One Viking Fan Opinion on Favre

bleedingpurple

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Well at least all the speculation is over.. We can go on knowing that he is our QB because once he hits the playing field he don't leave.

I always hated Favre when he played for GB and I hate GB more than any team in football with the Bears right behind. Saying that I am pleased he is with the Vikes now.. The Vikes are really close and I just think an old Favre is better than Rosenfelds and much much better than Jackson. He gives the team a much better chance to WIN. I may be a little bit sick to my stomach about this but in reality I root for the color of the JERSEY not one player except for Randy Moss which I am still sick about. Another great point about this is that this is making the Packer fans sick to their stomachs and trust me I like it. For many years they would always say.. "Favre will never leave Green Bay to play for another team!" Not only did he leave for the Jets but now with the Vikings.. The Vikes may fall flat on their faces this year but I really don't think it will because of Favre. I know this is rambling but seriously did anyone think the Vikings would win a Super Bowl with Sage or Tavarous? NO! With Favre they have a chance with the players they have and for me I will take it..
 

THE KOD

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Here?s hoping Favre?s comeback ends in a faceplant
4:21 pm August 18, 2009, by Jeff Schultz


"I'd love to put this helmet on, but I can't seem to get it to fit my head."
Hey, weren?t we just here two years ago?

And six months ago?

And three weeks ago?

Brett Favre is coming back again. This brings his career totals to three un-retirements, which I believe qualifies him for a top 10 ranking by the WBC.

Three weeks ago, Minnesota?s invertebrate coach, Brad Childress, claimed Favre told him that he was officially retiring because he hadn?t sufficiently recovered from shoulder surgery. (Turned out to be just another lie ? by both actually). At the time I wrote that Favre was retiring as the most selfish athlete in sports history. I believe that now more than ever before. Favre went from a former MVP and Super Bowl winner, a player to be admired for his courage and toughness, to somebody who really only cares about his own ego.

He is not someone to be admired any more. He?s someone to be mocked.

If I?m a fan, I don?t want him on my team. If I?m a teammate, I don?t want him in my locker room. If I?m forced to witness one more minute of this Hamlet act, I just want his leftover Vicodin because my head is killing me.

I want Brett Favre to fail. I want this to end with one of the most spectacular face plants in the history of comebacks. I want it for the same reason it was fun to watch the Terrell Owens experiment blow up in Dallas and the DeAngelo Hall experiment blow up in Oakland. Athletes who put their own cranium ahead of the game and their teammates and only exist because some sucker of an owner allow them to exist don?t deserve in be in uniform.

Brett Favre is a clown. He should be driven onto the field in a Volkwagon stuffed with other clowns in Week 1. In Week 6, he gets bonked with one of those oversized clubs. In Week 10, he loses a pie fight. In Week 16, his shoes explode.

That?s how I want Brett Favre to go out. Oh, and this: Lose to the Packers twice.:scared

............................................................

:SIB :0corn :scared
 

bleedingpurple

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Here?s hoping Favre?s comeback ends in a faceplant
4:21 pm August 18, 2009, by Jeff Schultz


"I'd love to put this helmet on, but I can't seem to get it to fit my head."
Hey, weren?t we just here two years ago?

And six months ago?

And three weeks ago?

Brett Favre is coming back again. This brings his career totals to three un-retirements, which I believe qualifies him for a top 10 ranking by the WBC.

Three weeks ago, Minnesota?s invertebrate coach, Brad Childress, claimed Favre told him that he was officially retiring because he hadn?t sufficiently recovered from shoulder surgery. (Turned out to be just another lie ? by both actually). At the time I wrote that Favre was retiring as the most selfish athlete in sports history. I believe that now more than ever before. Favre went from a former MVP and Super Bowl winner, a player to be admired for his courage and toughness, to somebody who really only cares about his own ego.

He is not someone to be admired any more. He?s someone to be mocked.

If I?m a fan, I don?t want him on my team. If I?m a teammate, I don?t want him in my locker room. If I?m forced to witness one more minute of this Hamlet act, I just want his leftover Vicodin because my head is killing me.

I want Brett Favre to fail. I want this to end with one of the most spectacular face plants in the history of comebacks. I want it for the same reason it was fun to watch the Terrell Owens experiment blow up in Dallas and the DeAngelo Hall experiment blow up in Oakland. Athletes who put their own cranium ahead of the game and their teammates and only exist because some sucker of an owner allow them to exist don?t deserve in be in uniform.

Brett Favre is a clown. He should be driven onto the field in a Volkwagon stuffed with other clowns in Week 1. In Week 6, he gets bonked with one of those oversized clubs. In Week 10, he loses a pie fight. In Week 16, his shoes explode.

That?s how I want Brett Favre to go out. Oh, and this: Lose to the Packers twice.:scared

............................................................

:SIB :0corn :scared


I get a kick out of the Packer Backers who now hate Favre... I love it.. I don't blame them for being pissed but come on.. Without him there is no modern day Super Bowl win. Probably no Reggie White and the class of free agents that folllowed Reggie so that they could win a Super Bowl. No dominant teams of the 90s and early 2000s.. The Lambeau Field Mystique will still be a thing of the 1960s. How many wins did they get in the 70s and 80s in Lambeau. Yeah Packer fans be pissed but don't ever ever forget where your team would of been without him.. IN THE TOILET!!:00x8
 

THE KOD

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I get a kick out of the Packer Backers who now hate Favre... I love it.. I don't blame them for being pissed but come on..

..............................................................

bleed

the scary thing about that article is that the writer is not a Packer fan.
 

luvmy$$$

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Bleedingpurple

Bleedingpurple

This is coming from a Packerfan, from the tundra. Not all backers are sick about this. You have to remember there is a generation of fans that have known nothing BUT Favre. I personally have seen every snap from the old county stadium to his move to the J-E-T-S. I'm a Packer fan, but also a Favre fan, wherever he plays. Yes his ints come with no notice, but so do his TD's. He is entertaining as hell, and plays with the innocence of a 12 year old. I wish him the best, but I'm am worried about Minnys coach. He can't call his kids in for dinner let alone play call, lol.
For those that can't stand the media hoopla, then don't pay attention to it. I watch Favre for footballs sake, I could give 2 shits if he needs a golden throne in the locker room.
All I can say is if your not a believer, rewatch GB/Oak monday night football after his father passed.
And lastly, when you are watching Favre play this year, and you have your drunk on. When you shout at the tv its not pronounced FARVE, its pronounced FAVerAAA, lol.
and I do have to add, as long as Ted Tompson is gm (the one to drive Brett out) I hope the Vikueens kick his ass.
 
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BigFatLooza

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The NFL is getting worse than a soap opera with all this Favre drama.:violin:
 

gardenweasel

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just shit or get off the pot,brett......the guy was great,but all this back and forth is getting silly...he`s already missed one preseason game...


who knows if he quits again....i have more confidence in the latvian space program than favre sticking to a decision...
 

BigFatLooza

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WE TOUGHT "THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS" WOULD END SOMETIME SOON.... MAYBE THIS ONE WILL REPLACE IT AND ITS AUDIENCE WILL CHEER IN ECTASY

I think the only ones cheering in ecstacy are the city of Minnesota and of course, John Madden.
 

THE KOD

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Don't hand NFC to Vikings just yet Story Highlights
Brett Favre's old team, not his new one, could win the NFC North

If there was one over-arching refrain I heard again and again Tuesday, it was that Brett Favre's signing makes Minnesota the hands-down favorite in the NFC and thus a slam-dunk Super Bowl contender.

Twenty seasons of covering the NFL has taught me this much: Whenever I hear that much conventional wisdom coalescing that quickly around one supposedly sure-fire outcome, it's got a great shot of being wrong.

Here then are a few reasons Favre and the Vikings shouldn't be booking their flights for Miami (site of Super Bowl XLIV) just yet:

1. Favre's old team could win the division. It's a scenario that has to be the absolute worst-case scenario for both Favre and anyone who loves the Vikings, but I think the Packers are headed for a big bounce-back season and could very well win the NFC North. With some legitimate depth on the defensive line, Green Bay's transition to a 3-4 front is off to a promising start under new defensive coordinator Dom Capers. Quarterback Aaron Rodgers looks confident and poised for a monster season, and the Packers have some young offensive talent that looks ready to take the next step (tight end Jermichael Findley, running back Brandon Jackson and receiver Jordy Nelson, to name three).

Green Bay and Rodgers denying Favre another shot at playoff glory would be rich, eh? But then, we've already seen Favre and his Jets denied a playoff trip last year by Miami and Chad Pennington, the guy he replaced in New York.

2. The Williams' suspensions. Don't underestimate how much the Vikings season could be affected if Minnesota loses the services of its two starting defensive tackles -- Pat Williams and Kevin Williams -- for the first four games of the year due to their NFL suspensions for the use of an over-the-counter supplement called StarCaps. Though the case remains unresolved and before a state circuit court of appeals in St. Paul, the loss of the Williams Wall for the season's first month could transform a superb defense into just a good one.

True, Minnesota's first four games don't appear to be its most challenging stretch by any measurement. The Vikings play at Cleveland, at Detroit, home against San Francisco and home against Green Bay. But maybe Minnesota starts 2-2 without their two dominating run-stuffers, rather than 3-1 or even 4-0. And maybe the difference winds up mattering greatly in the race for NFC playoff positioning.

3. History not on NFC North's side. No division in the NFC has sent fewer teams to the Super Bowl in the past decade or so than the North, or its precursor, the NFC Central. In the 11 seasons since Green Bay made back-to-back Super Bowl trips in 1996-97, the only NFC North team to make the Big Game was Chicago in 2006, and the defensive-led Bears were a one-dimensional team playing in a fairly weak conference that season.

The NFC East has sent the Giants twice and the Eagles once to the Super Bowl in that span. The NFC West has sent the Rams twice, the Seahawks once, the Cardinals once, and the Falcons once (when they were a member of that division in 1998). The NFC South has sent both Tampa Bay and Carolina to the Super Bowl this decade.

In fact, with just one Super Bowl qualifier in the past 11 seasons, the NFC North ranks last among the NFL's eight divisions in that department. The AFC South and AFC West are tied for next to last with two Super Bowl teams each in that span.

4. Favre turns 40 in October. Does that preclude him from leading the Vikings to the Super Bowl, or winning it? No. But history is history, and it teaches us stuff so we have some guidelines of what usually works and what doesn't. And 40-year-old quarterbacks don't usually win the biggest of games.

Denver's John Elway was the oldest quarterback to both start and win a Super Bowl, at 38 in January 1999. Baltimore's John Unitas was 37 when the Colts won Super Bowl V, although the 36-year-old Earl Morrall replaced him in the second quarter of that game. The Raiders' Jim Plunkett won his second ring at 36, and both Kurt Warner and Rich Gannon took their teams to the Super Bowl at 37. But Favre would be both the oldest starter to get there and/or win it, by a healthy margin.

Making that kind of history is what the Vikings are now banking on, and I'm not convinced it's a good bet.

5. The NFC East is still a beast, and all NFC title contenders know it. The Vikings, after all, aren't the only NFC team that thinks its defensive front and its running game are special. The Giants can compete with anybody in that argument, and they're even better now than they were two years ago, when they beat Favre and Co. in overtime in the NFC title game at Green Bay. (You remember, Brett. It was cold. You threw a game-deciding pick.)

And I seem to remember the Eagles are loading up for another run at a Super Bowl ring, too. They even took a chance on some free-agent quarterback named Michael Vick, who they think might just be their secret weapon. Lastly, we can't discount those dangerously quiet Cowboys, now that they've turned their attention fully to football instead of trying to be the NFL's home for glamour.

Oh, and somebody tell the Cardinals, Panthers and Falcons -- 2008 playoff teams all -- that the Vikings have been installed as conference favorites. All three teams have reason to believe they'll be heard from again this season.

6. The emotional toll on Favre. There's a stretch of the Vikings' schedule that should scare you if you bleed purple: In a five-game stretch that starts in Week 4 and concludes in Week 8, Minnesota plays four very tough, and emotional games for Favre. He'll face Green Bay for the first time, in Week 4 at home, draw the tenacious Ravens defense at home in Week 6, go to the defending champion Steelers in Week 7, and then the biggie, his trip to what promises to be a hostile Lambeau Field in Week 8.

That run could take a very big toll out of Favre as the Vikings head into their Week 9 bye and prepare for the season's second half. That's why the Vikings getting off to a good start in September is so crucial for their hopes of securing one of the NFC's top seeds and setting themselves up for the playoffs.

All told, Favre and the Vikings will play at both of last year's Super Bowl teams (Steelers and Cardinals), at Carolina in December when the Panthers are often at their best, at cold and windy Chicago three days after Christmas (at night, no less), and at Green Bay in the aforementioned return to Lambeau. Tough home games against the Packers, Ravens, Bears and Giants also loom. If the Vikings do win the NFC, it'll be no easy road.

..........................................................

interesting read :0corn
 

bleedingpurple

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This is coming from a Packerfan, from the tundra. Not all backers are sick about this. You have to remember there is a generation of fans that have known nothing BUT Favre. I personally have seen every snap from the old county stadium to his move to the J-E-T-S. I'm a Packer fan, but also a Favre fan, wherever he plays. Yes his ints come with no notice, but so do his TD's. He is entertaining as hell, and plays with the innocence of a 12 year old. I wish him the best, but I'm am worried about Minnys coach. He can't call his kids in for dinner let alone play call, lol.
For those that can't stand the media hoopla, then don't pay attention to it. I watch Favre for footballs sake, I could give 2 shits if he needs a golden throne in the locker room.
All I can say is if your not a believer, rewatch GB/Oak monday night football after his father passed.
And lastly, when you are watching Favre play this year, and you have your drunk on. When you shout at the tv its not pronounced FARVE, its pronounced FAVerAAA, lol.
and I do have to add, as long as Ted Tompson is gm (the one to drive Brett out) I hope the Vikueens kick his ass.

I didn't mean to make it sound that all the Packer Backers were hating Favre. I know PLENTY who hate Ted Thompson as well and are hoping that the Vikings kick ass.
 

bleedingpurple

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Don't hand NFC to Vikings just yet Story Highlights
Brett Favre's old team, not his new one, could win the NFC North

If there was one over-arching refrain I heard again and again Tuesday, it was that Brett Favre's signing makes Minnesota the hands-down favorite in the NFC and thus a slam-dunk Super Bowl contender.

Twenty seasons of covering the NFL has taught me this much: Whenever I hear that much conventional wisdom coalescing that quickly around one supposedly sure-fire outcome, it's got a great shot of being wrong.

Here then are a few reasons Favre and the Vikings shouldn't be booking their flights for Miami (site of Super Bowl XLIV) just yet:

1. Favre's old team could win the division. It's a scenario that has to be the absolute worst-case scenario for both Favre and anyone who loves the Vikings, but I think the Packers are headed for a big bounce-back season and could very well win the NFC North. With some legitimate depth on the defensive line, Green Bay's transition to a 3-4 front is off to a promising start under new defensive coordinator Dom Capers. Quarterback Aaron Rodgers looks confident and poised for a monster season, and the Packers have some young offensive talent that looks ready to take the next step (tight end Jermichael Findley, running back Brandon Jackson and receiver Jordy Nelson, to name three).

Green Bay and Rodgers denying Favre another shot at playoff glory would be rich, eh? But then, we've already seen Favre and his Jets denied a playoff trip last year by Miami and Chad Pennington, the guy he replaced in New York.

2. The Williams' suspensions. Don't underestimate how much the Vikings season could be affected if Minnesota loses the services of its two starting defensive tackles -- Pat Williams and Kevin Williams -- for the first four games of the year due to their NFL suspensions for the use of an over-the-counter supplement called StarCaps. Though the case remains unresolved and before a state circuit court of appeals in St. Paul, the loss of the Williams Wall for the season's first month could transform a superb defense into just a good one.

True, Minnesota's first four games don't appear to be its most challenging stretch by any measurement. The Vikings play at Cleveland, at Detroit, home against San Francisco and home against Green Bay. But maybe Minnesota starts 2-2 without their two dominating run-stuffers, rather than 3-1 or even 4-0. And maybe the difference winds up mattering greatly in the race for NFC playoff positioning.

3. History not on NFC North's side. No division in the NFC has sent fewer teams to the Super Bowl in the past decade or so than the North, or its precursor, the NFC Central. In the 11 seasons since Green Bay made back-to-back Super Bowl trips in 1996-97, the only NFC North team to make the Big Game was Chicago in 2006, and the defensive-led Bears were a one-dimensional team playing in a fairly weak conference that season.

The NFC East has sent the Giants twice and the Eagles once to the Super Bowl in that span. The NFC West has sent the Rams twice, the Seahawks once, the Cardinals once, and the Falcons once (when they were a member of that division in 1998). The NFC South has sent both Tampa Bay and Carolina to the Super Bowl this decade.

In fact, with just one Super Bowl qualifier in the past 11 seasons, the NFC North ranks last among the NFL's eight divisions in that department. The AFC South and AFC West are tied for next to last with two Super Bowl teams each in that span.

4. Favre turns 40 in October. Does that preclude him from leading the Vikings to the Super Bowl, or winning it? No. But history is history, and it teaches us stuff so we have some guidelines of what usually works and what doesn't. And 40-year-old quarterbacks don't usually win the biggest of games.

Denver's John Elway was the oldest quarterback to both start and win a Super Bowl, at 38 in January 1999. Baltimore's John Unitas was 37 when the Colts won Super Bowl V, although the 36-year-old Earl Morrall replaced him in the second quarter of that game. The Raiders' Jim Plunkett won his second ring at 36, and both Kurt Warner and Rich Gannon took their teams to the Super Bowl at 37. But Favre would be both the oldest starter to get there and/or win it, by a healthy margin.

Making that kind of history is what the Vikings are now banking on, and I'm not convinced it's a good bet.

5. The NFC East is still a beast, and all NFC title contenders know it. The Vikings, after all, aren't the only NFC team that thinks its defensive front and its running game are special. The Giants can compete with anybody in that argument, and they're even better now than they were two years ago, when they beat Favre and Co. in overtime in the NFC title game at Green Bay. (You remember, Brett. It was cold. You threw a game-deciding pick.)

And I seem to remember the Eagles are loading up for another run at a Super Bowl ring, too. They even took a chance on some free-agent quarterback named Michael Vick, who they think might just be their secret weapon. Lastly, we can't discount those dangerously quiet Cowboys, now that they've turned their attention fully to football instead of trying to be the NFL's home for glamour.

Oh, and somebody tell the Cardinals, Panthers and Falcons -- 2008 playoff teams all -- that the Vikings have been installed as conference favorites. All three teams have reason to believe they'll be heard from again this season.

6. The emotional toll on Favre. There's a stretch of the Vikings' schedule that should scare you if you bleed purple: In a five-game stretch that starts in Week 4 and concludes in Week 8, Minnesota plays four very tough, and emotional games for Favre. He'll face Green Bay for the first time, in Week 4 at home, draw the tenacious Ravens defense at home in Week 6, go to the defending champion Steelers in Week 7, and then the biggie, his trip to what promises to be a hostile Lambeau Field in Week 8.

That run could take a very big toll out of Favre as the Vikings head into their Week 9 bye and prepare for the season's second half. That's why the Vikings getting off to a good start in September is so crucial for their hopes of securing one of the NFC's top seeds and setting themselves up for the playoffs.

All told, Favre and the Vikings will play at both of last year's Super Bowl teams (Steelers and Cardinals), at Carolina in December when the Panthers are often at their best, at cold and windy Chicago three days after Christmas (at night, no less), and at Green Bay in the aforementioned return to Lambeau. Tough home games against the Packers, Ravens, Bears and Giants also loom. If the Vikings do win the NFC, it'll be no easy road.

..........................................................

interesting read :0corn


Oh no doubt..There is a reason that this team has never won a Super Bowl.. I am not saying that they will go to the Super Bowl but I do know that Favre gives them a better chance than any of the other dip shits they have.
 

MrChristo

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just shit or get off the pot,brett......the guy was great,but all this back and forth is getting silly...he`s already missed one preseason game...


who knows if he quits again....i have more confidence in the latvian space program than favre sticking to a decision...

Tell me about it, g-dub...

...at 39 you'd think he'd know the difference between being a QB and a circus performer by now. :rolleyes:

Does he need the money?...Or just a self-obsessed "TO"...but somehow retaining a 'good guy' image? :shrug:
 

hedgehog

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players have no loyalty whatsoever, I hope he is successful, the league is better with Favre in it. I am so glad I kept the sunday ticket, dammit can 3 weeks go by faster please, can't wait for football season
 

Packers4Life

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Well here is a packers fan and def 1 that is not against his decision. My opinion he has earned the right to go out when he wants. As$$$$ said in post above Fuc ted thompson and true Packer fans will never fault Brett Favre. Good luck Bleedin and u will have a hell of ride I can promise you that.:toast:
 

Packers4Life

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And hedge he did have loyalty he wanted to come back to pack and Idiot Ted forced him out. They forced a decision and it was 1 he didnt want to make . like I said Fuc Ted Thompson and when he is gone he will get his number retired. If he wants it!
 

luvmy$$$

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Packers4life....and FaVerAA fans....:toast: This division will be fun as hell to watch this season.
 
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