Tom Brady Faces Backlash Over Lamar Jackson Comment After Ravens TD

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Even though Tom Brady is still getting the hang of being an NFL analyst, he was criticized for his comments whenever he analyzed the Ravens quarterback Lamarr Jackson. While playing against the Cowboys, Jackson ran with the ball to score a nine-yard touchdown in the first quarter.

While approaching the end zone scenario, Brady’s words were ‘How fast is Lamar? Water fast’ and couldn’t be less in extent expounded. As a result, the fans turned to social media and vented their anger over his obvious remark.

On X, a user said, “Tom Brady is saying something that everyone knows like it is a very important thing,” in jest. Another user derisively remarked, “In other news, water is wet,” which was about him.

That was not the only time such criticisms were leveled. Other fans even brought up the fact that Brady signed a ten-year deal with Fox Sports for 375 million dollars, and some fans' funds had better be worth such income.

Brady Early Struggles

Even before this broadcasting disappointment, Brady has had to deal with such unfriendly comments before.

In Week 1 Brady debuted in Fox Sports, covering the Cowboys victory over the Browns; he was received positively and negatively. For example, he emphasized: “It is easy to give ten. It is difficult to give twenty”.

In that sense, the supporters were the first to complain about this awkward phrase, and Brady himself imputed before the second week that it was “a couple of things that were there to clean up”. Various sentiments were expressed, but even for Tom, it cannot get worse in Week 2 covering Cowboys vs.

Saints game. That seems to be the case here where Tom received such compliments, and a fan tweeted “Tom Brady is already way more comfortable and natural in the booth this week than he was in week 1”. Another fan on the other hand came out to assert that Brady was a good analyst: “So, sorry about this news, but today he is doing some insightful analysis, creative, and not cliché, in small portions”.

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