Brett Favre Pays the Price for His Toughness On the Football Field
By GilMartin

On Tuesday, former Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre revealed that he has been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease. The admission came when the Pro Football Hall of Famer was testifying before Congress about the misuse of Temporary Assistance for Needy Family funds in Mississippi.
The sad news will likely affect Favre, now 54, for the rest of his life. Symptoms of Parkinson’s Disease include tremors, pain, sleep disorders, imbalance, trouble walking, and mental health issues.
Favre played 20 seasons in the NFL including 16 with the Packers. He took a physical beating during those seasons, and yet his legendary toughness caused him to play through and despite the pain.
Favre started 297 consecutive regular season games and 321 overall games in his career. He played through broken bones, sprained ankles, bruises, concussions, and an assortment of other injuries that few people would have considered playing with.
For Packers fans, Favre’s arrival in 1992 coincided with the return of the team to prominence after a quarter century of struggles that started with Vince Lombardi’s retirement after the 1967 season.
GM Ron Wolf traded a first-round pick to get Favre, who spent one season with the Atlanta Falcons but did not complete a pass in four attempts as a rookie. Two of his passes were intercepted. Favre and his coach, Jerry Glanville did not get along well, and the quarterback was immature, so the Falcons were willing to trade him after one season.
When Don Majkowski was injured late in the Packers Week 3 game against the Cincinnati Bengals in 1992, Favre led the team to a dramatic 24-23 comeback win in the closing seconds. The following week, he started against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Favre then started every game for the Packers through the 2007 NFC title game. He led them to a pair of Super Bowl appearances after the 1996 and 1997 seasons and won three straight league MVP awards from 1995-97.
In Super Bowl XXXI, Favre threw for two long touchdown passes and ran for a third score as the Pack beat the New England Patriots 35-21 to win their first championship since the Lombardi Era.
There were so many memorable moments with Favre. His gunslinger mentality helped him make seemingly impossible passes although they also sometimes resulted in interceptions and bad plays.
Favre went through a lot off the field and Packers fans followed him every step of the way. Whether it was checking into rehab for an addiction to prescription painkillers before the 1996 season or his decision to play after the sudden death of his father before a Monday night game in Oakland in 2003, Packers fans went through the triumphs and tragedies with their quarterback. The sheer joy and enthusiasm he had for the game was contagious for fans and teammates alike.
Favre left the Packers in 2008 under less-than-ideal circumstances. He finished his career with by playing one season with the Jets and two with the Vikings before hanging up his cleats after the 2010 season.
At the time he retired, Favre held the all-time NFL record for touchdown passes, passing yards, wins by a quarterback, and interceptions. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2016. He later mended fences with the Packers organization and the team retired his number four.
Six years ago, Favre was asked how many concussions he had suffered during his career. He said he knew of three or four, but he could have suffered more than 1,000.
“When you have ringing of the ears, seeing stars, that’s a concussion,” Favre said on ‘The Today Show.’ He added, “If that is a concussion, I’ve had hundreds, maybe thousands throughout my career, which is frightening.”
But now, Favre is paying the price for the physical punishment he took in 20 years in the NFL plus all the football he played as a youth, in high school, and in college.
Favre’s diagnosis is yet another reminder of the human cost of the game of football we all love so much. Regardless of the issues he’s had off the field, we wish him well with his health battles and hope he can get the best of care and manage the condition as much as possible.
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You can follow Gil Martin on Twitter @GilPackers
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Comments (28)
Packers0808
September 26, 2024 at 10:40 am
Yes a warrior. Hope is illness will be mild and well controlled. Have a sister- in- law with this dreaded disease. She is in a nursing home and wheel chair and is non vocal as well. Sad and tough stuff. Good luck Mr Favre!
Leatherhead
September 26, 2024 at 10:42 am
Everything Favre says or does is self-serving. This is him...under legal investigation...saying "Be nice to me, I'm sick". Just like we were nice to him because he was an alcoholic, a Vicodin abuser, and a philanderer who sent Croc pictures to a young woman who was not his wife. Just like we were nice to him when he was attempting to smear shit on the organization for replacing him.
Sorry, I'm all out of sympathy for Brett Favre. I don't think he's a good guy. I'm sorry he's sick, but he's not the only one. I'll save my sympathy for somebody who is a little more deserving.
Bitternotsour
September 26, 2024 at 10:59 am
C'mon. he's running around like a kid out there.
But yeah, I'm fresh out of fucks to give over #4. He was traitorous to the Green and Gold. He stole from the poor. That said, Parkinsons is a horrid way to die, slow motion. There's a lot of research that points to the origin as a gut issue, not CTE. There's very little doubt he has CTE
13TimeChamps
September 26, 2024 at 12:22 pm
Not defending Favre here. I think some of his off field behavior, if proven to be true, shows someone of questionable character, to say the least. But that's his business, not mine.
But I really find it humorous when fans consider players who move on to another team as being "traitorous" and take it all personal. ("He's dead to me"...lol.) Professionals in all walks of life switch jobs/companies all the time. I never understood why it should be any different for professional athletes. Fans get way too attached to players, almost to an unhealthy extent.
But to each their own I guess.
Packers0808
September 26, 2024 at 11:01 am
Glad you are so perfect.
Leatherhead
September 26, 2024 at 11:36 am
Not perfect, just forgiven.
LambeauPlain
September 26, 2024 at 12:04 pm
Are you certain? Your comments are very judgmental.
How do you know Favre is not forgiven? Do you know his heart?
I was so disappointed in him for his personal failures and professional vengeance.
But I moved on years ago...with an exclamation point after his HOF Induction Speech.
Leatherhead
September 26, 2024 at 12:13 pm
No, YOUR comment is very judgemental. I'm simply stating what he has done and that I'm not sympathetic towards him. You can make up your own mind about him, just like I did. I don't know what is in his heart but I can see his actions.
He was a great QB for a while, and then he was a mediocre, turnover-prone QB for a while, and then he trashed the organization when he was replaced after yet another season ending interception. This is the same organization that found him drinking away his career on Atlanta's bench and helped to make him rich and famous.
Packers0808
September 26, 2024 at 12:49 pm
Sounds like you actually have a bad case of jealousy!
Leatherhead
September 26, 2024 at 01:17 pm
Yes, I'm jealous of a guy with Parkinson's who could be under indictment soon. I'm sure that makes perfect sense to some people.
Packers0808
September 26, 2024 at 03:14 pm
Obviously talking his ability as a football player and the bucks he made. Of course you would tack to his later life.
Leatherhead
September 26, 2024 at 07:02 pm
Yes, I'm jealous of a guy under indictment who has Parkinsons.
LLCHESTY
September 26, 2024 at 06:24 pm
I don't often agree with LH and he might have been a little harsh there but the fact is he had a damn good idea what he was doing and did it anyway. As far as forgiveness you can correct me if I'm wrong but I think Jesus might look down on stealing from the poor. Probably be up there with all the predatory lending places out there.
jannesbjornson
September 26, 2024 at 01:22 pm
Agreed, His victimhood is a bit over the top. The reporting by Anna Wolfe for Mississippi Today is factual and verified by a paper trail and confidential informants. The reason she won the Pulitzer Prize for her efforts uncovering the players in the $ 77 million welfare funds scandal. Some perps are doing time as we blog. Quite a few family, friends of mine and clients are dealing with Parkinson's Disease. We all share our concern and empathy.
Cheezehead72
September 26, 2024 at 10:59 am
I do not care for Favre as a person. Yes he has done some bad things and he might or has been paying the price for those actions. I loved watching him play football because he played it the way it should be played. He made the game fun to watch because you never knew what was coming next. I have always said he orchestrated his way to the Vikings but that is a lot of speculation and a long story so I will save time.
As much as I do not like him as a person I do not want to see him suffer from this disease and do not wish anything bad happen to him unless it is due to mistakes he made. I never wish ill will on anyone. After all he is a person and he is not perfect like us all. This should show Tua Tagovailoa that he should retire before it is too late. This should also provide reasons for all players to wear the gaurdian cap. Protect your head at all cost. This is coming from someone that might have suffered five concussions doing stupid stuff.
As a side note remember his first completion in the NFL was to himself.
The_Justicar
September 26, 2024 at 01:45 pm
I was at that game in Tampa. Side note…we left Mons Venus after 2am the night before the game. Majik was still there when we left. (A few o linemen were also with him). Not surprising he melted in the scorching heat the next day allowing for Favre to make an appearance.
Lphill
September 26, 2024 at 11:14 am
He was a tough son of a bitch on the field and fun to watch best wishes to him .
stockholder
September 26, 2024 at 11:17 am
Love Brett Farve.
IMO- TT would have won another super-Bowl
if he didn't trade him.
But with his addiction to pain killers.
I have to wonder if the chemicals that
he and others use.
Doesn't help bring out the diseases more.
We know he paid the price.
Still I bet he wouldn't do anything differently.
LLCHESTY
September 26, 2024 at 06:15 pm
"But with his addiction to pain killers.
I have to wonder if the chemicals that
he and others use.
Doesn't help bring out the diseases"
So you're thinking it's just a coincidence that Favre and Ali both ended up with Parkinson's after repeated head trauma? Yep, must be the drugs.
stockholder
September 26, 2024 at 07:47 pm
Said Help- didn't say it was the source.
jannesbjornson
September 27, 2024 at 11:46 am
Ted watched his final toss to the Giant's CB, just like the rest of us...
LambeauPlain
September 26, 2024 at 12:09 pm
Favre must now rely on Faith, Family and Friends. This is his Team now. And unlike fame and fortune, they are assets that endure.
I will keep Brett in my prayers. I have too many family members and friends who have followed a similar path. Deep sympathy for him.
I pray these diseases, including ALZ, discover cures soon.
Since'61
September 26, 2024 at 12:25 pm
I loved watching Favre play. He gave us everything he had every time he stepped on the field and that's all that we as fans can and should ask for. As for his mistakes in his personal life and how his Packers career ended we'll never know if all the head trauma he suffered was affecting his decision making even back then. Numerous studies have shown that Parkinsons, dementia and other mental illnesses can begin as early as a person in their 30s and go undiagnosed until their 50s, 60s or beyond.
I don't condone his actions but they may not have been entirely his fault. Whatever the case, I'm glad that he played for the Packers and that he is a big part of the Packers glorious tradition of football excellence. Thanks, Since '61
packanimal
September 26, 2024 at 02:48 pm
My wife has Parkinson's. She has found much helpful guidance and other resources from the Michael J. Fox Foundation, which is one of the agencies working for a cure for this miserable ailment. Favre fans might consider making a donation.
Bitternotsour
September 26, 2024 at 03:21 pm
i hate to thumbs up that comment, but you provided important info. That aside, I'm so sorry for your wife, I hope she gets to fight the good fight.
NFLfan
September 26, 2024 at 03:41 pm
Brett Favre, like all of us, was a product of his upbringing. His father beat him on a regular basis. People don't naturally act anti-socially ie., abuse drugs, philander, send inappropriate photos, portray a weak moral compass w/o a really harsh and abusive early home life.
He has mellowed, though there are lapses in ethics.
TheBigCat
September 26, 2024 at 06:40 pm
100% agreement w/ Leatherhead.
NFLfan
September 27, 2024 at 08:42 am
.