"One thing I'm doing that's a little bit different is I'm really monitoring my throws in the preseason," he said yesterday after the team's hot and muggy morning practice. "Before I'd come out and I'd throw 100 balls a day -- and it's 200 in two-a-days -- and you go, 'Gosh, after four days why is my arm sore?' I just try to understand how much I'm throwing and the type of throws we're making. Everybody has to get ready differently."
This is new territory for Brady, an ultra-competitor who would prefer to take every snap if possible. But time catches up with everybody, and if he needs proof of that, he can simply ask his good pal Peyton Manning in Indianapolis.
The 31-year-old Manning, too, has been on a reduced throwing schedule over the past few years. A Colts assistant coach was hitting a "counter" for each throw Manning made at the team's June minicamp, and Manning believes the approach has made a difference. He told Indianapolis reporters that in November and December of last year he didn't experience any arm fatigue.
In a year in which the Patriots have imported some potentially potent weapons at receiver, Brady hopes to have Manning-like results by adopting the reduced workload. Consider that in addition to the heavy volume of throws from practice, Brady has attempted 3,549 passes in 110 career games (108 starts), and was one of only eight quarterbacks in the NFL to throw more than 500 passes last regular season (516).
With the numbers mounting, Brady compared his situation to a baseball hurler who might have a pitch count in the 100 range, and then doesn't pitch again for five days. Brady is in the management business now, giving way to backup Matt Cassel in more team drills.
"I think I'm at a point in my career where I know what it takes to prepare myself," said the 6-foot-4-inch, 225-pound Brady, who regularly has been listed as probable on the team's injury report in recent years. "I've tried just about everything at this point, so you eliminate a lot of stuff you did in the past and you can really hone in and be efficient in how to prepare for games and just to maximize your time."