FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Tom Brady’s statue weighs six tons and rises 17 feet off the ground, from the bottom of the six-sided base — one for each of the New England Patriots’ Super Bowl victories — to the tip of the bronze fist raised in celebration.For a player who was too slow and immobile coming out of college to merit more than a No. 199 draft pick, that seems just about right.“When I was drafted, I just hoped to make the team. I never dreamed I’ll be standing here two and a half decades later, made of bronze and frozen in time,” Brady said Friday night at a ceremony to unveil the statue before the Patriots’ exhibition opener against the Washington Commanders. “But actually, it actually feels pretty appropriate given my 40-yard dash time.” A three-time NFL Most Valuable Player, five-time Super Bowl MVP and seven-time NFL champion — he won one after defecting to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers — Brady retired in 2023 as the league’s most-decorated player ever, holding records in dozens of categories that include most wins, yards passing, and passing touchdowns — for both the regular season and playoffs.The Patriots inducted him into their Hall of Fame last year, waiving the usual four-year waiting period, and retired his No. 12. At the ceremony, owner Robert Kraft said Brady would be the first player in franchise history to have a bronze statue outside the stadium.The work by sculptor lifelong Patriots fan Jeff Buccacio unveiled Friday on the plaza outside the team’s Pro Shop and Hall of Fame features a hexagonal granite base and a 12-foot Brady, honoring Brady’s uniform number and making good on Kraft’s wish for it to be …