Rams CB Jalen Ramsey remembers giving up Tom Brady’s last touchdown pass

After Tom Brady announced his retirement, Rams cornerback Jalen Ramsey remembered how he allowed Brady’s last touchdown pass.

Los Angeles Rams cornerback Jalen Ramsey will play in his first Super Bowl on February 13, and while that’s well-deserved for one of the best at his position in the NFL today, Ramsey took a second to reflect on Tom Brady’s retirement Tuesday morning.

That touchdown came in the Rams’ 30-27 win over the Buccaneers in the divisional round of the playoffs. Brady brought his team back from a 27-3 third-quarter deficit to tie the game at 27 with less than a minute left before Matthew Stafford out-Brady’d Brady with his own last-second drive, which led to Matt Gay’s 30-yard game-winning field goal as time expired.

Ramsey, and everyone else on the Rams’ side knew that they had just escaped one more of those Brady comebacks.

As to the play Ramsey’s talking about, it came with 3:20 left in the fourth quarter. The Buccaneers had second-and-7 from their own 45-yard line after a 19-yard pass to Scotty Miller and a three-yard pass to Leonard Fournette. Brady went quick no-huddle, and caught Ramsey in a one-on-one matchup with receiver Mike Evans. At that point, it was about Evans beating Ramsey downfield, and Brady throwing it where only Evans was going to get it.

Which, of course, Brady did.

“After I hit Mike on the deep one, that was a pretty good feeling,” Brady said after the game. “You know, we are right in it at that point. And then we got a great turnover. It gave us great field position and then had the play there before Leonard’s touchdown, we were kind of figuring down what down it was. First, they said it was a first down then all of a sudden it wasn’t a first down, mid-snap, so made the play then they [Rams] made a couple plays after that.”

(Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports)

We didn’t know it at that point, but it was Brady’s last touchdown pass, and Ramsey had no issue admitting that it was on him.

The NFL world reacts quickly to Tom Brady’s retirement

The NFL world reacted quickly and with great respect to the (official) news that Tom Brady has announced his retirement.

As we’re all looking to Senior Bowl Week, the ramp-up to Super Bowl LVI, and draft season for the fans of most teams, there was other news from the NFL on Tuesday. A sixth-round quarterback from the year 2000 announced his retirement (officially), and it was kind of a big deal.

Tom Brady, unquestionably the greatest quarterback in NFL history, hung ’em up after 22 of the most remarkable seasons we’ll see in any sport.

As expected, the NFL world reacted quickly and with great respect.

Seahawks players share respect for Tom Brady after news breaks of his retirement

Brady goes out as the greatest competitor in the history of the sport.

Tom Brady is finally hanging his cleats up. After a remarkable 22-year run in the NFL, Brady has told Adam Schefter at ESPN that he’s retiring. While there have been better passers and more athletic quarterbacks, Brady goes out as the unquestioned greatest competitor in the history of the sport. Perhaps most impressively, he was still playing the game at a high level even at 44 years old. Brady led the league in passing yards this season with 5,316, one year after earning his fifth Super Bowl MVP award and his seventh world championship victory. Along the way, he won three MVPs and was named to 15 Pro Bowl teams.

One of those seven Super Bowl wins came at the expense of the Seahawks in what was easily the most heart-breaking matchup in franchise history. Nevertheless, Brady has earned the respect of his peers. Here’s what Seattle’s players are tweeting about 12’s retirement.