Here we go again...
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“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.”― Stephen Hawking -
Guys, love the opinions here. IMPO, Brett Favre has earned the right to do whatever the hell he wants. Retire, unretire, tell us your retired, come out of retirement. I don't care. I love the way the guy plays. He's a warrior, unlike NBA players he take six weeks off for a dislocated pinkie. The MVP Trophy should be named the Brett Favre Award. Brett Favre should win Defensive Rookie of the year, MVP, comeback player of the year, 12th man award, whatever award they want to give, give it to Brett. And if he comes to Minnesota...just imagine the play action fake to Peterson...if the receivers can run routes and catch the ball, it will be awesome!EAT US AND SMILE!
LOOK WHO'S BACK IN CIRCULATION!
DAMAGE INC!Comment
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Guys, love the opinions here. IMPO, Brett Favre has earned the right to do whatever the hell he wants. Retire, unretire, tell us your retired, come out of retirement. I don't care. I love the way the guy plays. He's a warrior, unlike NBA players he take six weeks off for a dislocated pinkie. The MVP Trophy should be named the Brett Favre Award. Brett Favre should win Defensive Rookie of the year, MVP, comeback player of the year, 12th man award, whatever award they want to give, give it to Brett. And if he comes to Minnesota...just imagine the play action fake to Peterson...if the receivers can run routes and catch the ball, it will be awesome!. Those 2 games vs the PACK would be intense.
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I HOPE he comes back, then tears an ACL in the 1st preseason game....damn, I'm sick of this shit. He's DONE....He might be effective here and there, but like last year, he'll run out of steam. Peterson will tear off a 40 yard run, then Brett will throw a pick the next play....OVER.Comment
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Favre rebuffs Vikings, will stay retired
The Minnesota Vikings will not sign free-agent quarterback Brett Favre(notes), a source close to the team told Yahoo! Sports on Thursday.
The source said Favre told Vikings coach Brad Childress that he wanted to remain retired in a phone call that took place sometime in the last day. Favre is expected to publicly explain his decision soon.
Favre retired after the 2008 season, which he spent with the New York Jets. There was speculation that the Vikings were interested in bringing in a veteran to compete with Sage Rosenfels(notes), who was acquired this offseason from the Houston Texans. Rosenfels is atop the depth chart heading into training camp, with Tavaris Jackson and John David Booty(notes) also on the rosterComment
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Posted by Mike Florio on May 8, 2009, 7:17 p.m. EDT
Wow.
What a difference one freakin’ day makes.
Last night at this time, we all had assumed that Rick Schwartz of Yahoo! Sports had fashioned for himself a Jay Glazer moment, popping out of a Punxsutawney pantry and putting to rest the lingering question of whether it would be six more weeks — and longer — of the winter of Brett Favre’s career.
Now, Jeremy Schaap of ESPN reports that, if Favre doesn’t need “major surgery” on that arm injury that some think was merely an excuse for Favre’s diminished play down the stretch last season, Favre will unretire and play for the Vikings.
We’re not quite sure how Schaap got this scoop, given the small army of NFL reporters and bloggers residing on the Bristol payroll. But we’ll give Schaap the benefit of the doubt over Schwartz, given that we have heard of Schaap.Comment
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Yahoo! Sports Editor: No X-rays Were Sent To Minnesota
Posted by Mike Florio on May 10, 2009, 10:33 a.m. EDT
After posting our item from last night regarding the e-mail I received from Mark Pesavento of Yahoo! Sports regarding the twisting-in-the-wind report from Rick Schwartz of that same publication, I received a couple of additional e-mails from him.
The final e-mail expressed dismay over my assumption that any of the e-mails he sent to me were “on the record.”
And my final e-mail to Pesavento expressed dismay over his assumption that, when someone sends me an e-mail, it’s off the record even if the sender of the e-mail doesn’t utter the magic words.
It’s really not that hard, and most of my sources who prefer to remain nameless know how to invoke the protection that any journalist (real or pretend) worth his or her salt is willing to provide in exchange for information.
It comes in different forms (”off the record” . . . “don’t quote me on this” . . . “on background” . . . “if you tell anyone I told you this I’ll kick you in the nuts with a steel-toed sneaker”). But Pesavento, as the Assistant (to the) Managing Editor of Yahoo! Sports, presumably knows that there’s never a presumption that anything is “off the record.”
So, anyway, here’s what Pesavento had to say in his follow-up e-mail, before realizing that anything he was saying was fair game for publication.
He said that Yahoo! Sports knows that, contrary to multiple reports, no X-rays were sent by Brett Favre to the Vikings.
“I don’t want to come off as defensive, but since we’re talking about the reporting of this story, please hear me out: Despite what [ESPN’s Jeremy] Schaap reported (something other media outlets have latched onto), we know there were no X-rays sent to Minnesota. Our (highly-placed and very reliable) Vikings source told us so and Bus Cook has since confirmed that.
“So, my question to you, because I know you’re interested in media is: Is it really our duty to write the ‘ESPN is full of shit’ story just because everyone now assumes — despite evidence to the contrary — that the Vikings are holding X-rays up to the light to see what that weird crook in Favre’s bicep is? Because as of [Saturday], what we wrote is still accurate: Childress and Favre talked on the phone, and that was it. There are no X-rays. Both sides are worried about Favre’s health, and for many reasons, both sides have decided to move on. There is no deal and, according to our source, there will be no deal. And there’s absolutely nothing from Favre’s side to refute that.
“We’re not writing anything more because, as of now, there’s nothing more to say.”
Apparently, there is. And now it’s been said. And written.Comment
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Nice. So essentially, he tricks the Jets into giving him a release, therefore screwing them out of the opportunity of trading hiim for a player or picks, all so he can attempt to shove it up Green Bay's ass in two games the coming season. Classy.
This also points out why the meeting between Favre and Childers was called off. No need to discuss anything if Farvre can't play.
“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.”― Stephen HawkingComment
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Nice. So essentially, he tricks the Jets into giving him a release, therefore screwing them out of the opportunity of trading hiim for a player or picks, all so he can attempt to shove it up Green Bay's ass in two games the coming season. Classy.
This also points out why the meeting between Favre and Childers was called off. No need to discuss anything if Farvre can't play.Comment
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I can't find the item, but I read that the Jets & Favre had a 'gentleman's agreement' that if they released him the only team he would play for would be the Vikings. All the Jets cared about was eliminating his cap hit and making sure he didn't wind up throwing balls in the AFC.
Cool, and thanks for the info.
“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.”― Stephen HawkingComment
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In February, Vikings owner Zygi Wilf said as to interest in Brett Favre: “No way.”
More recently, Wilf replaced his position with: “No comment.”
Now, team president Mark Wilf is basically echoing the “no comment” mantra, but with more words.
“I’m not aware of any meeting [between coach Brad Childress and Favre], but any football personnel matters . . . those types of issues are issues that we don’t discuss publicly, and I hope fans and the media can appreciate that,” Mark Wilf told reporters on Monday. “Because that’s the right way we feel we can get the best product on the field to get our ultimate goal, which is a Super Bowl championship.
“I’m appreciative of the fact that the fans are very interested and curious about the whole situation. We have a football department, we have a head coach, Brad Childress, Rick Spielman is our head of personnel, and we go through this process with any player. We look at a variety of factors and that is the process we are going through right now. And certainly a competitor and Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre is no different in terms of that evaluation.”
But Mark Wilf did suggest that there is at least some interest in Favre.
“Certainly a player of Brett Favre’s [status], a Hall of Fame quarterback with the competitiveness that he has, that is a player we would have interest, as we would have other players. . . . I defer to our coach and personnel people to really evaluate those issues.”
Big questions remain, obviously. Did Favre tell Childress that Favre won’t be unretiring and playing for the Vikings? Did Favre send X-rays and/or an MRI and/or a cookie bouquet to the team last week?
As to the first question, Mark Wilf would say only this: “What I can tell you is that type of decision is up to Brett Favre, and I’ll leave it to Brett Favre to give you that answer.”
So, basically, Mark Wilf said, “No comment.”Comment
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Source: Favre looking for options
By Ed Werder and Chris Mortensen
ESPN.com
Quarterback Brett Favre consulted renowned orthopedic surgeon Dr. James Andrews regarding options for healing the partially torn biceps tendon in his throwing shoulder this week, according to a source.
The development further indicates Favre's willingness to consider coming out of retirement to sign with the Minnesota Vikings, particularly if there is a non-surgical solution to his damaged shoulder.
The source said Andrews and Favre experimented with one of several exercises that could accelerate the process of the tendon releasing on its own. During an interview with ESPN in February, Favre mentioned that he had a partially torn biceps tendon in his left shoulder during his Green Bay Packers career and that the pain subsided once it completely tore naturally.
If that fails to produce the desired results, it remains uncertain whether Favre would endure even arthroscopic surgery to prolong his career to a 19th season. A source close to Favre described that as an option but a projected 3-6 week rehabilitation is unappealing to the quarterback, who will apparently require no therapy if the tendon can be forced to tear through the exercise regimen. Favre, 39, has confided to friends he will not have major reconstructive shoulder surgery. Shortly after he retired from the New York Jets four months ago, Favre made it clear that he blamed the shoulder problem for his undoing late in the season.
At the time, Favre said the shoulder injury frustrated him and affected his confidence because it compromised his accuracy, and there was no pattern he could discern as to when it would interfere with his ability to deliver the football.
"My mind was telling me that I'm fine, but I would throw it, and it was not where I wanted it to go,'' he said in an interview at his home on Feb. 13. "That's telling me something, and it's frustrating. ... There started to be a little doubt that maybe I should attempt that [pass], and that's probably what's most disappointing. That's where I felt I let the team down. The downside of playing so many games and being physically healthy is that when it finally happened to me, it happened to the most important part of me -- the throwing shoulder.''
Favre said it didn't happen on every throw, but that he could never determine when he might lose velocity or accuracy and was unable to predict when the pain might return or how long it would linger.
"It wouldn't be every throw,'' he said. "Sometimes it would be a little 3-yard pass, and the pain would go into my neck and down my arm and, for two or three plays, there would be shooting pain. I'd get it a lot in practice, and the coaches would have me take a few plays off. It started altering the way I threw, and I thought, 'You're on the way out when that starts happening.'"
NFL senior analyst Chris Mortensen, ESPN's Ed Werder and ESPN.com's Matt Mosley contributed to this report.Comment
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he said today that he would decide by 7/30 when Vikings camp opens.
Brad Childress will now get to enjoy the same fate as Eric Mangini when this all doesn't work out.David Lee Roth's the greatest motherfucker who ever lived!
— Brian Moore (@brianpmoore666) June 26, 2012Comment
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Vikings are fucked without Favre, They have the Defense with the best RB duo in the NFL, they just don't have a QB and will do shit with Jackson at the helm.Comment
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