At the age of 44, Tom Brady is playing like a 22-year-old. Nathan Ray Seebeck-USA TODAY Sports

At the ripe age of 44, Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady is doing things that those 20 years younger than him couldn’t even imagine.

The Philadelphia Eagles found that out first-hand in Tampa’s blowout 31-15 win in the NFC wild-card playoffs last weekend. Leading the defending champions to the win, Brady completed 29-of-37 passes for 271 yards with two touchdowns and zero interceptions.

This comes following a 2021 regular season in which Tom Terrific led all NFL quarterbacks in completions (485), attempts (719), passing yards (5,316) and passing touchdowns (43).

If you think that’s insane, get a load of this. The 44-year-old is older than every remaining opposing coach in the NFC playoffs. Each and every one.

That’s not a typo.

  • Kyle Shanahan, San Francisco 49ers: 42
  • Matt LaFleur, Green Bay Packers: 42
  • Sean McVay, Los Angeles Rams: 35

Brady against NFL playoff coaches

When Brady made his debut as a member of the New England Patriots back in November of 2000, he was 23 years old and 112 days.

To put this into perspective, Sean McVay was 14 years old and attending Marist High School in Brookhaven, Georgia. He was a freshman. You know, taking part in pep rallies, keg stands and dances with other teenagers.

Also in November of 2000, Shanahan wasn’t even of legal drinking age. So, what we he up to? He was a wide receiver with the Texas Longhorns — playing with the likes of Roy Williams and Major Applewhite.

As for LaFleur, in November of 2000 he was playing quarterback for Division II Saginaw Valley State before briefly playing for the Omaha Beef of the National Indoor Football League (that was a thing).

Oh, but we’re not even close to done here.

Back in 2010 when Brady was going strong for his former Patriots team, Shanahan, LaFleur and McVay were all assistant coaches for the Washington Football Team. Yeah, we had to throw some shade in the direction of disgraced owner Daniel Snyder and Co.

Brady and his Buccaneers will take on McVay’s Los Angeles Rams at home Sunday in the NFC divisional playoffs. A win here, and the seven-time Super Bowl winner will end up making his 15th appearance in a conference title game. Craziness!

WATCH: Sportsnaut’s Carolyn Manno on the latest NFL rumors

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Heat play 'Herro ball' to stun Celtics in Game 2
Lions extension makes Amon-Ra St. Brown the NFL's highest-paid receiver
Brad Marchand gets winner as Bruins beat Leafs to go up 2-1 in series
Reigning Cy Young winner's disastrous 2024 continues
Timberwolves C overcomes long odds, wins Sixth Man of the Year
Watch: Aaron Judge passes Derek Jeter on Yankees all-time home run list
Why it makes sense that the Steelers declined QB Justin Fields' fifth-year option
Heisman Trust's Reggie Bush decision another sign of NCAA's diminishing power
Peyton Manning rips Jets for failing QB Zach Wilson
'Baaaadd man' Shai Gilgeous-Alexander lifts Thunder to commanding Game 2 win
Golden Knights heading home up 2-0 on Stars
Watch: Thunder G Shai Gilgeous-Alexander sets new playoff high
Chargers reportedly targeting this former Jim Harbaugh player in draft
Watch: The Maple Leafs turn up the physicality in Game 3 vs. Bruins
Cavaliers forward to miss rest of first-round series
Latest report provides hint on Cowboys' feelings about Ezekiel Elliott reunion
Three-time Pro Bowl pass-rusher requests a trade from the Bengals
Commanders suddenly cut pass-rusher after NFL reinstatement
Watch: Pirates prospect Paul Skenes' remarkable streak ends
Cowboys make unsurprising move with Micah Parsons