TAMPA, Fla. — There was a subtle tip of the cap Sunday — or perhaps it was an adjustment, depending on who you ask — and then Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady put his head down and walked off into the south end zone corner of Raymond James Stadium, perhaps for the last time in his 22-season NFL career, after falling in the NFC divisional round.

Is this how it ends for the 44-year-old signal-caller who put together perhaps the greatest career in professional sports, 20 of them with coach Bill Belichick to orchestrate the New England Patriots’ dynasty, and the past two elevating the Buccaneers from obscurity to NFL prominence? Was this Brady’s exit, with no wave to the fans, no tearful goodbye, just a man trailing behind his offensive coordinator to whatever’s next?

Eleven months prior, as confetti rained down in Tampa — the first time an NFL team won a Super Bowl at home — and moments after sons Jack and Benjamin and daughter Vivian ran into his arms, wife Gisele Bundchen whispered into his ear, “What more do you have to prove?”

And despite a few pleas from teammates — Shaq Barrett jokingly said last week, “Don’t hang ’em up, Tom. Man, don’t do it” — Bundchen’s right. Brady has literally nothing left to prove as a player, with seven championships — one more than Michael Jordan’s six with the Chicago Bulls — and an encyclopedic number of records to his name.

He owns the NFL’s record for most Super Bowl wins — more than any franchise in NFL history — career wins (243), postseason wins (35), completions (7,263), career passing yards (84,529) and career passing touchdowns (624). His 485 completions this year were an NFL single-season record. His 13,049 career postseason passing yardage is also nearly double the next closest player (Peyton Manning, 7,339).

But is this the way he’ll go out?

Brady said on his “Let’s Go!” podcast Monday, “It’s not always what I want — it’s what we want as a family.”