Brett Favre can't be trusted. But then again, if you've watched him play the Lions for the past 16 years, especially in Wisconsin, you already knew that. You knew that he couldn't be trusted to do anything but beat them consistently. You couldn't trust him if he had a poor first half, or a poor 3/4 of a game. Chances would be, at the end, he'd walk off victorious.
So no wonder that Favre can now not be trusted with his words, either.
As you know, the maybe-erstwhile QB of the Green Bay Packers is trying to "unretire", some four months after telling the Pack and the football world that he was hanging them up after 16 wonderful seasons, a stretch during which he never missed a start. And the Packers aren't making it easy for him, figuring that there's the small matter of having already told Favre's heir, Aaron Rodgers, that he's the guy, starting in 2008.
"We're prepared to move on," has been the paraphrased sentiment of the Packers' hierarchy.
Not without me, Favre says. Or else, release me and I'll play for someone who wants me.
Nuh-uh, the Pack said to Favre's requested release.
At first blush, I was seeing Favre's side of the story. How much different is it now, really, than it was four months ago, in Green Bay? How far along could the team have possibly moved with Rodgers in such a short time? What was the big deal if Favre came back for another run? The Packers fielded a surprisingly strong team in 2007; who says Favre couldn't nudge them further in 2008?
Of course, it might be bad form to mention at this juncture that it was Favre's gaffe that probably cost the Packers their playoff game -- at home -- last January.
But after further review, as they say in the NFL, I see where the Packers front office is coming from.
How can they trust Favre anymore? How do they know when he's really retiring? How many "comebacks" does he have in him? Is this the only one?
The question of whether Favre will return for the next NFL season has been asked for several springs now -- and recently, during the ongoing campaign. It can't possibly NOT have been a distraction. And Favre has been taking longer and longer to make his decision. This time, he decided -- or so we thought -- in early March.
So is this how it works? Favre can string the Packers along yearly, and they'll acquiesce to him?
Retire? Sure! Oh, come back, you say? Sure! We'll just tell Mr. Rodgers to sit tight and that he'll get his chance...someday.
Not the way to run a business.
But Favre has placed the Packers in a tough spot. Internet polls (and probably sports talk radio sentiment) have Favre in a big lead over Rodgers as far as who folks would like to see as the Green Bay QB in 2008. He's making team management out as the villain here. The media seems willing to go along with that portrayal.
Favre wants to play so badly, apparently, that he's willing to be released so he can play with another NFL team. I wonder if just ANY NFL team will do. I wonder if he'd play for a sad sack team? Or does he want to win? And which contending teams are able to fit a Brett Favre under their salary cap at the expense of their probably already-expensive signal caller? How much contract would have to be devoured and digested to bring Favre in?
Ahh, but what if, you might ask, Barry Sanders had pulled the same switcheroo back in 1999?
A fair question.
First, running back isn't the same as QB, in terms of importance to the team. In other words, it's a lot easier to bring in a new starting RB than to have invested all that time and teaching into a new quarterback, only to shove him aside. Second, Sanders didn't have an heir apparent, mainly because no one truly thought he was on the brink of retirement. His announcement on the eve of training camp -- that was different, too -- caught a lot of folks off guard, even though in retrospect it shouldn't have, necessarily. There was no one waiting in the wings -- not that you can replace someone like Sanders, anyway.
So what should the Packers do? They've offered to let Favre return -- but as the backup. That's quite a gesture, I think -- for even though Favre himself has been durable, that's not really the norm. Rodgers could go down -- it's quite feasible.
But think about Rodgers for a second. How terrible would it be for him as a rookie QB to play with Brett Favre over his shoulder, and with public sentiment wanting Favre to start? As if being a first-year QB in the NFL isn't hard enough...
It's hard to imagine this saga ending any way other than badly. But the "bad guys" aren't the ones who created this mess. Brett Favre did, public sentiment be damned.
3 comments:
This sounds eerily familiar, and it didn't end well (ok, it eventually ended well six years later, but not because of any of the main participants). Hasek did the same thing to the Wings after retiring. The Wings went out and got a respectable, solid veteran netminder named Curtis Joseph who only wanted to do his job an hopefully win a Cup. Then Dominik changed his mind and CuJo spent a whole season looking over his shoulder. I rarely feel sorry for anyone that gets paid millions for doing something they love, but you kinda had to feel for CuJo.
Because of that, there are a lot of Red Wings fans that really don't care for Hasek (forgetting that the outplayed the hell out of Roy in games 6 & 7 in 2002 and if it weren't for him, we wouldn't have won that year). He probably would have had to stand on his head and win about 9 games in a row to gain any of that appreciation back.
Favre has now put himself in that same situation - only on a much bigger, national scale.
Brian...
Kenny Holland told me a couple years ago (when I hit him with why he brought Hasek back in 2003) that he was afraid Colorado would sign him if not Detroit, and the thoughts of Hasek beating the Red Wings in an Avs uniform apparently gave Holland and Red Wings brass the creeps.
But you're right -- it didn't end well, and Holland admitted as much.
He also said he had "one mulligan" that he wished he could have back, but wouldn't reveal it. My guess is signing Uwe Krupp.
Uwe Krupp has to be the answer to that.
And I'm not blaming Holland or the Wings - Hasek put them in that position. They had to bring him back. And it's not like he was the most tradeable commodity.
That's the reason his "legacy is tarnished" (another familiar phrase) in Detroit. Real hockey fans remember respect, and revere what he did in 2002, but the general public (my mom, my wife, half the people I work with) only see him as an old guy that didn't know when to quit.
And that's what is going to happen to Favre.
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