In a shocking bit of news, Minnesota quarterback Brett Favre(notes) and the news he’s not getting along with coach Brad Childress stirred plenty of reaction. Here’s some of your responses – at least the type fit for family consumption:
Jason, give me a freakin’ BREAK on all this crap!! You damn sports writers always looking to “break the story first” and then all you write is a bunch of cheap nfl jerseys crap! What NFL team doesn’t have at least “some” players that do not like their head coach? Guess what? All of them. The only reason you’re writing this article is because Favre plays in MN, otherwise it wouldn’t even be a story at all. And, for the one player that said “Favre doesn’t like Childress”, big damn deal. They went 12-4 and went to the NFC Championship game last year as QB and HC, didn’t they? Favre does like his QB coach and that’s the guy he spends the majority of his time with anyway. Stop trying to make something out of nothing.
Jason, I read your article about the Viking’s Childress-Favre issues. You kept mentioning “a player said”; why don’t you identify that player? Was he real or in your imagination? Sometimes journalist tend to make up things and quote no one specifically. If what you said was true, then Favre could get Childress replaced in a heartbeat. That’s how much Zygi wants Favre … think about it.
Don’t you think it’s a little disconcerting that the sports media relies so Indianapolis Colts jersey heavily on anonymous sourcing these days? The fact that sports reporters have been duped so many times (ESPN running a full package the day Favre “retired” last month, only to find out that it was an unconfirmed rumor started by Jay Glazer, who is one of the least credible “journalists” short of Jayson Blair) leads me to believe that what is happening out there isn’t working. The NFL has figured out how to get the hype they crave by lying and spoon-feeding journalists, and we’re out there eating it up.
This article is a joke right? Favre retires and unretires a dozen times and has the gall to instigate a locker room rebellion against the coach based on trust issues? I have officially seen it all.
Here is another way to look at things. The all-time greatest quarterback from the past the present and the future was always going to play. Since he is god himself he decided that he was going to make a power play to get rid of the coach. When it was obvious that he wasn’t going to get what he wanted and he might have to retire rather then swallow what is left of his pride, he swallowed and came running back to play. Looking forward to an interception with the game on the line.
Is it Favre’s position that Childress called the play where-by Favre threw the ball to New Orleans? Why should Childress trust Favre? He pulled the same play in his last game with Green Bay!
Your piece on Favre isn’t listed as a Houston Texans jersey column and so I take that to mean it should be a news story. In that case, you did a great job until the middle of the 11th graph. At that point you allowed your own bias to enter the story and you put a nasty slant on it. I’ve read your stuff before and it’s usually spot. I just think you did yourself and the readers a disservice this time out.
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