Archive for August, 2008

Packers owe Rodgers the courtesy of a trade

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Now that the Packers, under pressure from the commissioner, gave in to the crybaby from Mississippi, the very least they can do is trade Aaron Rodgers or give him his outright release. We all know that any quarterback competition doesn’t exist because if Brett Favre is on the roster he is the starter, the fans won’t settle for anything less, and apparently they run the team.

The Packers should try to get something for Rodgers but if they can’t they should let him go no latter than the end of this week. Rodgers deserves that after being told he was the starting quarterback and then having the rug pulled out from under him by a prima donna player he once called a friend. The Packers can start over next year with Brian Brohm and hope for the best.

One thing is sure, teams with quarterback competitions/controversies usually win about three games a season. Look to Chicago for proof. If the Packers were to hold a true competition neither quarterback would be ready for opening day, and since the 2008 season is already shot, you might as well start working on 2009. Get a draft pick and coach the hell out of Brohm, because unlike Rodgers, he won’t have three years to learn the offense. My guess is he has about five games if Favre is quarterback. No way a 39-year old player who skipped all offseason workouts and team activities lasts a full year without getting hurt.

If Favre does stay healthy, you know what you will get. Possibly a playoff berth but like the last ten years, huge disappointment in the postseason and more likely than not, another Favre blunder that crushes Packers’ fans. At least now the Packers have a built-in excuse for failure – they have Brett Favre. The only quarterback in history who fails year after year and still keeps his job. Simply an amazing feat for any athlete and only possible in backwoods Green Bay.

Since the Packers are likely headed toward the cellar, I can’t imagine my writing very many more entries this year. No sense beating a dead horse. If anything positive happens in the next few weeks I’ll chime in, but it will take something big to replace the negative feelings that the month of July has laid upon the Packers. With four preseason games ahead, I can’t even think of what that could possibly be. The emergence of Brandon Jackson? Josh Sitton possibly starting at guard as a rookie? The continued improvement of Johnny Jolly? Might be a few I guess, but none the less it will all be overshadowed by the shadow of one Brett Lorenzo Favre. And Favre wouldn’t have it any other way.

We’ll See

Sunday, August 3rd, 2008

“We’ll see”. I was so despondent when I heard the news that the Packers would allow the over-the-hill-diva quarterback Brett Favre back to compete for a starting job that I had to call my Mom and Pops for their guidance. When I said it appeared that the Packers gave in to Favre, my mom said it best – “We’ll see”. She sounds like the Zen master if you ask me. We will see. In the end Aaron Rodgers gives the Packers the best chance of winning the Super Bowl not only this year, but in future years. We’ll see.

One thing is sure, however, with Favre in camp I have nothing to blog about. There will be only one subject in Green Bay and it is a big distraction. Thanks Brett for ruining the Packers’ 2008 season. Hope you are happy with 4-12.

Then again. We’ll see. Either way, I’ll talk to you in January.

Been glad to know you

Sunday, August 3rd, 2008

If Brett Favre steps one foot on the Green Bay Packers’ practice field, I am done. Because if Ted Thompson and Mike McCarthy allow that to happen they might as well go ahead and get the surgery, because they are not men.

Also, I will have two season tickets to sell. Here I was looking forward to a Super Bowl season and now I’m stuck with a graybeard who was never that good to begin with. Who would have thought that one of the most popular players in Packers’ history could turn me against the team in such a manner? I hope they lose every game this year.

This is Packernet signing out.