Brett Favre: Difference between revisions
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Since March 2001, Favre has been signed to a "lifetime" contract with the Packers, the first in team history. The deal made Favre the first $100 million player in NFL history. |
Since March 2001, Favre has been signed to a "lifetime" contract with the Packers, the first in team history. The deal made Favre the first $100 million player in NFL history. |
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===Post-Season Disasters=== |
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2001- 6 Interceptions in a 17-45 Loss at Rams |
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2002- 2 Interceptions and 2 Fumbles in a 7-27 Loss vs Falcons |
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2003- 1 Interception in OverTime in a 17-20 Loss at Eagles |
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2004- 4 Interceptions in a 17-31 Loss vs Vikings |
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===2005 Disappointment=== |
===2005 Disappointment=== |
Revision as of 06:23, 24 June 2006
Brett Favre (pronounced "Färv") (born October 10, 1969 in Gulfport, Mississippi) has been the starting quarterback for the Green Bay Packers American football team in the National Football League since 1992. He is widely considered one of the greatest quarterbacks in the history of the NFL.[1] Favre is the NFL's only three time MVP (1995-97), and is known for his durability and toughness, holding the NFL record of 221 consecutive starts, or nearly 14 seasons (241 total starts including playoffs). He is of French and Choctaw ancestry; one of his paternal grandparents was a Choctaw Native American.[2]
Kiln
Favre was raised in Kiln, Mississippi (pronouced Kill), and attended Hancock North Central High School there. He played quarterback, lineman, strong safety, placekicker and punter in a primarily option, run-oriented offense coached by his father, Irvin Favre. Irvin Favre said he knew his son had a great arm but also knew that the school was blessed with good running backs. As a result, the three years Brett was on the team his father ran a run-oriented offense called the wishbone.
College
Favre received only one scholarship offer after high school. It was from nearby Southern Mississippi—which wanted him to play defensive back. Favre wanted to play under center instead and clawed his way up from the seventh string to the backup job and then to the starting position just three games into his freshman year. He took over in the second half against Tulane on September 19, 1987 and led USM to a comeback victory with two touchdown passes. Favre led the Golden Eagles to a big upset of Florida State, then ranked sixth in the nation, September 2, 1989. Favre capped off a six-and-a-half-minute drive with the game-winning touchdown pass with 23 seconds remaining.
Favre's college career was turned upside down on July 14, 1990, when he was 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. It flipped three times in the air, crashed into a tree and got stuck there. Only after his brother smashed the window with a golf club could he be evacuated to the hospital. On the way there, inside of 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 of Favre's small intestine. 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.”
Atlanta
Favre was drafted by the Atlanta Falcons in the second round, 33rd overall in the 1991 NFL Draft. In Atlanta, he was a third-string quarterback with unremarkable numbers and an affinity for partying. He got into repeated clashes with head coach Jerry Glanville. Favre's very first pass in the NFL resulted in a touchdown ... for the other team (it was intercepted). His most notable accomplishments, aside from going 0 for 5 passing with two interceptions that year, were missing the team photo (he'd been out the night before), for which he was fined, and making a $100 bet with Jerry Glanville that he could throw the ball into the upperdeck of Fulton County Stadium. Favre won the bet and Glanville paid him the money. The Packers general manager Ron Wolf traded a first round pick (17th overall) for Favre during the following offseason. (Wolf, while general manager of the New York Jets, had intended to take Favre in the 1991 NFL draft, but Favre was taken by the Falcons on the pick previous to the Jets.)
The trade is regarded as one of the most lopsided in NFL history, but nearly didn't happen. According to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel and other sources, during the physical after the trade, Favre was diagnosed with avascular necrosis, the same degenerative hip condition that ended Bo Jackson's career, and doctors recommended he be failed. Wolf overruled them and the Packers would never be the same.
The Top 5 Reasons You Can't Blame...
On September 5, 2005, in an episode of The Top 5 Reasons You Can't Blame... series, ESPN Classic examined why the Falcons cannot be blamed for trading Favre. The hip condition was not listed among the reasons, which were:
- 5. Favre was a little-known player from a little-known college (his surname was even mispronounced "Favor" at the NFL Draft), whose preseason bragging about soon becoming the starter quickly wore thin.
- 4. Favre didn't fit in. He was a casual person on a flashy Falcons team, with a flashy coach, and Favre and Glanville never got along.
- 3. Favre was a party animal who drank too much, though he later quit drinking as part of treatment for an addiction to painkillers in 1996.
- 2. Favre was terrible when the Falcons actually put him into one exhibition game and one regular-season game.
- 1. Favre wanted a trade, and it could be argued that former Packers coach Mike Holmgren, himself a former quarterback, turned Favre from a good college quarterback without much of a pro future into a Hall of Fame pro quarterback.
Green Bay
Favre's first completion as a Green Bay Packer was to himself. On September 13, 1992, in a game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Favre's pass attempt was deflected by Ray Seals. Favre caught the deflection, but went down for a loss of 7 yards. He started the game in the second half.
He has started every Green Bay Packers game since September 20, 1992, when Don Majkowski went down injured against the Cincinnati Bengals. Favre did not play well during most of the game, prompting the fans to chant "Put Ty in!", referring to Ty Detmer who was also on the Packers at the time. Favre proceeded to lead the team to a comeback victory however, throwing the game-winning touchdown pass to Kitrick Taylor with 13 seconds remaining. Favre was so thrilled that he nearly forgot that he was supposed to be the holder on the extra point try. Favre never liked having to hold the ball for the kicker, and when he had to do it in this instance he let go of the ball several seconds before Packer kicker Chris Jacke could kick it. Fortunately, the ball stood up on its own tip long enough for Jacke to convert the extra point.
The next week's game against the Pittsburgh Steelers began the longest consecutive starts streak for a quarterback in NFL history, a number that continues to grow despite numerous injuries, including a broken thumb on his right (throwing) hand that he suffered in week 7 against the Rams during the 2003 season. At the time the Packers were holding a record of 3-4 going into the bye week. After the bye week, in spite of the fracture in his throwing thumb, he led the Packers to a 10-6 record in the regular season and a victory over the Seattle Seahawks in the playoffs. Even more impressive was the fact that he tossed a league leading 32 touchdown passes. The 2003 season was just one chapter in the story of Favre's toughness.
In the early years under head coach Mike Holmgren, Favre struggled to keep his game under control, often making high-risk throws that resulted in many interceptions. Eventually he learned Holmgren's system and became one of the league's top quarterbacks, winning the first of three MVP awards in 1995, a season in which the Packers made it to the NFC Championship Game, upsetting the San Francisco 49ers to go further in the playoffs than any Packer team since the Vince Lombardi era.
While being treated for various injuries, Brett Favre developed an addiction to painkillers. He went public with his problem in May 1996, and immediately sought rehabilitation after a press conference admitting his problem. He remained in rehab for 46 days.
Super Bowl Years
Favre led the Packers to their greatest season in 30 years in the 1996-97 season, winning his second consecutive MVP award in the process. Green Bay compiled an NFL-best regular season record of 13-3, dispatched San Francisco 49ers and Carolina at Lambeau Field in the playoffs, and advanced to Super Bowl XXXI at the Louisiana Superdome, a short drive from Kiln.
Favre completed 14 of 27 passes for 246 yards and 2 touchdowns in Super Bowl XXXI, including an 81-yard touchdown pass to Antonio Freeman in the second quarter (then a Super Bowl record; this was surpassed in Super Bowl XXXVIII with Jake Delhomme's 85-yard touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad). Favre also rushed for 12 yards and another touchdown, as the Packers won Super Bowl XXXI over the New England Patriots, 35-21.
Favre and the Packers continued their dominance of the NFC the next season. Favre was named co-MVP of the league with Detroit Lions running back Barry Sanders, his third straight award. Green Bay fought their way to Super Bowl XXXII but lost to John Elway and the Denver Broncos by the score of 31-24 at Jack Murphy Stadium in San Diego after turning the ball over on downs on their final drive while trying to score a touchdown to send the game into overtime. Favre had a superb performance in the game, completing 25 of 42 passes for 256 yards and 3 touchdowns, with 1 interception. Still, he took the loss to the Broncos hard, and considered retirement in the offseason. Eventually, Brett decided to continue playing.
Post Super Bowl years
Favre and the Packers continued posting positive results through the next few seasons. Through the 2004 season, the Packers had the longest streak of non-losing seasons (13) in the NFL, despite an 8-8 record under coach Ray Rhodes, a 9-7 season under coach Mike Sherman, and no playoff berths in either 1999 or 2000. The streak ended in 2005, with the Packers finishing 4-12 overall. Although seldom discussed by the media, Favre has not had as much success in the postseason since Super Bowl XXXII. He is 2-5 in the playoffs since the 1998 season. [3] Two of those losses were at home in the first round (or wild-card game), and they were the first postseason losses ever at Lambeau Field.
Favre was the target of controversy at the end of 2001 when, in the regular-season finale against the New York Giants at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., Favre rolled to his right and slid down at the feet of hard-charging Giants defensive end Michael Strahan. It was Strahan's lone sack of the game and gave him the NFL's single-season sack record of 22.5, which topped Mark Gastineau's record of 22 set in 1984. Favre claimed he'd changed the play at the line of scrimmage, but the rest of the team appeared to run a different play than Favre's. The Packers were winning the game handily—and did win 34-25—and Favre's offensive line had relegated Strahan to a non-factor for most of the game. Players and fans from around the league were highly critical of the play, and comedian Jimmy Kimmel even lampooned the episode in a skit during FOX NFL Sunday shortly after, depicting a "Strahan" and a "Favre" in an elegant ballet that culminated in "Strahan" sweeping "Favre" up off his feet and gently laying him on the ground.
One of the defining moments of Favre's career, and arguably his greatest game ever, took place on December 22, 2003, in a Monday Night Football game against the Oakland Raiders. The day before, his father, Irvin Favre, died suddenly of a heart attack (See the College sub-header). Favre elected to play and passed for four touchdowns in the first half, and 399 yards in a 41-7 destruction of the Raiders on international television (receiving applause from the highly partisan "Raider Nation"). Afterwards, Favre said, "I knew that my dad would have wanted me to play. I love him so much and I love this game. It's meant a great deal to me, to my dad, to my family, and I didn't expect this kind of performance. But I know he was watching tonight." He was named NFC Offensive Player of the Week. He then went to his father's funeral in Pass Christian, Mississippi and returned in time to lead the Packers to a dominant 31-3 victory over the Denver Broncos, which resulted in the 2003 NFC North championship when the division-leading Minnesota Vikings lost an 18-17 game to the Arizona Cardinals, who won with a last minute touchdown. Favre won an ESPY Award for his Monday Night Football performance.
Since March 2001, Favre has been signed to a "lifetime" contract with the Packers, the first in team history. The deal made Favre the first $100 million player in NFL history.
Post-Season Disasters
2001- 6 Interceptions in a 17-45 Loss at Rams 2002- 2 Interceptions and 2 Fumbles in a 7-27 Loss vs Falcons 2003- 1 Interception in OverTime in a 17-20 Loss at Eagles 2004- 4 Interceptions in a 17-31 Loss vs Vikings
2005 Disappointment
Green Bay's 2005 season was a disappointment right from the beginning. All-Pro wide receiver Javon Walker, Favre's favorite target, went down with a season-ending knee injury in the first game. This bad luck was followed by the loss of running back Ahman Green, and rookie wide receiver Terrence Murphy. The Packers' misfortunes didn't end there. Second running back Najeh Davenport was lost for the season after breaking his ankle. Third-string running back Tony Fisher, slot receiver Robert Ferguson and starting tight end Bubba Franks also missed playing time. With all of the team's injury problems, a few unknown players rose up to try and help Favre lead the team. Rookie, Nigeria-native Samkon Gado rushed for over a hundred yards three times before being lost for the rest of the season in game 14 due to a torn MCL, and veteran receiver Donald Driver excelled in the flanker position after replacing the injured Javon Walker. Third-year wideout Antonio Chatman saw some major playing time along with his normal special teams duties. Brett Favre had a below average season with over 3,000 yards for a record fourteenth consecutive time, however he only threw 20 touchdown passes and led the NFL with a career high 29 interceptions. This gave him a passer rating of 70.9, 31st in the NFL and his lowest single season rating of his career.
After his dissapointing 2005 season, many speculated that Favre would retire. However, on April 26 2006, Favre announced that he would remain with the team for the 2006 season. Despite earlier comments that the 2006 season would be his last, Favre announced in a press conference on May 6, 2006 that he has not ruled out the possibility of returning beyond the 2006 season.[1]
Family tragedies
On Sunday, December 21, 2003, Irvin Favre ran into a ditch near Kiln, where years earlier Brett Favre had nearly died. Said Sgt. Joe Gazzo of the Mississippi State Highway Patrol: "It didn't appear that the accident was serious enough to cause him to be unconscious, so that leads us to believe that a medical condition was what caused him to go off the road." Irvin Favre went off the road at 5:23 p.m., according to eye-witness reports, and was pronounced dead at 6:15 p.m. An autopsy done the following day showed that Irvin Favre died of a sudden heart attack.
Several family crises followed Irvin Favre's death. Favre's brother-in-law, Casey Tynes, was killed in an all-terrain vehicle accident on Favre's Mississippi property. Soon after, Brett's wife, Deanna, was diagnosed with breast cancer. Following aggressive treatment, she made progress and appears to be recovering well. (She is expected to make a complete recovery.)
More recently, in late August 2005, Favre's family suffered another setback. Hurricane Katrina blew through Mississippi, destroying his family's home there. However, none of his family members were injured. Brett and Deanna's home in Hattiesburg, Mississippi was also damaged by the storm.
On December 13, 2005, Brett's grandmother, Izella French, suffered a stroke. She is currently in stable condition.
Honors and awards
- Favre has won the National Football League's Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award a record three times, all in consecutive years (1995, 1996, and 1997; the last shared with Barry Sanders). He is the only NFL player to have won more than twice.
- Favre has been selected to play in the Pro Bowl eight times in his career.
- Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle declared November 29, 2004 as Brett Favre Day to honor Favre's 200th consecutive NFL regular season start. That night, the Packers defeated the St. Louis Rams on Monday Night Football.
- According to Sports Illustrated, he was named a sports enemy of four states: North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota (each of them home mainly to Minnesota Vikings fans), and Illinois (home mainly to Chicago Bears fans).
- Men's Health Magazine voted Favre the "Toughest Person in America" in 2003.
- His high school, Hancock North Central (Kiln, Miss.), honored him in May 2004 by renaming its field, ‘Brett Favre Field,’ and unveiling a life-sized statue of the quarterback at the stadium’s entrance. The school previously had retired his jersey (No. 10) in 1993.
- Established the 'Brett Favre Fourward Foundation’ in 1996; in conjunction with his annual golf tournament, celebrity softball game and fundraising dinners, foundation has donated more than $2 million to charities in his home state of Mississippi as well as to those in his adopted state of Wisconsin.
- Is a partner in a Green Bay restaurant, 'Brett Favre's Steakhouse'; operation has a sister location, 'Brett Favre's Two Minute Grill,' in the Lambeau Field Atrium.
- Appeared as himself in the 1998 comedy film There's Something About Mary.
- He won the NFL's sexiest man competition run by Fox Sports on January 22, 2006.
Records and Milestones
Favre currently possesses a number of NFL records:
- Most seasons with 30 or more touchdown passes: 8 (1994-1998, 2001, 2003-2004)
- Most consecutive seasons with 30 or more touchdown passes: 5 (1994-1998)
- Most consecutive seasons with 20 or more touchdown passes: 12 (1994-2005)
- Most seasons leading the league in touchdown passes: 4
- Most consecutive 3,000-yard passing seasons: 14 (1992-2005)
- Most 3,000-yard passing seasons: 14
- Most consecutive NFL MVP awards: 3 (1995, 1996, 1997 [co-MVP with Barry Sanders])
- Most NFL MVP awards: 3 (all in a row)
- Most consecutive starts by a quarterback: 221 (241 including playoffs)
- Longest touchdown pass: 99 yards (to Robert Brooks, 1995) (tied with several others)
- With a 17-yard pass to running back Ahman Green on September 18, 2005, in a game against the Cleveland Browns, Favre became only the third quarterback in NFL history to throw for 50,000 yards or more, along with Dan Marino and John Elway. He also joined Elway and Marino as the only players to complete more then 4,000 passes.
Only five other quarterbacks in NFL history have recorded at least two consecutive 30-touchdown passing seasons in their careers: Steve Bartkowski, Dan Fouts, Dan Marino, Jeff Garcia and Y.A. Tittle.
At the end of the 2005 season, Favre had closed in on several NFL career passing records. Favre currently stands at:
- Second all-time in career passing touchdowns, with 396 (Marino, 420)
- Second all-time in career passing yards, with 53,615 (Marino, 61,361)
- Second all-time in career pass completions, with 4,678 (Marino, 4,967)
- Second all-time in career pass attempts, with 7,610 (Marino, 8,358)
- Second all-time in career interceptions thrown, with 255 (George Blanda, 277)
- Third all-time in career record by a starting quarterback, at 139-82 (John Elway, 148-82-1)
- Third all-time in career wins as a starting QB, with 139 (Elway, 148; Marino, 147)
In addition, Favre owns a number of team records, having printed his name into almost every passing category in the annals of Green Bay Packers history.
Only one player has caught a Brett Favre pass in both college and the NFL. Interestingly enough, both passes were interceptions by cornerback great Deion Sanders - as a Seminole at Florida State and as a Dallas Cowboy. Sanders returned both interceptions for touchdowns.
Consecutive Starts
Favre's consecutive-starts streak is considered by many to be his most impressive record. Considered the Iron Man of the NFL, Favre is the only professional athlete in any sport to have started every game his team has played over the past 14-year period. He is currently in sole possession of fourth place for all-time NFL starting streaks of players in any position. During the first 200 straight games started by Favre, 178 other quarterbacks started in the NFL. In that time, the St. Louis Rams alone have started 13 different quarterbacks.
Statistics
2005 regular season
- 3,881 passing yards
- 20 passing touchdowns
- 29 interceptions
- 607 passes attempted
- 372 passes completed
- 61.3% completion rate
- 70.9 passer rating
Career (as of 28 February 2006)
- 7,610 passes attempted
- 4,678 passes completed
- 53,615 passing yards
- 396 passing touchdowns
- 255 passes intercepted
- 29.8 passing attempts per interception
Post-season records and statistics
- 11-9 record in the post-season
- 663 passes attempted
- 401 passes completed
- 4902 passing yards (245.1 ypg)
- 33 passing touchdowns
- 26 passes intercepted
- 25.5 passing attempts per interception in the post-season
- 8 Pro Bowls
- 2 Super Bowl appearances.
- 1 Super Bowl victory
References
- ^ Favre: I'm Not Sure This Is My Last Season, Houston Chronicle
External links
- Template:Pro-football-reference
- Brett Favre at NFL.com
- Brett Favre at ESPN.com
- Brett Favre Profile @ Packers.com
- Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's Career Retrospective
- Favre has avascular necrosis
- Favre's grandmother has a stroke
- Favre's Southern Miss career
- BrettFavre.com
- Brett Favre's Official Web Site
- 1969 births
- AP NFL MVP Award winners
- American football quarterbacks
- Atlanta Falcons players
- Choctaw
- French Americans
- Green Bay Packers players
- Living people
- Native American sportspeople
- NFC Pro Bowl players
- People from Mississippi
- Roman Catholic sportspeople
- The University of Southern Mississippi alumni
- Southern Miss Golden Eagles football players
- 50,000 passing yards club