For a retired guy, Tom Brady has a lot of jobs. He has a five-percent ownership stake in the Las Vegas Raiders. He is also Fox's lead football announcer. Earlier this month, Fox announced that Brady will be making an "epic return from retirement for the greatest flag football event ever," which is, inevitably, going to be held in Saudi Arabia. There's also TB12, "the method inspired by Tom Brady," though who knows how much involvement he has here.
Are we just picking numbers out of a hat and reporting them? While we're breaking news... Elvis is doing the halftime show, and babe Ruth is gonna sign some autographs for fans. Also I heard Dave prefers floppy pizza. Who cares about facts right? 😂 https://t.co/1pBq2FTj49- Tom Brady (@TomBrady) September 22, 2025
"There are no policies that prohibit an owner from sitting in the coaches' booth or wearing a headset during a game," NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said. "Brady was sitting in the booth in his capacity as a limited partner. "All personnel sitting in the booth must abide by policies that prohibit the use of electronic devices other than league-issued equipment such as a Microsoft Surface Tablet for the Sideline Viewing System."
On top of the conflict of interest that comes with being both a part-owner of the Las Vegas Raiders and a Fox commentator, and in between his duties as " guy who says fuck and denigrates Birmingham City, the soccer club he co-owns," Brady has now signed up to do some good old fashioned sportswashing. On Monday, Brady announced that he will return to the football field for the, ugh, Fanatics Flag Football Classic, a three-team tournament set to be held in March of 2026
That retriction has been lifted, NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy confirmed to The Times on Wednesday morning. There is one caveat, however - Brady must attend those meetings remotely. He is still prohibited from going to a team facility for practices or production meetings, McCarthy said. Brady is allowed to interview players off site, as he did on occassion last year, McCarthy said.
Brady was part of a guest list in President Trump's suite that included Rupert Murdoch, FIFA president Gianni Infantino, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, and U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem.