Tom Brady named a handful of players who did not like to be beaten by


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Tom Brady was able to avoid being hit by the defenders during most of his career, without the only shot in the knee that cost him the entire 2008 season before he could really get underway.

The seven -time Super Bowl champion was fired 565 times in 335 games as a field marshal, which is good for a percentage of 4.48 percentage.

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The New England Patriots Field Marshal, Tom Brady, #12, passes when the defensive wing of the Houston Texans, JJ Watt, #99, hastened during the game at the NRG stadium in Houston on December 13, 2015. (Kevin Jairaj-USA Today Sports)

He revealed in the podcast “unpaulsive” the players he had “afraid of being hit.

“Many boys,” Brady told Logan Paul. “Ray Lewis was on top. Ndamukong Suh, I didn’t like being beaten by him. Jj Watt was not very fun to be hit. Haloti Ngata. Do you remember?

“So yes, as, that’s not fun.”

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The New England Patriots field marshal, Tom Brady, #12, slides before being hit by the internal supporter of the Baltimore Ravens, Ray Lewis, #52, during the second quarter of the AFC championship game at the Gillette stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, on January 20, 2013. (David Butler II-USA Today Sports)

It was rare for Brady to hurt. The most memorable injury occurred when the former security of Kansas City bosses, Bernard Pollard, hit the New England Patriots Low star in his confrontation of week 1 in 2008. Brady broke his ACL and lost the whole season.

He returned the next season and launched for 4,398 yards and 28 touchdown passes. He did not win another Super Bowl with the Patriots until 2014.

Brady had 251-82 as a marshal regular and established records of all time for air yards (89,214 yards) and TouchDowns (649).

The defensive extremes of Houston Texans, Antonio Smith, #94, and JJ Watt, #99, Pressing New England Patriots Tom Brady, #12, during the second quarter in Reliant Stadium in Houston on December 1, 2013. (Troy taormina-USA Today Sports)

He retired after the 2022 season with the Bay Buccaneers.

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