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09/09/10 04:50:00
Printable Page
09/09 16:47 CDT Patriots QB Brady unhurt in wreck near Boston home
Patriots QB Brady unhurt in wreck near Boston home
By GLEN JOHNSON
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) -- New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was in a two-car
accident near his home Thursday morning but was unhurt and hours later
practiced as usual with his team just days before the season opener.
The crash, at an intersection in Boston's Back Bay area, knocked over a light
pole and sent a passenger in the other vehicle to the hospital with injuries
that were serious but not considered life-threatening, a police report said.
A witness told The Associated Press that the two-time Super Bowl MVP was
approaching the intersection on a green light when his black Audi sedan
collided with a minivan.
The 21-year-old driver of the Mercury Villager minivan, Ludgero Rodrigues, was
cited Thursday for failing to stop at a red light, based on witnesses
statements, police said. Two other people in the minivan were able to exit and
had no visible injuries, they said.
A telephone listing for Rodrigues could not immediately be found Thursday.
The police report, which did not name Brady, said the driver of the Audi had no
visible injuries and was evaluated by Emergency Medical Services. It said a
49-year-old passenger had to be freed with the Jaws of Life and was taken to a
hospital.
Brady's father had just arrived in Boston from the family's California home
early Thursday and found out about the accident when he got off his flight.
"I understand he's fine, but I haven't talked to him," Tom Brady Sr. told the
AP outside his son's home three blocks from the accident site.
Patriots coach Bill Belichick told the team about the accident before practice
and said Brady might be a bit late, linebacker Tully Banta-Cain said.
"I was hoping, obviously, that he was OK, but I saw him walking in. He had a
smile on his face, no abrasions, so I think he's fine," Banta-Cain said.
The Patriots open their season at home Sunday against the Cincinnati Bengals.
Brady remains in talks with the Patriots about a contract extension and is
entering the final year of his current contract - a six-year, $57.3 million
deal.
During the 11-minute portion of afternoon practice that reporters were allowed
to watch Thursday, Brady, in full uniform with pads and helmet, stretched as
usual with his teammates. Then, as he usually does, he threw soft passes of 20
to 30 yards to teammates.
"I want to thank the safety personnel for their service, and express our
concern and support for the well-being of the occupants of the other vehicle,"
Brady's agent, Don Yee, said in a statement.
Police responded to Commonwealth Avenue and Gloucester Street around 6:30 a.m.
after reports of an accident, police spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll said.
One of Brady's neighbors, a 74-year-old woman who asked that her name not be
used for fear of being hounded by reporters, was walking her dogs when she saw
the accident.
She said Brady was traveling south on Gloucester and approaching the
intersection on a green light when his black Audi collided with a fast-moving
red Ford Aerostar that was westbound on Commonwealth.
"The red car went up in the air, sideways. ... The tire was half off," the
woman said.
Afterward, she said Brady immediately got out of his car.
The woman had been walking toward the intersection when she saw the cars on
their collision course. She took a step backward, tripped on the curb and hit
her head, she said.
She sat next to Brady in an ambulance, but neither was taken to a hospital. She
said she did not realize he was the star quarterback until later.
Bill Barron said he was in his apartment overlooking the intersection when he
heard a collision that sounded like "a bolt of lightning."
When he looked out the window, he saw the driver of the car picking glass off
his clothes and wiping himself off with a towel. He didn't realize until later
that it was Brady.
"I thought it was some college kid who had crashed up his father's really nice
car," Barron said.
Brady then retrieved some items from his car, made a series of phone calls and
was picked up by another vehicle, Barron said.
___
Associated Press writers Mark Pratt, Denise Lavoie, Russell Contreras and
Howard Ulman contributed to this report.
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