Tom Brady and Bill Belichick won a record six Super Bowl together during their time with the New England Patriots. With his new team now in need of a head coach, Brady has reportedly looked into a possible reunion with his former coach with the Las Vegas Raiders.
Bill Belichick has a simple way out of the North Carolina contract as NFL teams reach out about a potential return to coaching.
Bill Belichick's plans have been revealed by an NFL insider amid buzz he could leave UNC to coach the Raiders or another team.
Belichick famously spurned the New York Jets after he was named Bill Parcells’s successor. His tenure lasted less than 24 hours after he wrote his resignation on a napkin and jumped ship to take over the New England Patriots. This move paid off handsomely.
North Carolina football received more confirmation that Bill Belichick will stay with the university, according to Michael Lombardi.
As noted when Belichick first signed with UNC, his contract includes a section detailing what would happen if the coach terminated his contract without cause. If he does so before June 1, 2025, then Belichick (or the NFL team that hires him) owes the university a whopping $10 million. But after June 1, it drops to merely $1 million.
According to a report from The Athletic, Bill Belichick has no plans of leaving his post at UNC for another shot at the NFL.
As the dust from Black Monday settles, multiple head-coaching vacancies need to be filled in the NFL, and a surprising new candidate has entered the mix — Bill Belichick.  According to NFL Network insider Tom Pelissero,
A reunion between Tom Brady and Bill Belichick on the Las Vegas Raiders reportedly isn't a strong possibility. Mark Maske of the Washington Post revealed
NFL Media reported that multiple teams, including the Raiders, have contacted North Carolina coach Bill Belichick to inquire as to whether he would reconsider his move to college football.
The Raiders make the most sense. He reveres Al Davis, the late father of current team owner Mark Davis. And Tom Brady, the quarterback with whom Belichick won six Super Bowls, could be working on Belichick to join forces on the team that Pats took down 23 years ago in the notorious Tuck Rule game.