Editor’s note: Sources have told ESPN that Tom Brady is retiring from football after 22 seasons in which he won a historic seven Super Bowl titles. The following story on the quarterback’s global impact was published Jan. 11, before the two-game postseason run of Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers run began.
It’s been more than 20 years since Tom Brady launched an NFL career worthy of every award and acclaim imaginable. Along the way, he has also become the league’s first global superstar. Like Babe Ruth and Michael Jordan before him, Brady has helped to elevate a sport that was mostly confined to North America and managed to spread its popularity to unexpected places.
Brady is the the first true ambassador of a league intent on global relevance. Trips to Brazil, Japan, Ghana and other spots have brought adoring fans from out of the woodwork. During a 2017 trip to China, throngs of photographers lined up to catch him tossing a football while standing on the Great Wall.
The fandom Brady has cultivated internationally is passionate and also a testament to the enormous impact one transcendental player has had on behalf of an entire sport. In recognition of this, we took a look at Brady’s international history and, with help from ESPN journalists abroad, also spoke to fans around the world about the role he has played not only in their love of football but in their lives as well.
A common theme among these accounts? “GOAT” translates well in any language or culture.
Brazil: ‘Gisele’s husband’ inspires doppelgangers
Already a popular figure among Brazil’s budding community of football fans, Tom Brady became a cultural mainstay in the country when he married Brazilian model and activist Gisele Bundchen in 2009. In the early days of their marriage, Brazilian media would constantly refer to Brady almost exclusively as “Gisele’s husband,” rattling hardcore fans.
Guilherme Lopes
It’s become common to see Brady out and about at high-profile events in Brazil, such as Carnival. In 2018, Tom and Gisele took in one of Brazilian soccer’s most intense rivalries, Gremio vs. Internacional.
Brady’s exploding fame in Brazil has escalated to the point of inspiring a doppelganger contest. Last month, in its efforts to connect with more NFL fans in-season, ESPN Brazil launched a web series titled “Searching for Tom Brasa” (Brasa is slang for Brazilian in Portuguese), tasked with finding Brady’s perfect lookalike.
“People tagged me on Instagram saying [I look like Tom Brady],” said winner Marcelo Taporosky, 31. “I ended up taking part in the auditions and I won, becoming the official double of the living legend here in Brazil.”
Depois de tanto trabalho, vem a consagração. Neste último episódio, Tom Brasa recebe um convite inesperado e, junto com seus parças, ele vai parar nos estúdios da ESPN, divertindo nossos talentos com toda essa resenha e muitas outras zueiras. #BuscandoTomBasa pic.twitter.com/23ckuYOToZ
Devotion to Brady is such that Brazilians were faced with choosing player over team after the quarterback left the New England Patriots for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 2020 offseason.
“It took me a while to accept the fact that he was leaving,” said Sidney Torres, who founded the NE Patriotas fan site for Brazilian fans of the six-time Super Bowl champion Pats. “I prepared myself a little psychologically for his departure; [then] when he announced it, I wouldn’t be shocked. When I saw him passing to Rob Gronkowski [with the Bucs], it hit me.”
For others, like 39-year-old Guilherme Lopes, loyalty to Brady remains most important – regardless of his uniform. “Wherever he goes, I will follow him. I’m his fan forever. He is the GOAT,” Lopes said. “Even if one day he goes to the Jets and leads them to the playoffs. I will follow him wherever he goes.” – Gustavo Faldon
Phil Jones, from Derbyshire, England, remembers filtering through a clearance box at Super Bowl XXXV in early 2001. An avid collector, he watched the previous year’s Orange Bowl from a hotel room as Tom Brady capped his college career at Michigan by throwing four touchdowns in a spectacular win over Alabama and took a liking to the quarterback.
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Jones, 66, can recall seeing the infamous NFL combine video of a shirtless Brady on a scale.
“I remember thinking ‘How did he beat Alabama?'” Jones said.
A few months later, he even checked to see where Brady was drafted, then took him in the last round of his fantasy team that year.
So, when he came across four Brady rookie cards at a memorabilia event in the lead-up to Super Bowl XXXV, he asked what the seller wanted for them. The sixth-round rookie did not command much of a price, so Jones bought the cards for $6.
Included in the collection is an ungraded, non-numbered 2000 Playoff Contenders Tom Brady RC rookie card that appears to be autographed. A similar card fetched close to $50,000 online in October, but high returns for cards that aren’t graded or numbered are an anomaly.
“Tom Brady is my pension,” Jones joked.
Jones is perhaps one of the biggest NFL fans in the U.K. He is the joint-president of the BucsUK fan group, which he first joined in 1990, and has been to 12 Super Bowls – his first was in 1991; Super Bowl XXXV was his ninth. He even went to Brady’s first in 2002, a year after he bought the rookie collectibles, and sat behind the goalposts as Adam Vinatieri kicked the winning field goal for the Patriots.