Friday, August 12, 2016

I have Lambeau Field on my mind ....


I have football on my mind today, but not like the way it is with most other people right now.

First off, there was the induction ceremony for the Pro Football Hall of Fame last weekend, and not only did I cover Brett Favre for a couple of seasons with the Packers, but also Tony Dungy when I worked in Florida. He was the first pro/college head coach I had to deal with and will always have my respect. Moreover, I had met Kenny Stabler more than a few times after moving to Alabama.

Talk about legends ...

Moreover, LSU is getting ready to open its season against Wisconsin at Lambeau Field, which is the kind of game I love to see. Great teams, great fans, historic location. However, I think a lot of college football writers are going to be a little on the shocked side when they get there.

The first time I went to Lambeau was when I was covering the Buccaneers, and a couple of weeks beforehand the beat writers got to do a conference call with Reggie White, then with the Carolina Panthers. For some reason we had some time to kill before the interview formally started when someone on our end said, "Hey Reggie, we're going to Lambeau soon, what's it like?" His response: "Imagine you're driving in the middle of nowhere, and then there's a football stadium."

I thought there's no way it's really like that so after my plane landed in Appleton (25 minutes south of Green Bay) the night before I drove up to check it out. All I could smell were the farms in the area and then sure enough there was this big football stadium.

The next morning when I drove back all I could smell were brats cooking on hundreds of grills.

Consequently, my pregame ritual for every home Packers game was to have a brat.

Here's one of the stories I included in the book, No Time Outs, which was reprinted courtesy of the Appleton Post-Crescent. The tricky thing about doing this story was coming up with something fresh and new with Favre, as just about everything imaginable had been written about him and the columnist for our Gannett team coverage had co-authored the quarterback's book.

I find it funny that the story had an LSU reference in it. Go figure.



Dec. 15, 2000
Headline: Just like old times
Subhead: Favre enjoying what he believes will eventually be another trip to the top of the NFL for the Packers.

         GREEN BAY _ It was a typical day at the Favre house with the three-time Most Valuable Player of the National Football League lounging about and his 11-year-old daughter Brittany preparing for a basketball game.
Figuring that her old man might know a few things about competition, she asked a question that defenders have been wondering for years.
         “Dad,” she said. “Do you ever get nervous?”
         The reply was yes.
“But it’s not a negative nervous or scared,” the father said. “I think in order to be good at something, I think you have to be a little nervous about it, and you have to be excited about it _ you have to be an excited nervous. You want to do well. If it didn’t bother you, then you wouldn’t have the drive.
         “When I step out on the field, or I go out on a last drive with a chance to win, yeah, butterflies are there and stuff. I just play as hard as I can, reckless.”
         With that, Brittany had an understanding of why the father is still one of the best at what he does. Why after winning a Super Bowl, making millions and being involved with everything from a candy bar to a cameo role in the movie “There’s Something About Mary,” quarterback Brett Favre still loves to suit up as the Green Bay Packers quarterback.
Sometimes even he can’t wait to see what he’ll do next, but while the passionate mantra _ “Love to play, work hard, be in there. That’s basically it” _ has remained the same, his approach and attitude have had to change.  Some would simply call it maturity.
         Although most Packers fans will forever consider the 2000 season a disappointment regardless of whether Green Bay squeaks into the playoffs or not, it will also be one Favre is forever proud of. Despite two injuries _ elbow tendonitis and a foot sprain _ that would have sidelined most 10-year veterans, the 31-year old has only added to his legacy:
         _ Favre has started a record 139 consecutive regular-season games at quarterback, 93 more than the nearest pursuer, Indianapolis’ Peyton Manning. It’s also the eighth-longest active streak at all positions.
         _ With a 58-11 record at Lambeau field and Milwaukee, he enjoys the second-highest winning percentage (.841) in home starts among NFL quarterbacks who began their careers on or after 1967 (Terry Bradshaw 67-12, .848). Favre is a perfect 26-0 at home when the temperature is 34 degrees or colder.
         _ Favre has thrown for more than 3,000 yards in each of the last nine seasons, trying Dan Marino’s amazing mark from 1984 to 1992. He also became the second-fastest player in league history to reach 250 career touchdown passes. Favre needed 141 games, Marino 128.
         Yet those are just numbers. Favre prefers to focus on things like confidence, poise and pride.
         “We’re judged on statistics _ football, basketball, baseball, life,” he said. “How many magazines did you sell today, how many papers did you sell? I know that because I won three MVPs on statistics and it’s always nice to look at, but seventy years from now, if I’m lucky enough to be alive, you look back and I threw for X-amount of yards. Who cares?
“But I can always say that I won a Super Bowl. I can say I played with good guys, Reggie White, LeRoy Butler, Frank Winters. I think that’s more important. As you get older you learn that some of the things that you thought you’d do forever, you can’t believe you did at some time. I look back on this season and I can’t believe that this team has held together the way we have, though 14 games, with the injuries that we’ve had.”
         On offense alone, Green Bay has been without its best lineman and gone with two rookie tackles. The tight end is a rookie and without injured Dorsey Levens (knee) the starting running back essentially is too as 23-yard-old Ahman Green is a feature ballcarrier for the first time. The changes on defense have been just as pronounced with injuries, new starters and a new scheme that is beginning to jell.
         Despite this, both starting receivers might have 1,000-yard seasons for the second straight year and Green, who also leads the Packers in receptions, needs just 60 yards for his first 1,000-yard rushing campaign.
Early in the season it was obvious that Green Bay would only win when Favre led the victory, but that’s no longer the case. Sunday against Detroit, he was admittedly off, saying that of those 139 starts, 130 were probably better statistically. Yet Favre and Co. came through in the clutch and Green Bay won 26-13. Years ago the performance would have bothered him, but no longer. Victory made it a good game.
         “I still feel like I can throw with anyone in the league, make great decisions great plays _ the touchdown to Donald (Driver) at Carolina _ but I also know that you can’t make a living doing that,” Favre said. “You can’t make a living winning on the last play. Yes it’s dramatic, fans love it, but it’s just too hard for any one player, any one team to do that week in and week out. So just try and keep us close, you don’t have to get it all at once, and if it comes down to the end, I feel like I’m better than the next guy.”
         Call it the evolution of an already great quarterback who has an incredible rivalry with every other team and countless players, not just Tampa Bay defensive tackle Warren Sapp. One who surprises himself by saying and thinking the kind of things that coach Mike Holmgren used to drive him crazy with.
         “He’s everything I expected,” said end John Thierry, who in six years with the Chicago Bears never beat Favre. “Don’t get me wrong, I didn’t like him at Chicago, but he had my utmost respect. I’ve gained even more respect here.
         “He’s the one that gets the team going, a phenomenal leader and a great player.”
         Most Packers can’t find the words to articulate what Favre means to the franchise. First-year coach Mike Sherman said, “I know one thing, I never want to bet against Brett Favre. He’s a special guy.” Perhaps the best compliment came from linebacker Brian Williams, “He’s just Brett Favre,” because there is no comparison.
         Of course, last year many were wondering if Favre’s days as an elite quarterback were over. As some fans called for backup Matt Hasselbeck (who will almost certainly be traded this offseason for draft picks) to play, Favre might have too, comparing his fatigue and frustration to that of a retiring, burned-out coach. The more the Packers struggled, the more he shouldered the blame and consequently tried way too hard to make big plays. Favre threw for 4,091 yards, more than two his two MVP seasons, but the team wound up 8-8 and coach Ray Rhodes was fired. Favre compared the “forgotten year” of 1999 to being a sort of wake-up call.
         “I was so spent by the eighth game that I don’t know if I had anything else,” Favre said. “I know I played as hard as I possibly could. I don’t regret anything I did last year, but it was almost like a blur for everyone. It was one of those years, when you look back to that season, people will go, ‘I don’t even remember that year.’ Whereas I think I’ll remember this year more than any other year aside from the year we won the Super Bowl.”
         Even though this team isn’t anywhere near as good as the 1996 Packers, Favre means that last part. For him, this season’s numbers have been pretty average, 292 of 500 attempts completed for 3,336 yards, with 17 touchdowns and 14 interceptions. It adds up to a 78.1 passer rating, well below his 87.1 career average. Favre hasn’t had so few touchdowns since his first two years as a starter (18 in 1992, 19 in ’93).
Rather he enjoys the process of getting to the top almost as much as being there, and compares his current excitement to the Packers’ upswing to the Super Bowl that began in 1993.
“I’m enjoying it right now, probably more so this year than I have in quite some time,” he continued. “We were scoring touchdowns, we were killing people. We were like, ‘OK, we’re going to do it.’
“Now we’re working for everything and it’s not guaranteeing us anything. I’ve been at the bottom, I’ve been at the top. Nothing really phases me any more so I kind of appreciate the tough times too. I’ve always said if you went 16-0 every year, you’d be bored, you wouldn’t appreciate the guys in the locker room, how hard it is to get there, not that everyone struggled. I think that’s part of it, part of life. I’m really enjoying it and take it as it comes.”
Although no one might do more when the stakes are highest (the 91.1 postseason passer rating ranks among the best ever behind Bart Starr’s record 104.8), Favre has been forced to learn the hard way that ball control and chemistry almost always win; because in the NFL, more games are lost by teams than won.
         “Sometimes talent, I think, is looked at as the No. 1 thing that makes a team great,” Favre said. “It helps, but look at Washington. They probably have no chemistry in that locker room. It’s ‘me, me, me’ and ‘What’s wrong with these guys?’ Sure Norv Turner got fired, I saw three or four guys doing interviews saying, ‘Now we have a guy who cares about his players’ and all this stuff. It’s easy to rip the coach. I don’t know Norv Turner and I don’t know anything about that team. You take their talent and our talent, they should whip us every day of the week. But why is it that we have the same record?”
         The point was further driven home during the Oct. 1 home defeat to the Chicago Bears _ a game that might mean the difference between making the playoffs and being in Mississippi for New Year’s. While most remember Favre’s final pass attempt, a drop by Franks that could have put Green Bay into position to attempt a game-tying field goal, he instead dwells on the first throw. It was up the middle to Franks with safety Tony Parrish stepping in for an interception.
         “The whole momentum changes,” Favre said. “They go in and get seven points. Before we knew it we were down three scores. We came back, but it was too late, no different than Indianapolis against us. Of all the plays and throws I’ve had this year, that’s the only play I wish I had back. That’s the one play that really gives a good example of why I need to play consistent, be the veteran leader and handle the team the way they hoped that I would.
“I feel like I’ve done that. My touchdowns are way down in comparison to the years past. We’re 7-7, but I think it could be a lot worse.”

OPTIONAL

         There are countless examples of Favre’s continuing love affair with pro football, from watching his reaction to a touchdown pass to a typical conversation about the game that might last for hours. For example, here’s what he thinks about Florida State quarterback Chris Weinke winning the Heisman Trophy at 28, the same age Favre took home his third MVP:
         “His age to me, it didn’t matter,” said Favre, who compared Weinke to Josh Booty, a Louisiana State player who came back after playing baseball without anywhere near the same success. “I’ve never been out of football, but I know this, I was probably better in baseball than football. I’ve been out of baseball a long time and I’m 31 years old. If I went back now and played minor-league baseball, which I think I could do, I might not be near as good as I think I am. I haven’t seen a fastball in quite some time. He hadn’t seen a pass rush. Just because he’s older doesn’t mean he’ll go “Oh, it’s not as bad as I thought.”

OPTIONAL END

         The married father of two likes the direction Green Bay is headed.
         He thinks the team will only get better as the young players develop into proven veterans.
         He believes general manager Ron Wolf will again surround him with the necessary coaches and talent to succeed. Guys like returner Allen Rossum, of whom Favre admits he had “no idea who the guy was when we picked him up.” Now he’s considered one of the best special-teams players in the league and has shown heart players twice his size lack.

“It all comes down to guys wanting it,” Favre said. “I think this team really wants it.”