The Aura of Brett Favre

  • Wednesday, August 19, 2009 5:43 PM
  • Written By: Sumner Widdoes

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There is only one person in the National Football League for whom words of emotion are used in place of words aptitude: Brett Favre. Writers, broadcasters, coaches and even some players describe Favre in terms of his spiritual makeup and mental fortitude rather than his athletic ability, a phenomenon that has completely distorted the way in which we, as fans, have followed his career path, especially during the last three years. Yesterday words spread far and wide that Favre had returned to football once again, ending his second retirement to join the Minnesota Vikings, and those words, once again, had more to do with legacy, treason and revenge than actual ability.

There is a mystique to Brett Favre that persists no matter how he plays or how he behaves – an aura that previously would have been reserved only for Paul Bunyan and Davy Crockett. Where the origin of that persona lies is unknown – his 269 consecutive starts, three MVPs, Super Bowl XXXI championship, or that 399-yard four-touchdown game the day after his father died – but it has undoubtedly transformed the way Favre operates within the otherwise rigid confines of NFL decorum. And it is especially shocking when juxtaposed in the football news cycle to Michael Vick’s return, Chad Ocho Cinco’s antics, Terrell Owens’ theatrics and the consistent dominance of teams such as the Patriots, Colts and Steelers.

Now, you probably just looked at the top of the page and figured out I’m a huge Steeler fan, but that has a lot to do with my point. The Steelers will never be nominated for any kind of sentimentality award – the idea of retaining a player simply as a matter of loyalty for years of service is offensive to fans and the ownership.

Steeler fans have watched countless Pro Bowlers and Hall of Famers walk away from Pittsburgh dejected once their pay rate exceeded their value on the field: Greg Lloyd, Rod Woodson, Carnell Lake, Yancey Thigpen, Levon Kirkland, Chad Brown, Kendrell Bell and, of course, Joey Porter, just to name the most recent. Each of these players put in a number of years of valuable service for the organization, and most of them helped lead the team to Super Bowl XXX. But when it became clear that their service with the Steelers had concluded, there were no games played, no fake retirements and no words of heresy or devotion. They were simply sent on their way to find another employer.

In March 2008, Favre announced his retirement after a surprisingly successful season, which ended one win (actually, one Favre interception) away from another Super Bowl appearance. Everyone thought he was going out as close to the top as he would ever get again, until rumors circulated a few months later that he wanted back in. Well, by that time the team had already named Aaron Rodgers its starting quarterback for the coming season – although it offered to bring Favre back to participate in a competition for the starting job. The old guy refused, bitched and moaned until he was traded to the Jets, and was applauded generously for turning the Jets’ season around.

But wait, the Jets finished 9-7 after starting the season 8-3, and weeks after the season ended team members revealed that Brett had done just about everything in his power to remove himself from the rest of the team, emotionally and physically. His play during the second half of the season was atrocious and his demeanor apparently poisonous, yet somehow organizations and sports writers fawn over this guy as though he can do no wrong. Shouldn’t the discussion about Favre’s signing have more to do with his deteriorating throwing ability and surgically reconstructed shoulder than the psychological effect of his signing with a former division rival?

Five or six years from now, when Peyton Manning starts throwing late-game interceptions, refusing to attend training camp because he despises staying in the dorms and slipping into obvious mediocrity, will owners still see him as the MVP he used to be and put up with all his childish behavior? Will they wait out his fake retirements even after they trade for potential replacement quarterbacks, as the Vikings did with Sage Rosenfels earlier this offseason? Will the media cover him the way they do T.O and Ocho Cinco, or Favre?

Football is a game that is goes beyond one player, and no matter how much the league and each team wants to promote quarterbacks as the face of the game, results ultimately sell tickets more than celebrity. Dan Marino, Jim Kelly and Troy Aikman decided to hang it up once their teams saw their cost exceeded their value. Joe Montana squeezed a couple more seasons out of his career with the Chiefs. The final chapter for Manning, Tom Brady, Donovan McNabb, Big Ben, Eli and Drew Brees remains to be seen.

But after this Favre fiasco, let's hope that those in charge of paying and reporting on these players understand that football goes on with or without these individual stars, and that their ability on the field is the only criteria by which they should be judged.





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stantheman
It is amazing how much differently Favre's reputation has changed from January 2008 to now.
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Dr. Downtown
I had a lot of respect for Phil Simms, who just walked away rather than trying to latch on with another team.
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Sam
Favre is one of my QBs in Fantasy Football. What exactly does this mean for me? By the way, I'm a noob.

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