When the Tampa Bay Buccaneers signed Tom Brady to a two-year, $50 million contract in March of 2020, the organization—while thrilled to have the legend onboard—probably assumed it would be the only deal he would ink with the franchise.

After all, Brady will be 45 years old (!) at the end of the contract and finishing up his 22nd NFL season.

However, based on how Brady performed in his first season in Tampa Bay—starting every game, throwing 40 touchdown passes and leading the Bucs to the friggin' Super Bowl—it's possible that the G.O.A.T. could stick around longer.

As Buccaneers head coach Bruce Arians alluded to, Brady is not just still one of the best players in the game, he's looked visibly refreshed and revitalized by the move from New England to sunny Florida.

“I think Tom’s real happy where he’s at, and I wouldn’t be surprised,” Arians said at his video conference with reporters on Thursday when asked about Brady re-upping with the Bucs after his current deal expires, via Pro Football Talk.

Brady is set to earn $27 million in 2021, per Over the Cap.

Earlier this week, Brady—who has long said his goal was to play deep into his 40s—didn't rule out the possibility of playing past that age, either.

“Yeah, definitely,” Brady said when asked about playing past 45, per The Athletic's Ben Standig. “I would definitely consider that. Again, it’s a physical sport, and just the perspective I have on that is you never know when that moment is, just because it’s a contact sport. There’s a lot of training that goes into it, and again it has to be 100 percent commitment from myself to keep doing it.”

Heck, they might even re-name the city after him.