the best part of brett favre

CartersCubs

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According to Tom Jackson of ESPN, the best part of Brett Favre is that he isn't afraid of throwing an INT

He goes on to compare that statement to Michael Jordan and wanting to shoot the last shot.

This sounds like comparing apples to oranges.

Compare MJ's last shot to Manning's 2 min offense that takes it down to score the winning TD. Please Tom Jackson don't give Brett Favre an out to make that rookie mistake. He throws an INT and loses the NFC championship.

all his fault.
 

THE KOD

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Favre threw the interception because he was spent out and been hammered the entire game

I got respect for Favre but I am glad he is gone now and we dont have to listen to the hype anymore.

Peterson is a bum imo
 

CartersCubs

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Favre threw the interception because he was spent out and been hammered the entire game

I got respect for Favre but I am glad he is gone now and we dont have to listen to the hype anymore.

Peterson is a bum imo

I totally agree

Brett Favre is a great guy but he's always been the gunslinger and always will be.
 

THE KOD

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I totally agree

Brett Favre is a great guy but he's always been the gunslinger and always will be.

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

Carter

Favre is not a great guy.

he is a asshole

if you ever tried to walk up to him in public you would find out .

Other than that he is just a overblown millionaire that dont have to work another day in his life, and dont have to care about anyone but his own ass.
 

FirstnGoal

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FYI:

Without Brett Favre, the Vikings are a 10-6 football team and would have been home watching the NFC Championship game yesterday.

One of the toughest players ever to play the game.
 

Old School

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the gambler who refuses to walk away from the table when he is winning ..

Is a losing gambler...

Time after time after time trying to beat the odds..

Great player..no doubt.

Decision maker...piss poor..

but the turnovers were the fateful factor..

and not just his..

but ya gotta take the 5 or 6 yard pickup on the roll-out..

by design..find the open man ..don't force the ball in throwing across your body off your back foot.

from the NO 38yard line[per NFL Gamebook]
the roll-out somehow produced a clear path for at least a 5 yard pick..and that's being conservative..[we all saw the open field]

33+10+8=51 yarder..

gotta give ya kicker a chance to win the game..

no...roll the dice again..

craps......again



Brett Favre's final pass as a member of the Packers, Jets and Vikings were all interceptions.
... sometimes ya gotta put the dice down on the felt and walk away.
 
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Shleprock

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According to Tom Jackson of ESPN, the best part of Brett Favre is that he isn't afraid of throwing an INT

He goes on to compare that statement to Michael Jordan and wanting to shoot the last shot.

This sounds like comparing apples to oranges.

Compare MJ's last shot to Manning's 2 min offense that takes it down to score the winning TD. Please Tom Jackson don't give Brett Favre an out to make that rookie mistake. He throws an INT and loses the NFC championship.

all his fault.

last time I checked it did not lose them the game. The kick return team could have prevented a 40 yard return. The defense could have made a stop. Peterson,harvin,berrian could have not fumbled. Although it was a stupid pass attempt all it did was notgive them a chance of kicking a 50 some yard field goal. Favre did try calling a timeout before the boneheaded 12 men in huddle was called. Who's fault was that favre recognized it and attempted to call timeout before penalty.
 

CartersCubs

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hmm ok KOD i trust you.

i have never seen brett favre in public and do not know what he is like in person. he seems very down to earth in post game interviews and on the NFL network.
 

THE KOD

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hmm ok KOD i trust you.

i have never seen brett favre in public and do not know what he is like in person. he seems very down to earth in post game interviews and on the NFL network.

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

last year we had a thread about Favre and how he treated people.

It was scorching the way he acted and some things he did that people that knew him wrote/
 

BigFatLooza

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Makes me wonder what would have happened if Favre stayed out of the game after the ankle injury. Could Jackson have stepped in and won the game for Minny? As mediocre as Jackson is, I think he might have ran with the ball on that last drive rather than make the throw that Favre did. Oh well, I guess we'll never know.
 

THE KOD

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Whoever lost the game here was going to feel it for a long time, but the fact that Minnesota may have lost on a 12-men-in the-huddle penalty, followed by a horrendous Brett Favre interception in the last pass of his season (career?) ... I don't know how the Vikings will sleep for a while.

Oh, and I'll have an opinion about the overtime rule too. And an interesting conversation with Tim Tebow about the first day of the rest of his life. But let's start with the beaten man at his locker in the bowels of the Superdome, and the odd end to this game.

The most compelling player of the era is broken.

"Poor Breleigh,'' Brett Favre said almost inaudibly, after hugging half of his organization and getting emotional with a few fellows, mostly Sidney Rice. Breleigh's the daughter who urged him so strongly to come back last summer, and now Favre was thinking how distraught she must be. "I'm sure her heart's broken.''

Pause.

"Of course, so is mine.''

No matter what you think of Favre
you have to admire how he bleeds in front of us. He goes out and gets the snot knocked out of him ("We were determined to hit him over and over and make him feel it,'' said none other than his old friend with the Packers, Saints safety Darren Sharper), somehow survives, then makes a throw he never should have made. And he stands there for the inquisition and answers the questions as honestly as I think a man can in these circumstances.

Before he went to his postgame press conference, he talked to me quietly for a couple of minutes, then to a couple of others in a growing group around his locker.

"I thought when I got hit [the high-low Saints sandwich late in the third quarter], my ankle was broken,'' he said. "I felt a lot of crunching in there.''

I told him I thought it was a late hit, with the lower hit a good example of why the Tom Brady rule was put in this year. Favre released the ball and was hit high by one rusher and low by another; the low hit looked like the kind of hit below the waist that deserved a flag, but the 'Dome was still ringing with boos from a roughing-the-passer call four plays earlier when New Orleans lineman Anthony Hargrove drove Favre into the ground (a textbook call for driving a quarterback from the air into the ground with the force the rusher's body). And it's human nature to wonder if a good referee, Peter Morelli, was inclined to let this hit pass because he'd just called the big one on the Saints. Whatever, Favre limped off. He'd been nailed by Sharper in the first half, then by Hargrove, and now this one.

"Tomorrow,'' he said, "the whole foot will be purple. My thigh, right there, will be purple. My wrist [with a chunk of skin missing] will be purple. Other than that, I'm OK.''

He said all the requisite stuff about his future, that he'll go home and think about it and talk to his family about it. (My feeling is he'll be back for another season because he feels at home in Minnesota, as Tim Layden wrote so well in Sports Illustrated this week, and because he likes his teammates so much, but I have no inside information on it. And as most of you know, my inside information on Favre playing or not has been as solid as vanilla pudding over the past three years.)

As for the question all of America is asking this morning -- how in the world could you have thrown that pass? -- this was his explanation: When the Vikings had third-and-10 at the New Orleans 33 with 19 seconds left in a 28-28 game, they planned to call a running play to get a couple of yards closer. Then Ryan Longwell would trot onto the field for a field goal of between 45 and 50 yards. But the Vikings got a five-yard penalty for 12 men in the huddle, which is illegal because an extra man or men would create unfair confusion to the defense. Incredible it would happen at such a big moment. "The communication was obviously lost [between the sideline and the field for the play that was called],'' Favre said.

Now, instead of running and forcing Longwell to try a field goal of up to 55 yards (he told the coaches he thought his range was about 53 yards), Favre had to throw. He rolled right with at least five yards of open field in front of him, and made the kind of decision that still haunts him from his last throw as a Packer. Against the Giants in the 2007 NFC Championship Game, he threw a careless pass that was intercepted by the Giants' Corey Webster, and the game-winning field goal followed. As did his divorce from the Packers. Here, he locked onto Sidney Rice and threw a pick right into the hands of cornerback Tracy Porter.

"I probably should have ran it,'' Favre said. "In hindsight, that's probably what I should have done. It was just late to Sidney.''

As Favre said to me: "You try to say it's just a game, and of course it is. You know that's the case. But it still hurts.''

This one will, for a long time

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interesting read from msn sports
 

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He had the talent to be the best QB ever, but he never achieved that because he saw all the INTs as a cost of doing business rather than mistakes that could be avoided.
 

THE KOD

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He had the talent to be the best QB ever, but he never achieved that because he saw all the INTs as a cost of doing business rather than mistakes that could be avoided.
..............................................................

yeh but you can make a case for the guy for passing Dan Marino's all time passing record this year.
 

Old School

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ya can Scott...

But sooner than later Peyton owns just about all the records and 2-3-4-5 on the list are just former greats..

they ain't #1

Bret's been watching the all time career list for years..
 

bleedingpurple

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Brett the best ever.. No but its close..

Brett Favre undoubtedly has tons and tons of talent but lets put somethings into perspective.
Yeah he threw big INT's at crucial times but everyone forgets when he had great throws and put up big numbers and could of beat the Cowboy's teams of the early 90s.. That was a powerhouse team..
Brett Favre did a lot with the least talent for most of his career. He had Sterling Sharp for a little while but his best receiver for any length of time was Donald Driver?? Driver is good but if you look at the great QBs, many had excellent receivers as well
. Everyone bithces about the pick he threw against the NYG and against Philly. Well those teams were not very good or projected to be very good. He had the Eagles beat.. The defense gave up a 4th and 26.. The Giants game.. He had no one to get open, the weather was miserable, and the Giants dominated the game. It was a miracle that it even went into over time.. Not to mention that was a projected 8 - 8 team that year.. Now this year the Vikes would of been a decent team but not a play or 2 from the Superbowl.. I will always be pist that he threw the INT in that spot but I am thankful he got us there.. 3 other people lost fumbles in the game as well.
 

luvmy$$$

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Brett the best ever.. No but its close..

Brett Favre undoubtedly has tons and tons of talent but lets put somethings into perspective.
Yeah he threw big INT's at crucial times but everyone forgets when he had great throws and put up big numbers and could of beat the Cowboy's teams of the early 90s.. That was a powerhouse team..
Brett Favre did a lot with the least talent for most of his career. He had Sterling Sharp for a little while but his best receiver for any length of time was Donald Driver?? Driver is good but if you look at the great QBs, many had excellent receivers as well
. Everyone bithces about the pick he threw against the NYG and against Philly. Well those teams were not very good or projected to be very good. He had the Eagles beat.. The defense gave up a 4th and 26.. The Giants game.. He had no one to get open, the weather was miserable, and the Giants dominated the game. It was a miracle that it even went into over time.. Not to mention that was a projected 8 - 8 team that year.. Now this year the Vikes would of been a decent team but not a play or 2 from the Superbowl.. I will always be pist that he threw the INT in that spot but I am thankful he got us there.. 3 other people lost fumbles in the game as well.

Could'nt have said it better, this coming from the other side of the border. How many games has he won by throwing across the body, more than he has lost. He's a gunslinger, you either appreciate his style or you don't. I love it, better than watching frikin Dilfer. Chilie should have never called a time out, when the boy is rolling, just let him go.
If you want to fully appreciate him, just watch the games, and when he steps up to the podium afterwards for questions, shut the tv off. When it's on the radio, turn the station. If ya can't hear him dragging on an on about cutting grass, it won't bother ya.
 

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Sure that INT was a bad one, but the 12 men in the huddle out of a TO is absolutely a mistake that can't happen, couple this with AP fumble before the half in the red zone, and Harvin's fumble to give the ball to NO inside the 10 are mistakes that can't be discredited. AP's TO's were brutal and should be talked about just as much as Brett's INT's, on the other one that should have been a personal foul for hitting low.

The guy is a great competitor and fun to watch. Is he the best ever, no, but somebody I would gladly take on my team as he appears to play the game for the pure joy of it, and to WIN.
 
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