the San Francisco 49ers was such a great team growing up that I love the sport, but I also
love baseball. I love soccer. I love golf. And when I started playing football in high school,
we weren't very good. But and as I fell in love with the game through my freshman year in high
school and my sophomore year. Okay, sorry. One quick question. One quick question.
on that. So how gifted or not were you uniquely? Not very gifted. Not very gifted. I was
very much a late bloomer physically, but there were some intangibles that I had that I think were
very unique that I would like to try to take credit for my competitiveness and for my work ethic
and for my desire. But I think those, I was born with those. Like, you don't take credit for your
height. You know, you don't take credit for your eye color. I think there's other things in traits within
that maybe we think about willpower, determination, or discipline as something that is nurtured in us,
maybe to a degree. But I think there's a pretty strong baseline I had in those areas that maybe
people couldn't recognize then. But I always remember when I was in fifth grade, I was going to the
gym doing jump rope and pushups and sit-ups. And like, that's not normal for kids. So I was very blessed
just being born in the family I was born into. And I was cultivated by a great work ethic by my parents
and a commitment to family and a commitment to one another that gave me such a great foundation.
So I go into my athletic career and I'm a late bloomer, so I'm not as good as the other players.
I'm not as good as the kids on my own team, not as good as the guys in the league.
So you were not the best player in high school football team?
No, I mean, it took me a while to get there.
My first year, I was the backup quarterback on a team that didn't win a game.
Didn't even start, didn't even start me in a game, barely played me.
And our team never won.
So I was so shitty.
they didn't want to play me on a team where we couldn't win a game.
I was starting at the very, very, very bottom.
And this is on your freshman team?
My freshman team.
Wow.
So my second year, I try out for junior.
So Tom Brady did not start.
No.
I did a lot of prep work.
I didn't find that.
Did not start on his freshman high school football team.
Yeah.
A winless freshman high school football team.
This is my favorite fact I have learned yet.
Yeah.
Crazy.
So I go to my second year and I start on the junior varsity team because the guy
who was a starting freshman quarterback, my friend Kevin Gristofiak, he quit football. He's like,
I'm not playing football. We stink. I'm going to play basketball. So I elevated to the starter
position just by happenstance. And I really got improved and got better, but we still weren't a
great team my second year. But I was falling in love with the game. I had coaches that really
cultivated the love of the sport in me. I had parents that were supportive that wanted to facilitate
my growth by bringing me to camps in the summertime because I was like, hey, I really love football.
My dad was like, hey, let's go up to this camp at the college of San Mateo.
There was a football coach up there named Tom Martinez.
God rest his soul, he passed away in about 2012.
And he took a liking to me because he saw my work ethic and said,
God, I can work with his kid and he can improve a lot.
So I go into my junior year, much improved.
I was growing into my body.
We were a decent team, my junior year.
I think six wins, four losses.
And I go into my senior year and had another similar type year.
but I still wasn't as good as a lot of the other kids in the Bay Area where I grew up.
Which is a hot bed of athletic talent in the country.
Yeah, in the country.
And it's good in baseball.
I was actually a better baseball player growing up than I was a football player,
much more natural as a baseball player.
But I loved football.
I love the teamwork.
I love the camaraderie.
I loved just being involved in this team sport because football is like an orchestra.
There are so many moving parts.
and everybody plays a role.
And you can't play a role that someone else is playing
because you have a very important job yourself.
I'm a quarterback.
I can't catch the ball.
I can't block people.
I can't tackle people.
I just have to do my job well.
And I have to count on my teammates to do their job well
in order for us to be successful.
So because I had perspective from my first year
where I didn't play,
when I was playing as a fourth year player and a senior,
I had so much love of the game
because I love being out there competing with my team.
mates. Wow. And how do you get to Michigan with sort of this background? Like what's that,
like what does that all look like? There was a regional scouting combine at St. Mary's College in
Maraga and also in the Bay or in the East Bay. And I drove over there because you wanted to
gain some awareness by these other coaches. And it wasn't the digital age at that time. It was
just you had people had to visualize you and see you. So you would go to these regional camps. And,
And you would perform in these camps and there'd be write-ups that would go in these little scouting booklets.
And after that first combine that I went to where you throw the ball and you show off some of your skills,
well, these coaches start to recruit you.
So I would start getting these recruiting letters from different places.
And my dad and I made some cassette tapes of my highlights from my junior season.
And we sent them out to colleges.
We made 50 of them.
And one of the tapes I sent to the University of Michigan.
So they get the tape.
They also see some of these write-ups that are coming from me from these regional combines
that I did.
And I would say I got lightly recruited.
It wasn't this heavy recruitment where every team in the country wanted me.
There were teams that were interested, like Cal Berkeley offered me a scholarship.
I was really considering going to Cal Berkeley.
And University of Illinois offered me a scholarship.
The school I really wanted to go to was USC.
But they didn't want me.
There was another kid by the name of John Fox, who was the top-rated quarterback on the West Coast that they wanted. And he went there. So Michigan in the spring of 95 came. And with the competitiveness and the evolution beginning, how did you feel about that? Like were you inside? Was it burning? And I read a little bit about when the draft was happening and how you would feel a couple years later. How were you feeling in this college process and about things like John Fox and USC not being interested?
How was that landing on you and what was it causing inside?
I always had maybe another blessing in my life was I had maybe a very naive confidence in myself.
Like it wasn't a well-founded confidence like I had done enough things in my life to be really
uber confident in football.
We weren't that good.
I was a late bloomer.
I had some size.
I had a good arm.
But I didn't perform consistently well.
I made a lot of good throws, but I made some bad ones too.
But I always in some ways in my mind felt like, well, I'm going to figure it out.
You know, I'm going to keep going.
Of course, I'm going to play in college because that's what I want to do.
Like, why would I not?
I mean, I want to play.
There's going to be a team that wants me.
So Michigan ends up offering me a scholarship, which I thought was a long shot.
And I was a bit surprised.
I took my visit there, really fell in love with the school.
And I kind of, in a way, chose Michigan because it was the toughest path to success.
And I chose a difficult place to go that had a high level of competition.
Because I always thought, if I want to be the best, I got to beat out the best.
And that's where Michigan is where the best quarterbacks are.
And it had a history of great quarterbacks like Elvis Gerbach, Todd Collins, Jim Harbaugh.
This is what Michigan football was all about.
And there was a great coach there named Bo Schembeckler who used to preach, the team, the team, the team.
And that's what I wanted to be a part of.
So I go to Michigan and there are six other quarterbacks on the team when I arrived on campus,
which is not totally different than probably a lot of other schools,
but I was the sixth or seventh my first year on the depth chart.
It's a long way to go to being the starter.
And they were you, they were going to suit you up, though?
They were going to carry six or seven quarterbacks?
They carry you because there's about 100 guys on the team in college.
And I was a first year player.
and they redshirted me and I had to grow into my body again I was still physically behind
everybody else when I committed to Michigan and I showed up on campus in late July of 1995 I was
only 17 years old so I wasn't an 18 year old 18 and a half year old kid I was kids today prep
school is 19 20 years old exactly so my body was still catching up to the other guys in fact
one of my freshman locker mates was Charles.
Woodson who ended up winning the Heisman trophy in 1997. I remember he took his shirt off in the
Lockford Room on the first day. And I looked over at him and I was like, holy shit, that's what a
college athlete. And I looked down it myself and I'm like, oh my God. He's in another level league
in his own. And he certainly was. But I had a lot of catching up to do because of what he looked like
and how he played. And he had this crazy confidence in himself. And it was good for me to be around a
guy like that because he inspired me to work harder to be better. So my first year I redshirted,
didn't play. My second year, this is a crazy story. We're playing UCLA. We're blowing them out.
And of course, now I'm eligible to play because I already used my red shirt year. So I'm like the
third or fourth quarterback on the depth chart. We're smashing UCLA. It's the end of the third
quarter. We're beating them by like 40 points. They look over at me.
and they go, Brady, you're going in the game.
Of course, I got in Michigan Stadium, 110,000 fans.
I know this game is being televised nationally because it's UCLA Michigan.
Strap my helmet on, it's the last play of the third quarter.
I hand the ball off.
Quarter ends.
Come to the sideline.
They say, we're going to throw a pass.
I'm like, okay.
They said, what do you want to throw?
I said, I want to call Trips Left Lake Hank S.
Okay, Trips left is the formation.
Lake is the protection.
Hank is the route.
And the S means I'm going to run a skinny post on the backside of the formation,
which was like kind of a play where I want to show off my arm strength.
So they come up in a coverage and they give me this opportunity to throw this backside S route.
And I want to show off to the coaches that I can look off to the front side.
plant my back foot and then rip this skinny post to the backside to one of my big receivers.
All right. I run on the field, get in a huddle.
I call the play. Trips left.
Lank can get someone. Ready?
Break the huddle.
Come to the line of scrimmage.
They're playing the perfect coverage for me to throw this backside quick post.
Ball snapped, drop back.
I look off the front side, plant my back foot, look at my receiver, throw the ball,
gets caught and run in for a touchdown.
Except I throw it to the middle linebacker for UCLA,
who goes 45 yards untouched, interception return for a touchdown on my very first college pass.
I thought there is no way this team is ever going to play me ever again.
Wow.
So I went in the, literally, I was horrified.
I felt so bad.
The next day I go into the team meeting, our head coach Lloyd Carr, Brady,
we ever put you in the game again and you do that,
you're never playing in that stadium ever again.
And it was a very humbling experience for me.
And I had to go back.
And I had to earn the trust back from my coaches
and back from the other teammates that I had
that if they put me in, I'm going to make the right place.
So it was a very inauspicious, humbling start to my college career.
But I think things worked out.
Yes, over time they did.
So can we take you to thank you for that,
unbelievable story. So what I'm hearing Tom Brady say is it doesn't all start out perfectly,
the development, the acceleration, the things we confront in life, with masterful people
freeing us up and getting real confronts from the people around us. So thank you for that.
The draft. Yeah. $199, 6 round. How are you feeling as that's progressing that day?
Yeah. So I end up having, I would say, a very good college career. I finished my career as a
starter 20 wins and five losses at Michigan. I won two bowl games. I thought I improved a lot
over the course of my college career and I dealt with a lot of adversity in college. And again,
I go back to my early childhood and I had a great work ethic, very competitive, had a great
foundation to deal with success and failure because of my parents, total unconditional love and
support from the people that mattered most in my life. Then I go to college along with
from home. And I grew up in California. I go to the Midwest, freezing cold, long way from home.
This is before cell phones. I can't just, you know, call my parents up with things. So I had to grow up.
So I go through my college career. I have a good career. And now I'm like trying to go to this
pro level. And again, what was another blessing I had? Like I said, I was very naive. I thought,
like I did in college.
Well, yeah, I'm going to go to college and I'm going to play.
And then it was like, okay, well, now I'm going to go play pro football.
Of course I'm going to play pro football.
Like, why would I not?
Didn't everybody see how good I did at Michigan?
And the pro scouts didn't exactly see it the same way.
The pro scouts were like, this kid's skinny, doesn't have a great arm, doesn't move very well in the pocket, goes down easily.
And in fact, I had a challenging fifth year in college where,
I kind of platooned it quarterback with a younger player.
So a lot of the pro scouts thought, well, if Michigan doesn't want to play Tom,
well, like, why would we want him?
Michigan wants to play another player, Drew Henson.
And I played a lot, my senior.
But they seem every day in practice.
He must not be that good.
So I thought, man, I'd overcome a lot, played well.
I should go like a second and third round pick.
And the pro scouts, again, just didn't see it that way.
So I go to the draft, and it was, again, very different time than today's day and age of the draft, which is, you know, all the media attention, all the hype.
It was just kind of a little bit under the radar.
It happened on a Saturday Sunday.
The first three rounds were on a Saturday.
The second rounds four through seven were on Sunday.
So on Saturday, I go to a San Francisco Giants baseball game to take my mind off the draft because I kind of didn't think I'd be a second or third round pick.
I thought maybe third, but I'll probably go on the second day.
So I go to a Giants baseball game and to take my mind off it.
Of course, I don't get picked.
So I go home on that Sunday and I'm like, all right, this is my day.
Fourth round, who's going to pick me?
Fourth round comes and goes.
Then the fifth round comes and goes.
Sixth round is getting to the very end.
And I'm like, I don't know if I'm going to go anywhere.
Maybe I, you know, maybe I'm going to have to not play football anymore.
Maybe I have to be go sell insurance.
Like my dad, that was his job.
And fortunately, the Patriots picked me, 1099th pick overall.
And I didn't even know where New England was when I got drafted.
I was a, I grew up a Niners fan.
I was in California.
You know, again, I didn't know my geography, the United States, but New England is not a state.
You know, when they pick you to the New England Patriots, I'm like, here, where is that?
Not knowing that it's in Massachusetts.
And I figured it out pretty quickly where I was going after they picked.
me. We had a mini camp shortly thereafter. And out of all the places I could have went, it was an
absolute perfect fit. And again, that's just happenstance. You could be picked to a lot of other
places. But I got to go to New England, Bill Belichick's first year, one of the greatest
coaches to ever coach, the Mount Rushmore coaches. Right after being head coached my Jets for one day.
I know. One day. He resigned on a napkin that said, I no longer.
you know, I'm resigning as the head coach of the New York Jets and ends up going to the Patriots.
Coach Belichick had a lot to prove.
He saw something in me where I had a lot to prove.
And it was a match made in heaven.
And he took me under his wing.
And in another crazy story, I was really responsible to get drafted by the New England Patriots by a coach by the name of Dick Raybine.
Dick Raybine came to the University of Michigan.
He was the quarterback coach for the Patriots.
He worked me out, came back and reported back to the Patriots.
Very good workout.
He's definitely a prospect.
Nobody else worked me out.
Washington Redskins at the time worked me out.
So New England comes in Dick Raybine's my quarterback coach.
And Dick Raybine, my first year in New England, we didn't have a very good year, five and 11.
we go into my second year and in training camp Dick Raybine is jogging on a treadmill and has a heart attack on the treadmill
passes away in that moment and it was heartbreaking for all of us and we really dedicated our season in 2001 to coach
Raybine and because he couldn't obviously you know he wasn't the quarterback coach we didn't have a
quarterback coach, Coach Belichick became the quasi quarterback coach.
And he would come in and instruct the quarterbacks.
This is how we're going to read defense.
This is how we're going to read coverages.
This is how you're going to understand formation, shifts, motions.
I'm going to teach all you quarterbacks how defenses are called.
And it was just such an eye-opening experience for me to have coach Belichick coming in as our
as our quarterback coach.
And again, he took me under his wing.
he embraced everything that I was.
He knew my strengths,
and we developed a very special relationship over that time.
And you start that season, not as a starter,
Drew Bledsoe gets hurt,
and then a minute later,
I'm sure there's 800 things that happen in between,
you're winning the Super Bowl.
Yeah.
What was any reflections as that was happening
on how improbable that was coming as a six-round pick
and going back and not starting as a freshman
high school, how much do you reflect at that point on your life? What's happening? What's happened?
How does that land for you? Or you're just like, hey, like, you know, I knew I was going to work.
I knew I was going to get here. Like, what is it like? So of course when I wanted to go to college,
like, yeah, I'm going to go play college football. Of course, I'm going to play Michigan. Yeah,
I'll go take on the other guys. Then at the end of my college career, well, of course I'm going to
go play pro football. So like that naive confidence I had in myself, obviously,
continued. So now Drew gets injured in week two, the Sunday after 9-11, two Sundays after 9-11,
and we're playing the Jets, Drew gets injured. And when I ran on the field, I thought, if I ever
get my chance, they're never going to take me off the field. And of course, we're going to do well,
because that's what I knew how to do. I had worked really hard to put myself in a position to succeed.
I got my opportunity, and I wanted to do a great job with it.
And in the moment wasn't too big for me.
I played at Michigan.
It was 110,000 fans.
In Foxborough Stadium, there was only 65,000.
It was a small venue compared to what I was used to in college.
So I end up playing for, you know, week two.
We lost the game.
We start the season 0 and 2.
The next game is the Indianapolis Colts.
They're undefeated.
We are hadn't won a game.
And it's my first real start.
And one of the great stories about that game was we ended up beating the Colts really bad.
40 plus points to like 17.
They had Peyton Manning's on the other side of the ball.
Of course, I'm so enamored by Peyton Manning because I thought he's like, you know, the guy that I looked up to even though it was just a year older than me.
I went up to, I saw Peyton and pregame warm up, but I went over to him and I said, hey, shook my, put my hand out.
Hey, hey, Peyton, I'm Tom Brady.
He goes, yeah, I know who you are.
And I was like, holy shit.
Peyton Manning knows who I am.
And we ended up intercepting two passes from Peyton Manning that day that were run back for touchdowns.
One by my teammate Otis Smith, who was a cornerback, and one was Thai law.
Coach Belichick comes into the locker room after the game.
And he wants to give out game balls.
And he gives out two game balls.
And he says, one game ball is for you, Otis Smith, not for your interception return for a touchdown,
but for your block that you made on tie.
I lost interception return for a touchdown.
And he said, the other game ball is for you, Ty, not for your interception return for a touchdown,
for the block that you gave to get Otis Smith into the end zone on his interception
return for a touchdown.
And if you think about that, that is the ultimate team sport.
Football, the glory doesn't go to the person who makes to play.
It goes to all the guys who contributed to a teammate making.
the play. That's what I loved about the sport. I throw a touchdown pass and yeah, it was great.
Everyone wants to talk about, oh, Brady throws it to Gruncowski. Brady throws it to Troy Brown for a
touchdown. I wanted to celebrate with the offense alignment. I wanted to celebrate with the guys
who are blocking for me up front. It's just that's the sport. And the more we can get back to that,
the better the sport's going to be. It's always about us. It's always about we. It's not about
me and life, whether it's a successful business, family, sports team, it's always about us. What can
I contribute? They're energy givers and their energy takers. The more people that can give energy
and you wake up every day going, how can I serve you as my teammate? How can I serve you as my
partner? How can I serve you as my parent? Like, that is the best way to go about life,
is how do you serve other people? And how can you give back? And that's what the foundation
of our team was built on at the Patriots over a very long career.
We won the Super Bowl that first year, and because of the values created by the team and the
culture we built, that continued on through the early part of my Patriot career.
And then those values really began to just become so rooted in everything we did.
It was always about the team.
It was always about serving each other as teammates to go out there and be the best we can be.
And that's what I valued more than anything in sports.
Amen.
So from that place, if folks are listening out there
and final couple minutes here together,
what would you want them to know about how they could trust the people,
whether it's a coach, a boss, a leader,
how they can trust people or not, right?
Because there's leaders that aren't serving the team
and growing and effective.
And then there's people like you played for and mentored you.
What would you say to people about that
in difficult decision?
You know, the moment of Daniel son, the COBRA Kai Johnny thing,
and then the Daniel and Mr. Miyagi thing, you know,
Johnny shouldn't have been listened to.
It looks like the Kobe Kai people.
Like how would you, what advice would you give to people about discerning leadership
and, you know, being coached and led by people?
So I think trust is built up through shared experience and communication.
And I would say pure intentions.
And people can manipulate people through life.
and tell people what they want to hear
in order to get something that they want,
which is not my style of communication.
I believe that leaders should always do two things
that are critical to success
and critical to leadership.
You should care about the people that you work with
and you should care about the mission
that you're trying to accomplish.
If your individual personal agenda supersedes either of those two,
you're never going to be defined as a great leader.
When I see people,
on TV talking about I and me as it relates to teams or corporations or I think, yeah, that's
not going to work. Because great leaders always give the credit to the others. And great leaders
also take the blame when things don't go right. And that's how you endure yourself to a group of people.
In fact, you should always point the finger back at yourself. You should always think about any
critical evaluation about something that doesn't go right should always start with yourself.
What can I do better? What could I have done more of to support the cause? What could I have done?
What did I learn from this experience? And then you try not to repeat it. And we're always going to
make mistakes. Life is about making mistakes and learning from them. In fact, if you push the limits
and you try to do things that are very challenging, you're going to fail. And the reality,
is within yourself, when you do fail, what kind of resilience do you have within you?
What have you built up within yourself to try to solve that problem through failure
that if you do solve it, you can gain a tremendous amount of self-confidence and self-esteem
because you realize that you are the solution, that you're not a victim, that you're
someone that if you work hard, if you are humble, if you have self-awareness, if you have a
growth mindset and you have a relentless work ethic to figure these things out, you will overcome
it. You aren't a victim of your circumstance. You are the solution to your life. It's your
choice. It's your day. What do you want to make of it? Yeah, you can choose whatever you want.
Every day we got opportunities to choose. And it's up to you. It's your life. Whatever you want
to choose, you can do, you can go for it.
Well, thank you for that.
Final question after quick acknowledgement.
What you did when the transition happened from Patriots to Tampa Bay, I think it was one
the most remarkable stories in the history of sport.
Seven Super Bowl, all these other incredible people didn't win without those coaches.
And you did.
And I have 9,000 questions to ask, but we are at time.
So this final question, you're competitive.
You have a heart.
You have a why and a purpose, never ending.
You feel a fire inside of you, Tom.
What do you still compete at?
And what does it look like if it's a hundred years from now and it's your final day in this planet?
What happens from this day to that day that you'd want to add to the preposterous legacy?
Amazing matchable legacy you've already created.
So I want to, I think the competition is me versus me.
It's myself today versus the version of myself yesterday and the improvement that I can make on a daily basis.
whether it's physically, mentally, or emotionally to live the life that I want to live.
And every day there's different priorities.
You know, it's funny.
Sometimes I work out in the morning.
I talk to my therapist after that, and then I go work on my career stuff after that.
So in some ways, I work on my physical, I work on my emotional, and then I go work on my mental.
And that well-rounded part of me allows me to live the life.
that I want to live and continue to push myself.
And I think, you know, many years from now,
I hope that I've surrounded myself with people
that push me to hold myself to a high standard.
And I push them to hold themselves to a high standard too.
That, again, when you have the fortunate things
that have happened in my life,
I realize how blessed I am.
And then I think, how can I continue to be a good example
for, you know, myself and others?
And I have kids that,
that are the light of my life.
They motivate me and inspire me every day
to be the best dad that I can be.
And then I work with other people
that I've committed myself to.
And I wanna be the best I can be for them.
And whatever I say I'm gonna do,
I wanna follow through and do.
Awesome. Well, it has been an honor and privilege
to be with what I will call
the greatest leader and winner in sports history.
And I know there's complex ways to measure that
and somebody that was the bane of my existence
as a jet fan.
to sitting here, massive gratitude,
wish you all the best, of course, with the card vault.
Thank you.
And everything you do, the world needs leaders like you,
and you're one of the greatest leaders on planet Earth.
Thank you, Mr. Talway.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
So great to meet you.
Oh, great to meet you.
And you keep up the great work as well.
You're doing amazing things.
Great job.
Thank you, sir.
