After winning his seventh Super Bowl title with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tom Brady confirmed that he isn't retiring any time soon.

In a brief speech following their Super Bowl 55 victory on Sunday against the Kansas City Chiefs, the 43-year-old QB said he is coming back for another NFL season.

Tom Brady signed a two-year, $50 million contract with the Buccaneers last offseason after spending 20 years with the New England Patriots, and he surely made sure that Tampa Bay wouldn't regret it.

Brady set the tone early for the Buccaneers, throwing three touchdown passes in the first half. Interestingly, it came after his doubters pointed out that Brady has never thrown a successful touchdown pass in the first half of the Super Bowl throughout his entire career.  He completed 16 of 20 attempts for 140 yards in the first half, along with zero interceptions.

Fired up by Tyrann Mathieu's brash antics, Brady continued to destroy Kansas City in the second half.

The veteran QB eclipsed another record with his old pal Rob Gronkowski by notching their 13th postseason touchdown on an eight-yard pass, overtaking the legendary duo of Joe Montana and Jerry Rice for the most postseason TDs by a QB-receiver combo in league history.

It looks like Brady can break even more records now that he'll be playing for at least one more year.