The NFL entered a quagmire of its own making on Monday.
During the Las Vegas Raiders' 20-9 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers, cameras captured Raiders minority owner and Fox color commentator Tom Brady with a headset on in Las Vegas' coaching booth. The only thing missing was a blinking neon sign reading, "CONFLICT OF INTEREST."
It was a poor look for the league, one that ESPN NFL analyst Marcus Spears suggested threatens its integrity during "First Take" on Tuesday morning.
"This should not happen with him being a commentator of NFL football games. It actually questions the integrity of the NFL," Spears said.
Marcus Spears on Tom Brady's dual roles with Fox and the Raiders: "It's abhorrent for me for his job. I love it for his team... this should not happen with him being a commentator of NFL football games. It actually questions the integrity of the NFL." pic.twitter.com/o7S55J1lul
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) September 16, 2025
The NFL dismissed the controversy, saying, "No policies ... prohibit an owner from sitting in the coaches' booth or wearing a headset during a game.
"Brady was sitting in the booth in his capacity as a limited partner," the NFL continued.
From the NFL on Tom Brady: “There are no policies that prohibit an owner from sitting in the coaches’ booth or wearing a headset during a game. Brady was sitting in the booth in his capacity as a limited partner.”pic.twitter.com/dmebVaOBYg
— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) September 16, 2025
Unless Brady underwent a "Severance"-like procedure, he remains the same person with the same memories and experiences as both a commentator and owner. And since that's a concept from a sci-fi Apple TV show and not real life, it's a comically absurd statement for the NFL to make.
To Spears' point, Brady is set to call the Dallas Cowboys-Chicago Bears in Week 3. The following week, the Raiders host the Bears. While his schedule won't allow him to be in the coaches' booth for that Week 4 game, who's to say what information he's giving offensive coordinator Chip Kelly during their two to three weekly meetings?
Under the current rules, which the league bent this offseason after not allowing Brady to attend pre-production meetings in 2024, teams would be foolish to provide much in-depth information to broadcasts featuring the seven-time Super Bowl-winning quarterback, instead sticking to simple, boilerplate phrases: "Avoid sacks and turnovers," "Control the line of scrimmage, "Establish the run." Things we've heard countless times before and could go without hearing again.
The NFL essentially told teams to be measured with what they say, also writing in its statement, "As with any production meeting ... it's up to the club, coach or players to determine what they say in those sessions."
Just in: NFL says Tom Brady, like any team owner, can sit in coaches booth and wear headsets during game. He's subject to rules in that booth as he is with restriction attending on site broadcast meetings: pic.twitter.com/lPFSomAeKW
— Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein) September 16, 2025
Broadcast booths should enhance the viewing experience, but that's less likely for Fox's No. 1 commentating team with Brady so closely entwined with the Raiders' game-day operations. That might not have been what the network had in mind when it handed him a 10-year, $375 million contract in May 2022.
Worse than that (the mute button exists for a reason), Brady's dual role as owner and broadcaster will likely increase scrutiny anytime he calls a game featuring future Raiders opponents. It's a line better left uncrossed, but Brady and the NFL are bulldozing through it anyway, the rest of the league and fans be damned.
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