Tom Brady Says Argentina’s World Cup Comeback ‘Might Top 28-3’ in Atlanta
Tom Brady’s legendary 28-3 comeback just got a fresh chapter written in soccer’s biggest tournament.
On Tuesday night in Atlanta, Argentina trailed Egypt 2-0 in a 2026 World Cup Round of 16 match at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The defending champions looked headed for an early exit. Then they scored three times in roughly 12 minutes to win 3-2 and advance. The rally was so dramatic that even Tom Brady took notice.
The NFL legend, who led the New England Patriots back from a 28-3 deficit against the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI, posted a simple reaction that immediately spread across sports timelines: “Yeah so that might top 28-3.”
The meme that lit up timelines
The official NFL account amplified the moment with a split image that captured the symmetry perfectly. The top half showed Brady on the sideline during that Super Bowl, head down, with the scoreboard reading NE 3 ATL 28 late in the third quarter. Below it sat Argentina players celebrating on the same field nine years later. A fake tweet overlay in Brady’s voice read exactly what many fans were thinking.
Argentina’s comeback had @TomBrady thinking 🤔 pic.twitter.com/CnGwVJ0299
— NFL (@NFL) July 7, 2026
The post rocketed across platforms within hours. NFL fans, soccer supporters, and casual observers flooded replies with jokes, arguments about which comeback was greater, and plenty of “Brady still the king” takes. What started as one game’s late drama became a cross-sport conversation starter.
Why the 28-3 reference still hits
Few moments in NFL history carry the same shorthand power. In February 2017 the Patriots sat in the same stadium, down 25 points with the clock winding down in the third quarter. Most teams fold in that spot. Brady and Bill Belichick’s group did not. They scored 31 straight points, forced overtime, and won their fifth Super Bowl. It remains the largest deficit overcome in Super Bowl history.
That night turned into instant lore because it combined preparation, resilience, and execution under the brightest lights. Every dramatic rally since gets measured against it. When Argentina flipped a two-goal hole into a quarterfinal berth on the same turf, the comparison wrote itself.
Atlanta keeps delivering
The venue added another layer. Both comebacks unfolded inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The building that hosted one of football’s greatest escapes hosted soccer’s version on a warm July night. Fans who filled the seats for the World Cup match got the same kind of late-game electricity that Super Bowl crowds remember.
Argentina’s path back was different in rhythm but similar in spirit. They needed rapid responses and belief that the deficit was never final. Three goals in a short burst flipped the script. The final whistle brought visible relief from Lionel Messi, who has seen his share of high-stakes turnarounds.
What the reaction reveals
Brady’s quick post and the meme that followed show how certain sports moments travel. A retired quarterback watching international soccer still sees echoes of his own career-defining night. Fans who grew up on that Super Bowl instantly understood the reference without needing extra context.
It also highlights how the 28-3 game has moved beyond box scores. It became a cultural shorthand for refusing to quit when the numbers say you should. Whether the sport is played with an oblong ball or a round one, that mindset travels.
The Argentina win keeps their title defense alive. They will face either Colombia or Switzerland in the quarterfinals. The meme, meanwhile, will live on in group chats and timeline replies for days.
For NFL fans, the moment served as a reminder that some nights in sports simply refuse to follow the script. Brady lived one of the best versions of that story. On Tuesday in Atlanta, another group wrote its own chapter on the same stage.