Fair enough. Brady has probably been forced into enough self-reflection for a lifetime, even if the rest of us want to imbue his play with a heightened level of meaning, as if Brady was imagining four Roger Goodells playing in the Browns' secondary with every deep ball he launched. Brady has only spoken in bits and pieces, in allusions and generalities, about the underinflated footballs that derailed the start of his season and sent him on a vacation to Italy when he would have rather been sweating it out in Foxborough. And now he is back in a position to do what he has done best since he took over the starting job in 2001 -- allow his play to speak for him while the rest of us scramble to fill in the blanks.