Found May 04, 2009 on
MVN:
For years, we admired Brett Favre's childlike love of the game and
enthusiasm on the field. It is no wonder he was recently photographed
on a lawn chair next to Goofy... Now that he has been granted
his request to be released by the New York Jets, speculation is flying
that he will indeed attempt one more comeback, and pursue his
well-documented wish from last season to play for the Minnesota Vikings.If he does, he is dead to me.Let
me start out by saying that I would have taken Brett Favre over any
other quarterback to build my team around. I was outright belittled for
putting him on a plateau with the likes of Joe Montana.But
if you don't have a good line in front of Joe, you better have a great
backup QB like Steve Young (simply not feasible in the modern
salary-cap era), because he will miss time. He played behind the likes
of Jesse Sapolu, Randy Cross, and Guy McIntyre, and still missed two
seasons.You are not much good to your team if you cannot be under center. Favre
never missed a game, despite playing behind many suspect lines early in
his career. Even when the Packers won the Superbowl, he had three
different left tackles that season. However, while I will still
assert that Brett is on par on the field with any quarterback, he
appears to leave a lot to be desired off of it. Sure, he's not "making
it rain" in the nightclubs, and even quit drinking over a decade ago.
But he is looking like as big a primadonna as any quarterback of his
era.I wrote much on this as it pertained to the Packers, and will not rehash it. But we can now add another chapter based on his time with the Jets.First,
he admitted that he had wanted to be play for the Vikings or the Bears
for revenge. But I was willing to let that go when he admitted it and
conceded that it was not the right thing to do: Brett is an emotional
player, and the team's response to his announcement that he was coming
back was not only unexpected but disappointing. He reacted emotionally.But
then over the season, we receive a credible report that he fed
information to his former team's opponent. His denial was followed it
up with the assertion that even if he had done it, there were no rules
against it. Why would one make this point if one did not commit the
offense? Later, he had an issue with coach Eric Mangini for
being too harsh. He went rogue late in the season and cost his team the
playoffs, throwing nine picks against two scores in the final five
games en route to four losses. He even drew the ire of teammates.Now, after costing his new team a third-round pick, he retires, but then demands his release. I
do not want to jump to conclusions, but I am only human. What would
make a retired player's release urgent if he were not planning to
return? And since he wanted to play for the Vikings and they
are completely lacking a QB, why would he not want to stick it to his
former team twice? They are the only contending team he would greatly
improve since they have no established quarterback. Given all that has happened, if he is healthy it is hard to see him not going to the Vikings. I hope I am wrong, because right now what he has done for us outweighs what he has done to us.But if I am right, I will be leading the charge to keep him from entering the Hall of Fame as a Packer.
Original Story:
http://mvn.com/thefrozentundra/2009/0...
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