Brett Favre : An Overrated Legacy Ends As Expected

Discussion in 'Minnesota Vikings' started by 3rdStoneFromTheSun, Jan 27, 2010.

  1. 3rdStoneFromTheSun

    3rdStoneFromTheSun Truth Hurts Like Freedom

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    It was a fitting end to a career carried by the glow of media hype that inappropriately placed it amongst the very best predecessors.

    It ended much like the career had begun on November 10, 1991. That was the first time Brett Favre threw passes in the NFL. He threw four passes for the Atlanta Falcons and the only two caught were by the opposing team. The last pass was caught by Andre Collins of the eventual Super Bowl XXVI champion Washington Redskins. Collins proceeded to rumble 15 yards for a touchdown, ending the game in a 56-17 Redskins victory.

    Favre was traded after the 1991 season to the Green Bay Packers for a first round draft pick, which turned out to be running back Tony Smith. Smith was a teammate of Favre in college, but lasted just three seasons in the NFL. One of the reasons the Falcons traded Favre was because their team doctor had diagnosed him with having a hip condition called avascular necrosis, which is the same condition that ended many athletic careers. Bo Jackson may be the most famous example.

    Favre proved the Falcons doctor wrong by taking over the Packers starting job before the fourth week of the season and not letting go of it until the end of the 2007 season. He never missed a start in his 16 years in Green Bay, and was on the team that won Super Bowl XXXI behind an excellent defense and a record setting return specialist named Desmond Howard.

    His first significant action as a Packer was a prelude of the madness that would capsulize much of his career. He fumbled four times, yet the Packers were able to win the game. This was the theme of his career, one where Favre would turn over the ball more than any other player that has even played in the NFL before.

    Despite his penchant for mental errors, he became a fan favorite. Many followed the career of the man with a good arm, average mobility, and questionable intelligence. He became so well liked, he was forgiven by some after throwing teammates under the bus for wanting more money. Even despite the fact he had just signed a lifetime contract for $100 million.

    The journey was given a personal touch by his media buddies, which is not entirely common. His family suffered deaths, a cancer scare, and the loss of his family home to Hurricane Katrina. His allowances of media intrusion for society to see vignettes of personal pains was an intelligent marketing move by his agent so the legend could grow further with deeper roots.

    When his time in Green Bay was coming to an end in 2007, he waffled on what he wanted. Once again putting the team second, he knew Aaron Rodgers was ready to take the mantle but Favre was not willing to pass the torch. Tiring of his act and pettiness, the Packers gave him extra money to go away so it could allow Rodgers to develop into the Pro Bowl quarterback they had envisioned him being when they drafted him in the first round before the 2005 season.

    After parting shots at the Packers through his media adherents, the New York Jets became a fallback choice so he could play again in 2008. After a hot start of 8-3, the team won just once in the next five games. Though it appeared his 39 year old body betrayed him through a lack of proper conditioning, after rarely showing up at the Jets training camp, he leaked out a story that he had hurt his arm and that was the reason his team fell short of the playoffs instead of the league leading 22 interceptions he tossed.

    Seeing where this was going, and holding no allegiances to him, the Jets cut him. The Vikings came calling, which set the stage for perhaps his finest season ever. A year that may have surpassed the four times he led the league in touchdown passes, or the two times he led the NFL in passing yards.

    He appeared to finally had learned to play his position with real leadership. Though it took him 19 years to do so, Favre stopped forcing passes as much and generally kept his mouth shut through much of the year. This helped the Vikings become a well balanced team win 13 games before falling one victory short of the playoffs.

    It was the sixth time he threw for over 4,000 yards, and his 4,202 yards was the third highest total in his career. This was accomplished by throwing less passes than in any other of his previous 4,000 yard seasons. It also was the only time in his career that he led the league in lowest interception percentage per pass attempts, and he fumbled the ball a career low two times if his two games in Atlanta are disregarded.

    Brett was still Brett, unfortunately, in the 2009 season. He butted heads with his head coach, questioned the offensive system, and refused to come out of a game when Vikings coach Brad Childress called for a change of signal callers. Once again, he put his ego ahead of the team.

    This ego was the reason he threw a record 317 interceptions in his career, and allowed him to lead the NFL in interceptions thrown three times. He also fumbled the ball 159 times in his career, which is the second most in league history. His propensity for the stupid play was lovingly referred to as a gunslinger mentality by his devoted media partisans.

    This mentality ended the Vikings season almost exactly like it ended the Packers 2007 season, and several others before that. With the game on the line, his ego overtook the team concept, and an entire franchise suffered because of it.

    The game ended in a fit of spite from many of his fans. Without noticing the referees had called a clean hit a roughing the passer penalty that enabled the Vikings to stay in the game, fans are trying to compare this game to the time Drew Pearson, of the Dallas Cowboys, shoved Nate Wright of the Vikings to the ground in the Cowboys 1975 NFC Championship win.

    Though Favre's zealous army of toadies would like to say he is the greatest football player ever, they tend to never mention the era he played in. An era that had rules that protected the quarterback to disturbingly effeminate proportions, allowing blockers to hold on every play, and allowing receivers to frolic untouched after the first five yards from the line of scrimmage.

    The type of fans who fail to realize Archie Manning was a better athlete and quarterback than his sons or how the changes in the way the game is played today has been a enormous boon to offenses and the quarterback particularly. Rules that make Ron Jaworski's consecutive starts streak more impressive than the surpassed total Farve has currently.

    Those who forget about history and prefer his story of the here and now. Every few years a new player gets anointed the greatest ever at his position even though their games are inferior to their predecessors. Favre has statistics that are favorable and disagreeable. The unfriendly statistics helped prevent him from hoisting more than one Super Bowl trophy. Despite trying to gloss over these facts, his fans throw statistics in retort.

    Yet none of his fans can feign surprise when their deity threw away another game with victory just moments away. Those who pretend they were can be accused of having not paid attention to the NFL the past 19 years.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Apr 14, 2010
    5 people like this.
  2. Flacco2MasonTD

    Flacco2MasonTD ಠ_ಠ

    Outstanding.
     
  3. ollysj

    ollysj iKraut

    This can't be about Favre.... :icon_cheesygrin:

    Good read as usual
     
  4. DoubleC

    DoubleC i'm ready now...

    Nice stuff!
     
  5. SoDev

    SoDev Don't tase me, bro!

    To think he's the greatest ever is a joke that most people don't tell anyways... to say he's likes drama and has many dubious moments is true... to focus on the negative, ignore the positive, and rip his "legacy" apart is easy.

    Love him or hate him, on the field, Brett Favre is and always has been gamer...

     
    1 person likes this.
  6. ollysj

    ollysj iKraut

    Yes, but sometimes the gamer become a gambler...
     
  7. SoDev

    SoDev Don't tase me, bro!

    He certainly is that too, but that doesn't make him any less of a gamer.
     
  8. Jihad Joe

    Jihad Joe Life to Infidels

    You didnt mention the 9 season he has had with 30 TD's. Or the 13 consective seasons the Packers had with at least 8 wins with Farve
     
  9. hermhater

    hermhater Guest

  10. ollysj

    ollysj iKraut

    Next to all his off-field antics, he did alot of good things for the Packers, but I still didn't see him as the savoir like some others do. He was part of a great team, beside players like White, Butler, Freeman, Howard and many others. Football is still a teamsport and the 2 times SB team was superb.
     
  11. mj1987us26

    mj1987us26 Super

    His hands must be dirty cause they are black. That is so Weird.:icon_cheesygrin:

    Great read BTW, Favre has been overrated his entire career, don't get me wrong, he was a great QB, but when people regard him as the "greatest ever" IMO is an insult to guys like Unitas and Montana.
     
  12. hermhater

    hermhater Guest

    If you look closely you will see that I tried to lighten his hands up...

    [​IMG]
     
  13. smeags

    smeags militant geek

    farve is not overrated.
     
  14. mj1987us26

    mj1987us26 Super

    Care to elaborate?
     
  15. Evasfunk

    Evasfunk Rookie

    I don't personally think he is the best of all time but he has a strong case. To call him overrated though is just foolish, were talking about a 3x NFL MVP, Superbowl champion, career passer rating of 86+ with a 62% completion. Oh and 70,000 yards and 500 TD passes, I think you could honestly say that any QB coming out of college would kill to have the career Favre had.
     
    1 person likes this.
  16. ollysj

    ollysj iKraut

    Not the best ever - yes
    overrated - no
     
  17. smeags

    smeags militant geek


    70,000 yards and 500 TD passes does not equal overrated no matter what math you use.
     
  18. mj1987us26

    mj1987us26 Super

    See in that context no he isn't over-rated, but people continue to call him the best QB, let alone the best player of all time, and in that since I say he is over-rated. Plus if your going on stats then the fact he has 375 total turnovers making his TD to TO ration to around 2-1. But again, it depends on how you look at what is being said about him.
     
  19. hermhater

    hermhater Guest

    Who says the legacy can't still grow?
     
  20. smeags

    smeags militant geek

    i am just going by his stats, the int's while high do not take away from the fact that he put up monster numbers to go with multi mvp awards and a super bowl ring.

    when i hear the people that proclaim he is the best ever i take it thsoe comments for what they are and consider the source becuase as you pointed out the int's do take away from any arguement that he is the best ever.