Tom Brady turns 42 years young on Saturday, yet, he doesn’t show signs of slowing down.

He’s entering his 20th training camp with the Patriots and just led the team to a victory in Super Bowl LIII, New England’s second in the past three years. In honor of Brady’s birthday, here are 42 of his most memorable achievements throughout his NFL career, one for every year he has been alive.

1. Let’s start with this: According to the last press release from the Patriots in the 2018 campaign, Brady holds 54 NFL records.

2. He holds the record for Super Bowl appearances (nine), Super Bowl victories (six), Super Bowl MVPs (four).

3. He holds Super Bowl records for passing yards (2,576), passing touchdowns (18), completions (256), and attempts (392).

4. At 41 years and 184 days, he became the oldest quarterback to start and win a Super Bowl (LIII).

5. At 24 years and 184 days, he became the second-youngest quarterback to start and win a Super Bowl (XXXVI).

6. He holds the record for the most overall touchdown passes (590).

7. He has the most all-time postseason victories for a starting QB with 30.

8. He has the most all-time postseason passing yards with 11,170.

9. He has the most all-time postseason completions with 1,005.

10. He has the most all-time postseason touchdown passes with 73.

11. Brady has the record for conference championship appearances (13) and titles (nine).

12. Brady has compiled 237 victories (including the playoffs), giving him the record for most by any NFL player. His 207 regular-season victories are also a record for starting quarterbacks. By comparison, according to Pro Football Reference, the Jacksonville Jaguars – who have been a franchise since 1995 – have won 170 regular-season games in their history and seven in the postseason.

13. Stunningly enough, Brady has lost in the regular season just 60 times.

14. Brady has never had a losing season with the Patriots. In fact, the only time New England has failed to reach double digits in victories since Brady became the starter in 2001 was the 2002 campaign (9-7).

15. Including the playoffs, Brady holds the all-time record for total yards with 82,897. Or almost 829 entire football fields.

16. Sorry, Atlanta. Brady helped spark a 25-point come-from-behind victory against the Falcons in Super Bowl LI, after the Patriots trailed 28-3 with 2:12 left in the third quarter.

17. Some might forget this, but Brady started his playoff career 10-0, winning three Super Bowls in his first three postseason appearances. Then, in the divisional round of the 2005 playoffs, the Patriots fell to the Denver Broncos, 27-13.

18. Sorry again, Atlanta. The Falcons are one of the teams Brady has never lost to, joining the Bears, Cowboys, Vikings, and Buccaneers. He has gone a combined 24-0 against those squads, including the playoffs.

19. He has thrown 171 regular-season interceptions. Brett Favre holds the record with 336. Brady ranks 47th all-time.

20. The Patriots have been lethal at home under Brady. At Gillette Stadium, Brady is 135-21-0 in home games, including the postseason.

21. Brady has started 267 regular-season games, ranking fifth all-time behind Favre’s record of 298.

22. Brady has played through several injuries and has appeared on the final injury report before games 187 times, according to ESPN, including 15 weeks in 2008 after he tore his anterior cruciate ligament. The only time he has missed starting a game due to injury, however, was that 2008 season.

23. Brady has won 16 division championships, most by a starting QB. Factor in that he was a backup in 2000 as a rookie when the team went 5-11 and that he suffered a season-ending knee injury in the 2008 regular-season opener, and Brady has won the AFC East 16 of a possible 17 seasons as a starter, with 2002 as the lone year he missed out.

24. The Pats are one of those teams that seem to get better as a season wears on. His 60 victories in December are most for a player in NFL history.

25. Brady has three regular-season MVP awards, trailing Peyton Manning’s record of five.

26. He has been selected to 14 Pro Bowls.

27. He was named an all-pro three times.

28. He has won the AP Offensive Player of the Year twice (2007, 2010).

29. Including the playoffs, Brady has led 44 fourth-quarter comebacks and 57 game-winning drives, according to Pro Football Reference.

30. He has been sacked 473 times, well behind Favre (525) and even behind current Steelers passer Ben Roethlisberger (501).

31. Brady has an incredible 30-3 (.909) record against the Bills, with those 30 victories being the most in NFL history by a starting QB against a single opponent.

32. He holds the record for most different touchdown targets, with 71 players hauling in Brady TDs.

33. In Week 13 against the Vikings, Brady had a rush of 5 yards. That pushed him over the 1,000 rushing yards mark, making him the oldest player – at 41 – to reach the milestone since 1970. He currently has 1,003 regular-season rushing yards.

34. Making that figure even more impressive, Brady has lost 259 rushing yards on 249 attempted kneel downs. In the regular season, that number is 206 attempts for -211 yards. Per Pro Football reference, that figure is the most for any player since 1994, when the site started recording that data.

35. He also has 19 career rushing touchdowns in the regular season.

36. People often make fun of Brady when he tries to tackle defenders after turnovers, but he has 12 career stops, all of them solo tackles.

37. He has also punted twice: once in 2003 for 26 yards and then in 2013 for 32 yards. He pinned the one in 2003 inside the 20.

38. The Patriots lost Super Bowl LII against the Philadelphia Eagles, but he set a record in the game with 505 passing yards.

39. Interestingly enough, in Brady’s first championship, Super Bowl XXXVI against the Rams, he threw for only 145 yards. Fifty-three of those yards came on the final drive that set up kicker Adam Vinatieri’s 48-yard field goal to win the game, 20-17, as time expired.

40. He became the oldest quarterback to lead the NFL in passing with 4,577 yards in the 2017 season at the age of 40.

41. He joined NFL legend and arguably the best receiver of all-time in Jerry Rice as the only 41-year-old players to catch a pass when he hauled in a 6-yard completion from receiver Julian Edelman in Week 10 of last season.

42. Still remarkable, he has had all that success despite being the 199th overall pick – in the sixth round – of the 2000 NFL draft.

Follow Lorenzo Reyes on Twitter @LorenzoGReyes.