Finneran: Tom Brady, Blessed By An Angel

Tom Finneran, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Finneran: Tom Brady, Blessed By An Angel

That was some football game they played on Sunday. A seesaw contest between two very good teams and an absolutely fabulous final five minutes. Some thoughts---

Tom Brady
TOM BRADY: If you are ever in Tom Brady’s company, buy a Lottery ticket. This guy has the best guardian angel in God’s kingdom. Forget the super-model multi-millionaire wife, the handsome kids, the chiseled good looks, and the great athletic ability. All of that adds to the aura of our Tom, but he also has a certain je ne sais quoi, an indispensable element in capturing and holding the public’s respect and attention. He was absolutely magnificent in the Patriots’ opening drive, as precise as a surgeon until, inexplicably, he made one of the worst throws of his storied career, giving Seattle an easy interception right on their goal line.

A second interception and a badly missed throw to a wide-open Julian Edelman in the end zone had set the stage for a Tom Brady as goat storyline. Lesser quarterbacks would have folded under the pressure of the moment, dragged under by the type of mistakes that cause good teams to lose football games. But as he has done time and time again during his personal march to the Hall of Fame, Brady stared down a ten point deficit and a tenacious Seattle defense with a clinic on NFL quarterbacking. Those two final drives were the stuff of legend, storybook football lessons which you’ll still be telling your kids about twenty years from now. Buy that Lottery ticket.

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NFL “GENIUSES”: That word, genius, is completely overworked in our society, and particularly so in the NFL. Two examples—1) the League’s many geniuses passed repeatedly on Tom Brady in his draft year, leaving him to the sixth round, while picking more than 190 other players before finally choosing him; call young Brady chopped liver or second-hand goods, the geniuses missed the jewel; 2) Seattle’s coaching geniuses made the dumbest most inexplicable call of all time while camped on the Patriots’ goal line, leaving Marshawn Lynch, the League’s best runner, completely idle and choosing to throw a high risk pass into heavy traffic. These are not examples of genius at work.

A SUGGESTION: Might NBC (and other broadcast networks) consider ending the utter foolishness of sideline reporters asking dopey questions of beleaguered coaches who are determined to say nothing at all? It’s a colossal and worthless distraction. So too with Al Michaels’ forcing in meaningless and irrelevant historical comparisons, often times talking over the actual play in the actual game as if some team statistic from twenty years ago has significance to the ongoing battle. Cris Collinsworth on the other hand is superb—knowledgeable about the finer points of the game and crisp in his delivery.

THE COMMERCIALS: The airline passenger with the Doritos was the best ad, hands-down. Budweiser’s ads were pretty good too. Honorable mention goes to the “you know you want a truck” ads and Turbo Tax’s tax preparation ad with the British soldiers and the Boston Tea Party. Most of the others were eminently forgettable, particularly the repulsive ads about idiotic and repulsive movies. Are American audiences really that mindlessly stupid? Hollywood badly needs an enema.

DREAMS COME TRUE: There were two fairy-tale stories on the field there in Arizona. Seattle receiver  Chris Matthews, whose most recent job was with Foot Locker, and Patriots’ defensive back Malcolm Butler, recently an employee at Popeye’s, had their young fantasies fulfilled in the biggest game of their lives. We sometimes forget that these players are still just kids, barely out of college and just hoping for a chance to stick with the team. They now have stories for their grandchildren. Stories for the ages, good stories. I hope that they’re blessed with good health and much success.

POOR GLENDALE: By all accounts the City of Glendale, host site to the big game, took a bath financially. When will they ever learn? The NFL has suckered cities and states into subsidizing their billionaires’ buildings for years. Why any Mayor, Representative, or Senator would ever commit taxpayers’ money to these stadia is beyond me. The decision to subsidize inevitably means that education, public safety, and transportation get leftovers and crumbs. It’s a very raw deal for the taxpayers. If they are asked (more frequently threatened) to “invest”, where is their equity in the franchise? Every other business in America takes financial responsibility for its premises. Let the NFL do the same.

BEST OF THE BEST: Tom Brady gives the new truck he won as the game’s MVP to Malcolm Butler, the unsung unknown kid who saved the Patriots from defeat. Great play by Butler, great move by Brady. And they all lived happily ever after………………………………………

Tom Finneran is the former Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, served as the head the Massachusetts Biotechnology Council, and was a longstanding radio voice in Boston radio.


The New England Patriots - Greatest Team Ever

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