(JaiDee @ Sep. 25 2008,02:32) Of course
this is the most over-rated person in the history of sports
he has one title and about 900 picks and people {mostly in the part of america that no one cares about} think he is some sort of a legend 'cause he had gaudy numbers. He sucks....he threw another pick against the Pats 2 weeks ago, looked like hell against the chargers monday and knows about 10% of the Jets playbook.
I said it up here even before the season......the division he ends up in [happened to be in the AFC, proving there IS a God] would have DB's and safety's salivating just waiting for the ball to be thrown their way and it proved to be true.
This guy has been indecisive and reckless his whole career, has more "misses" than "hits" and is WAY over-rated
Over-the-hill never-was who should have hung it up around 1998
this is the most over-rated person in the history of sports
he has one title and about 900 picks and people {mostly in the part of america that no one cares about} think he is some sort of a legend 'cause he had gaudy numbers. He sucks....he threw another pick against the Pats 2 weeks ago, looked like hell against the chargers monday and knows about 10% of the Jets playbook.
I said it up here even before the season......the division he ends up in [happened to be in the AFC, proving there IS a God] would have DB's and safety's salivating just waiting for the ball to be thrown their way and it proved to be true.
This guy has been indecisive and reckless his whole career, has more "misses" than "hits" and is WAY over-rated
Over-the-hill never-was who should have hung it up around 1998
OK, he threw a pick against the Pats, and looked like hell against the Chargers, you say. Here is his stat line against a tough SD defense: 42 att 30 comp, 271 yds, 3 TD 2 INT, 92.5 rating. Sorry, but that does not define looking like hell. Yeah he had a bad play or two, but so does EVERY other QB WHO EVER PLAYED the game.
For the 2008 season, so far, he has 6 TDs, 3 INTS and a 98.7 rating. Those are very good numbers. He has done that well, even considering, like you said, he still does not know most of the Jets play book.
That the Packers have won only one Super Bowl during his time there, does not take away from the great career he has had so far. TEAMS win Super Bowls, not individuals.
Favre is the only three€“time AP MVP (1995€“97) in NFL history and led the Packers to seven division championships (1995, 1996, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2007), four NFC Championship Games (1995, 1996, 1997, and 2007), two NFC Championships (1996 and 1997), and one Super Bowl championship (XXXI). His NFL records include: most career touchdown passes (445), most career passing yards (62,030), most career pass completions (5,410), most career pass attempts (8,806), most career interceptions thrown (289), most consecutive starts among NFL quarterbacks (255; 277 total starts including playoffs), and most career victories as a starting quarterback (161)
None of the above is indicative of one being the most overrated ever.
He is easily one of the toughest players to ever play the game, if not THE toughest. His iron man streak is not to be taken lightly, and it is extremely doubtful anyone else will ever come close in our lifetimes.
Here is another example of his toughness. On July 14, 1990, before the start of Favre's senior year of college, he was involved in a near-fatal car accident. When going around a bend a few tenths of a mile from his parents' house, Favre lost control of his car, which flipped three times and came to rest against a tree. It was only after one of his brothers smashed a car window with a golf club that Favre could be evacuated to the hospital. In the ambulance, his mother was sitting with him. "All I kept asking [her] was 'Will I be able to play football again?'" Favre recalled later. Doctors would later remove 30 inches (760 mm) of Favre's small intestine. Six weeks after this incident, on September 8, Favre led Southern Miss to a comeback victory over Alabama. Alabama coach Gene Stallings said, "You can call it a miracle or a legend or whatever you want to. I just know that on that day, Brett Favre was larger than life.
To say he should have "hung the up" around 1998, is absurd. The Packers still apparently wanted him, unless one believes he was paying them to let him play, and if they hadn't probably 25 other teams at the time would have been glad to take him.
More misses than hits? If you're referring to TDs vs INTs it would be 445 to 289, so it can't be that aspect. If it is games won that he started in relationship to total games started, it would 161 wins out of 255 starts, so that doesn't fit either.
I hate that he is now playing for a team that I totally despise, but looking at Favre's career objectively, I have to give him his just due, and as a matter of fact, amongst NFL QBs, he is an all time great. One of the top ten all time best QBs. It would do no good to rank the top ten, 20, or whatever in order, because it gets to be nit picky to put this guy over that guy, or that guy over this guy, and some subjectivity comes into the equation. So I'll just say he falls somewhere in the top ten, IMO, and I would bet any amount of money also in the opinion of any head coach he ever played against in the NFL.
Green Bay, Wisconsin embodies all that is great about the NFL and the sport of football, and to say it is a part of America that nobody cares about is way off base IMO.
Even looking at the state from a political standpoint, they have IMO one of the best pairs of US Senators of any state. People in Wisconsin are generally at least as progressive and forward thinking as people anywhere in the USA.
Comment