Weighing Tom Brady’s contract options — Will he stay in New England or go?

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FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Tom Brady‘s future is not only the biggest story in the NFL in the coming months, but maybe in all of sports.

It is rare, but not unprecedented, that such an iconic figure finds himself in this situation: a free agent who made $23 million in 2019 with the leverage to dictate his destination. Adding further intrigue is that it is unknown to what extent New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick values Brady’s return.

Will Brady, 42, be back with the Patriots for a 21st season? Or should New England fans prepare themselves to see Brady in a different uniform in 2020?

Let’s break down the situation:

How did we get to this point?

Brady and the Patriots failed to come to an agreement on a true extension by August, so they adjusted the contract to give him a raise in 2019. As part of the adjusted contract, the Patriots included two voidable years in 2020 and 2021 for salary-cap purposes. The voidable years ensured Brady would become a free agent after the 2019 season. The adjusted contract also prohibited the Patriots from assigning Brady the franchise tag, which would have guaranteed Brady the average salary of the top five highest-paid players at his position or 120% of his salary from the previous year (whichever of the two amounts is higher).

Does Brady want to stay?

Brady hasn’t decisively answered that question publicly, although he was open to signing a true multiyear extension as of last offseason. How the dynamics have changed for him since — after the sides couldn’t reach a deal, the Pats went through a 12-4 season in which they were disappointingly light on offensive firepower around their quarterback and the team ended its campaign with a wild-card loss Saturday — is an unknown. Family considerations will be a notable part of his decision-making process.

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Tim Hasselbeck and Ryan Clark discuss what Tom Brady’s future with the Patriots looks like now that he’s a free agent.

Does Belichick want him back?

Only one person has the answer — he often wears a hoodie and his initials are B.B. — and he isn’t tipping his hand. Here’s what Belichick said during his season-ending news conference Sunday regarding Brady:

“I want to give the proper attention and communication and detail and thought into my input into those decisions,” he said. “But any decision made is not an individual decision. There are other people involved. There has to be some type of communication, understanding, agreement, whatever you want to call it. That’s not a one-way street. I hope you can understand that. One person can’t just decide what everybody else is going to do.

“There’s a lot of time, thought and effort and communication that goes into that. Now is not the time.”

But any decision regarding Brady, or any player, usually comes down to one question with Belichick: At what cost? The coach has made the unpopular decision to move away from franchise quarterbacks in the past (Bernie Kosar to Vinny Testaverde in Cleveland; Drew Bledsoe to Brady in New England), and he has a history of removing emotion in personnel decisions he views as best for the team.

Is there a timetable for a decision?



Source : ESPN