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Slapinions

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< Happy Birthday Ka
Monday, March 3, 2008
Happy Birthday St >
Thursday, March 6, 2008
March 2008
Happy April - No Fool's Day joke here
Baseball Season is Here!
A conversation with a neighbor
Hello to Kazakhstan
Zach and Cody, Credit Scores, Photobucket, and some groovy mind trips
Things aren't perfect
The World's Oldest Recorded Human Voice
The Final 2008 Easter Post (Yay!)
Easter Egg Dyeing 2008
Fay Wray, Richard Widmark, a hot Angelina Jolie, the Zodiac Killer, DB Cooper, and Egg McMuffins
Buddies - 2007 Version
Easter 2007 Continued . .
Easter Egg Dyeing - 2007 ???
Dale Check - A musical thank you!
Easter - Never this Early Again (well, in our lifetimes)
(What I consider) a stunning pic of The Baby
Honoring America's Last Surviving Doughboy
Some Easter Humor
Wisconsin makes the Sweet 16!
The pizza that currently reigns supreme
The Baby goes to the Emergency Room
The Return of Old Man Winter on Good Friday
How I spent my Birthday: A grade-school essay ? answered by a 34 year old
Lost: Meet Kevin Johnson (Season 4, Episode 8)
A piece on race in America, featuring Obama and the Houston Chronicle too!
Happy Birthday to  . . well, me!
Smiley's 1st Field trip 3/18/08
On Obama, Rev. Wright, and my objection to restrictions on speech
Picture with the Easter Bunny 2008
Stupid Human Tricks Dept.- Here's an odd talent of LuLu's
Some Comedy Sites to Check out
On the legalization of marijuana
A brief update on our week thru the Ides of March
Follow Up to The Legend Trip
Lost: Ji Yeon (Season 4, Episode 7) Spoiler Alert!
Smiley's 1st Day of School! 3-10-08
The Legend Trip
Frankly, of interest only to my family
JLand Photo Shoot #130 - Photographer's Choice
Just a nice photo, looking out my 2nd floor hallway window
On how I'm nothing more than a means of transportation and amusement for the kids
Smiley's 3rd Birthday Party - pt 2
Smiley's 3rd Birthday Party Pt. 1
My 100th post of the year - and of course, it's political ;)
On Boots, cupcakes, my hair, sign language, and a cranky baby
A rant about the kids and some pics of George Washington
Lost: The Other Woman (season 4, episode 6)
What the panel of docs and teachers said about Smiley
Happy Birthday Stacey
The End of an Era - Brett Favre Retires
Happy Birthday Katie
Beowulf and 30 Days of Night
An example of how honesty has never been an issue in our marriage
« March 2008 Archive
Wednesday, March 5, 2008

The End of an Era - Brett Favre Retires

Brett Favre, three time MVP, Super Bowl Champion, record holder for most consecutive games at QB, most TD passes, most wins at QB, and beloved hero of millions of Wisconsin fans, retired yesterday after 17 years in the NFL.

'I know I can still play. I'm just tired mentally. I'm just tired.', he was quoted as saying.

The news came as a shock following a great season that only ended in OT during the NFC Championship game, as most fans were  confident he'd return to lead the charge towards another elusive Super Bowl ring.

If you don't live in Wisconsin, or haven't for the last 15 years, I think it's impossible to accurately portray Favre's status in this state.

In Wisconsin he is sports icon/respected elder/warrior/leader/sex symbol/iron man. He is Moses, bringing a once proud people out of obscurity and to the Promised Land. He is Achilles, strong and feared, but with weaknesses that made him human. He is Beowulf/Arthur/Washington and Babe Ruth.

If this was a different era bards would sing tales of his life, and centuries from now children on the banks of the Wolf River would recite his exploits in exaggerated awe.

Think I'm stretching the truth? Move here.

The local nightly news devoted a full 14 minutes to his retirement, at which point the anchor apologized for having to relate 'other' news - like those pesky Texas and Ohio primaries. A few minutes later the sports segment started and we were back at it.

A local company started producing 'Green Bay 4 Ever' t-shirts and marketing them. Local papers blasted headlines as large as any announcing a war or the moon landing. Montages recounting his wife's cancer, his father's death, his own addiction, and his greatness flowed across the airwaves.

Here's the front page of the Journal website from this morning, a full day later:

You have to understand, the Packers had more world championships than any other team in the NFL. Green Bay left the '60's, the era of Lombardi, the undisputed kings of the road and then . . .  30 horrible years of nothing.

No championships. No Super-Bowl appearances. A rare playoff appearance in a strike year.

I remember many times watching the Packers take a comfortable lead (this would be in the midst of one of any number of mediocre years) and turning away from the TV, fearing they'd give up the game.

And they would.

4-12 . . I remember that as the last season before Holmgren and Favre took over. 4 and 12.

And then nearly two decades of constant playoff appearances, highlight reel passes, a Super Bowl ring and another that should-have-been, and a quarterback that is legitimately mentioned in best-ever discussions.

(I remember Socialist, many years ago, telling me in a hushed tone. "I always thought we'd have a decent quarterback someday. But I never dreamed we'd have a stud like Favre, not  the Packers. Never in a million years . . .")

I never fully embraced the Favre religion, largely because I'm only a casual football fan, but also because it seemed a bit too . . . well, like worship.

But I do remember the excitement and hope some kid from Mississippi inspired in the frozen tundra of Wisconsin. I remember Milwaukee exploding when the Pack took the Super Bowl in New Orleans. I remember disgust over his interceptions and acceptance of it as part of his necessary 'gunslinger' mentality. I remember getting sick of his yearly off-season 'maybe I'll be back/maybe I'll retire' dramas. I remember his triumphant game on the heels of his father's death. I remember countless victories, far fewer defeats, and endless confidence that  we'd do it all again next year.

We'll miss you Brett. Thanks for everything.

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slapinions at 9:13:00 AM CST Blog about this entry
This entry has 3 comments: (Add your own)
  • #3 Comment from jeannescorsone 
    3/5/08 5:35 PM Permalink
    I too will miss Brett, the game will not be the same....I hope that his retirement still keeps him in the public eye....He would make a good person in anything he does...

    Jeanne
  • #2 Comment from luvrte66 
    3/5/08 4:47 PM Permalink
    As I commented on Dan's journal, Brett Favre is one of the class acts in football. Fast track him to the Hall of Fame, no doubt about it.

    Beth
    http://journals.aol.com/luvrte66/nutwoodjunction/
  • #1 Comment from mutualaide 
    3/5/08 10:48 AM Permalink
    For a casual football fan ... you have surely written a nice tribute to a man who brought much to the game.  I do hope his retirement is all he hopes it will be.