News Archive on Green Bay Packers

The Saga of Favre, Or How I Became A Brett Fan

Monday, February 8th, 2010

I admit, I was one of those Vikings fans that dreaded the idea of the hated ex Green Bay QB wearing the Purple and Gold.

  • I made puking sounds when I saw the Photoshop pictures of Favre in a Vikings uniform.
  • I made gagging sounds when I heard that yes he COULD become a Viking.
  • I gave the evil eye to whomever said that yes, he would be coming to Minnesota to play.
  • I stared unbelieving at the TV as the SUV moved along 494 toward Winter Park, which oddly reminded me of the OJ chase.

No, not Brett Favre who had been a thorn in our side for 16 years. Who I called many names, including Diva, spoiled, Hick, among many others. I remember laughing at him as he cried through his retirement speech. Cheering when he broke the record for most INTs, booing him as he acted like a big baby and hid from cameras when the Pack was losing big to the Vikings years ago, his trainers hiding him with towels. How pathetic is that?

It wasn’t because I didn’t think Favre was talented, oh no! It was because Favre was still considered a PACKER even if he hadn’t been on the team for over a year. After all, for 16 years he led the Packers to numerous championships, including two super bowls. He out played our team, out smarted our defense and basically was the icon for the Green Bay Packers. I have nothing against the Packers. I admire their history and feel they are the one true football team still around, it’s the annoying, arrogant, cheese and beer addled fans I can’t stand. I do work on the border between Minnesota and Wisconsin and unfortunately work with a bunch of cheese heads. For those years that Favre was leading the Pack they had boosting rights. Except for a couple of those years I could not say too much, but then again, they were winning championships and our coach took a knee. What can be said to that?

When Favre left GB and wanted to come back, we Viking fans just sat there and watched the tennis match between the future hall of famer and the somewhat confused (at least it seemed to me) Green Bay Packers duke it out. It was not pretty, nor was it clean. It was a messy, silly and somewhat very drawn out match and we LOVED it!! Meanwhile we were slowly and quietly building not only a good team, but a great team. Signing free agents like the Williams boys and Jared Allen. Making smart and superior draft picks like Adrian Peterson. The only missing link seemed to be… a QB. What we had was not going to cut it.

When Favre didn’t back down, and it was obvious that the Pack didn’t want him, nor did they want US to have him (rumor had it he wanted to come here BADLY) they traded him to the Jets in a very smart deal with a “poison pill” attached. I say smart, because at the time it was, but it almost bit them in the butt when Favre played very well, until hurt late in the season. The Jets dropped him and once again, Favre not so tearfully retired from football.

Not so fast!

Enter the Vikings, notably Brad Childress with his ALMOST perfect team. Brett Favre was now available, with no contract, no poison pill…the only problem was he was going to be 40 years old, hurt and yes, retired (but does that even count when talking about Brett Favre??) And, yes, sadly when you look at the whole NFL the best QB available. Now to convince the “old gunslinger” he still had another year or maybe two in him.

Once again, we had the tennis match, only we were on the other side of the net, but we did not have much to lose in this match. If he didn’t want to UN-retire, then we go on with what we have (yikes!) or, if he did we deal with his obvious flaws and hopefully fill that gaping hole at QB, but with risks….lots of risks!!

There were signs this deal was done months before. Brett had his shoulder operated on. He worked out at home with high school kids he coached. He looked dang good throwing that ball too. Then of course the rumored phone calls, and then the famous pick up from the airport and the SUV drive. You’d think the president was in town the way it was played out here.

Brett signed and was on the practice field that afternoon. Seeing him in the red #4 jersey and Viking helmet seemed surreal to me. I thought this cannot be happening.

Brett missed camp, but after all his years did he really need it? He also was familiar with the offense and just had to build some chemistry with the receivers. Two of them very young, Sydney Rice and rookie Percy Harvin. Sounded easy huh?

And it was!

Again, I still had to rub my eyes when he stepped out onto the field but after awhile it seemed natural. He jelled, he threw, he took apart defenses like they were playing high school teams and not professional football teams. He built that chemistry with Harvin, Barrian and especially Sydney Rice. There were rumors of locker room problems, but after the rest of the team squashed that, nick naming him the “silver fox” putting a rocking chair by his locker on his 40th birthday and of course the butt slapping.

  • Brett made them believe in themselves
  • Brett kept them in the game, even when down.
  • Brett made them a better team.
  • Brett made it fun to watch football again.

Now of course I am a Brett fan. He’s not that spoiled diva I read about. He’s a good old boy that loves football, and yes has a big ego but he should and needs one for the work he’s doing. He does sometimes let that ego get in the way but that’s part of the price we pay to have him.

The first time they played the Packers, Brett played flawlessly, and the Packers didn’t have a chance. His predecessor, a decent QB himself Aaron Rogers looked like a deer in the headlights. It was beautiful!!

The 2nd Packer meeting in Green Bay only reinstates how I feel about cheese heads. When Randy Moss left the Vikings years before it was not for all good reasons. Randy obviously wanted to go somewhere else, and the Vikings were OK with letting him go feeling his best years were behind him. Randy had had his problems and only hung on because of his amazing talent. Most Vikings fans miss him, even with his off field problems and sometimes on field problems, Randy was a blast to watch in his hay day. When Randy returned to Minnesota he was greeted with applause. One notable picture I saw was of the famous Viking fan, Syd who dresses up like a Viking at games, was offered a seat in the end zone of a Patriots game. Randy caught a TD and went over and shook hands with Syd. It’s a touching picture and tells you how much Randy respects the Viking fans and how much we respect him… not so with the cheese heads and the QB who put their little hole in the wall town on the map. Who brought back a team that sucked for a decade and made them respectable. Who won a super bowl for them and was their hero for 16 years… noooooo, these morons booed him and booed him relentlessly the whole game. The most disgusting thing I saw was a “funeral” with a dressed up dummy of GB QB Favre in a coffin. The obscene shirts and the burning of jerseys…. SHAME on you Packer fans!! THIS is why you are so hated. I hope because of all of this that Brett goes into the Hall of Fame as a Viking and not a Packer just to stick it to them…one more time.

The Dallas playoff game had to be one of the best games. The defense won it, but Brett took apart their defense as if he were drawing up the plays on them. The famous Pants on the Ground chant showed how much these guys enjoyed playing together.

The NFC championship game was sad, since the Vikings out played the Saints in every way but turnovers. This game Brett played his heart out. He played with close to a broken ankle brought on by cheap shots from the Saints who hit him when he was unprotected. I believe they should start ejecting players since fining them seems to do no good. And I heard that the fans were yelling at him as he lay in pain getting it taped. Yelling that they hoped he’d never walk again… sickening, sad and totally classless fans. Shame on you too!! Even at his most “divaish” I never wished him any ill will.

Watching his press conference after the game you just could not see him wanting to come back. He looked tired and all of his 40 years. Yet when you saw Percy and Sydney talk about him, how much they admired him and how much they learned from him, begging him in their way to come back you wonder. And it is Brett Favre. He’s a “never say never” kind of guy. We won’t know until training camp is almost over if he’ll back or not.

I do hope so. What Viking fan would not want to relive that magic again? It was, for the first time in a very long time, fun to watch a Viking game. But for his sake… I’m on the fence. I feel for his family who had to watch him get pummeled in that playoff game. It was brutal, but my new pal Brett is tough.

Tennis anyone??

Should Brett Favre Hang Up The #4

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Adding to the misery of the  Minnesota Vikings fans after their devastating loss in the NFC Championship is whether their starting quarterback Brett Favre will be back next season.  The question arises on whether he should return or retire.

Should Brett Favre be back next year?
Favre Ponders Retirement Again

Favre is  coming off of one of his best statistical seasons of his career.  He passed for 4202 yards with 33 touchdowns and only seven interceptions.  He also completed a impressive 68.4 of s passes.  He led the Vikings to a 12-4 record , good enough to win the NFC North division.

Minnesota then defeated Dallas 34-3 in the division round of the playoffs in which Favre threw a career best four touchdown passes.  He had the Vikings on the brink of the Super Bowl in New Orleans, when he made another poor decision that sealed their fate.

Most of the Minnesota players want him back next year.  That is definitely in his favor for a return.

The poor decision in question is his third down pass that was intercepted when he had the Vikings in field gaol range at the end of regulation in the NFC Championship game. Instead of running, passing to a receiver in front of him, he threw cross field and got picked off.

This is what you get from a gunslinger like Favre.

He tries to force things when they are not there.  While sometimes they pay off, this time it blew up in his face when it counted the most.  Favre did the same thing a couple of years ago in Green Bay against the New York Giants.  He again tried to force a pass, when there were other open receivers ,and it ended up with another interception.  The Packers lost, and the Giants became Super Bowl Champions.

This seems to becoming a habit for #4.

I think that the rigors of the NFL season leaves Favre with nothing left at the end of the season both physically and mentally.  This takes a toll on Favre and must effect his play deep in the playoffs.  I would suggest that he hand the reigns to a younger quarterback.  Favre does not have what it takes to to lead his team to the ultimate goal of a Super Bowl title.  He should hang up the #4.

Favre, Turnovers Sink Viking’s Ship

Monday, January 25th, 2010

The Minnesota Vikings suffered a devastating loss yesterday at the hands of the New Orleans Saints 31-28 in overtime in the NFC Championship. It would be easy to blame some very shaky officiating in overtime, but a closer look tells the story of a team that has nobody to blame but themselves…

The Vikings outplayed the Saints everywhere but on the scoreboard. They moved the ball up and down on the field outgaining the Saints 475-257. The Vikes defense played  more than well enough to get this team to the Superbowl. It was the miscues by the offense lead by Brett Favre that sealed their fate.

The Saints had   more that a couple of “Home Town” calls in overtime. In particular was running back Pierre Thomas fourth and inches dive that appeared to be a certain first down. The officials went to replay. The replay showed that Thomas did not have  control of the ball where the ball was spotted. It should have been spotted behind the first down marker giving the ball to the Vikings. Another big blown call was a catch by wideout  Robert Meachem jut before the game winning field goal. Meachem’s catch was ruled a completion on the filed. The officials again reviewed the play that showed Meachem had trapped the ball. The Saints benefited again and Garret Hartley kicked a 40 yarder than sent them to the Super Bowl.The Vikings have reason to feel they were ripped off. If you going to rely on the instant replay, get the calls right. Everybody saw what I saw and it cost a team the right to play in the SuperBowl . WOW!

But as I said, this is only part of the story. If the Vikings protected the ball, it would of never have gotten to the point of overtime. Minnesota had five turnovers in all. Three fumbles and two interceptions. Percy Harvin fumbled deep in his own  territory that lead to a Saints touchdown. Bernard Barrian also fumbled when the Vikes were on the move. But the biggest culprit was quarterback Brett Favre. Favre lost a fumble and had two picked off. The first two were drive killers and the last one sealed preventing them for ending the game at the end of regulation.

On third down and in field goal range, Favre made a decision that was reminiscent of a couple of years ago.Favre had room to run and a receiver right in front of him on the sideline that would of picked up very valuable yardage towards a game winning kick. But instead of seeing right in front of him, the gunslinger threw cross field that ended in a devastating interception. Green Bay fans will remember him doing that against the Giants a couple of years. Favre also had more viable options then but choked then as he did now. He will receive no sympathy form them. Favre ended up 28-46 for 310 yards, a touch and two picks. But it was his last pass, like Green Bay, that will be remembered by Viking fans. The Hall of Famer will have a long off season to think about a very poor decision.

The Vikings have lost five straight NFC Championship games. I have a little sympathy for them. I am a Eagles fan. They have lost four out of five. My advice for the fans of Minnesota is; Some things are not meant to be!

Rules Were (Not) Meant to be Broken

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

The NFL needs to decide whether or not it wants to enforce its own rules.  It’s playoff time in the NFL now.  Win, or go home.

In one of the best playoff games in recent memory, and arguably one of the greatest playoff games of all time, Green Bay was sent packing by the Cardinals.  However, there were a few blown calls late in the game that could have cost the Packers a chance of advancing to play New Orleans.

Snyder and Other Dismiss NFL Rules

Snyder Dismisses NFL Rules

On the second play in overtime after a thrilling four periods of regulation, Aaron Rodgers was hit in a helmet to helmet collision in the process of completing a fourteen yard pass.  No personal foul was called, and the play was called back for offensive holding.  Two plays later, everyone watched in shock as Rodgers was taken down by the facemask, losing the ball in the process as Karlos Dansby scooped it out of the air and into the end zone for the Arizona win.

Over the past season, and going further back into prior seasons, the NFL has shown their commitment to protecting the quarterback, no matter how minor the offense. Some argue that certain players have received special treatment from these rules, a la the “Tom Brady treatment.”

To maintain fair competition, the NFL needs to stop over blowing the whistle when these “elite” quarterbacks are out there or make consistent calls.  Since the evidence shows that the calls are never consistent, they should stop overprotecting the quarterback position and let defenses go and do what they are paid to do, which is play defense.

Another rule that has become even more of a mockery than the protection of quarterbacks is the Rooney Rule. This states that teams who are in the process of hiring a new head coach must interview at least one minority. The purpose of this is to give the opportunity of obtaining a head coaching job to a minority. At the very least, even if said minority is passed over for the job, it gets their name out there for future vacancies.

However, it has become commonplace for owners in all sports, including the NFL, to continually recycle the same Caucasian coaches who have been mediocre in prior stints on other teams.  Presumably some of this has to do with media hype over certain coaches when coaching jobs open up, no matter how merited that hype may be. The ignorance of the owners perpetuates this.

In two jobs that opened up shortly after season’s end, the Redskins and Seahawks had their positions filled (at least in principle) before full interviews really took place.  Dan Snyder played footsie with Mike Shanahan for weeks with Zorn still under contract, and days after the season was officially over, he was hired.  The Seahawks were quick to dump their first year coach in favor of USC’s Pete Carroll, who has been mediocre at best in his prior head coaching positions in the NFL.

What’s questionable is if and how these two teams complied with the rule when looking for their replacement. The Redskins interviewed one of their assistants during the season while Zorn was still head coach, and the Seahawks were trying to set up an interview with Minnesota’s defensive coordinator while at the same time working on a contract with Carroll.

It’s quite evident that the spirit of the rule was not followed by either team. Quick moves to dump their current head coaches were made to make room for candidates that were available and coveted by ownership of both teams. Any lackadaisical interviews that occurred with anyone were done simply for compliance sake, not to give those candidates their fair opportunity as was the plan when the rule was originated. But I guess ignorance is bliss.

Green Bay Looking To Send Arizona Packing

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

The Green Bay Packers will look to keep things rolling as they return to Arizona for the third rematch of Week 17 looking to make it a clean sweep by the Week 17 winners.  The New York Jets dominated the Cincinnati Bengals yesterday afternoon and the Dallas Cowboys blew the Philadelphia Eagles off the field last night.  Its now up to the Packers to keep it going.

Woodson and Green Bay Defense Look To Be Difference Makers

Woodson and Green Bay Defense Look To Be Difference Makers

Closing out the season with seven wins in its last eight games, the Packers entered the playoffs with the tag of the NFL’s hottest team.  They rolled into Arizona last week and put a statement on a game that although meaningless to the Cardinals, they certainly didn’t roll over.

The Cardinals continue to be the same Jeckyll and Hyde team they were in their Super Bowl runner-up season in 2009.  You never seem to know who is going to show up on a weekly basis.  This season, the Cardinals have not shown the mettle they did last year and Kurt Warner appears to be showing his age.

This game will be decided on the defensive side of the ball between these two explosive offenses.  Both teams field solid defenses that have their moments.  Each need to have their moments today.

Green Bay’s defense led the league in turnover margin, which may be the deciding factor today.  Green Bay registered a +24 turnover margin in the regular season, making big plays on defense and securing the ball on offense.

Conversely, Warner has a penchant for turning the ball over with errant passes.  When he’s on, he has pinpoint accuracy.  When he’s off, forget about it.  If Green Bay can apply pressure to Warner and force him into mistakes, it is likely the Packers will leave Arizona with a similar result this week.

For the Packers offense, they will look to take advantage of an ailing Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie who missed practice all week.  Rodgers-Cromartie, a Pro Bowler in 2009, injured his knee on just the third play of the game last week.  It has been diagnosed as a deep bruise on the knee cap.  Rodgers-Cromartie has been limited in practice and has been unable to plant and cut, which could prove disastrous against Green Bay’s WRs Donald Driver and Greg Jennings as QB Aaron Rodgers looks to exploit his injury.

Look for Green Bay to move on in the playoffs with a solid victory.

Prediction: Green Bay 31-28

NFC Playoff Scenario Breakdown for Week 17

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

The final week of the NFL season is upon us and the playoff scenarios are the talk of the NFL. In the NFC, the teams have been decided, but the seeding are a crap shoot from positions 2 to 6. Only the New Orleans Saints get the opportunity to rest this week knowing they are assured home field advantage throughout the playoffs and everyone else is fighting for the other first round bye.

nfc_logoThe Eagles control their destiny.  A win secures a first week bye and home field, a loss send them on the road for the entire playoff.  With an Eagles loss, a free-for-all will ensue, giving every team left a shot at that first week bye. The following is a breakdown of all the possibilities for today’s games.

Philadelphia Eagles clinch first round bye with:

  • A win over Dallas Cowboys

Minnesota Vikings clinch a first round bye with:

  • A win over New York Giants
  • A loss by Philadelphia

Arizona Cardinals clinch a first round bye with:

  • A win over Green Bay Packers
  • A loss by Philadelphia
  • A loss by Minnesota

Dall as Cowboys clinch a first round bye with:

  • A win over Philadelphia
  • A loss by Minnesota
  • A loss by Arizona

You can follow how the day breaks down with Yahoo’s Playoff Scenario Generators at http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/playoffscenario.

Pro Bowl Selections That Make You Scratch Your Head

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Pro Bowl 2010Every time an All-Star team is selected there are always bound to be undeserving guys making the squad and a bunch of bridesmaids hoping to be the bride.  The 2010 Pro Bowl selections are no different this year.  Unlike most years, there are fewer disagreements on the choices.  Regardless, there were some glaringly bad selections and awful omissions.

Here’s my take:

Who Was Undeserving

1.  Jason Witten

Here’s a guy that had an awful season.  Who cares if he has a lot catches, they’ve been meaningless dump offs and mop up play.   He rates at the bottom for YPC, TDs and catches for first downs.  Not to mention he is no longer Romo’s go to guy.

2.  Bryant McKinnie

Benched two weeks ago as Julius Peppers brutalized Brett Favre, leading to the sideline meltdown between Favre and Childress.  His reward…a starting spot on the Pro Bowl offensive line.  At least Pepper is on his team this time.

3.  David Akers

A beneficiary of playing on a team that can’t put the ball in the end zone.  Kicking is about more than just chipshot field goals.  Akers has never shown himself to be a pressure guy and his kickoffs rate in the back half of the league.  A little known fact: Shaun Suisham and Nick Folk had better averages for 40+ field goals and they both got cut.

4.  Wes Welker

Put the numbers aside, this guy has no right in the Pro Bowl.  He is not even their top receiver.  His numbers are bloated because of the slot passes which are more wildcat formation runs than actual catches.  He’s the only top WR where less than 10% of his catches are over 10 yards.

5.  DeAngelo Williams

Williams had a somewhat down year on a bad team that he contributed losses to and he gets in the Pro Bowl?  He deserved it last year, but not based on his performance this year.  After Jonathan Stewart’s performance against the Giants, Williams might not even start next year.

6.  Asante Samuel

While he gets lots of interceptions, he gets beaten too often.  This is not to mention that the guy likes less tackling contact than Deion Sanders.  Its almost impossible to play every down of every game and only have 40 tackles, but Samuels did it.

Who Got Shafted

1.  Cedric Benson

How did this guy not make the team?  He leads the NFL in carries per game and has made an unbelievable comeback against all the odds. his performance against the Bears should get him in alone.  Probably the biggest shaft of them all.

2.  Brent Celek

This guy has been a rock in the Philly offense.  Unlike Witten and Tony Gonzalez who feed as dump off receivers, Celek goes down the field for his catches because dumps to its running backs.  Not to mention taking hit better than anyone in the NFL.  Celek is a major reason why the Eagles offense has clicked despite all the injuries.  I guess he lost out so undeserving Eagles like Akers and Samuels could attend in his place.

3.  Ryan Grant

This guy has been a workhorse.  When he is running the ball well, Green Bay wins games.  He is perhaps the most important player to their success because he takes pressure off the offensive line that can’t pass block.

4.  D.J. Williams

Victim of the ongoing love affair with Ray Lewis that will never end.  Williams had a breakout year that should have gotten the recognition it deserved.  Williams is a tackling machine but won’t see the Pro Bowl until Lewis retires.

5.  Antoine Bethea

94 tackles, 9 passes defended and 4 INTs.  This rates you a bystander for the pro bowl.  But if you get 45 tackles, 8 passes defended and 3 INTs at the same position, you are in like flint.  Congrats to Ed Reed for stealing Bethea’s spot.

Steelers and Pittsburgh are in State of Shock

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

The defending Super Bowl champions are mirrored in a five game losing streak that has the team in a funk and dealing with reality of missing the playoffs. At the beginning of this season, this

Mike Tomlin has seen better days in Steel Town

Mike Tomlin has seen better days in Steel Town

would have been the last thing the Steelers would have dreamed of. This five game skid has the players and their coach Mike Tomlin in more than a miserable mood. Everyone is in a state of shock in Pittsburgh.

The Steelers stand at 6-7 and  and their five game losing streak has been by a total of 22 points. Three of those games; Kansas City, Baltimore and Oakland have come by only three points. The loss by Oakland in the final minutes when they gave up a touchdown drive was followed up with a listless effort in Cleveland on a Thursday night resulting in a 13-6 loss. You cannot lose games to the likes of those teams in this league and expect to play in the post season. The Steelers are 1-7 in games decided by seven point or less. It seems that lack of execution and a failure to close the game has lead this team to the predictement they are currently in. This is in large contrast to last season when there executed with greatness in the fourth quarter including last years Super Bowl triumph over the Arizona Cardinals.

Pittsburgh’s  remaining schedule does not do them any favors. They have Green Bay, Baltimore and finish off in Miami. It looks like they will end their season in the warmth of Miami, FAR from the plan  they add for this season. Their will be a new Super Bowl champion this year in the National Football League.