Seems
like just yesterday we were here. Well, I think we all know why
I'm here. First of all, sorry I'm late. But I am officially
retiring from the NFL and the Green Bay Packers, and as much as
I've thought about what I would say, and how ... I promised I
wouldn't get emotional ... it's never easy ... you know, it's
funny, I've watched hundreds of players retire, and you wonder
what that would be like ... you think you're prepared ... but I
was telling Deanna on the way over here, God has blessed me with
so many great things. Ability, wonderful family. And as I was
flying up here today I thought about so many different things
and how I wanted to say some of the things that I felt like I
need to say, but he gave me an opportunity to use my abilities,
and I seized that opportunity ... I thank him for that.
I'd like to thank the Packers, for giving me the opportunity as
well. I hope that every penny ... I hope that every penny that
they've spent on me, they know was money well-spent. It was
never about the money or fame or records, and I hear people talk
about your accomplishments and things ... It was never my
accomplishments, it was our accomplishments, the teammates that
I've played with, and I can name so many. It was never about me,
it was about everybody else. It just so happens the position I
played got most of the attention. But the Packers have been, ...
it's been a great relationship, and I hope that this
organization and the fans appreciate me as much as I appreciate
them.
I can't leave without saying thanks to Ron Wolf
and Mike Holmgren for giving me a chance when no one else would.
I'd like to thank Mike McCarthy and Ted Thompson, Bob Harlan,
Tom Clements my recent quarterback coach, Darrell Bevell. Mike
was my quarterback coach in '99. Andy Reid, Marty, ... Steve
Mariucci, Mike Sherman, Ray Rhodes, Tom Rossley, and I could go
through so many different names and players and seasons. It's
been everything I thought it would be, and then some. And it's
hard to leave. You think you're prepared for it. I know there's
been comments and issues in the press lately about why I'm
leaving, whether or not the Packers did enough, whether or not
Ted and Mike tried to convince me to stay. None of those things
have anything to do with me retiring, and that's from the heart.
I've given everything I possibly can give to this organization,
to the game of football, and I don't think I've got anything
left to give, and that's it. I know I can play, but I don't
think I want to. And that's really what it comes down to.
Fishing for different answers and what ifs and will he come back
and things like that, what matters is it's been a great career
for me, and it's over. As hard as that is for me to say, it's
over. There's only one way for me to play the game, and that's
100 percent. Mike and I had that conversation the other night,
and I will wonder if I made the wrong decision. I'm sure on
Sundays, I will say I could be doing that, I should be doing
that. I'm not going to sit here like other players maybe have
said in the past that I won't miss it, because I will. But I
just don't think I can give anything else, aside from the three
hours on Sundays, and in football you can't do that. It's a
total commitment, and up to this point I have been totally
committed.
As I look back on my career, no regrets.
No regrets, whatsoever. Sure, I would have liked to have won
more games, would have liked to have gone to a Super Bowl this
year, would have liked to have thrown less interceptions, more
touchdowns, but no regrets. I played the game one way, the only
way I knew how.
I can't leave without saying thank
you to the fans. When I laughed and when my family laughed, they
laughed. When I cried, they cried. When I cheered, they cheered.
When I threw an interception, well, you know. But it was a
perfect fit for me. Little ol' Southern Miss, southern boy from
Hancock County who had big dreams, no different than any other
kid, to play here, and there's no better place to play. I had a
conversation with Ron Wolf yesterday, and we had that
discussion. To be thought of as one of the best players to play
in this league, and to be mentioned within an organization that
has players like Reggie White and Bart Starr and Paul Hornung
and Willie Davis and Willie Wood and Herb Adderley and Jim
Taylor, Ray Nitschke, Vince Lombardi. To be mentioned with those
people, ... I'm honored. Really ... I am honored. I hope
everyone knows how special this is and I truly appreciate the
opportunity, and as they say all good things must come ... come
to an end.
But I
look forward to whatever the future may hold for me. Deanna and
our two girls, Brittany and Breleigh, I sincerely thank you
Deanna and my family for being there and supporting me, going
back and forth and switching schools and putting up with all
those things. I know you probably have some questions, I'll try
to answer them as best I can, but hopefully I addressed a lot of
the issues and spoke from the heart.
(There are
still many fans in denial about this. They think Brett is tired
now, but after time passes, maybe he'll change his mind. It
sounds like that won't happen, but can you address that?)
I think last year and the year before I was tired and it took
awhile but I came back. Something told me this time not to come
back. It took awhile once again. Once again, I wondered if it
was the right decision. But I think in my situation, and I had
this conversation with Mike and Ted, that it's a unique
situation in that at 17 years I had one of the better years in
my career, the team had a great year, everything seems to be
going great, the team wants me back, I still can play, for the
most part everyone would think I would be back, would want me
back. That's a unique situation going into an 18th season.
There's no guarantees next year, personally and as a team, and
I'm well aware of that. It's a tough business and last year and
the year before I questioned whether or not I should come back
because I didn't play at a high enough level. Other people
questioned that. I really didn't question my commitment. I just
wondered, 'Could I not play anymore?' I know I can play. But
this year, and this is not the first year but it really to me
and Deanna was more noticeable, the stress part of it. It's
demanding. It always has been, but I think as I've gotten older
I'm much more aware of that. I'm much more aware of how hard it
is to win in this league and to play at a high level. I'm not up
to the challenge anymore. I can play, but I'm not up to the
challenge. You can't just show up and play for three hours on
Sunday. If you could, there'd be a lot more people doing it and
they'd be doing it for a lot longer. I have way too much pride,
I expect a lot out of myself, and if I cannot do those things
100 percent, then I can't play.
(From a mental
standpoint, how much impact did that last play have on your
thought process? How much did you think about it as you walked
off the field?)
I didn't really think about it
when I walked off the field. Would I have liked to have finished
that game and season differently? Absolutely. But one play, one
game, one season doesn't define me. As upset as I was at the end
of that game, I really didn't think about my future at that
particular time. I didn't know what I was going to do and know
that I had to get away and think about it. And I've heard
remarks from family and friends that you don't want to go out on
a play like that. I hear that every year, regardless of the
play: You've got to go out on top or you've got to go out this
way or you've got to go out that way. I'm going out on top,
believe me. I could care less what other people think. It's what
I think and I'm going out on top. It's been a wonderful career
and, once again, I have no regrets. As I think back about my
career, and I've said this numerous times, the losses and the
bad plays, the ups and downs, all to me were important. I would
hate to think that we were perfect all the time. You would never
appreciate how tough it is to get there. And through every loss
and every bad play, it made the plays like the first play in the
overtime game against Denver so much sweeter. As time passes, I
don't know what I will do. I'm not really worried about it right
now. I'll take it as it comes. Poeple say, 'Do you have a plan?'
No, I don't. This is all I've ever done. I'm proud of the fact
that I've done it this long and at a high level. This is a new
phase in my life. I don't know what that exactly means, but it's
been a pretty good ride.
(When you talk about the
strain of the offseason commitment or the strain of living up to
your high standards on Sundays and leading such a young team,
did those weigh any differently?)
The off-season
-- the minicamps, the training camp and just individually your
off-season preparation -- has been difficult. As I looked at
this upcoming season, I said, I probably could get myself
prepared to play. That really didn't have that much of a bearing
on my decision. It's tough on everybody. But it was more the
in-season strain. And Mike knows this, there were numerous
Saturdays (before) home games where I was here at 8:30 at night
watching film. I had never done that before. It was never enough
for me. And Deanna knows this, after numerous games I would come
home and after a couple of hours I had the computer out and I
was watching film of the upcoming opponent instead of enjoying
the win we just had. At some point, you've got to relax and
enjoy and I found myself not enjoying it as much. It's fun to
win but you've got to enjoy it and relax a little bit. That more
than anything was taking its toll on me.
(Some
guys when they walk away can't get near the team they left. Do
you see yourself being involved with this team in the upcoming
year, or with Aaron Rodgers?)
I'm sure that we
will talk. I'm sure Mike and I will talk. But they have coaches
and because I've played 17 years and had a great career here
doesn't make me an expert. The way I've done things has worked
for me. It may not work for the next guy. The last thing I want
to be is one of those guys who hangs around and, because of my
status, they keep me around. They don't know how to tell me no.
Will I be a Green Bay Packer for life? Sure. That doesn't mean I
come in and give my opinions and things like that. I wish the
Packers well. I wish Aaron well. I think he'll do a great job. I
think he has the talent. I've heard it for the last three years
that hopefully he's learned from Brett. What that means I don't
know. He's his own player, he has his own style and that's what
he needs to stick to. Hopefully, what he's learned from me are
things away from playing, how to handle certain situations and
be a teammate and things like that. I think here in the last
couple of years, that's where I've noticed, in my case, things
maybe changing a little bit. You can credit it to age or
whatever, but I was never really a vocal person. That hasn't
changed. I always enjoyed playing the game and having fun and
cracking up and things like that and I didn't do that as much. I
maybe was not as good a teammate from that standpoint as I once
was. Not to get away from your questsion, but I think that had
some bearing on my decision as well. I don't even want to think
about next year. Will I watch games? I'm sure I will. Will I be
involved? I always made the joke about being here for the
honorary coin toss. Well, that time may come. So I may be back
for something like that. But as far as giving advice, I don't
think that will happen.
(You said you didn't have
an exact plan. What are some things you're looking forward to
doing?)
Nothing. Nothing. Ron Wolf asked me
yesterday, 'What are you going to do?' I said, 'Nothing.' And
I'm going to stick to that until I want to do something else.
(With so many accolades and honors, how do you want to be
remembered?)
You know, I think we all want to be
liked and we want good things said about us, positive things
said about us. As I stated earlier, I hope people appreciate me,
the way I played the game, as much as I appreciate them. The way
I approached the game, the way I played it, to me all was
important. The statistics part of it were never that important.
They have been earlier in my career. I was never really a
statistics guy, and that's coming from a guy that ran the
wishbone and wing-T in high school and was signed as a safety in
college. So statistics never were never a big part of my makeup
and I think people know that. I'm well aware of the statistics,
the records that I have right now. I think those were meant to
be ... That's why they keep records, for those to be broken. I'm
sure it makes for good TV when the next guy comes through. But I
hope my legacy is a lot more than that. If I have to be
remembered because of statistics then I did something wrong
along the way. I really believe that I left a lot more than
that. I can't make people like me or say good things about me
but I hope that I left a pretty good impact on people. As I've
heard, that the way he's played the game, with as much fun as
he's had, is all important and I agree with that. It's a game
and I played it spontaneously, nothing was ever choreographed.
And I've always said this: the money they pay is icing on the
cake. It had no bearing on the way I played. I played the game
regardless a certain way. And I hope that's what people
appreciate about me.
(Playing in 275 straight
games and the pride you took in that, how hard was it to admit
to yourself that commitment just wasn't there anymore?)
Well, yes and no. It's been 275 games, at some point it's got to
end. I think there will be people, including myself, saying,
'Hey, you can still do it.' But I don't want to be one of those
guys that you say, 'Well, he stuck around too long.' Who knows
when that will be? Relatively healthy for the most part. There
are little things here and there that bother me. The thing that
I'm most impressed about in my career is the fact that I've
played in all those games. Whether it be consecutive or not, the
fact that I played in that many games is amazing. Might as well
leave when I've still got my health for the most part. As far as
a career goes, it's been wonderful. So it's been everything I
thought it would be and then some. None of those statistics come
without playing and there's nothing left to prove, there really
isn't. There was nothing last year to prove. I've known that. I
have a lot of pride but it wasn't that difficult. It's more
important for me to play the game a certain way and be (in it)
completely, than it is to admit to myself that maybe I don't
have it anymore.
(Waking up this morning, knowing
you were coming up here to do this, what have the emotions been
like? What's today been like?)
I'm not going to
lie to ya. There was a lot ... I flew up here by myself, Deanna
was already up here. I thought of so many different things. At
first I got up and drove Breleigh to school. We were late as
usual. I just went about my day up to that point as I always do.
In the back of my mind, I knew in just few hours I was not going
to be a Green Bay Packer anymore. That was hard. Breleigh
understands but I didn't let on that something was bothering me.
But as I got closer and closer, there was a knot the size of a
basketball in my throat. There were so many things... Again, I'm
not a person that likes to get up and speak. I thought about
writing some things down that I wanted to say. I didn't want to
leave anyone out. I wanted to say the right things. I wanted to
come across as genuine. I wanted to leave gracefully. The more I
thought about all those things, the worse it got. I have to
admit that there's a little bit more of a relief right now. It
went over somewhat smoothly. Time will tell. But it was a tough
day. And Jeff (Blumb) and I went round and round. He wanted me
to come up right away, the Packers wanted me to come up. If it
was me, I would have just done something later. Which to me
later meant they'll forget about it and it will be over and done
with. But I'm glad it's done. It was tough, it will be tough.
Today was extremely difficult. But I believe it's the right
thing.
(You're one of the most
competitive people, and other athletes who have retired have
talked about needing something to fuel their competitive desire.
Have you thought about that and how you transition that way?)
I think every
individual is different. I will say this, I have listened to
advice in the past, directly or indirectly. People said play as
long as you can - make them drag you off the field. If I play
much longer, they will. So my situation has been different. Not
too many people have played 275 games, not too many people have
had the career that I've had. It's easy, I think, for other
people to say, 'Do this' or 'Do that' There aren't many people
who have been in my situation. Because of that I'm so thankful,
but I have to be cautious looking at it from their standpoint.
Will I find something to do that's equal to throwing a touchdown
pass at Lambeau Field? I doubt it. Will I find something that's
as equal as playing in the Super Bowl or playing a game in
general? I doubt it. I'm not even going to try.
As I
said earlier, there really isn't a plan. I know that this place
and what it's meant to my career is really special, and to think
that I can find something to replace that and feel the same, I'm
no fool. I know there's nothing out there like that. So I'm not
even going to try. But life does go on and I will do something,
whatever that may be. But it will be nice for awhile, I think,
to feel like I don't have to live up to certain expectations,
not only that other people have of me, but I have of myself. I
can just kind of as they say, ride off into the sunset, whatever
that means. Just try to relax for once in my life and enjoy it.
And I'm going to steal a quote from Deanna, and I thought about
this on the way up, 'See life through the front windshield, not
through the rearview mirror.' I think that is so true, so
important. And people who know me and play with me and coaches
that I work with, I can recite almost every play I've ever ran,
called, think about near every game I've played in, and that's
going back to high school. So as I look back, I can't say, 'What
if? I don't quite remember that game or that play.' But there
are things in life I can't say that about. There are things I
missed. And you can't get those things back. From this day
forward, I hope to kind of see things through the front
windshield.
(Coach Holmgren released a statement
that talked about how proud he was to see you grow as a person
even more than on the football field. Can you talk about who you
were and how you've grown and who you are today?)
I think my career in life has been well-documented. We have
lived my life in the public and that's OK. If I had to deal with
it again, I would do it here in Green Bay. The people here have
been phenomenal. I'm not just saying that because I'm here in
front of you guys. We have been supported as if we were native.
But, you know, for me it's been 16 wonderful years. And I look
back and I was watching at home last night, I actually broke
down and watched some of the footage. How could you not? I
realize what it's like to die. As I'm watching TV last night, I
said, 'This is what it's like when you die.' They're honoring me
and saying all these things and showing all these games. It's
good, but I've come a long ways. Some of those old interviews, I
thought I had it all figured out, which I didn't. But
fortunately I was able to overcome a lot of my - I don't know
what you want to call it - insecurities or whatever, one thing
about it is I can play football. And because of that I'm still
here. Throughout that process I've become a better person, a
more likeable person I hope. And as my skills maybe diminished,
maybe I've picked up the slack in other areas. I'm about as
proud of that as anything I've done on the field. I'm not
perfect by any means. I'm not going to say that, not even close.
Nor will I ever be. As I look back at my career and as I watched
footage last night, I have come a long ways, in a positive way
and I'm truly thankful for that.
(I have a question for Deanna if
you wouldn't mind going up to the microphone. I just wanted to
ask what retirement means to you and your family and the work
you've done in Green Bay and with other organizations, in
retrospect and looking forward?)
Brett: I promised her she
wouldn't have to speak.
Deanna: I'm not real crazy
about being up here. It's been very rewarding to be part of this
community and to be a part of the charity work going on because
it always seemed like a team effort. The people here are very
appreciative, grateful, for everything we've done and I hope
we'll continue in some form or another with our charity work
here, but I don't think it will be the extent it has been.
Brett: We're going to take a break for a year.
Deanna: We have decided to take a break from all events this
year, so the softball game we normally have in June we won't
have. I know that will disappoint a lot of people, but honestly
we are really tired right now.
(Is there anything
anybody in the organization could have said to you to change
your mind and get you to play one more season?)
Once again I think that there have been a lot of things in the
press this week that aren't true. Believe me, I've questioned my
decision. I believe it's the right decision. And there's nothing
that they can do or say to change that. They can make me wonder.
But I think that's part of it. But once again, I think it's the
right decision. It's a hard decision. I know for the last couple
of years, I mean, I'm sure there a lot of people who said,
'Finally.' Good or bad, he made a decision. Believe me, it was
hard. Very hard. Because that decision is made don't think I
won't question it. But that's life. For people who've never had
to make a decision like the one I've had to make, I can't begin
to explain to you how difficult it is. But I made it and I have
to be at peace with that.
(As you reviewed this
decision, are you saying that in order to match your standard,
you had to put so much more into it and as a result you weren't
getting as much fun out of it?)
I had so many
people saying, 'You look like you had a lot of fun out there
this year,' and I did. But what they don't see, that's three
hours during the course of a week and I'm no different than most
people. I can act the part and I know I expect a lot out of
myself and certain things are expected of me within this
organization and I tried to live up to those all the time. And
Brett Favre got hard to live up to. And I found myself during
games at times, tough situation, people always kind of made this
joke or other guys on the team, even Mike at times would turn to
me and say, 'All right Brett. This is where you're at your best.
Pull us out.' I'm thinking, 'Uh! ... ' Now I wouldn't do that,
but I'm thinking that. I'm thinking, 'Boy it sure would be nice
to be up about 14 right now.' It's just hard. It got hard. I did
it, but it got hard. I don't think it would get easier next year
or the following year. It hasn't up to this point. It's only
gotten tougher and something told me, it's gotten too hard for
you. I could probably come back and do it, suck it up, but what
kind of a toll would that take on me, my family or my teammates?
At some point it would affect one of those, if not all of them.
Maybe it has already. I don't know. I can't speak for my
teammates, but maybe it's affected my play. If I even question
for a second that toll that it takes has affected at least one
play, then it's time to leave. You can't second-guess any
decision you make on the field or wonder did the pressure or
stress get to you. I think if you're starting to question that
at all, then it's probably time to go.
(Guys talk
about the locker room, plays, and games. What will you miss the
most?)
Well, in my discussions with former
players, every one of the guys I've talked to has said the
things you miss, you miss the games but it is the guys. And I
haven't heard too many guys say I miss meetings or miss
practice. But I may be one of those rare people who miss that to
a certain extent as I'm involved in it. Sitting in meetings or
practice, I have to admit, I thought about being elsewhere, but
it's easy to do that when you're in the moment. But the
friendships you make along the way, they come and go to a
certain extent. But they are special and that I think I'll miss,
grinding together. Football, I think is very unique in that of
all the sports because you have to rely on one another so much
more than the other sports and it's a physical sport, which I
think in turn mentally challenges you more so than any other
sport. And I am a little biased, but I will miss that. Sitting
in those meetings with the receivers and figuring out how we're
going to beat the upcoming team and challenging each other and
doing it in a fun way, slapping our big linemen on the butt,
which I don't think I'll be doing that anytime soon. But all
that stuff, man that's just what it's all about. And I will miss
that stuff.
(What's the most memorable play or
most memorable game you'll take with you?)
I
hate when that question's asked. I don't have one. I really
don't. I know if you ask anyone who's covered the Packers or
Brett Favre over the years, ask them their top five plays or
games, they're going to give you some, as I probably could, too.
But it's too hard. They all meant a lot to me. For obvious
reasons, some may mean a little more. But I think most people
who have never played professional football would kill for one
opportunity to play if they could and I had thousands and
thousands of plays. But the thing that is unique about me is
that every one of those plays meant something to me, and I
really mean that. I never took a play off and to me it came
natural to me. And to sit here and name a few plays that meant
more, there were some that were more exciting, there were some
that other people could say, 'That's my favorite.' That's fine.
But the fact I got a chance to take a snap under center in Green
Bay or in professional football was something special. And the
fact I've done it for that many years and have so many plays,
they're all special.
(You've been embraced so
wholeheartedly by the entire nation. Why do you think you've had
that privilege?)
Well, I think, I'm probably the
wrong person to ask that. But if I had to guess I would say, and
I hear this from time to time, he's like one of us. Well, I am.
I just play professional football. Now that is a little
different job than most people. But we are regular people and
things have happened to our family, maybe it being that we're in
the public eye, things we've had to deal with, tragedy,
obviously has (been) dealt with within the community and the
world when other people are able to deal with it privately. So I
think people say, 'You know what, death does happen to Brett
Favre and Deanna Favre. Cancer does happen to them.' It's not
all about making a lot of money and being on TV all the time.
There's more to it than that. And I think, I hate to say that
we're appreciated because of that because we would love to
change some of those things. But it's life and we've had to deal
with it with the public and we're thankful for that because it
has helped. And I think coming across as, to me as genuine as
possible. Deanna told me on the way over her that her sister had
called her, Christy, and said that Marshall Faulk was wondering
what I was going to wear. Well, Marshall, here I am. This is
about as dressed up as you're going to see. I thought about
wearing a suit, I really did. I thought about shaving. But, what
you see is what you get. And I hope that I never change. I don't
think I will. I hope that people appreciate that side of me
because it is real, obviously. And it's the way I played the
game. I've always said that people watching in the stands I
could see them saying, 'If I could play, that's the way I'd want
to play.' And that is important to me because that's the only
way I know how to play it. That's the only way I know how to
dress. That's the only way I know how to act. Right or wrong,
it's the only way and I think people do appreciate that.
(You were so close to the Super Bowl. Do you feel the 2008
Packers are capable of another Super Bowl run, and did that make
this decision more difficult for you?)
Sure.
This is a good football team, and I think I could be sitting
here next year saying, I could be pulling a Tiki Barber - what
if? But you know, that's the chance you take. I've been to the
Super Bowl, been fortunate to play on some great teams. Once
again, I have no regrets and there are no guarantees. And in our
discussions, we've said that over and over again. All we can
make at this point are predictions, what we think will happen.
And not too many people thought the Packers would be 13-3 this
year, me included. But who knows? But there are no guarantees.
And hopefully the Packers do go on and have great success. And
if that is the case, I hope I don't say, you made the wrong
decision. I don't believe I'll do that. I really don't. But this
team is really close, and that makes it a little bit tougher, it
makes it tougher to leave. Boy, we were right there. But that
was last year we were right there.
So the Packers
wanted me, I know I can play, the fans, I guess they love me.
They were camped out at my gate, the media. All these great
things. Why would you retire? That's a tough question. It's a
tough decision. But once again, I think I made the right
decision regardless of whether we were 13-3 and on the cusp of
another Super Bowl. And I keep going back to, I've done
everything there is to do, and then some, and then some. I would
have liked to have won more Super Bowls, but you know what? I'm
not disappointed about that. I gave it my all. I think people
who know me know that. And I don't know if I had any more to
give. There will be no what-ifs. When I think of high school and
I think of college, I think I could play a little bit better at
times. I didn't really appreciate (it), because high school,
before you know it, it was over. College, before I knew it, it
was over. I had 17 years and those experiences in high school
and college to make sure I didn't say what if in professional
football. And I don't think I will say what if.
(Does it feel as though you're
leaving on your own terms?)
Sure. Yeah, we all would
like to leave on our own terms. What those terms are, I've heard
so many times, 'Man, I'd like to see him go out like Elway.'
Well, Elway was different. He'd never won a Super Bowl, until
they beat us. We could have went 3-13 this year, and I was going
out on top. People may argue against that, but look at my
career. I shouldn't have to make an argument. And maybe I'm the
only one who's so well aware of how blessed I really was. And I
want to say this again. I know I get credit for the wins, yards,
touchdowns, even interceptions. But it was about everyone else.
Coaches, players, fans. I want to say that again: Our
accomplishments. I never thought it was fair, the attention that
the quarterback gets. Being labeled as, he has 160 wins. What
about everyone else? And as I walk away, I'm walking away on
top, my head high, chin up. And it is on my terms. It is on my
terms. Which is a good way to go out.
(The
toughest job in sports is to play quarterback in the NFL, and
there's even more to that in your situation in Green Bay. Can
you talk about carrying the hopes and dreams of this community
and franchise for 16 years and restoring the team to glory after
so many down years?)
I go back to what I said
when I look back at old clips. It's a good thing I didn't know
any better. I watch those interviews, and it's painful to watch.
But in a lot of ways that was good for me. I had talent,
probably thought I had more. I probably thought a little more of
myself than I should have. But I was talented to a certain
degree, but I was so naïve. Believe me, I knew all about the
Green Bay Packers, and all those great players that have played
here before. Knew all about the tradition. But I thought, what
the heck. What's the big deal? Now, if I had to go back with the
same mentality right now that I have and start over again, I
probably wouldn't make it, because I'm so much more aware of how
difficult it is to win, to prepare. I'm well-aware of the
expectations. Back then, it was like, bring them on. No big
deal. And that mentality helped me, as I looked back. It's
painful to watch, but it helped me.
It is
a unique franchise. I'm telling you something that we all know.
There's only a few in professional sports that are like this
one. It's a tough job. I don't know how tough other jobs are,
because I've never done them. But I know to be the quarterback,
period, is tough. To be the quarterback in Green Bay, and to
have success, is very difficult. But I'm proof it can be done.
As I look back, and dreaming as a little kid, I hate to admit it
I always dreamt of being a Dallas Cowboy, and winning Super
Bowls and being Roger Staubach. Think of all the kids, and
there's probably some here in Wisconsin who have dreamed of
being Brett Favre and doing the things that he's done, as I look
back on my career, those dreams have been surpassed a thousand
times over, and that is rare that I've been able to do that.
Because I was no different than anyone else with those dreams.
I wish Aaron the best of luck. I think once again he'll do a
fine job. It can be done. I know everyone's made comments that,
boy, big shoes to fill. The only shoes he has to fill is
himself. He doesn't need to play like Brett Favre. It's all
about the cast around you, it's about the coaching staff. If you
stay focused on the fact that it's not about you -- they
obviously drafted him because he has the talent, mental
capabilities -- he'll be fine. Hopefully one day he's sitting
here where I am and able to experience what I've been able to
experience.
(For all of your contributions on
the field, are you just as grateful and proud of your
off-the-field accomplishments, the impact you've had with
Make-A-Wish kids, your foundation, and other charities?)
If you really
think about it, that stuff is so much more important than
football. But at times we lose sight of that. Deanna and I this
past Sunday were down in Gulfport, Mississippi. Ronnie Hebert,
that name probably doesn't ring a bell to anyone in here, but he
was a figure on the Gulf coast for 65 years, in fact. As my dad
coached Legion ball for 28 years, the summer in Gulfport, Ronnie
Hebert was a bat boy, was mentally challenged. Deanna surprised
me several years ago at our dinner, charity dinner, bringing
Ronnie up. He passed away this past week, suddenly. He had a
long, fun life. Never saw him disappointed. But I've had so many
people say to me, boy, you made a great impact on Ronnie and
great impact on Make-A-Wish kids, and so on and so forth. But
it's the impact they had on me. That's what it's all about. For
me, football has been wonderful in a lot of ways, but the fact
that I've been able to touch other people's lives, and Deanna
has said this I don't know how many times, that you don't
realize the impact you have on people, I really don't. I've
never really thought about it. All I've thought about was
playing football and playing it a certain way, and whatever
comes along with that, great. Whether it be money, commercials,
reaching out to people, charity, whatever. It's because of
football, I'm well aware of that. But because of football, I've
been impacted by a lot of people and charities.
We
were in Phoenix a couple weeks ago visiting the Children's
Hospital, boy, that's tough. It's really, really tough. And I'm
very thankful that I've got two daughters who are (in) great
health, and up to this point life has been pretty good.
Difficult at times, but I think we can all say that, but it's
been pretty good. And I can't say that for other people. But I
am, once again, I'm not perfect, never will be. I'll probably
get in trouble with Deanna at times, with my girls at times, but
I do have a different outlook on life, much more than 16 years
ago. But I am very proud of the things that we have done off the
field. Could we have done more? Sure. Could we all do more?
Absolutely. But we have impacted other people's lives in a
positive way I would hope, and we are thankful for that.