GOAT—Greatest of All Time—is a hotly debated topic in every sport, and football is no exception. Everyone has their criteria for greatness:
Stats: Championships, MVP awards, and personal records.
Recognition: Peer reviews, expert opinions, and accolades.
Impact: Players who transcend the sport and leave a global cultural footprint.
Era: Dominating a competitive field of rivals often carries more weight than solitary, uncontested success.
These discussions frequently overlap with humor, as the acronym "GOAT" also means "a goat." Players often receive goat-themed gifts, further cementing their legendary status.
In the NFL, the GOAT debate is equally intense. Names like Joe Montana, Dan Marino, Brett Favre, Peyton Manning, and Aaron Rodgers dominate the conversation—just for quarterbacks. Expand the scope to other positions, and the list grows exponentially.
At the heart of this conversation stands Tom Brady, quarterback for the New England Patriots.
As the 2017 season approached, Brady's individual statistics—passing yards, passing touchdowns, and regular season MVP awards—didn't necessarily top the charts. Legends like Manning, Favre, and Drew Brees had stronger numbers in some categories.
But after leading an unprecedented comeback in Super Bowl LI to secure his fifth championship ring, Brady rocketed up GOAT discussions.
Pittsburgh Steelers: Six titles.
San Francisco 49ers and Dallas Cowboys: Five titles each.
The New England Patriots, led by Brady, joined this elite group, placing him in rarefied air.
Coupled with his Cinderella story—a sixth-round pick, 199th overall—Brady's ascent was the stuff of legend. A late-round underdog rising to NFL superstardom made him an icon, akin to a modern-day fairy tale.
For over 16 years, Brady and Manning defined the NFL's golden age, a rivalry for the ages. With Manning's retirement last season, Brady now stood alone as the league's undisputed face.
Every move Brady made sparked league-wide attention. He lived every second under the spotlight.
And yet, Brady never imagined someone else could steal that spotlight.
Especially not a rookie.
Especially not a running back.
When Brady was asked during a press conference about Kansas City's rookie sensation Lance, his first reaction was disbelief.
Angry? No. Annoyed? Maybe. Mostly, he found it ridiculous.
Brady chuckled, his signature calm demeanor intact.
"I'm sorry, I don't know. I haven't been following his games."
Polite. Honest. Truthfully, why would Brady bother keeping tabs on a rookie running back? They weren't on the same level.
In Brady's world, rookies—especially running backs—weren't worth the mental energy. No rookie this year had caught his eye, not even among the quarterbacks.
Lance? The rookie was so far off Brady's radar it might as well have been another galaxy.
But to the media, this was gold.
One player was the current face of the NFL; the other, the league's newest sensation. A generational icon versus a rookie phenom. A battle of past and future.
The narrative practically wrote itself. And the reporters weren't done poking the bear.
"Tom, you share the same agent as Lance. Didn't you cross paths during the offseason?"
Now, Brady was irritated. He wasn't just a football legend—he wasn't a babysitter. Even if he and Lance shared an agent, what did that matter? His offseason regimen was strictly off-limits to outsiders.
His tone sharpened.
"Donald? I'm not his agent. I wouldn't know his schedule."
The insinuation was absurd. Brady didn't even train with Patriots backup QB Jimmy Garoppolo, who also shared his agent. Why would Lance, a rookie, get such privileges?
Why would Brady even care?
The ridiculousness of the question caused Brady to lose patience entirely.
"So, does that mean you don't care about Lance's performance?"
Brady was done.
"No, I don't care at all."
Of course, Brady had heard of Lance. No one in the NFL could miss the buzz surrounding the league's first Asian-American first-rounder. The offseason headlines had been impossible to ignore.
But care? Not a chance.
A rookie running back? Even if Lance were from another planet, he still wouldn't be worth Brady's attention.
As Brady stormed out of the press conference, leaving a stiff, irritated silhouette behind, one thought lingered:
"Why am I wasting my time on this nonsense?"
"Brady: Lance is Irrelevant"
By the next morning, media headlines had a field day.
"Brady: Lance is Irrelevant."
It was the perfect bait, and it worked like a charm.
Players, coaches, and fans across the league jumped into the fray. Many had already grown weary of the constant media frenzy surrounding Lance. Brady's words became the rallying cry for those eager to knock the rookie down a peg.
A rookie. A running back. A newcomer.
In no time, the narrative shifted. Lance wasn't just facing Brady anymore. It became "Lance vs. Everyone."
For Lance, who had yet to play his first regular-season game, the league's hostility was swift and overwhelming.
What had started as a cheeky media stunt spiraled into a rookie vs. GOAT showdown.
The backlash was fierce, and Lance quickly became the NFL's most polarizing figure. Was it jealousy? Misplaced anger? Or just the internet being the internet?
Regardless, Lance now stood alone, a rookie under immense pressure.
The league's toughest stage awaited, and the mountain Lance had to climb was now steeper than ever.
But amid the madness, one truth stood clear:
Lance was no ordinary rookie.
And the story?
It had only just begun.
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Powerstones?
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