Monday, April 02, 2007

Notes from Indy Johnson, Thomas top my post-Combine storylines

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Notes from Indy
Johnson, Thomas top my post-Combine storylines
Posted: Monday February 26, 2007 8:27AM; Updated: Monday February 26, 2007 4:55PM

INDIANAPOLIS -- Here are the 2007 draft storylines I know about after spending four days at the Scouting Combine:
1. Calvin Johnson is atop everyone's draft board. Two team executives told me that not only is the Georgia Tech wide receiver the No. 1 player on their boards, but also he might be 32 for 32. The amazing thing is, there's a good chance he'll last until the fourth overall pick.
Oakland is 1 and has to pick a quarterback. Detroit, 2, would be excommunicated from the NFL if it picked its 43rd wide receiver in the last four drafts. Cleveland, 3, recently took Braylon Edwards in the first round, and its coach, Romeo Crennel, craves meat and potatoes. Tampa Bay, picking 4, already has Michael Clayton and Joey Galloway and needs help elsewhere, but I don't see Jon Gruden passing on the best receiver to come out in a while.
I'm not a big wideout guy this high, because I think you can find receivers down the line and the washout factor of first rounders -- by my count, only 10 of the last 30 wideouts picked in the first round are what I'd call impact players today -- is far too high. "Not many people have my size, speed and strength,'' Johnson said while in Indy. Right. Like, none. Not many 6-5, 239-pound wideouts with 4.4 speed and production.
2. Wisconsin tackle Joe Thomas was a breath of fresh air. He's a left tackle who runs like a linebacker (4.92 in the 40), looked svelte doing all the drills here, and looked very, very much like Rod Marinelli's kind of guy. Marinelli is trying to rework the Detroit locker room and make it an egoless place. Imagine getting a fixture tackle for a decade who thinks like this:
The Wisconsin defensive front had a spat of injuries near the end of the 2005 season and so Thomas, who played defense for one game as a freshman, volunteered to fill in at defensive end. In his first game back at defensive end, he tore his ACL, threatening his draft prospects for this year. Why'd he do it?
"We had a couple injuries during the year, and I just raised my hand and said I'd like to step in and help the team win. And we won. So who cares about the injury?''
I don't know Thomas. Maybe that's rehearsed. But if the Lions can determine that Thomas is legit and not the best actor in the '07 Combine, they've got to take him. "I'd love to play for Detroit,'' he said. Send the plane, Mr. Ford.
3. The Raiders have debriefed the new mentor of JaMarcus Russell, leading to rampant speculation (mine) that the fix is in and that Randy Moss is about to be a very happy man.
You may have heard that California quarterback consultant Tom Martinez, the mentor of Tom Brady since Mr. Super Bowl was 13, worked with Russell for a week at the Athletes Performance Institute in Arizona and came away highly impressed. You have not heard that the Raiders, prior to the Combine, summoned Martinez to ask him about Russell. Martinez says he told the Raiders, "There's nothing you'll ask him to do that he can't do. Nothing.'' Here are some other interesting tidbits Martinez shared with me Sunday night:
a. He told Oakland offensive coordinator Greg Knapp to remember how good Russell is, and he's only 21.
b. He told Russell after analyzing LSU tape he too often looked sluggish, like he was carrying too much weight. And the one thing he stressed with Russell is consistency with the passing motion. "Like a golf swing -- you get really good when the swing's exactly the same every time.''
c. "I told the Raiders, 'The worst thing you could do with this kid is give him four coaches in his first four years,' " said Martinez. "He needs stability. He needs the right guy coaching him the first two or three years, where he'll be taught consistency and stay on him about his technique. That's what every young quarterback needs.''
d. Everyone's talking about how well Russell throws the deep ball, and they're right. "But he makes such beautiful throws on the curls and the comebacks," says Martinez, "like an outfielder hitting the cutoff man perfectly. And his touch is so good. He throws it short with touch, deep with touch. Every throw looks so natural.''
e. Martinez worked with Russell on throwing the ball more over the top. "When Tom Brady throws an interception, it's very rarely a tipped ball because he's releasing the ball high, so it's hard to deflect it." said Martinez. He said the 6-5 1/2 Russell, releasing the ball high over his head, would, in effect, make him about 7-3 and make it very hard for defenders to tip his passes.



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Daniel Graham is just one free agent who could sign a big contract this offseason.
AP





4. Cleveland GM Phil Savage is going to have a very tough decision to make. When Adrian Peterson ran a 4.37 40, it set up this pleasant quandary for the Browns, assuming Russell and Thomas go 1-2. The Browns could have their choice of four primo players at positions of major need -- quarterback Brady Quinn, defensive end Gaines Adams, wideout Johnson and running back Peterson. Savage met Peterson on Saturday and was impressed by what a solid rock he is. He might be Eric Dickerson.
5. There was almost a mini-scandal in the coin flip for the third pick in the draft. The Bucs and Browns finished tied for the third pick, because their opponents' won-loss records were identical. So Friday morning, Savage and Tampa Bay GM Bruce Allen met in a Westin Hotel conference room to break the tie for the third pick of the draft. Imagine the significance here.
Allen came into the room with a coin he wanted to use, one from a military base in Florida. That was fine with Savage. League officials Joel Bussert and Ken Fiore ran it. Allen called heads. And when the coin went up in the air, Allen shouted, "Wait! Wait!'' The coin was plucked out of the air. And Allen said, "What are we going to do, let it fall to the floor or catch it and flip it over on your hand?'' Let it fall, he was told. He called heads again. It came up tails.
Pretty big stuff. Might be the difference between the guy who can save your team for the next three or four years or the guy who might be a nice, complimentary player. "It was just nice to get a win,'' said Savage, sounding like a desperate coach. "We gotta string some wins like that together.''
6. Free-agency is going to be insane. I think some team is going to pay Daniel Graham, a blocking tight end, $5 million a year. I think some team (rumored to be Washington, profootballtalk.com reported Sunday night) is going to pay London Fletcher-Baker $6 million a year. I think some team might pay Tampa Bay defensive end Dewayne White (60 career games, 14 sacks) $7 million a year.
I know some team will pay Adalius Thomas $8 million per, minimum. My guess is Thomas gets to $9 million. And within four months, he'll be the best addition of the year to whatever locker room welcomes him. My upset special for a no-name guy who will get the richest: Buffalo defensive end Chris Kelsay.
Football's amazing. Three weeks ago, the Super Bowl was the big story, and we all thought, "Well, that's over. Time to hibernate for a while.'' And now our psyche is all football, again. Sometimes I wonder how a great sport like hockey makes it. This should be the best time of the year for hockey, with the race for the playoffs heating up. But I'll bet you SportsCenter had more minutes of Combine coverage this weekend than Sabres-Senators highlights and other hockey games. Football just doesn't end.



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Quote of the Week I


Ohio State's Troy Smith grew tired of answering questions about his height at the Combine.
AP






"Would you have any problem playing in a colder climate, like a Minnesota?''
--Reporter's question to Georgia Tech's Calvin Johnson during Johnson's press conference at the Combine Saturday afternoon.
The Vikings have played in a dome since 1982.
Quote of the Week II
"You make it seem like being 6-feet is a disease.''
--Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith, who measured exactly 6-0 at the Combine, to a reporter he felt was pressing the height line of questioning too long.
Quote of the Week III
"Just look at my body of work at USC. I won a national championship as a freshman. I've been all-American two times, broke every record at USC, fourth in NCAA history in scoring touchdowns. I had 41. So look at the film.''
--Trojans wide receiver Dwayne Jarrett, sounding a tad bitter at the prospect of dropping in the draft. He's projected to be a late first- or second-round pick, dropping in some scouts' eyes because of average quickness and a perceived difficulty in getting away from quick corners in bump coverage.
Quote of the Week IV
"I respect him, he respects me, and that's how we pretty much differ.''
--Dwayne Jarrett, on his relationship with former USC wideout Mike Williams.
Was that English he was speaking?
Stat of the Week
The Raiders are 0-14 in AFC West games over the past 26 months.
They had the fewest rushing touchdowns (five) and passing touchdowns (seven) in the NFL last year.
Marion Barber (16) scored more touchdowns than the entire Oakland offense (12).
San Diego's Nate Kaeding out-kicked Sebastian Janikowski in extra points, 58-16.
I guess my point is if the Raiders don't take a quarterback with the first pick of the draft, they just might be certifiable.
Factoid of the Week That May Interest Only Me
To say that new Giants quarterback coach Chris Palmer's dad is pleased with his son's new position might be an understatement. Francis Palmer, a resident of Brewster, N.Y., an hour north of the Meadowlands, has been a Giants' season-ticket holder for 50 years.
Enjoyable/Aggravating Travel Note of the Week
Indianapolis the last weekend of February. The Combine.
Groundhog Day.
"It's snowing sideways out there!'' JaMarcus Russell's uncle, Ray Williams, said Saturday night, walking into the hotel suite of the agents representing the LSU quarterback: Eric Metz, Vince Malinovic and Ethan Lock.
"It snows like that every year here,'' I said.
"I've been coming here 21 years now,'' said Metz, from Arizona. "It's pretty much the same weather every year.''
Same faces too. There's Don Breaux, Joe Gibbs' ancient assistant, crossing the street wearing his omnipresent reading glasses. There's Jerry Jones' luxury Cowboys bus, idling in front of the Marriott, across from the convention center and RCA Dome; wonder which agent he's schmoozing in there now? Jim Mora, in line at Starbucks. Mike Lombardi, the Raider scout, at Jillian's sports bar, watching the NBA game Friday night, like he does every year. Rick Gosselin, the crack Dallas Morning News NFL writer and superb draftnik, buttonholing scouts and coaches arriving for the 7:30 a.m. weigh ins. Wade Phillips in his nylon Cowboys pullover. Last year it was a Chargers pullover. A few years ago, a Bills pullover. A decade or so ago, a Broncos pullover.
The 11-year-old cheerleaders from across Indiana. The 9-year-old gymnasts from around the Midwest. I swear they time their big contests and meets to coincide with the Combine, to give the halls of the convention center a bizarre feel. Look honey! It's Jeff Fisher! Get Suzy and Misty and Bobby Jo and get the camera out! Coach, can we bug you for a photo! There's a bunch of Cardinal scouts, stepping around a preteen cheerleading squad with CARDINALS across the chest, all of them done up like Jon Benet.
Only difference between now and, say, 10 years ago around here? The immense media throng -- maybe 15 media folk in 1997, 350 in 2007. Dot-coms, scores of them, team Web sites and college papers. Instead of staking out the hallways for players, now they're brought into a media ballroom. And I almost forget the NFL Network and SIRIUS radio. Instead of having a half-hour alone with Bill Polian, now we get a few minutes, and the NFL entities get him for much of the time we used to have with him exclusively. Sign of the giant NFL times.
Just a little snapshot of something that, like everything else in the NFL over the years, is exploding.



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Ten Things I Think I Think
1. I think these are my quick-hit thoughts of the Scouting Combine:
a. Dwayne Jarrett said Saturday that Pete Carroll's coaching staff at USC "is the best coaching staff I've ever been around.'' What a tribute! Did you know the USC coaching staff is better than New Brunswick (N.J.) High's? Amazing.






b. Best Line of the Combine Lost in the Shuffle, from Jets coach Eric Mangini: "As a head coach, five things come up every day that you didn't have scheduled.''
c. Troy Smith seems to be an impressive kid. A little Napoleonic about the height thing, but the kind of natural leader other players will like.
d. Drew Brees is three-eighths of an inch taller Troy Smith.
e. There is no really good, first-day blocking tight end in the draft.
f. Paul Posluszny, who has the face of a 13-year-old, is an impressive kid.
g. Roger Goodell sure made himself scarce over the weekend.
h. You doing OK, Andy Reid? You were missed here.
i. Watching Tony Dungy walk through a busy Indiana Convention Center, I can't imagine Bono or K-Fed drawing a bigger crowd. Maybe Britney Spears. Maybe.
2. I think more and more coaches and GMs are staying away from individual interviews at the Combine, because these Combine-prep places are doing such a good job of polishing up the players. I couldn't believe how many general managers I saw out at night, eating normal dinners instead of being cooped up for four hours a night asking the same questions to different kids and getting the same practiced answers in return.
The way the combine works is that there are physical exams and running and lifting and measuring during the day, and the night is reserved for 15-minute interview blocks in the rooms inside the Indiana Convention Center. Now teams are starting to throw changeups at the players, so they won't be able to have the mental string pulled on their back to answer the question the way the media coach wanted them to answer it.
3. I think the one interview Brady Quinn thought was original and a smart use of his time came in the Miami meeting room. Coach Cam Cameron asked Quinn midway through their time together how many run plays, how many pass protections and how many pass formations Notre Dame had. After Quinn answered, Cameron said: "OK, about seven minutes left. Go to the board and diagram every one of them.'' Quinn loved it, because it was a challenge that made him have to improvise and perform well under pressure. When the period ended, and Quinn didn't finish (obviously), Cameron told him the next time they met, he wanted him to do it again, only faster, losing none of the efficiency. (There's a draft hint, people. The Fins and Quinn will meet again before the draft.)
Speaking of Quinn, he's almost a little too perfect. But if that's who he is, that's who he is. That's what we all were saying about Peyton Manning nine years ago. Speaking of winning the big one (or not), Quinn, by my very unofficial count, was 2-8 in the Very Big Ones at Notre Dame: 2-1 versus Michigan, 0-4 against USC, 0-3 in bowl games. Not good. But let's not slay Quinn over it just yet. In those eight losses, Notre Dame allowed 47, 44, 41, 34, 34, 41, 38 and 45 points.
4. I think the scariest thing about the death of Damien Nash, the Denver running back who died Saturday night of unknown causes after playing in a charity basketball game, is that Nash had undergone four complete physicals since 2004. What a sad story.



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5. I think it's hard not to root for Steve DeOssie's boy Zak, a 6-4 1/2, 250-pound linebacker and long-snapper from Brown -- the first Brown player ever invited to the combine -- and former Bill Belichick ballboy with the Patriots. "I hope football's going to be my life for a long, long time,'' he said, soaking up some media before hitting the RCA Dome today for his trial. "I'd play for an expansion team in Hawaii, I don't care.''






His Brown major: Public and Private Sectors of Organization. His Brown classes this term: Ancient Samarian writing ("deciphering tablets,'' he said), business management, Russian literature. Four times a week since November, he drove an hour from his Providence campus to a workout facility run by the same man who trained legendary workout warrior Mike Mamula for the Combine, Mike Boyle.
After an impressive showing in the Hula Bowl, Zak's hoping to run a 4.5 40 today so he can assure his mid-round draft status. "He's redeemed my faith in a lot of ways about what a student athlete should be,'' said his agent, Brad Blank.
6. I think the league is playing with fire by considering allowing fans into the Combine. First, you'd bore them silly. It's not sporting to watching 21-year-old after 21-year-old run around some orange cones. Second, can you imagine if the Patriots beat the Colts in the playoffs next year, and Belichick walks out on the carpet at the Dome next February to watch the proceedings, and somebody yells, "Belichick, you SUCK!'' What if there's beer sold? Isn't the object here to make money to defray the cost of the Combine? I don't get it really.
7. I think the Eagles still need Jeff Garcia.
8. I think if a third of what's alleged against Pacman Jones is true, the Titans have to cut the guy.
9. I think it's safe to say the Jets and Patriots aren't going to kiss and make up anytime soon. Take my word for it. There's some hard feelings over how New England receivers coach Brian Daboll ended up the Jets quarterbacks coach, and the Patriots won't forget last year's tampering charges against the Jets, even though the league recently dismissed the case. I doubt that Eric Mangini will be Bill Belichick's guest in Terry Francona's box seats at Fenway this spring.
10. I think these are my non-football thoughts of the week:
a. How sad at the Oscars. The Departed kicked tail. I say that's bad because ... well, have you seen it? Did the gore bother you? The over-the-top, pandering, blood-gurgling murderous spree was too much for me. We must be inured to it by now, because the Academy voted Oscars not only for the movie but also for Martin Scorsese for making the flick. What's next, I wonder. A beheading in Times Square? Gouging someone's eyes out? So sad we seem to be in search of the next great gruesome thing in movies.
b. Good for Helen Mirren winning Best Actress. I can't imagine a better acting job than what she did playing the Queen in The Queen.
c. Frank Cooney, that nfldraftscout.com is gospel to me. Thanks for making a site that is part Encyclopedia Britannica, part Inside the Scouting Combine.
d. Coffeenerdness: You learn one thing about restaurant coffee when you go to Indianapolis. I'm a coffee-after-dinner guy. Always have been. But in much of middle America, coffee after dinner too often means coffee-flavored water after dinner.
e. Adam Schefter's doing a really good job on NFL Network. I think he might have found his calling. The camera likes him. Combine that with his Grudenesque work ethic, and you've got a good TV guy.
f. Will Carroll really knows his baseball.
g. Belated thanks to friends-of-MMQB Patrick Pantano and Alex Marvez of the Pro Football Writers of America. Pantano, a PR man for NFL Films, is the classic good PR guy, suggesting good stories but not overly pushing them, passing along good NFL Films clips and ideas. Re: Marvez, he got commissioner Roger Goodell to address the annual Pro Football Writers of America meeting two days before the Super Bowl, thawing some icy waters with the league office.
h. There is no one -- not Letterman, not Leno, not Caliendo -- funnier than Bill Bryson. That's saying something.
i. Finally got an iPod. Yes, I was the last man in America to do so. And I must say two things: Mick Jagger is a better singer, remixed, than I ever thought. And also, what a country.

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BRETT FAVRE PRO SUMMARY


Brett Favre
Originally uploaded by brucesingman.
BRETT FAVRE PRO SUMMARY:

• A certain first-ballot Hall of Famer, Brett Favre in 2006 embarks upon his 15th season in his adopted city of Green Bay
• Among the most exciting players in pro football annals ever to line up at quarterback, Favre, now in his 16th NFL campaign, stands as one of the game’s most productive signal callers
• Ranks second on the NFL’s all-time lists for passing yards (53,615), attempts (7,610), completions (4,678) and touchdowns (396), all behind the prolific Dan Marino
• With 139 victories as quarterback, ranks third behind John Elway (148) and Marino (147)
• Celebrated even more than his prodigious numbers is his legendary durability
• Upon taking over the reigns as the Green and Gold’s signal caller Sept. 20, 1992, has started the ensuing 221 contests, a record for NFL quarterbacks and, astoundingly, the fourth-longest recorded streak in league annals
• During 14 campaigns under center for Green Bay, has led Packers to 10 postseason appearances, including six division crowns, three NFC Championship Games, two Super Bowls and a World Championship with a victory in Super Bowl XXXI
• The former Southern Mississippi leader’s success is partially attributed to a commanding knowledge of his offense, astute observation of countless defenses designed to stop him and physical ability – especially renowned arm strength
• But his legacy transcends the passes, the touchdowns and the statistics: the inspiring leader will go down as one of the most beloved players of his generation
• The swashbuckling Southerner embodies the heart of America’s favorite game
• Stands as one of the most respected players among his peers and coaches, as well
• His hard-working approach and down-to-earth attitude appeals to football fans across the nation
• Favre once again topped the Harris Poll, in a survey of American sports fans, as the nation’s favorite football player in 2006 and placed third among all sports figures, behind Tiger Woods and Michael Jordan
• The quarterback earlier topped the 2003 and ’04 Harris Polls and placed second to the Colts’ Peyton Manning in ’05
• In another measure of his popularity, in 2006 he ranked first among active NFL players in Sports QScore, a prominent rating survey conducted for marketing and advertising purposes; overall he trailed only Woods and Jordan
• His legendary grit was saluted twice recently as well
• In February 2004, he was named as the No. 1 'Toughest Athlete in Sports' by USA Today
• Then, transcending sports, in the March 2004 issue of Men's Journal, he was chosen as the No. 1 'Toughest Guy in America' on the basis of his “fearlessness, perseverance, a willingness to take risk, a tolerance for pain and even a dash of modesty”
• In further similar documentation, a 2005 nationwide vote of more than a half-million viewers for The Discovery Channel’s special, ‘100 Greatest Americans,’ ranked Favre No. 89
CONSISTENTLY ONE OF THE BEST
• At the top of his game throughout his career, he is one of the most worthy adversaries for defensive coordinators
• As recently as 2004, helped the Packers to establish all-time franchise records for total net yards (6,357), net yards passing (4,449), first downs (354) and completions (382) as Green Bay finished third among NFL offenses; his output included a combination of 4,000-plus yards and 30 TDs, the third such season in his distinguished career
• His TD total ranked fourth in the league and his yardage total fifth
• Selected as an alternate for the 2004 Pro Bowl, his eighth such honor, one short of Forrest Gregg's team record of nine Pro Bowl appearances
• Known for his strong practice habits, coaches consider him a fine example for younger players, even now in his later seasons
• Execution in practice is legendary, oftentimes working through a session without a ball touching the ground
AMONG ALL-TIME GREATS
• Long considered one of the NFL’s best ever, he ranks high on a number of the league’s all-time lists
• Ranks 12th in NFL history with a career passer rating of 86.0
• Over the course of 2005, extended three other NFL records and established two more
• He padded three streaks: seasons with at least 20 TD passes (12), seasons with at least 300 completions (14) and seasons with at least 3,000 yards passing (14), and broke away from previous NFL-record holder Marino (13) with 3,000 yards in a 14th overall season
• Plus, Favre eclipsed Elway's single-stadium TD pass record (180 at Mile High Stadium), improving his Lambeau Field total to 189
• Is one of only four quarterbacks in league history to post as many as four 4,000-yard seasons (also doing so in 1995, '98-99); Marino (6), Peyton Manning (6) and Warren Moon (4) are the others
• With four 300-yard passing performances in 2005, now has 45 such career outings – tops among active NFL players
• Is the NFL's most accurate passer among those with at least 6,000 career attempts, his 61.5 career completion percentage placing him substantially ahead of No. 2 Marino (59.4 percent)
• A testament to his consistently high production level, his completions, attempts, yards and touchdown totals are tops in the league over the past 15 seasons (1991-2005)
• Along the way, he has solidified his standing among the game's all-time elite by earning the NFL's 'MVP' honor a record three times, capturing the Associated Press award over the 1995, 1996 and 1997 seasons; he was runner-up in 2002 as well
• Honored in “co-status” with the Detroit Lions' Barry Sanders in 1997, he became the first player in league history to win the award three times, let alone in three consecutive years
• Incomparability of the strong-armed Southerner is further evidenced by his selection in 2000 to the 1990s NFL All-Decade second team as voted by the Pro Football Hall of Fame Selection Committee
• Also ranked as the ninth-best player in 'NFL Player of the Century' voting, which was conducted on nfl.com during the 1999 season
• Collaborated with former Packers wide receiver Antonio Freeman for 57 touchdown passes from 1995-2001, the sixth-best such duo in NFL history
• With it being impossible for someone to better it, will be the permanent possessor of at least one all-time NFL record – that for longest pass completion – as he hooked up with wideout Robert Brooks for a 99-yard score in a 1995 game at Chicago
• In 2003 became part of the second-longest rush in NFL annals, handing off to Ahman Green on a play that resulted in a 98-yard TD, vs. Denver in the season finale
WILL FINISH AS A PACKER
• Will finish his career in Green Bay after signing a “lifetime” contract on March 1, 2001
• Then-head coach Mike Sherman, calling the signing day “historic,” commented on the uniqueness of Favre's relationship with the Packers' organization and fans, saying, “No player in the NFL identifies, or is more closely linked to, a specific team like Brett Favre is to the Green Bay Packers. He embodies the spirit and character of Packer fans everywhere. I do not think there is a player in the NFL that experiences a relationship with the fans like Brett Favre does. That is very, very special.”
• Favre echoed the sentiment, saying, “I enjoy it here. I don't want to move. I enjoy the fans and I just want to stay. I couldn't envision myself playing for another team.”
A WINNER
• Throughout his career, has disdained talk of statistics, concerning himself most with his team’s victories
• Ranks alone at third on the all-time QB wins list with 139, behind only Elway (148) and Marino (147)
• From 1992-2004, won at least eight games an NFL-record 13 consecutive seasons, substantially better than the next closest player, Ken Stabler, who had eight straight .500-or-better seasons from 1973-80
• Also has led the Packers to an NFL-best 139-82 record since taking over as the starter in the fourth week of the 1992 season; the winning percentage, .629, is the seventh highest since the 1970 league merger (min. 100 starts)
• Is the possessor of an .782 winning percentage (86-24) at home as a starter, fifth to Terry Bradshaw (.848, 67-12), Roger Staubach (.831, 49-10), Elway (95-23) and Danny White (.787, 37-10) among starters who have begun their careers since 1967 (min. 25 home starts)
• His record as a leader consists of 10 playoff berths, including a club-record six in a row (1993-98), three straight NFC Central Division crowns (1995-97), three NFC North Division titles in a row (2002-04), three consecutive NFC Championship Games (1995, 1996, 1997) and back-to-back Super Bowl appearances, including a 35-21 victory over New England in Super Bowl XXXI, returning the Lombardi Trophy to Green Bay for the first time in 29 years
• Upon defeating Chicago in December of 2000, became the third-fastest player in the NFL since 1970 to reach 100 regular-season victories, doing so in his 153rd career start; only Joe Montana (139) and Bradshaw (147) got to the century mark quicker over the past 34 years
• Since 1992, holds a 46-17 record (.730) in regular-season games after Dec. 1, the fourth-best mark among NFL starters who have begun their careers since 1970 (min. 20 starts); Tom Brady (.826, 19-4), Joe Theismann (.783, 18-5) and Montana (.756, 34-11) rank just ahead
• Owns 35 career fourth-quarter or overtime comebacks (which includes three postseason contests)
• A game conductor of the highest caliber, has led the Packers to a nearly perfect 53-2 regular-season record since 1992 in games where they have more rushing attempts than passing attempts
DOMINANTLY DURABLE
• As indestructable as football players come, has started an NFL-quarterback-record 221 consecutive regular-season contests (241 including playoffs) – 93 games (equivalent of better than five-and-a-half seasons) more than the next closest streak among league QBs all-time, 128 by Manning (1998-2005); his streak is the league’s longest active skein (by nearly six seasons) among all
• Played much of the 2003 season with a broken thumb on his right (throwing) hand
• In 2005 surpassed No. 6 Gene Upshaw (207, 1967-81) and the No. 4 streaks, shared by Fred Cox (210, 1963-77) and Jim Otto (210, 1960-74)
• Actually has played in 223 consecutive regular-season contests, having seen action in two contests as a reserve leading into his starting streak
• Eight more signal callers made their initial NFL start in 2005, meaning that a total of 191 league quarterbacks have opened a game since Favre began his starting streak Sept. 27, 1992
• Furthermore, he is the only athlete in the four major sports to have started every game for the same team since Sept. 27, 1992, having been presented his opportunity the previous week when Don Majkowski suffered strained ligaments in his left ankle midway through the first quarter of Cincinnati contest
• During his remarkable run, 15 different quarterbacks have served as his backup in Green Bay; chronologically, they are Majkowski (1992), Ty Detmer (1992-95), Mark Brunell (1993-94), T.J. Rubley (1995), Bob Gagliano (1995), Doug Pederson (1995-98, 2001-04), Jim McMahon (1995-96), Steve Bono (1997), Rick Mirer (1998), Matt Hasselbeck (1999-2000), Aaron Brooks (1999), Danny Wuerffel (2000), Henry Burris (2001), Craig Nall (2002-05) and Aaron Rodgers (2005); only five times over the course of his streak has a backup had to complete a game due to injury – Oct. 20, 1994, at Minnesota (hip), when Brunell wrapped up the contest; Nov. 5, 1995, at Minnesota (ankle), when Detmer subbed in before injuring his thumb and giving way to Rubley; Nov. 12, 2000, at Tampa Bay (ankle), when Hasselbeck was called upon to finish the game; Oct. 20, 2002, vs. Washington (knee), when Pederson completed the contest; and Oct. 3, 2004, vs. the New York Giants (concussion), when Pederson took over before suffering a rib injury and Nall finished the game
TOUCHDOWN PRODUCER
• Astonishingly productive in firing touchdown passes, in 2005 he padded his NFL record with at least 20 TD passes in 12 seasons
• In 2004, he extended his own NFL record with his eighth career season of 30-or-more touchdown passes – twice as many as any other quarterback in league history (Marino, with four, stands second)
• As recently as 2004, finished fourth in the NFL in TD passes, behind the Colts’ Manning (49), the Vikings’ Daunte Culpepper (39) and the Eagles’ Donovan McNabb (31)
• Also that season stretched his streak of consecutive games with a touchdown pass to 36 games – a franchise record and the second-longest streak in league history, behind only the 47-game string of Johnny Unitas (1956-60); string ended Dec. 5 at Philadelphia
• With a four-TD performance in 2005, has authored 19 such career games, good for second place in NFL history for most career games with four-or-more TD passes, behind only Marino (21)
• Now has 56 career games where he has thrown three-or-more TD passes, second to only Marino (62) in NFL history
• Now owns the NFL’s single-stadium TD pass record with 189 at Lambeau Field, surpassing Elway; Elway threw 180 at Mile High Stadium
• Authored 24 TD passes at Chicago’s Soldier Field, owning sole possession of fourth on that stadium’s all-time list, behind three Bears quarterbacks: Erik Kramer (38), Jim McMahon (37) and Jim Harbaugh (28)
• According to Elias Sports Bureau, he finished 2005 averaging the second most touchdown passes per game (1.76, 396 TDs in 225 games) in league history, just behind No. 1 Manning (1.91, 244-128)
• Has 51 career TD passes against the Bears, the third most all-time by a QB against an opponent
• Owns NFL record (since 1970) for most consecutive games with a TD pass vs. a single opponent by throwing for a score in 26 straight games against the Bears (1992-2004)
• Dependable in his production of scoring strikes, has thrown for at least one TD in 192 of his 223 career games with Green Bay, failing to do so in only 21 games since the start of the 1995 season
ALL-TIME PACKERS
• Ranks first in most seasons leading the team in yards passing (14), having broken Bart Starr’s franchise record (12) in 2004
• Also is the club’s all-time leader with 223 games played, passing Starr (196) during the ’04 season
• Now holds 30 team records, among them career touchdowns (396), pass attempts (7,606), completions (4,678) and yards passing (53,615)
• Has now played in 14 seasons with Green Bay, tying Gregg (14; 1956, 1958-70); Ray Nitschke (15; 1958-72) and Starr (16; 1956-71) are the only former Packers to have played more
• Began his streak of 223 straight games played with second-half, mop-up duty in a 1992 loss to the Buccaneers, he then replaced the injured Majkowski the next week against Cincinnati, leading Green Bay to a come-from-behind victory, before initiating his amazing streak of 221 consecutive starting assignments vs. Pittsburgh on Sept. 27, 1992
COLD WEATHER EXCELLENCE
• Born and raised in the South, goes against conventional wisdom by performing well in the cold
• At home, now holds a 40-4 record including playoffs when the kickoff temperature is 34 degrees or below; possesses an impressive 92.0 passer rating in those 44 cold-weather games, based on 866 completions in 1,394 attempts (62.1 percent) for 10,028 yards and 78 TDs, 35 INTs
PLAYOFFS
• In the postseason, has thrown a touchdown pass in an NFL-record 16 consecutive games (1995-2004)
• Ranks second on the NFL's all-time list for postseason touchdown passes; his 34 places him behind only Montana (45)
• Ranks third all-time in postseason yards passing, with 4,902; Elway (4,964) and Montana (5,772) are the only players above him
• Ranks second on NFL’s all-time postseason completions list (401) and third on the attempts list (663)
• Owns the club's all-time postseason record for service with 20 games played
• Owner of 13 club postseason marks overall, while sharing in one
2005 Season
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