FOXBORO — Tom Brady didn’t deliver any verbal hand grenades. He didn’t chastise the league or call out commissioner Roger Goodell and his henchmen for all the misery he was forced to endure throughout the Deflategate fiasco.
There weren’t any angry mentions of league counsel Jeff Pash or investigator Ted Wells during the five minutes Brady spoke at his locker.
No, that’s not really his style.
For the Super Bowl MVP, all his aggression and passion will be reserved for the football field. That’s where you’ll see No. 12’s fire come out.
So instead, the Patriots quarterback, addressing the media yesterday for the first time since having his four-game suspension wiped out by federal Judge Richard Berman, while making his first public comments on the subject since February, chose to keep his thoughts on the matter private.