LAS VEGAS — The divorce was supposed to be amicable, but the papers just got torn up in public. With the New England Patriots just days away from a Super Bowl LX showdown against the Seattle Seahawks, the franchise’s greatest icon has officially gone rogue. Tom Brady, the man who delivered six Lombardis to Foxborough, refused to back his old squad on Tuesday, claiming he has “no dog in the fight.” The response from Patriots Nation? Absolute fury.
The Betrayal Heard ‘Round the World
It wasn’t just a polite “no comment.” Brady, now a minority owner of the Las Vegas Raiders, went out of his way to declare neutrality on his “Let’s Go!” podcast. “May the best team win,” Brady said, dismissing 20 years of history with a corporate shrug. He praised the “Mike Vrabel regime” but stopped short of the one thing New England fans demanded: loyalty.
The neutrality might satisfy the NFL’s ownership conflict-of-interest rules, but it didn’t fly with the guys who bled beside him. The backlash was instant, personal, and loud.
Legends Unleashed
Vince Wilfork, the defensive anchor for two of Brady’s championship runs, didn’t care about Brady’s new business ties. He wanted the truth.
“That’s bullsh*t, Tom. Come on now. All that political—this ain’t political. It ain’t political, what it is. The Raiders ain’t in it. Say what it is, what you see? At the end of the day, if you’re a Patriot for life, you know what it is.” — Vince Wilfork, 2x Super Bowl Champion
Asante Samuel, never one to hold back, took it a step further. Samuel played with both Brady and current Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel during the early dynasty years (2003-2007). He sees the snub as a direct slight against Vrabel, who has miraculously turned the post-Belichick Patriots back into contenders in just his first season.
“Tom Brady I am highly, I mean highly disappointed in you not rooting for your ex-teammate, Mike Vrabel, who is about to do something special. I’m going to fye your ass up one of these mornings.” — Asante Samuel, via X (formerly Twitter)
The “Portnoy” Factor
Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy, effectively the voice of the aggrieved Patriots fanbase, went nuclear. Portnoy tweeted that Brady’s indifference proves the quarterback “doesn’t give a sh*t about us anymore.” It’s a harsh realization for a fanbase that built a statue for the guy outside Gillette Stadium.
Analysis: Why the Cold Shoulder?
Brady isn’t just being petty; he’s protecting an investment. As a partial owner of the Raiders, publicly rooting for another AFC team—even his former one—creates a messy optics problem for the league. But try explaining “corporate optics” to a fanbase that watched him orchestrate the 28-3 comeback.
The irony is thick. The last time the Patriots were here, Brady was under center, grinding out a 13-3 win over the Rams in 2019. Now, he’s watching from a luxury box, wallet thick with Raiders equity, while his old linebacker buddy Mike Vrabel tries to finish the job against the very team (Seattle) Brady gutted in Super Bowl 49.
Playoff Implications: The Vrabel Effect
While the drama swirls, the game itself is a massive legacy check. A win on Sunday cements Mike Vrabel as the true heir to the New England throne, proving the “Patriot Way” can survive without Brady or Belichick. The Patriots defense has looked ferocious this postseason, channeling the energy of those early-2000s squads. If they shut down Seattle, Brady’s silence won’t matter—the new dynasty will have officially begun without him.

