![]() What about all the other Favre backups? Where did they go? What did they do? Again, it’s a who’s who of nobodies. And in New England, Cassel was on the roster for three years. 1 pick who, through dumb luck, fell to you in the draft. But again, we’re talking about guys who left the Packers over a decade ago and a potential No. ![]() And we all know Rodgers started as a backup to Favre.Īnd, you would be right in bringing up those examples. Looking a little closer to home, you may point to the fact that after leaving Green Bay Mark Brunell (Jacksonville), Aaron Brooks (New Orleans) and Matt Hasselbeck (Seattle) all had successful careers as starters. You may bring up Matt Cassel and the 2008 New England Patriots, when the 26-year-old stepped in for an injured Brady to lead the Patriots to an 11-5 (non-playoff season) and eventually turned into a Pro Bowl quarterback two years later in Kansas City. It just doesn’t happen often enough to expect it. There’s a reason you or I rattle those names off the top of your head of what "could be" when it comes to backup quarterbacks: It’s the three times a Hall of Famer just happened to be sitting there, and Morrall (an established veteran, by the way) just happened to take those two teams to Super Bowls. Prior to those two Cinderella stories, you had Steve Young gradually taking over for an injury-plagued Joe Montana in 1991 in San Francisco.Īnd before that? I don’t know, you’re maybe going back to Earl Morrall winning the MVP in 1968 after Johnny Unitas got hurt in the preseason in Baltimore or Morrall turning in an All-Pro year in 1972 after backing up Bob Griese in Miami. We all know how Warner, who threw all of 11 passes for the Rams in 1998, replaced an injured Trent Green before the season and led the Rams and the "Greatest Show on Turf" to the Super Bowl.Īnd we all know how Brady, who threw all of three passes in 2000, replaced an injured Drew Bledsoe in Week 2 to lead the Patriots over – who else? – Warner and the Rams in one of the biggest title game upsets in recent memory. Louis Rams, Tom Brady and the 2001 New England Patriots. Parts of that "unbeatable" MVP lineage I wrote about are two of the greatest rags-to-riches, backup quarterback stories in NFL history: Kurt Warner and the 1999 St. ![]() ![]() There are concerns on this team, but who is backing up that MVP isn’t one of them.īut I’m not forgetful of history. There aren’t 32 quality starting quarterbacks in the National Football League, so worrying about who is your second or third stringer is really just a waste of blood pressure medicine.Ībout two weeks ago I outlined why the Packers simply can’t lose – it’s because they have an MVP quarterback, and this league is tailored for those players to be successful. The backup quarterback spot, and any debate about it, should be reserved for teams and fan bases who don’t have a guy like Rodgers – just reference what your neighbors 90 miles south went through from about 1986 to 2009. You’re not supposed to know who they are, and if you do, it likely means a top 10 draft pick for general manager Ted Thompson the next year. That list is a who’s who of nobodies, and a list that will surely grow, and that’s the point – they’re the backups to Green Bay Packers starting quarterback Aaron Rodgers. ![]()
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