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Tom Brady will be permitted to participate in the Chiefs' production meetings prior to Super Bowl LIX, adjusting his broadcast restrictions

The NFL has relaxed restrictions for Tom Brady's access to Kansas City Chiefs production meetings ahead of Super Bowl 59. Previously limited due to his ownership stake in the Raiders, Brady will now have similar access as other broadcasters, while still being restricted from attending practices.
Tom Brady will be permitted to participate in the Chiefs' production meetings prior to Super Bowl LIX, adjusting his broadcast restrictions
Image via Imagn Images
The NFL will let Tom Brady have a longer leash to attend Kansas City Chiefs production meetings before Super Bowl LIX, according to The Athletic's Andrew Marchand and Nate Taylor. Brady held conflicting positions previously as minority owner of the Las Vegas Raiders and lead analyst for FOX Sports.
The first year of his 10-year contract with FOX was suspended and he was forbidden from criticizing the NFL referees, visiting teams' facilities, watching practices, or attending broadcast production meetings. He was strictly barred from revealing any league secrets to the Raiders.

The NFL will let Tom Brady have a longer leash to attend Kansas City Chiefs production meetings


The broadcast of Fox Super Bowl 59 will give color analyst Tom Brady much greater access to the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles than he had for the season. The NFL limited the role of rookie broadcaster Brady after he gained a minority ownership stake in the Las Vegas Raiders.

Those rules included barring him from other teams' facilities, practices, and participation in production meetings with coaches, players, and executives of any team whose game he's calling. The rules were instituted to mitigate perceived conflicts of interest. According to The Athletic, those rules will be somewhat relaxed leading up to Super Bowl 59.
Brady will still not be able to enter Chiefs' and Eagles' practices but other Fox broadcasting crew members will have access: play-by-play announcer Kevin Burkhardt and reporters Erin Andrews and Tom Rinaldi, for example. Brady can interact with players and coaches during the production meetings.
Addressing the decision to soften the “Brady Rules” for the Super Bowl, Chiefs owner Clark Hunt told reporters on Monday: “When [Brady] was approved as an owner of the Raiders, there were a lot of discussions internally [among owners] and that ended up being the recommendation of the league office, that it didn’t make sense to have him in the production meetings.”
He added, “That’s where that rule came from. Since he’s doing the game this week, we have no issue with him being in our production meetings. He’ll have the access that any broadcaster would have.”

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell praised Brady's ability to balance his roles as a commentator and minority owner during Super Bowl opening night. “Right now, Tom has been incredibly cooperative,” Goodell said. “He calls frequently about it and says, ‘Am I doing OK?’ I think he’s serious about making sure that he separates these two and he doesn’t put the league or anyone in a position of conflict.”
Goodell announced that the league will review Brady's restrictions to determine the need for more or fewer rules during the offseason. “In the case of this actual transition, we had special rules that were designed for this for the concerns that some of the ownership had,” he added. “And to make sure as we learn a little bit more about this, where could there possibly be any kind of conflicts."
Also Read: Who will Tom Brady root for in the Super Bowl? The GOAT shares shares his insights ahead of the big game


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