Tom Brady was the subject of X-rated chants from soccer fans in England who showed no respect for his legendary NFL career. Based on his reaction, either he didn’t care or he didn’t have a clue what they were saying. Put your headphones in and watch the NSFW video from the Wrexham fan section below.
Wrexham fans’ X-rated chant for Tom Brady
Brady attended the Birmingham City vs Wrexham game on Monday night, dubbed the Hollywood Derby between the club he partially owns, Birmingham, and Wrexham, the club backed by famous actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney.
Fox Sports‘ newest $375 million broadcaster showed his commitment to the Blues by jumping on a jet right after broadcasting the Saints vs Cowboys game in Dallas on Sunday. He landed across the pond in time to watch Birmingham City take down Wrexham with a 3-1 victory despite going behind 1-0 three minutes into the match at St. Andrews.
His travels clearly didn’t earn him any respect from the Welsh fans, whose vile chant illustrated how little admiration they had for the American football star. The chorus of F-bombs looked like a deleted scene from Tom Brady’s Netflix roast, rather than something that might appear in Reynolds and McElhenney’s Hulu documentary, Welcome to Wrexham.
Brady joins trash talk between Birmingham and Wrexham
Before the Hollywood clash, Wrexham’s first taunt of Brady came via social media, where they recruited his Super Bowl rival Eli Manning to sport a kit from the Birmingham City opponents. Manning posted: “Now I can beat Tom Brady in football and ftbol! Go Wrexham!”
“So I’ve been working on our little response video to Eli and I’m looking around the house, and I can’t find the other six of these,’ Brady said in response, holding up the Lombardi Trophy.
‘Rob, can you just educate the Wrexham fans just a little bit on the history of the NFL?’ he continued. ‘Thanks bud, appreciate it. I’ll see you Monday.’
It appears the Wrexham fans did not get the memo, but Brady didn’t seem to mind one bit, playfully acknowledging the chants. As one of the most successful quarterbacks in history, he was also one of the most hated. The fans in England made him feel right at home.