"Favre's status on and off the field vaulted into the stratosphere at that time, and that could have impacted his focus on the task at hand in game-defining situations over the second two-thirds of his career. Success may well have gotten into his head."
This is the sort of thing I find fascinating. We mostly understand the physical gifts required for a great quarterback (imagine how good Doug Flutie might've been if he'd been about five inches taller), and I think we think we understand the mental requirements. People like to talk about the "mental toughness" required to be a great QB. Quarterbacks who have the physical gifts but don't have the mental makeup (I think of Jeff George) we think of as lacking some sense of cool under fire. Yet a quarterback who, in the popular imagination, definitely has that "it" factor - Favre - statistically does not have it at the end of games (when it's supposed to surface most strongly)..
On the other hand, a guy like Trent Green, whom we think of mostly as a journeyman, appears to rise above his limitations - but only at certain times (that is, at the end of a close game). Then you've got a guy with some physical gifts whom the populace often thinks of as a spoiled, had-it-handed-to-him guy - Eli Manning (no poor boondocks kid story there) - and he seems to have this end-of-game "it" factor we like to associate with self-made Marlon Brando tough guys, not with the sons of the privileged.
Crazy.
This is the sort of thing I find fascinating. We mostly understand the physical gifts required for a great quarterback (imagine how good Doug Flutie might've been if he'd been about five inches taller), and I think we think we understand the mental requirements. People like to talk about the "mental toughness" required to be a great QB. Quarterbacks who have the physical gifts but don't have the mental makeup (I think of Jeff George) we think of as lacking some sense of cool under fire. Yet a quarterback who, in the popular imagination, definitely has that "it" factor - Favre - statistically does not have it at the end of games (when it's supposed to surface most strongly)..
On the other hand, a guy like Trent Green, whom we think of mostly as a journeyman, appears to rise above his limitations - but only at certain times (that is, at the end of a close game). Then you've got a guy with some physical gifts whom the populace often thinks of as a spoiled, had-it-handed-to-him guy - Eli Manning (no poor boondocks kid story there) - and he seems to have this end-of-game "it" factor we like to associate with self-made Marlon Brando tough guys, not with the sons of the privileged.
Crazy.


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