In a fiery exchange on ESPN’s postgame coverage following the New England Patriots’ resounding 38-10 victory over the Miami Dolphins, Tom Brady delivered a commanding rebuke to Stephen A. Smith after the analyst dismissed the dominant performance as “ugly” and uninspiring.

Smith, visibly unimpressed despite the 28-point margin, argued that the Patriots’ offense appeared stagnant and overly conservative, claiming the win relied more on Miami’s struggles than New England’s excellence in the modern high-scoring NFL era.
He insisted that championship teams cannot succeed with such play-calling, waving off the result as lucky survival rather than true dominance, questioning whether the Patriots could pose a genuine playoff threat heading into the postseason.
The studio fell silent as Brady, seated calmly with a knowing smile, waited for Smith to finish before leaning forward and delivering a measured but intense response that shifted the entire tone of the debate.
“Stephen,” Brady began firmly, his voice carrying the weight of seven Super Bowl rings, “stop it. You’re confusing ‘ugly’ with ‘dominant.'” He emphasized how the Patriots’ defense suffocated Miami’s explosive attack, limiting them to a single field goal.

Brady sharply interrupted Smith’s attempt to pivot back to offensive concerns, declaring, “Sit down and listen,” before dismantling the narrative that New England merely benefited from an opponent’s poor play.
He highlighted the physical beatdown his former team inflicted over 60 minutes, noting that true January football is built on discipline, toughness, and championship DNA rather than flashy highlight-reel points.
As the scoreboard graphic lingered on screen showing the decisive 38-10 final, Smith appeared momentarily speechless, unable to counter Brady’s unflinching defense of a victory rooted in suffocating defense and relentless execution.