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Pat Dye Field => War Damn Eagle => Topic started by: Ogre on March 04, 2008, 11:22:23 AM

Title: Farve to Retire
Post by: Ogre on March 04, 2008, 11:22:23 AM
Quote
Agent: Packers QB Brett Favre will retire after 17 seasons
By CHRIS JENKINS, AP Sports Writer

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)—Brett Favre has decided to retire from the NFL after 17 seasons.

FOX Sports first reported Tuesday that the Green Bay Packers quarterback informed the team in the last few days. ESPN.com said that according to Favre’s agent the quarterback told coach Mike McCarthy of his decision.

The team did not immediately confirm or deny the report. An assistant to Packers general manager Ted Thompson said he was in meetings all day but would release a statement later Tuesday morning.

The news was a surprise to at least one of Favre’s teammates. Most players expected Favre to return after a successful 2007 season.

“I just saw it come across the TV,” Packers wide receiver Koren Robinson said, when reached on his cell phone by The Associated Press.

The 38-year-old Favre, a three-time NFL MVP and one of the NFL’s grittiest players, has made his annual flirtation with retirement a winter tradition in Wisconsin. He has taken weeks and even months to make his decision after recent seasons, with Cheeseheads hanging on his every word.

But unlike the final game of the 2006 season—when Favre provided a cliffhanger by getting choked up in a television interview as he walked off the field in Chicago, only to return once again—nearly everyone assumed he would be back this time. They were wrong.

Only two years removed from perhaps his worst season, Favre had a resurgence in 2007. He broke several career records. Among them was Dan Marino’s career mark for career touchdown passes. He powered the Packers to an NFC North title and a 13-3 regular-season record and earned his ninth Pro Bowl spot.

Surrounded by an underrated group of wide receivers who proved hard to tackle after the catch, Favre had a career-high completion percentage of 66.5. He threw for 4,155 yards, 28 touchdowns and only 15 interceptions.

It was a remarkable turnaround from 2005, Favre’s final season under former head coach Mike Sherman, when he threw a career-worst 29 interceptions as the Packers went 4-12.

Given Favre’s career resurgence, it was widely assumed that he was leaning toward returning for the 2008 season.

He even said as much just before the Packers’ Jan. 12 divisional playoff game against Seattle, telling his hometown newspaper that he wasn’t approaching the game as if it would be his last and was more optimistic than in years past about returning.

“For the first time in three years, I haven’t thought this could be my last game,” Favre told the Biloxi (Miss.) Sun Herald. “I would like to continue longer.”

Those comments sent premature shock waves across the state—all the way up to the governor’s office, where the political version of a false start was committed.

“Like all Packer fans, I am thrilled that Brett Favre will return to action next year for the green and gold,” Gov. Jim Doyle said in a statement. “Brett Favre’s tremendous work ethic and willingness to go out and play hard every day represent the true spirit of Wisconsin. I am hopeful that with this announcement behind us, Brett Favre and the Green Bay Packers can focus on the task at hand: defeating the Seattle Seahawks.”

The governor’s office later amended the statement to say Doyle was “excited to hear Brett Favre talking about returning to action next year.”

It was another example of the state’s fascination with the future of its favorite quarterback.

Favre then finished the season on a sour note, suddenly showing his age in the Packers’ 23-20 overtime loss to the New York Giants in the NFC Championship game.

Favre struggled in subzero temperatures, throwing an interception on the Packers’ second play from scrimmage in overtime to set up the Giants’ game-winning field goal.

After that game, Favre was noncommittal on his future. McCarthy said he wanted Favre to take a step back from the season before making a decision. But it was widely assumed he would be back.

“I think he’s going to come back,” Packers receiver Donald Driver said in early January. “I wouldn’t be surprised if he comes back. He’s having a great year, so it’d be great to see him come back if he decides to.”

Retiring Packers chairman Bob Harlan figured Favre would be back, too.

“Yeah, I think he’ll be back,” Harlan said, on his final official day as the Packers’ top executive. “And I felt that way the last couple years, when we’ve had these long debates about it. I just think he’s such a competitor that as long as he feels he can compete, he’s going to keep coming back.”

Still, in the week leading to the playoff game against Seattle, Favre said his injuries were starting to linger.

“I’m not getting any younger,” Favre said. “I wake up some days and think I can’t even touch my toes. I think about that. I think, well, next year is not going to be like some refreshing, awakening season where all of a sudden you’re going to feel great. That’s not going to happen.

“I carry some of these things with me that maybe you wouldn’t see. I tend to dwell on them, at least internally, more than I used to. I don’t write them off as quickly as I used to.”

Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Jumbo on March 04, 2008, 01:34:25 PM
One of the top 5 Qb's to ever play the game.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Thrilla on March 04, 2008, 03:50:57 PM
One of the top 5 Qb's to ever play the game.

And...he's made wearing Wranglers cool again.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Saniflush on March 04, 2008, 03:51:48 PM
And...he's made wearing Wranglers cool again.

Wearing Wranglers has never been cool unless you were on the the Rodeo circuit.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Buzz Killington on March 04, 2008, 04:01:53 PM
Wearing Wranglers has never been cool unless you were on the the Rodeo circuit.
Yeah, but he's one tough customer who knows what he likes when he sees it.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Saniflush on March 04, 2008, 04:04:37 PM
Yeah, but he's one tough customer who knows what he likes when he sees it.

I know he liked whipping our ass while he was at Southern Miss.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Snaggletiger on March 04, 2008, 10:13:43 PM
You know, the guy's a multi-quadrillionaire.  You'd think he could afford a box of Just For Men and comb out that gray.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: DnATL on March 04, 2008, 10:52:03 PM
And...he's made wearing Wranglers cool again.
Just like Prince made wearing assless chaps cool again.  (And it is cool - actually quite breezy)
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Jumbo on March 05, 2008, 01:52:44 AM
Just like Prince made wearing assless chaps cool again.  (And it is cool - actually quite breezy)
I look smokin' hot in assless chaps. :vn:
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Pell City Tiger on March 05, 2008, 07:12:33 PM
Wearing Wranglers has never been cool unless you were on the the Rodeo circuit.
Led the Golden Eagles to victory against us after suffering a near fatal car wreck the previous week.

Bret Favre is the 3rd toughest son-of-a-bitch ever to walk the earth. Right behind Bill Brasky and Chuck Norris.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: War Eagle!!! on March 05, 2008, 07:13:22 PM
Favre is retiring???? Holy shit!!! Why hasn't there been anything on the news...or SportsCenter...or ESPN Radio???? I had no idea...
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: AWK on March 05, 2008, 10:48:43 PM
Who in the hell is Brett Fav-re?
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Snaggletiger on March 05, 2008, 11:00:04 PM
It's a new cologne from Channel.

Fav-re...every man's fantasy
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Ogre on March 06, 2008, 09:13:44 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ok85BmPyl_I
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Buzz Killington on March 06, 2008, 09:18:53 AM
Leave it to Rick "on my knees" Karle to turn back to back stories about Favre retiring into Bammer pep rallies.  First it was Gene Stallings, then Bart Starr.

Hey Rick,  :fu:
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Kaos on March 06, 2008, 09:47:55 AM
I know he liked whipping our ass while he was at Southern Miss.

I tried my best to hate Favre, but couldn't.  I was in the stands the day we kicked four field goals and he led them back for a late TD to ruin homecoming.  I wanted so bad to hate him....

But I couldn't.  Admired the guy's tenacity.

That was the day my wife became an Auburn fan.  She was born and raised into a Bryant-worshipping family. She grudgingly went to that game.  As we were leaving she watched the Auburn fans interact with each other and with the Southern Miss fans.  We congratulated them and they us.  We still greeted each other with War Eagles. She was puzzled that there wasn't any complaining, people weren't screaming at each other and cursing the team and the coach, we weren't throwing things at the Southern Miss fans or flipping them off. She understood for the first time what the term "Auburn family" meant.  And she turned right then and there.  We left Auburn with her in possession of her first Auburn shirt.  She's 100% one of us now. Can't believe she was ever one of them.  

But that was a long time ago.  I don't know that the same attitude exists at Auburn any more. David Housel is shoved aside.  We've got Bamma-holes in orange and blue clothing like David fucKing Ward running around and thinking they have the right to speak for Auburn when they are completely clueless about what it truly means to be an Auburn man.  Merely attending school there does not qualify you.  We've also got tons of bandwagoners like PCChamp -- who admittedly chose Auburn in 2004 because the football team was doing well. He also presumes to lecture people on how the Auburn family should act.  I guess we've gotten spoiled.  The days when we could shrug off a loss to Southern Miss and still enjoy being in Auburn with Auburn people have been replaced.  We're not David Housel's small-town charm and friendliness, we're Jay Jacobs' pompadour pomposity.  Toomer's isn't a friendly corner drug store, it's a merchandising vehicle.  We've got a segment of the fanbase -- again heavily populated with former Bammers -- pledging loyalty to a MAN rather than the team, which if you think about it is how they grew up anyway. It's all they know.  I love Auburn. Always will.  I'm not so sure I like what it's becoming, though.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: CCTAU on March 06, 2008, 11:52:30 AM
I was in the stands that day. I sat and marveled at how one guy could be as tough as that and almost single-handedly will his team past us. The only other time I saw that type of determination was when we played UF and the mustache QB (can't think of his name right now, Kerwin Bell?) for them just got pummeled and kept getting up and coming back for more. The difference is that Favre continued for almost 20 years and almost 300 consecutive games. The other guy never started in the NFL.

Phenomenal career. And it was only a couple of years ago that most folks said he should just retire. That he was washed up.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Pell City Tiger on March 06, 2008, 09:27:48 PM
I was in the stands that day. I sat and marveled at how one guy could be as tough as that and almost single-handedly will his team past us. The only other time I saw that type of determination was when we played UF and the mustache QB (can't think of his name right now, Kerwin Bell?) for them just got pummeled and kept getting up and coming back for more. The difference is that Favre continued for almost 20 years and almost 300 consecutive games. The other guy never started in the NFL.

Phenomenal career. And it was only a couple of years ago that most folks said he should just retire. That he was washed up.
You're correct. It was Kerwin Bell (aka the throwin' Mayoan). He limped into the endzone dragging a bum leg to win the game against us in the Swamp in '86 or so.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Pell City Tiger on March 06, 2008, 09:28:53 PM
Who in the hell is Brett Fav-re?
I'm in town to play the Dolphins, you dumb ass.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Jumbo on March 07, 2008, 02:07:28 AM
I tried my best to hate Favre, but couldn't.  I was in the stands the day we kicked four field goals and he led them back for a late TD to ruin homecoming.  I wanted so bad to hate him....

But I couldn't.  Admired the guy's tenacity.

That was the day my wife became an Auburn fan.  She was born and raised into a Bryant-worshipping family. She grudgingly went to that game.  As we were leaving she watched the Auburn fans interact with each other and with the Southern Miss fans.  We congratulated them and they us.  We still greeted each other with War Eagles. She was puzzled that there wasn't any complaining, people weren't screaming at each other and cursing the team and the coach, we weren't throwing things at the Southern Miss fans or flipping them off. She understood for the first time what the term "Auburn family" meant.  And she turned right then and there.  We left Auburn with her in possession of her first Auburn shirt.  She's 100% one of us now. Can't believe she was ever one of them.  

But that was a long time ago.  I don't know that the same attitude exists at Auburn any more. David Housel is shoved aside.  We've got Bamma-holes in orange and blue clothing like David fucKing Ward running around and thinking they have the right to speak for Auburn when they are completely clueless about what it truly means to be an Auburn man.  Merely attending school there does not qualify you.  We've also got tons of bandwagoners like PCChamp -- who admittedly chose Auburn in 2004 because the football team was doing well. He also presumes to lecture people on how the Auburn family should act.  I guess we've gotten spoiled.  The days when we could shrug off a loss to Southern Miss and still enjoy being in Auburn with Auburn people have been replaced.  We're not David Housel's small-town charm and friendliness, we're Jay Jacobs' pompadour pomposity.  Toomer's isn't a friendly corner drug store, it's a merchandising vehicle.  We've got a segment of the fanbase -- again heavily populated with former Bammers -- pledging loyalty to a MAN rather than the team, which if you think about it is how they grew up anyway. It's all they know.  I love Auburn. Always will.  I'm not so sure I like what it's becoming, though.
Why dont you write more? I enjoy the hell out of your stories!
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Kaos on March 07, 2008, 10:30:52 AM
Why dont you write more? I enjoy the hell out of your stories!


Thanks.  Tell a publisher.  I would really like to write for a living.  I've got a head full of stories. 
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: CCTAU on March 09, 2008, 11:35:09 PM

Thanks.  Tell a publisher.  I would really like to write for a living.  I've got a head full of stories. 

OR SUMPIN!
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Ogre on April 10, 2008, 02:38:39 PM
Hold your horses! (http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ap-packers-favre&prov=ap&type=lgns)


Quote
If Green Bay Packers were in need, Brett Favre might think twice about retirement

GULFPORT, Miss. (AP)—If the Green Bay Packers are ravaged by injuries this season, Brett Favre might consider returning should the team reach out to him.

“It would be hard to pass up, I guess,” he told the Biloxi (Miss.) Sun Herald. “But three months from now, say that presents itself, I may say, you know what, I’m so glad I made that decision. I’m feel very comfortable in what I’m doing and my decision.

“Yeah, I can probably be up there doing that and playing, but again, I don’t know. It’s only speculating. I think the world of that team. I had a lot of fun, not only this year, but over my career.”

But if Aaron Rodgers went down with an injury?

“Aaron has fallen into a great situation,” Favre said. “And if that opportunity presented itself and they did call, it would be tempting. And I very well could be enticed do it.”

Favre understands the kind of challenge he would face should he opt to go back to the NFL after ending his record-setting 17-year career. And he made it clear he is not changing his mind at this time.

“But to think that if they called me in October and told me, ‘Hey, we need you this week.’ That would be hard,” Favre said in a story that appeared on the paper’s Web site on Tuesday. “I’m sure mentally, I would be refreshed. I’d be away from it for a long time. But mentally versus physically, the last thing I’d want to do is go up and it’s ‘Oh this is great’ and all that stuff and me be excited and then just flop.

“You just can’t show up and play.”

There has been a steady flow of speculation that Favre would have a change of heart in the wake of the March 4 announcement the league’s only three-time MVP was retiring.

“I guess the best response would be, right now no,” he said of a possible return to the game.

Favre added he would not return unless he was in shape.

“It would be hard to go up there at 38. It was hard to stay in shape. I say that, I worked out and I worked out hard,” he said. “Week in and week out, I was just drained. Finally, for the first time, I felt, not that 38 is old, but I looked around at practice and these guys are bouncing around. And I practiced every day and all the time people would ask me … `How do you do it? Inside I’m saying, ‘I have no idea.’ It’s a struggle.”


Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Thrilla on April 10, 2008, 02:38:54 PM
 :poke:

Quote
If Green Bay Packers were in need, Brett Favre might think twice about retirement
Apr 9, 6:10 pm EDT
 
 GULFPORT, Miss. (AP)—If the Green Bay Packers are ravaged by injuries this season, Brett Favre might consider returning should the team reach out to him.

“It would be hard to pass up, I guess,” he told the Biloxi (Miss.) Sun Herald. “But three months from now, say that presents itself, I may say, you know what, I’m so glad I made that decision. I’m feel very comfortable in what I’m doing and my decision.

“Yeah, I can probably be up there doing that and playing, but again, I don’t know. It’s only speculating. I think the world of that team. I had a lot of fun, not only this year, but over my career.”

But if Aaron Rodgers went down with an injury?

“Aaron has fallen into a great situation,” Favre said. “And if that opportunity presented itself and they did call, it would be tempting. And I very well could be enticed do it.”

Favre understands the kind of challenge he would face should he opt to go back to the NFL after ending his record-setting 17-year career. And he made it clear he is not changing his mind at this time.

“But to think that if they called me in October and told me, ‘Hey, we need you this week.’ That would be hard,” Favre said in a story that appeared on the paper’s Web site on Tuesday. “I’m sure mentally, I would be refreshed. I’d be away from it for a long time. But mentally versus physically, the last thing I’d want to do is go up and it’s ‘Oh this is great’ and all that stuff and me be excited and then just flop.

“You just can’t show up and play.”

There has been a steady flow of speculation that Favre would have a change of heart in the wake of the March 4 announcement the league’s only three-time MVP was retiring.

“I guess the best response would be, right now no,” he said of a possible return to the game.

Favre added he would not return unless he was in shape.

“It would be hard to go up there at 38. It was hard to stay in shape. I say that, I worked out and I worked out hard,” he said. “Week in and week out, I was just drained. Finally, for the first time, I felt, not that 38 is old, but I looked around at practice and these guys are bouncing around. And I practiced every day and all the time people would ask me … `How do you do it? Inside I’m saying, ‘I have no idea.’ It’s a struggle.”

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ap-packers-favre&prov=ap&type=lgns (http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ap-packers-favre&prov=ap&type=lgns)
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Thrilla on April 10, 2008, 02:39:16 PM
Whoa that was freaky
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Ogre on April 10, 2008, 02:40:29 PM
Whoa that was freaky

Beat you by 15 seconds.  Booyah!
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Thrilla on April 10, 2008, 02:45:49 PM
Beat you by 15 seconds.  Booyah!

You always were the first to make the biscuit soggy.
Title: Re: Farve to Retire
Post by: Ogre on April 10, 2008, 02:46:45 PM
You always were the first to make the biscuit soggy.

And you were always the first to eat it.