Rob Gronkowski comments on Tom Brady broadcasting Tom Brady is already breaking records in his upcoming craeer as a broadcaster and it hasn’t even taken off yet. He signed an unprecedented deal with Fox worth $375 million across 10 years to call live NFL games in the booth, despite the fact that he has never done so before. It’s reportedly the largest contract ever given to any broadcaster in sports history. He did, however, call the UFL championship game.
The NFL legend will make his highly-anticiapted debut in Week 1 of the 2024 NFL season in a nationally televised game between the Cleveland Browns and Dallas Cowboys. His former teammate Rob Gronkowski recently appeared on an episode of Good Morning Football to share his opinion on Brady’s transition to a new side of football.
Gronkowski explained:
.@RobGronkowski joined the show & it went exactly as you’d expect 😂@JoeyMulinaro pic.twitter.com/QamKGyQ3kC
— Good Morning Football (@gmfb) August 2, 2024
He added:
Dominating was clearly a theme for Brady during his career as a player, as he holds many NFL records. This includes the most wins, passing yards, touchdowns, and Super Bowl rings by any player ever.
Apparently Gronkowksi thinks that his former quarterback is in line to keep dominating in another area of football, where he has already set the record for being the highest-paid sports broadcaster of all-time.
Comparing Tom Brady’s Fox contract to other sports broadcasters
Tom Brady contract
When Fox signed Tom Brady to a $375 million contract across 10 years, he set the record for receiving the highest AAV for any sports broadcaster ever. In fact, he more than doubled any other salary for a booth analyst and reportedly became the highest-paid person in sports media.
Tony Romo most recently set the record with $18 million in AAV with CBS and ESPN matched that number for Troy Aikman. They are making less than half of what Brady’s deal pays him at $37.5 million in AAV.
The next closest person in sports media is reportedly Jim Rome, who earns an AAV of $30 million from CBS after his long and successful career. The major difference is that Brady has yet to even call an NFL game, so his career is just getting started.