
汤姆·布雷迪过去赚钱全靠“拼命”:在NFL最激烈的比赛中,他得顶住体重300磅的锋线球员的冲撞,奋力冲向底线。如今,他无需承受任何冲撞,仅凭解说获得的报酬,就超过了他在超级碗打球的收入。
福克斯(Fox)与布雷迪签下一份10年3.75亿美元的合约,折合年薪约为3,750万美元。这相当于他在超级碗LV时期、作为联盟薪资最高球员约2,500万美元年薪的15倍,而且这还不包括数十年来的绩效奖金、股权激励以及代言带来的附加收益。颇具讽刺意味的是,这位公认的史上最伟大四分卫,竟然是在退役后,才拿到了职业生涯最大的一笔酬劳。
不过,布雷迪退役后的职业生涯,也生动诠释了他长期推崇的一种理念:如果你想真正实现跨越式成长,“失败”其实大有裨益。
布雷迪在2024年《财富》全球论坛演讲时表示:“对我而言,失败是宝贵的财富。”他解释称,建立真正自信的唯一方式,就是把自己置于“不舒服的处境”中,坦然面对失误,然后再想办法解决问题。
他接着说道:“无论是你的事业还是职业生涯,本质上都是在克服逆境,而唯一的途径就是经历失败。”
他描述了一些领导者习惯性推卸责任的行为,就像四分卫坚称是接球手导致了失误。“我盯着屏幕,心里直犯嘀咕:你刚才说的这话,到底是什么意思?”
这种勇于承担错误并解决问题的心态,后来让布雷迪在电视解说的职业生涯中获益匪浅。
布雷迪在福克斯担任NFL首席解说员的“新秀赛季”,并不算顺利。据他本人坦言,他回看播出内容时会感到尴尬。
他会反问自己:“我当时为什么要这么说?我不喜欢那段,简直莫名其妙。”他是在一个规模堪比“一个小国人口”的每周观众面前,摸索着学习一门全新的职业技能,而且经常只是照本宣科地念完事先准备好的讲稿,缺乏及时的临场反应。
过度准备反而成了问题的症结所在。以“事无巨细”著称的布雷迪,准备了大量笔记和成堆的事实信息,反而让节目变得沉闷。他后来将这种状态形容为“信息过载”(TMI)。于是,他不再试图按照自己想象中的“解说员方式”去准备,而是重拾四分卫的思维模式。他在接受The Athletic采访时表示,他开始研究对阵情况、预判战术动向,并像球员时代那样制定“比赛计划”。到了第二年,布雷迪逐渐找到自己的节奏,不再依赖外部模板,表现有显著提升。
他的解说搭档凯文·伯克哈特在接受The Athletic采访时表示:“汤姆就是那个四分卫。我们的任务,就是当好队友,在第三档关键进攻时为他跑出空位。”
数据也印证了布雷迪的这种全情投入。进入第二个解说赛季后,他的“TB12”解说方法开始显现出可量化的成效。在2025-26赛季常规赛期间,福克斯的NFL收视率同比提升6%,场均观众人数达到1,870万,这是自1988年开始统计观众数据以来,该电视网的历史第二高水平。布雷迪在第二年的表现也赢得了“一致好评”。外界认为,他成功地从“解说员的思维模式”转向了“四分卫的本能判断”。理查德·戴茨等专家在一档播客节目中指出,布雷迪将实战经验融入解说,变得“更为专业”“条理清晰”,例如他根据护肩动作解析外接手追踪长传球落点,就给人留下了深刻印象。
而就像任何一名优秀的四分卫一样,布雷迪仍在精进自己的技艺。
布雷迪在接受The Athletic采访时坦言:“即便到现在,我可能还是传递了太多信息。我打算明年再做进一步精简。”(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
汤姆·布雷迪过去赚钱全靠“拼命”:在NFL最激烈的比赛中,他得顶住体重300磅的锋线球员的冲撞,奋力冲向底线。如今,他无需承受任何冲撞,仅凭解说获得的报酬,就超过了他在超级碗打球的收入。
福克斯(Fox)与布雷迪签下一份10年3.75亿美元的合约,折合年薪约为3,750万美元。这相当于他在超级碗LV时期、作为联盟薪资最高球员约2,500万美元年薪的15倍,而且这还不包括数十年来的绩效奖金、股权激励以及代言带来的附加收益。颇具讽刺意味的是,这位公认的史上最伟大四分卫,竟然是在退役后,才拿到了职业生涯最大的一笔酬劳。
不过,布雷迪退役后的职业生涯,也生动诠释了他长期推崇的一种理念:如果你想真正实现跨越式成长,“失败”其实大有裨益。
布雷迪在2024年《财富》全球论坛演讲时表示:“对我而言,失败是宝贵的财富。”他解释称,建立真正自信的唯一方式,就是把自己置于“不舒服的处境”中,坦然面对失误,然后再想办法解决问题。
他接着说道:“无论是你的事业还是职业生涯,本质上都是在克服逆境,而唯一的途径就是经历失败。”
他描述了一些领导者习惯性推卸责任的行为,就像四分卫坚称是接球手导致了失误。“我盯着屏幕,心里直犯嘀咕:你刚才说的这话,到底是什么意思?”
这种勇于承担错误并解决问题的心态,后来让布雷迪在电视解说的职业生涯中获益匪浅。
布雷迪在福克斯担任NFL首席解说员的“新秀赛季”,并不算顺利。据他本人坦言,他回看播出内容时会感到尴尬。
他会反问自己:“我当时为什么要这么说?我不喜欢那段,简直莫名其妙。”他是在一个规模堪比“一个小国人口”的每周观众面前,摸索着学习一门全新的职业技能,而且经常只是照本宣科地念完事先准备好的讲稿,缺乏及时的临场反应。
过度准备反而成了问题的症结所在。以“事无巨细”著称的布雷迪,准备了大量笔记和成堆的事实信息,反而让节目变得沉闷。他后来将这种状态形容为“信息过载”(TMI)。于是,他不再试图按照自己想象中的“解说员方式”去准备,而是重拾四分卫的思维模式。他在接受The Athletic采访时表示,他开始研究对阵情况、预判战术动向,并像球员时代那样制定“比赛计划”。到了第二年,布雷迪逐渐找到自己的节奏,不再依赖外部模板,表现有显著提升。
他的解说搭档凯文·伯克哈特在接受The Athletic采访时表示:“汤姆就是那个四分卫。我们的任务,就是当好队友,在第三档关键进攻时为他跑出空位。”
数据也印证了布雷迪的这种全情投入。进入第二个解说赛季后,他的“TB12”解说方法开始显现出可量化的成效。在2025-26赛季常规赛期间,福克斯的NFL收视率同比提升6%,场均观众人数达到1,870万,这是自1988年开始统计观众数据以来,该电视网的历史第二高水平。布雷迪在第二年的表现也赢得了“一致好评”。外界认为,他成功地从“解说员的思维模式”转向了“四分卫的本能判断”。理查德·戴茨等专家在一档播客节目中指出,布雷迪将实战经验融入解说,变得“更为专业”“条理清晰”,例如他根据护肩动作解析外接手追踪长传球落点,就给人留下了深刻印象。
而就像任何一名优秀的四分卫一样,布雷迪仍在精进自己的技艺。
布雷迪在接受The Athletic采访时坦言:“即便到现在,我可能还是传递了太多信息。我打算明年再做进一步精简。”(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
Tom Brady used to make his money the hard way: shoved by a 300-pound lineman, racing to the end of the line, in some of the most brutal NFL games one could watch. Now, he makes more than he ever did in the Super Bowl without taking a single hit—just by talking.
Fox’s 10-year, $375 million deal with Brady works out to about $37.5 million a year. That’s 15 times the roughly $25 million he made as the highest-paid player in Super Bowl LV-era salary terms—before you even get into the performance bonuses, stock options, and the endorsement halo that followed him for decades. It’s ironic the greatest quarterback of all time is getting his biggest check only after he retires.
But Brady’s post-playing career has been a live demonstration of one of his favorite ideas: that “failure” is useful if you want to level up.
“To me, failure is amazing,” Brady said onstage at Fortune’s 2024 Global Forum, explaining the only way to build real confidence is to put yourself “in uncomfortable positions,” mess up, and then figure out the solution.
“The reality of your business and career is overcoming adversity,” he continued. “The only way to do that is to fail.”
He described the reflex of other leaders who pass blame around the room, like watching a quarterback insist the receiver caused a mistake: “I’m watching the screen like, what did you just say?”
That mindset, to own the error and fix it, has turned out to benefit Brady in his television career.
Brady’s rookie season as Fox’s lead NFL analyst was not very smooth. According to his own account, he watched his broadcasts back and cringed in real time.
“Why’d I say that?” he’d ask. “I didn’t like that. That made no sense.” He was learning a new craft in front of a weekly audience the size of a small country, and would often just read the entirety of prepared notes instead of reacting quickly.
That preparation was a part of the problem. Brady, who’s known to cover all his bases, brought pages and pages of notes and an avalanche of facts that dulled the show. He later described it as “TMI,” too much information. So, instead of trying to prepare like how he thought a broadcaster should, Brady started preparing like a quarterback again, he told The Athletic: scouting matchups, anticipating the next move, and building game plans the way he used to. His second year went much better as Brady grew into his own, instead of relying on others.
“Tom’s the quarterback,” his sports broadcaster partner, Kevin Burkhardt told The Athletic. “We’re trying to be a good teammate and get open on third down for him.”
The numbers matched Brady’s lock-in. In his second season, the “TB12” method for broadcasting began to yield measurable results. Fox saw a 6% jump in NFL viewership during the 2025-26 regular season, averaging 18.7 million viewers per game, the network’s second-highest average since audience records began in 1988. Brady’s sophomore performance earned “rave reviews” for his shift from a broadcaster’s mindset to a quarterback’s instincts. Experts like Richard Deitsch noted on a podcast Brady became “more competent” and “lucid” by weaving in real-game experiences, such as a standout breakdown of how wide receivers track deep balls based on their shoulder pad movement.
And, like any good quarterback, Brady is still working on his game.
“Even now, I probably have too much information,” Brady told The Athletic. “I think next year I’m going to streamline it even more.”