Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Goodbye, Brett


Brett Favre's first throw as a professional quarterback was a touchdown. On November 10, 1991, the rookie quarterback, then playing for Atlanta, threw an interception that was returned for a touchdown by the Redskins' Andre Collins. The Redskins went on to win the Super Bowl. Brett Favre's final pass was an interception to Corey Webster, a throw that helped send the Giants to their third Super Bowl win. They were two dubious throws that were the moldy bread which encapsulated the sandwich, the meat of which was a Hall of Fame career.

Brett Favre broke many NFL records. Even so, I will not argue that he was the greatest quarterback in NFL history. He deserves to be in the argument, but he doesn't deserve to win it. Despite his numbers, he was not as good as Elway, Brady, Bradshaw, or Montana. However, he was by far the most fun quarterback to watch in NFL history. His improvisational skills were fantastic. He made so many crazy, goofy looking plays that fans simply shook their heads. Further, one never knew if those throws would result in an interception, further adding suspense to every play. He made more good throws than bad ones, but still, his wildman tendencies made for a suspensful football game. The NFL has had many exciting quarterbacks: Daryle Lamonica, Fran Tarkenton, Terry Bradshaw, Steve Young, John Elway, Michael Vick, and Randall Cunningham. Favre was more exciting than any of them.

Still, he had struggles. In 1996, he announced his addiction to Vicodin, a prescription painkiller. That season, he won his only Super Bowl. His father died on December 23, 2003. Brett was able to put that behind him in order to whip the Oakland Raiders on Monday Night Football, one of the most touching games in NFL history. His second to last season was his worst, throwing more interceptions than any year in his career. Despite all of his touchdowns, he made many, many ill-advised passes. With each bad one, he had the uncanny ability to shake it off and move on. When he threw his first NFL pass, he amazed Jerry Glanville, then his head coach, by bragging that his first pass was a touchdown. When Glanville informed him that it went to the wrong team, Favre beamed that nobody would remember that several years down the road. With all of his flaws, he never missed a start, and he is guaranteed to make it into the Hall of Fame five years from now, his first year of eligibility.

Brett Favre played one season in Atlanta. When Ron Wolfe hired Favre in Green Bay, the scouting reports said that he had maybe five years in him. Brett started 275 consecutive games over 17 seasons. In his first game in Green Bay, he replaced Don Majkowski, and proceded to stink up the place, fumbling three times. He was able to pull the game together, throwing a touchdown pass to beat Cincinatti 24-23 with 17 seconds left. Even in his first game in Green Bay, he showed that the had the stuff to get up when knocked down.

Humans are flawed. Even the great ones are imperfect. The strongest Christians will sometimes succumb to moments of weakness. What makes all the difference is what comes after the fall. Do we confess, repent, and move on, or do we allow our failures to spin a downward cycle of damnation?

Saturday, February 23, 2008

An Encouraging Thought



For those of you who started watching baseball last year, that skinny, ninety pound guy is Barry Bonds!

Whether he did it or not is not really the point anymore. Whether he, or Roger Clemens, or anybody else took steroids has long since become a moot point. I personally think they did. I may be wrong, but I don't think so. I'm sure that most Americans think they did.

Regardless, there are many Americans who detest Barry Bonds. Some of that is the "up yours" arrogance that he has shown to the media and the fans. I don't think that's the major reason. People don't like Barry Bonds because they think that he is a jerk who cheated and wrongfully 'roided his way to the most prestigious record in sports.

I'm happy about this outrage, by the way. This means that I have many Americans going on record saying that they still value integrity. We hear so much about corrupt athletes, corrupt CEOs, corrupt politicians, corrupt clergy, corrupt cleaning ladies, and corrupt doctors (which I don't think is as rampant as people say). If we believe our media and our preachers, then to many, we live in a very dishonest society. In a day and age where the very notion of right and wrong are being challenged, there has been an outcry against men like Bonds and Clemens for cheating. In essence, many are saying that if the accusations are true, then what they did is wrong. Yes, I used the dreaded "w-word."

Integrity is still a value in this country, at least in the sports world. Now, if we Christians can be trustworthy and honest, maybe we'll be able to spread this virtue through our actions.