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The Last Huck From an Old Seed

By
Updated: February 22, 2011

Late last week there seemed to be a lot of discussion amongst many media outlets about Brett Favre trying to “reach out” to Aaron Rodgers after his Super Bowl victory.

First of all, how this situation was even picked up by the media comes highly into question. Could something have been intentionally leaked by Favre’s long-time yenta, his agent Bus Cook, in an attempt to try and upstage Rodgers during his moment on top of the quarterbacking world?

The events of this situation are eerily similar to Alex Rodriguez choosing to announce his free agency when the Boston Red Sox were winning their most recent World Series a few years ago. Both Favre and Rodriguez are equally transparent and pathetically out of touch as to the right way to handle yourself with even the slightest amount of integrity.

Honestly, ask yourself how the media would even know if Favre were about to give Rodgers a stupid phone call? How would something this simple and personal to the parties involved end up on national media radar? Why this is a relevant discussion point on the afternoon talking head forums of the evil-four-letter defies explanation.

Charles Woodson said in a recent interview that Favre had plenty of opportunities over the past few years to reach out to Rodgers, as most mentors with even a speckle of class would generally do. Did he choose to reach out at any other random time that wasn’t Super Bowl championship time? Of course not. He had to play the role of the spiteful juvenile who was losing the attention to his little brother. It is becoming ever that much more clear that Favre’s only motivation is to try and strategize for the benefit of his now tainted legacy.

My question is, why does Rodgers even need Favre’s approval? He doesn’t. The misconception that he does is only a creation of the media and Favre’s massive, unsubstantiated ego.

Do you think Rodgers cares about getting some sort of blessing from Favre? Of course not. He now has the same amount of rings that Favre won in his entire career. He has only been a full-time starter for three years and is only 28 years of age. With Rodgers’ talent level and the fact that he could possibly display that level of talent for another decade or more, inevitability says there are more rings to come. This should scare Favre’s over-inflated head, and it’s blatently obvious that it does.

There is also a good chance Rodgers will go down in history someday as a greater Packer quarterback than Favre. I guarantee you a personality like Rodgers will not end his career in Green Bay by trying to be bigger than the franchise, and hold it hostage in the final three offseasons of his tenure.

Favre grew up in the sticks of Southwest Mississippi. He stayed in Southwest Mississippi to go to college. I’m no pyschologist, and I only play one on the internet – but I believe Favre’s disconnect as a youth from competing with the world outside of the swamp and mud played a major role in the immaturity he has displayed as a grown-man.

With this recent “news,” Favre wants nothing more than to steal some of the spotlight from Rodgers, like a junior high “it” girl would, who becomes outlandishly envious and jealous when she is overtaken by the next “it” in the eyes of the peers.

The timing of this supposed reach-out, right after Rodgers is “going to Disneyland,” is a clear cry for “please, still look at me” by Favre. He wants everyone to know that he still holds something over the Super Bowl-winning quarterback – well at least something he thinks he still holds over Rodgers. Rodgers was Favre’s understudy in his final three years in Green Bay, and Favre wants everyone to know that. To a certain extent, he wants everyone to think that Rodgers wouldn’t be what he is today without being that understudy.

All this aside, what really is disappointing is how a legend like Favre has wilted away to nothing but a grasping pub-hound that oozes desparation, and how this kind of behavior only cements the answer to the question of whether or not Favre has created all the drama we have seen over the past few years, or if the media simply had over-sensationalized the entire saga.

The link of egomaniacal behavior between the off-season holdouts and this current drama with Rodgers, which cleary bares no semblence of relevancy, significance or time and place, only confirms the personality flaw Favre suffers from. You have become the senile old man, Brett. Nobody has actually cared for quite a few years now.

But what should we really expect? Favre was always the epitome of chuck and duck, going for broke when it means the most, just closing his eyes and letting it rip. So in that regard, I guess it’s not suprising that on the way out the door, he has managed to throw one final embarrassing and befuddling interception, one we have all picked off.

The next move for the ol’ gun-slingin’ “Silver Fox?” You’re a shoe-in for the daytime soap opera circut.