Zero2Cool
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10 years ago
If there is one article that every Packers fan and every Brett Favre fan should read, it is this one. I'm glad Peter put it out there and hopefully the knuckleheads will connect the dots and drop the unnecessary drama targeted headlines.

Additionally, you'll read several points yours truly has stated repeatedly over the years that always get forgotten with the clickbait asswipe media we have thrusting garbage down our throats.

In so many ways, this is a “Wow” moment for Favre and the Packers, particularly for coach Mike McCarthy and general manager Ted Thompson. I thought on the eve of the event, it would be proper to put the ceremony into some perspective.

Seven years ago next month, Favre and the Packers divorced, citing irreconcilable differences, and I had a front-row seat. Settle back. The story’s pretty interesting—and it’s a big reason why I find it amazing that after just seven years, Favre and the Packers can pledge their love for each other again.

I’ll never forget a few things about that spring and summer of 2008. When Favre announced his retirement in March, it stunned the world. The Packers wanted a decision from Favre in March on whether he’d play in 2008, and if that decision wasn’t forthcoming, they were giving the job to Aaron Rodgers, who’d sat and learned the job behind Favre for three years. Favre wasn’t ready to commit, so he retired.

A couple of months later, I was washing my dog in my New Jersey driveway (true story) when my cell rang. It was Favre. I put down the soap and hose and talked to him. He said he was having second thoughts. Lots of them. He said he still wanted to play. He said he was thinking of asking for his release so he could play somewhere else. Chicago or Minnesota, maybe. I told him I didn’t think the Packers would release him so he could torment them from within the division. I remember saying to him that day he should think about all the kids with Brett Favre posters on their walls; they’d be heartbroken if he ever walked into Lambeau as a Bear or Viking. At the time, he wanted to keep his ruminations quiet, because he was still thinking about what to do.


July. Almost time for training camp. Now news broke that Favre, 38, still wanted to play, and he was going to try to force the Packers to release him so he could play elsewhere. I talked to Thompson, and he was adamant that the Packers would not let Favre go. They might consider trading him, but a release? No way.

On the Saturday before the Packers were due at training camp, I visited Favre at his home outside Hattiesburg, Miss. He and wife Deanna were there, and agent Bus Cook. We went to dinner with some relatives, then back to the house on his 465-acre spread. That day, Thompson asked Favre for a list of teams he’d agree to be traded to. Favre wouldn’t give him one. If Favre couldn’t go to Minnesota or Chicago, his preference was to force Thompson’s hand, and come back to play quarterback for the Packers. For Thompson, that was a non-starter.

Cook’s stance was the Packers would likely back down if Favre pressed his case to be released. I said I didn’t think Thompson would release him under any circumstances. I hadn’t seen Favre agonize over many decisions in his life, but he sure was on this late night sitting around the polished marble kitchen counter.

“I don’t know what I’ll do,’’ he said, massaging his ever-present stubbly beard. Then he bled a little bit, verbally.

“It’s strange to think I’ll never play for the Packers again. Does it hurt? Hurt’s not quite it. To see those fans I love cheer for another quarterback … That’s the way it goes, but it’ll be hard. Maybe I won’t play. If I don’t, I’ve had 17 great years in the NFL. Loved every minute of it. Loved playing in Green Bay.”

“You’re a football player,” Deanna said pointedly. “You need to play football.”

Favre had a couple of realistic options. Commissioner Roger Goodell told him if he sat for a while, maybe a team that got a quarterback injury would reach out to acquire him. True, but not something Favre wanted. Or he could agree to go to Tampa Bay or the Jets; both teams had been granted permission to talk to Cook and Favre in hopes they could convince Favre to get interested in playing for them.

But Favre wanted to play for the Vikings, or possibly the Bears. Both needed passers. Next option: the Packers.

Two or three times that night, well into the evening, I told him Thompson wouldn’t bend. The GM would get killed in Wisconsin if he handed Brett Favre to an arch rival. Favre knew, but he had trouble accepting.

“Ted told me, ‘Aaron’s our starter,’” Favre said at one point. “I asked if I could compete for the job. He said, ‘That is not an option.’ He said, ‘Coming up there obviously is not good. Things have changed. We’ve moved on.’ He basically said, ‘You’re not going to play here.’”

I flew to Green Bay the next day. Thompson reiterated there’d be no release. Favre, that night, texted me thusly: “Tell Ted to release me.” I don’t recall what I said, but it was something like, Not happening.

Two days later, I’d arrived in Charlotte to cover the Panthers at camp the next day. I’m a minor-league baseball fan, so I was in the stands to see the Kannapolis (N.C.) Intimidators when my phone rang. It was Jets GM Mike Tannenbaum. How can we sell our program to Brett? That’s what Tannenbaum wanted to know. I thought now that he had permission to talk to Favre, he should go to Hattiesburg and try to make his case. I’d have told someone from the Bucs the same thing had they called. Tannenbaum did make the trip, and he must have been persuasive. A few days later, he made a deal for Favre, and Favre played one year for the Jets. He played 2009 and ’10 for the Vikings, of course. The Vikes went 2-2 against the Packers, with Favre splitting a pair at Lambeau. And then it was over.

Now the ugliness, the hard feelings … poof. I don’t know why—but it seems it should have taken longer than seven years for the healing to happen. But good for all sides it didn’t.

One last thing. Remember when Jerry Rice was trying to keep his career going forever? I saw him in camp with the Broncos in 2005, at 42, trying to stick as a backup wideout. And I saw a free-agent cornerback from Bowling Green (I don’t recall the name) playing him straight-up in man coverage. Jerry Rice is ruining his legacy! Or so the talk went that summer.

But it didn’t. That, too, passed. As did the Favre bitterness in 2008.

This is what Favre said just before we parted that July Saturday in Mississippi:

“If this doesn’t work out, there’s no way to duplicate the relationship I have with the fans. When Bart Starr was fired by the Packers as coach, it was rough, but look now. He’s much bigger than that. He’s Bart Starr. Fans forgot the firing. Whatever happens, that will never have an effect on my love for the team or the fans. This is the ugliness of business. I understand.”

Nothing will feel ugly Saturday night. Good for Favre, and good for the Packers, and good for the fans who loved him.


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nerdmann
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10 years ago
Bert concocted the whole thing to get back and Ted for not letting him run the team.

Bert STILL isn't over it. He just knows that they'll all have to show honor to him now. The Packers take the high road, and Bert is abusing that.

Fuck Bert.
“Winning is not a sometime thing, it is an all the time thing. You don't do things right once in a while…you do them right all the time.”
musccy
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10 years ago
Why can't we get over this?!? (I'm not pointing fingers, I'm just as bad as anyone).

Off the field as a role model, teammate, and leader he was often deplorable.

However, for 3 hours on the field, aside from his stupid ints, he was awesome for the team, franchise, and fans. We're celebrating the "3 hour Bert" and yes that strokes his ego and indirectly condones the laundry list of immature poor choices he made, but I'm trying to compartmentalize that. He was fun to watch on the field, he made the Packers relevant and Sundays exciting again.
gbguy20
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10 years ago
I'm confused, why the hell would Peter King be in the middle of this situation? Why the hell would he have any pull on Ted Thompson's thoughts?

What in the
BAD EMAIL because the address couldn ot be found, or is unable to receive mail.
uffda udfa
10 years ago
Favre was and is a clown. Glad Peter put it out there for all to see.
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Ted Thompson sits on his hands per former GM: "because they’ve had 25 fricking years of great quarterbacks. Of course it works. Try it without a special quarterback."


nerdmann
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10 years ago

I'm confused, why the hell would Peter King be in the middle of this situation? Why the hell would he have any pull on Ted Thompson's thoughts?

What in the

Originally Posted by: gbguy20 



Maybe Bert promised him an excusive someday.
“Winning is not a sometime thing, it is an all the time thing. You don't do things right once in a while…you do them right all the time.”
sschind
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10 years ago

I'm confused, why the hell would Peter King be in the middle of this situation? Why the hell would he have any pull on Ted Thompson's thoughts?

What in the

Originally Posted by: gbguy20 



I was thinking the same thing but I think he has a pretty good reputation (for a sports reporter anyway) he has been around for a long time and I think people respect him and his opinions. I don't think he was involved in any negotiations or anything like that even though apparently Favre asked him to intervene ("Tell Ted to release me") I think that was more of a comment than a request. I don't think Favre really expected PK to tell Ted to release him. All in all I just think he has a pretty good idea of what is going on in the NFL and lots of people are curious to know what he is thinking.
sschind
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10 years ago

Favre was and is a clown. Glad Peter put it out there for all to see.

Originally Posted by: uffda udfa 



I was wondering how you were going to interpret this. Actually I guess I wasn't wondering, I figured you would interpret it pretty much just the way you did.

Zero2Cool
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10 years ago
Mortal Enemies!





http://mmqb.si.com/2015/07/16/brett-favre-green-bay-packers-unplugged-nfl/ 
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Barfarn
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10 years ago

I was wondering how you were going to interpret this. Actually I guess I wasn't wondering, I figured you would interpret it pretty much just the way you did.

Originally Posted by: sschind 



I dont think Nerd was "interpreting." Given the facts, it's the only rational conclusion to be drawn. Favre wanted GB to sacrifice pick/picks and be burdened w/ a pile of dead money so he could be free to possibly improve teams in the division. Ted Thompson honored his fiduciary duty to GB; Favre threw a temper tantrum.

Then after he engineered his way out of NY; we saw would could have been from 1999 forward if BF2 had been team player instead of a wanting only to be the glory hound "gunslinger."

Favre Records:
threw 508 TDs
threw 336 INTs
threw 1 8 year long temper tantrum [and counting]
Cheesey
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10 years ago
I can't blame Ted for not allowing him to go to the Bears or Viqueens. He would have been stupid to do so. Unless he could have recieved 1st round picks for the next 6 years.
It was a good football/business move to make him go elsewhere.
And Favre wanted to play, can't blame the guy for that.
To me, it's in the past and it's time now to honor his accomplishments here.
I know not all feel that forgiving, and if they want to hold onto the bitterness, that's their choice. Me, I will remember all the fun I had watching him lead the Packers.
It was one HELL of a ride!!!😁
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nerdmann
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10 years ago

I can't blame Ted for not allowing him to go to the Bears or Viqueens. He would have been stupid to do so. Unless he could have recieved 1st round picks for the next 6 years.
It was a good football/business move to make him go elsewhere.
And Favre wanted to play, can't blame the guy for that.
To me, it's in the past and it's time now to honor his accomplishments here.
I know not all feel that forgiving, and if they want to hold onto the bitterness, that's their choice. Me, I will remember all the fun I had watching him lead the Packers.
It was one HELL of a ride!!!😁

Originally Posted by: Cheesey 



Ted's job was to NOT give in to Bert. Giving him what he wants will only encourage other entitled divas to expect the same treatment in the future.

Ted did what was best for the team, and he was a good leader in doing so.
“Winning is not a sometime thing, it is an all the time thing. You don't do things right once in a while…you do them right all the time.”
musccy
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10 years ago

Ted's job was to NOT give in to Bert. Giving him what he wants will only encourage other entitled divas to expect the same treatment in the future.

Ted did what was best for the team, and he was a good leader in doing so.

Originally Posted by: nerdmann 



Agreed, and I give 🇹🇹 a lot of credit for it. That was a decision that easily could have ended 🇹🇹 's career (or at least tenure in GB). Whether he was lucky or not for having 🇦🇷 pan out, it certainly took some balls from 🇹🇹

sschind
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10 years ago

Ted's job was to NOT give in to Bert. Giving him what he wants will only encourage other entitled divas to expect the same treatment in the future.

Ted did what was best for the team, and he was a good leader in doing so.

Originally Posted by: nerdmann 



I agree with this 100%. I have absolutely no problem with the way the Packers handled their end of it. It would have been foolish for him to trade a QB, even if it was one they no longer wanted as their starter, to a division rival. The difference between me and a lot of other people is that I don't have a particular problem with the way Favre handled it either. He wanted to be released so he could go where he wanted to go. Who wouldn't. Ted said no and he traded him away. The Jets had no problem letting him go and he went to the vikings. I don't think its that big of a deal. Others disagree. No biggie.

I wish I could be there in person Saturday night but it won't happen. I'm guessing only a SB win would exceed the enthusiasm and celebration that will go on.
musccy
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10 years ago

The difference between me and a lot of other people is that I don't have a particular problem with the way Favre handled it either.

Originally Posted by: sschind 



The problem many had was this was just one of the straws. This alone may not have been all that bad, but coupled with the annual will he/won't he drama, questionable work ethic outside of games, diva qualities, and questionable moral decisions all contribute to the bigger picture many others see.

Ints aside, he was generally all you could ask for on the field. Off the field, though...




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Martha Careful (25-Jun) : I would have otherwise admirably served
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Mucky Tundra (19-Jun) : One person on Twitter=cannon law
Zero2Cool (19-Jun) : Well, to ONE person on Tweeter
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