Monday night fuseball Brady’s still queer

Dam good throw. He’s still got the arm...


For da homos
Kinda funny that Brady spent the first 20 years of his career on a team coached by a maniacal genius that valued intelligence and professionalism over raw athletic talent and now he is on a team loaded with ignorant donkeys, coached by a old, fat, frat boy clown.
 
That might be a fumble.
 
buccaneers offensive line is sleepwalking out there now. either that, or the rams D is in hyperdrive speed.
 
bullshit call. X2
 
buccaneers offensive line is sleepwalking out there now. either that, or the rams D is in hyperdrive speed.

Oh it’s about to get ugly
 
These blacks refs are some kinda racist
 
Pretty insane play there by Brady
 
Rams offensive play calling is shit right now, the Boy Wonder is keeping Brady in the game.
 
Rams offensive play calling is shit right now, the Boy Wonder is keeping Brady in the game.

Execution has been some junior shit last 2 possessions.
 
Execution has been some junior shit last 2 possessions.
I suggest that the Rams burn as much clock as possible before scoring, but that could come back to bite them.
 
Let's see if Brady can remember which down it is...
 
Lotta clock left, even for a bunch of tards like Tampa.
 
Thank God for our D

Offense went full blown tard in the 4th quarter
 
Mcvay with major cajonaays leaving that much time on the clock.
 
Just watching my recording and didn't notice this until now.


The Monday Night Football matchup between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Los Angeles Rams made history, but it had nothing to do with the two teams vying for playoff seeding.

For the first time, the league assembled an all-Black officiating crew, led by Jerome Boger, a 17-year NFL official.
Rounding out the seven-member crew: umpire Barry Anderson, side judge Anthony Jeffries, line judge Carl Johnson, down judge Julian Mapp, field judge Dale Shaw and back judge Greg Steed.

"This historic Week 11 crew is a testament to the countless and immeasurable contributions of Black officials to the game, their exemplary performance, and to the power of inclusion that is the hallmark of this great game," Troy Vincent, a former NFL player who is now the league's executive vice president of football operations, said in a statement.

"It just goes to show you." Vincent continued "No matter your age, sex, or race, as long as you're incompetent enough and have an IQ below 80 the NFL will hire you to be an official".
 
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