Tom Brady threw cold water on the idea that he would suit up until age 50. Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports

During Super Bowl week, Tom Brady said he would consider playing past age 45 — his long-held target year. The Buccaneers then signed the superstar quarterback to an extension that pushes his two-year contract to a three-year pledge.

Brady is now signed through 2022. GM Jason Licht later floated age 50 as a (perhaps half-serious) consideration, but Brady is not making any hard plans beyond next season. Brady said, via USA Today’s Jori Epstein:

“Fifty? That’s a long time. Even for me, that’s a long time. I’ve always said 45 was the age that I wanted to reach and that was my goal. This year I’ll be 44, so next year I’ll be 45. I got a two-year contract. I’m going to be able to obviously play this year and God forbid anything happens but play next year and then see what happens after that.

“If I still want to keep playing, I might be able to do that. And if that’s enough, then that would be enough.”

Quarterbacks have played through age-44 seasons; Vinny Testaverde, Warren Moon and Steve DeBerg suited up at 44. George Blanda played until he was 48, but the quarterback/kicker was almost exclusively a kicker following his age-44 season. While Testaverde started six games for the 2007 Panthers — a year after serving as Brady’s backup — Brady will be the only full-time QB1 at this age. Blanda is the only player to have thrown a pass at age 45, so Brady making it to 2022 as Tampa Bay’s starter would add to his list of NFL firsts.

Brady has managed to avoid serious injury for more than 10 years, missing only the four games mandated by the Deflategate ban since his September 2008 ACL tear. Although Brady underwent knee surgery this offseason, he was back in time for Tampa Bay’s minicamp. The Super Bowl LV MVP will attempt to lead a Bucs title defense over a 17-game season this year and, barring a significant injury, is almost certain to return in 2022. Brady’s health will likely determine his 2023 plans.

“I’ll just have to evaluate all that when it comes,” Brady said. “It’s a physical sport; anything could happen. So I’m going to go out there this year and give everything I’ve got like I’ve done every other year, and then take it from there.”

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Luka Doncic trying to replicate a feat not achieved since 2000
The time needs to be now for Connor McDavid, Oilers to win Stanley Cup
Watch: Austin Cindric wins at Gateway after Ryan Blaney runs out of fuel on final lap
White Sox's Tommy Pham voices frustrations in profane interview
Eye-popping stat highlights Iga Swiatek's dominance in fourth round of French Open
Luka Doncic calls Mavericks' jump from NBA Draft Lottery to 2024 NBA Finals 'insane'
Yankees' Aaron Boone reveals rehab assignment date for ace pitcher
WNBA upgrades hard foul on Caitlin Clark to a Flagrant 1
Steelers could ‘get a little weird’ with usage of Justin Fields, says insider
Dustin Poirier teases retirement following his loss to Islam Makhachev at UFC 302
Watch: Robert MacIntyre claims emotional first PGA Tour win with dad as caddy
11 NFL teams gain cap space from post-June 1 cuts
Watch: Shuttered college's baseball team's magical run ends on walk-off HR
Commanders release kicker Brandon McManus following his lawsuit
Giants ace Blake Snell's season just went from bad to worse on Sunday
Yuka Saso rallies to win her second U.S. Women's Open
Ryan Blaney's misfortune is Austin Cindric's gain after wild final lap at Gateway
Tigers to promote outfielder with stellar batting eye
Report: NFL expected to reach resolution on Eagles', Falcons' tampering cases this week
Blue Jays GM has no interest in entertaining trade offers for star players

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.