It looks like when Tom Brady loses a game, he doesn’t want to spend much time talking about it in press conferences. Brady had to storm out of a press conference after a loss to WTF!
Brady was not in the talkative mood after the game.
Tom Brady didn’t say much in his postgame press conference on Sunday — 82 words across three questions and 58 seconds to be exact.
After Brady’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers lost a 29-19 game to the Washington Football Team, he walked behind the podium and told reporters, “Who wants to start? Make it quick.” Brady then fielded three questions — about not executing splash plays, the difficulties kick-starting the offense after a bye week, and throwing two interceptions — before leaving the podium less than a minute later.
He finished 23-of-34 against Washington for 220 yards with two touchdowns, but threw multiple first-quarter interceptions for the first time since 2012 — and it was just his second and third first-quarter interceptions since signing with the Buccaneers, according to NFL Research. His first interception came at the nine-minute mark, when a pass popped off the hands of wide receiver Jaelon Darden. The second one came about six minutes later after Brady overthrew Mike Evans near midfield
The quarterback for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers posted a video of his interview with Jim Gray on Twitter and wrote:
Press conferences after a loss are like co-workers emailing you before you’ve had your coffee… I mean I don’t drink coffee, but I imagine that’s what it’s like..
Via Total Pro Sports:
Based on his interview with Jim Gray, it seems like Brady is in much better spirits just three days after that tough loss. But if the Bucs lose their week 11 contest against the New York Giants on Monday night, I’d hate to be the one to ask that first question at his next post-game presser.
Flip to the next page to watch Tom Brady walked out of a press conference and his interview with Jim Gray explaining why he walked out.
            
            
                            
                            
                            
                            