LOS ANGELES — The Greatest of All Time wanted back in, but the NFL slammed the door shut. Tom Brady recently admitted he inquired about a sensational return to the gridiron, only for the league to shoot down the idea. Despite the rejection, sports media firebrand Skip Bayless is leading a public charge to get the seven-time Super Bowl champion back under center for the 2026 season.
The League Says No to Number 12
During a revealing sit-down with CNBC Sports this week, Brady dropped a bombshell that shifted the focus of the entire sports world. The 48-year-old legend confirmed he reached out to league officials to see if a comeback was possible. The answer was a cold, hard no. “I actually have inquired, and they don’t like that idea very much,” Brady said. He claimed he is currently “very happily retired,” but his admission that he “explored a lot of different things” suggests the fire still burns hot. Brady officially walked away after the 2022 season with 89,214 passing yards and 649 touchdowns, but three years on the sidelines haven’t dampened his competitive spirit.
The league’s resistance likely stems from Brady’s complicated ties to the business side of the game. He isn’t just a former player; he’s a 5% owner of the Las Vegas Raiders and the lead voice in the Fox broadcasting booth. Entering the locker room as a player while holding equity in a rival franchise creates a massive conflict of interest and salary cap headache that the NFL isn’t ready to solve. Still, seeing Brady dodge defenders and fire “lasers” at the Fanatics Flag Football Classic last week in LA made fans wonder if he could still carry a pro offense.
“COME ON, NFL, LET TOM BRADY PLAY!”— Skip Bayless, X (formerly Twitter)
The Ownership Trap: Why a Return Is Stuck
The path back to the field is blocked by red tape. Under current league rules, a player cannot hold an ownership stake in a team while active on a roster. Brady would have to sell his piece of the Raiders to even lace up his cleats. Then there is the matter of his $375 million contract with Fox. Network executives likely won’t enjoy their star analyst risking a season-ending injury on a Sunday afternoon instead of talking through one.
The air at BMO Stadium was electric when Brady took the field for flag football on March 21. He looked like the man who led the Buccaneers to an 8-9 record and an NFC South title in his final year, even at nearly 50 years old. He hasn’t taken a real NFL hit in three full seasons, but his presence alone would turn any struggling contender into a prime-time draw. For now, however, the “GOAT” remains a suit-and-tie executive rather than a jersey-wearing hero.

