
Tom Brady just casually dropped the bombshell that his current furry sidekick, Junie, is actually a scientific carbon copy of his beloved late pit bull mix, Lua. And honestly, it makes perfect sense. This is the same guy who’s been defying “Father Time” for decades, so why wouldn’t he give the middle finger to pet mortality too?
Tom Brady revealed that his current dog Junie is a clone of his late dog Lua, who died in December 2023, per @baileykrich
— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) November 4, 2025
The dogs were cloned by Colossal Biosciences, a biotech company that Brady is an investor in, using blood collected prior to Lua's death pic.twitter.com/1yEYrjILqz
Brady isn’t just throwing money at some sci-fi pet project for kicks. The emotional weight behind this decision hits harder than a Lawrence Taylor blindside blitz. When Lua passed away in December 2023, it clearly crushed the Brady household. His ex-wife Gisele Bündchen’s Instagram tribute said it all: “Our little Lulu, our guardian angel is gone to heaven. She will forever live in our hearts.”
The former Patriots and Bucs quarterback didn’t mince words about his motivation: “I love my animals. They mean the world to me and my family.” For a guy who’s usually more guarded than his offensive line, that kind of raw emotion speaks volumes. Brady and Bündchen had adopted Lua over a decade ago, and she became as much a part of the family as those seven championship rings.
Here’s where things get wild. Brady partnered with Colossal Biosciences, a company he’s actually invested in, to pull off what sounds like something out of a Marvel movie. Using a simple blood draw they collected before Lua’s death, scientists essentially hit the genetic copy-paste button and created Junie.
The process was “non-invasive,” according to Brady, which probably means it was easier than some of his fourth-quarter comebacks. Colossal Biosciences just acquired Viagen Pets and Equine. They have cloned everything from Barbra Streisand’s dog to Paris Hilton’s missing pup. They’ve even brought back 15 different species, including some that were practically extinct.
This isn’t just about bringing back a beloved family member. It is vintage Brady thinking three moves ahead. By investing in Colossal Biosciences, he’s betting on technology that could help families dealing with pet loss while simultaneously working to save endangered species. It’s like he’s running a play-action fake on grief itself.
The timing of his announcement wasn’t coincidental either. The quarterback revealed Junie’s true identity on the same day Colossal announced their Viagen acquisition. That is the kind of strategic coordination that made him the master of the two-minute drill.
What makes this story even more Brady-esque is how seamlessly Junie has apparently stepped into Lua’s role. The clone shares the same coloring and markings as the original, making the transition smooth. It is like having your favorite receiver run the same route—you know exactly what to expect.
The technology Brady leveraged represents a new frontier in how we might approach pet loss in the future. Sure, it’s expensive and probably not accessible to most families right now, but neither were cell phones thirty years ago.
At the end of the day, he found a way to keep his family whole after losing something precious. Whether you think it’s touching or totally bonkers, you have to admit it’s the most Tom Brady thing ever: taking an impossible situation and somehow finding a way to win.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!