New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady has achieved it all in the field of football. He’s won MVPs, Super Bowl titles, Super Bowl MVPs, and numerous Pro Bowl selections. There is virtually nothing left for Brady to prove in the NFL. He is still playing, though, and has even said once that he plans to play professional football a few more years. When exactly Brady would walk away from the game for good is up to Brady himself if you ask Patriots president Jonathan Kraft.

In a sit-down interview with NFL Network’s Andrea Kremer, Kraft said that Brady will have the last call on when it comes to his retirement.

https://twitter.com/Patriots/status/958769790067212289

Via Mark Reiss of ESPN:

“I think [he] has earned the right to have that be a decision he makes when he wants to make it,” Kraft told Andrea Kremer, when asked if he could envision a scenario in which he would have to tell Brady it's time to retire.

Based on his performance this 2017, Tom Brady is far from being an over-the-hill quarterback. At 40-years-old, Brady managed to pace the NFL in the regular season in passing yards (4,577) while going third in passing touchdowns (32). His great play continued into these playoffs in which he has guided the Patriots to back-to-back wins over the Tennessee Titans and the Jacksonville Jaguars. In the AFC Championship Game against the Jags, Brady churned out a classic performance, passing for 290 yards on 26-of-38 completions with two touchdowns and zero interceptions despite facing Jacksonville’s tough pass defense.

Brady has a shot at winning his sixth Super Bowl title this coming Sunday against the Philadelphia Eagles. Not bad for someone who was drafted in the sixth round of the 2000 NFL Draft.