Here's a recent read from SI.com, and it ain't Dr. Z (I've edited to remove a lot of the stuff about McNabb, because who cares about McNabb):
A few years ago, an Eagles-Packers game would have been a showcase for two of the NFL's most remarkable quarterbacks. Donovan McNabb was young, athletic, with a missile-launcher for an arm and rocket-fueled legs, and BrettFavre was living up to the Hall of Fame credentials he'd established in his first 10 years.
That was a few years ago.
Last week's Eagles-Packers game at Lambeau Field was a showcase of two quarterbacks who look a little older, a little slower and a lot less effective than in their glory years.
McNabb, in his first game since having knee surgery last November, completed 45 percent of his passes and was just 5-for-16 in the second half. Favre didn't throw a touchdown pass, didn't have a completion longer than 22 yards and turned the ball over twice.
You expect this sort of thing when Matt Leinart and Alex Smith square off. Errant passes, poor decisions, rookie mistakes. Not when you're watching two quarterbacks with 13 combined Pro Bowl appearances.
It's easy to dismiss these ugly performances as aberrations by two guys who've been very successful for a long time. It's easy to assume that this Sunday or maybe next both McNabb and Favre will revert back to All-Pro form. Both faced tough defenses, neither got much help from his offensive line and both have made a living out of bouncing back from adversity.
And it's certainly possible. McNabb and Favre have had poor games and protracted slumps before. Next thing you know they're putting together a six-game winning streak, chucking 50-yard touchdowns up and down the field and laughing at those who doubted them. Favre is 37, but McNabb is only 30 and has played only 11 games in the last 22 months. Maybe he just needs some time to shake off the rust.
But last Sunday's performances didn't occur in a vacuum. Lately, games like these have been the rule, not the exception. And the suspicion grows stronger and stronger that neither will ever be what he used to be -- McNabb because of injuries, Favre because of age.
If you look beyond their reputations, there's little evidence to support the notion that McNabb and Favre are still elite quarterbacks.
Over the past three seasons, Favre has won 13 of 33 games, with 38 touchdown passes and 48 interceptions. Joey Harrington can walk around and brag that since the 2005 season started, he has a better touchdown-to-interception ratio than Favre. And Harrington can't brag about much.
Favre? Since the Packers beat the 49ers in the 1997 NFC Championship Game, he's lost six of eight playoff games, throwing more interceptions than touchdowns in those eight games.
Through 2004, Favre won 65 percent of his starts.
Since 2005, he's won 39 percent.
The Packers used a first-round pick in 2005 to draft Aaron Rodgers out of Cal, and the Eagles used a second-round pick in 2007 to draft Kevin Kolb out of Houston. Both were sharp in the preseason, completing at least 62 percent of their passes and combining for five TDs and no interceptions.
It's tough to find the right time to say good-bye to a legend. Favre is a first-ballot Hall of Famer. McNabb a few years ago supplanted Randall Cunningham as the greatest quarterback in Eagles history.
They're two of the most gifted quarterbacks to ever play the game. Or maybe they just used to be.
A few years ago, an Eagles-Packers game would have been a showcase for two of the NFL's most remarkable quarterbacks. Donovan McNabb was young, athletic, with a missile-launcher for an arm and rocket-fueled legs, and BrettFavre was living up to the Hall of Fame credentials he'd established in his first 10 years.
That was a few years ago.
Last week's Eagles-Packers game at Lambeau Field was a showcase of two quarterbacks who look a little older, a little slower and a lot less effective than in their glory years.
McNabb, in his first game since having knee surgery last November, completed 45 percent of his passes and was just 5-for-16 in the second half. Favre didn't throw a touchdown pass, didn't have a completion longer than 22 yards and turned the ball over twice.
You expect this sort of thing when Matt Leinart and Alex Smith square off. Errant passes, poor decisions, rookie mistakes. Not when you're watching two quarterbacks with 13 combined Pro Bowl appearances.
It's easy to dismiss these ugly performances as aberrations by two guys who've been very successful for a long time. It's easy to assume that this Sunday or maybe next both McNabb and Favre will revert back to All-Pro form. Both faced tough defenses, neither got much help from his offensive line and both have made a living out of bouncing back from adversity.
And it's certainly possible. McNabb and Favre have had poor games and protracted slumps before. Next thing you know they're putting together a six-game winning streak, chucking 50-yard touchdowns up and down the field and laughing at those who doubted them. Favre is 37, but McNabb is only 30 and has played only 11 games in the last 22 months. Maybe he just needs some time to shake off the rust.
But last Sunday's performances didn't occur in a vacuum. Lately, games like these have been the rule, not the exception. And the suspicion grows stronger and stronger that neither will ever be what he used to be -- McNabb because of injuries, Favre because of age.
If you look beyond their reputations, there's little evidence to support the notion that McNabb and Favre are still elite quarterbacks.
Over the past three seasons, Favre has won 13 of 33 games, with 38 touchdown passes and 48 interceptions. Joey Harrington can walk around and brag that since the 2005 season started, he has a better touchdown-to-interception ratio than Favre. And Harrington can't brag about much.
Favre? Since the Packers beat the 49ers in the 1997 NFC Championship Game, he's lost six of eight playoff games, throwing more interceptions than touchdowns in those eight games.
Through 2004, Favre won 65 percent of his starts.
Since 2005, he's won 39 percent.
The Packers used a first-round pick in 2005 to draft Aaron Rodgers out of Cal, and the Eagles used a second-round pick in 2007 to draft Kevin Kolb out of Houston. Both were sharp in the preseason, completing at least 62 percent of their passes and combining for five TDs and no interceptions.
It's tough to find the right time to say good-bye to a legend. Favre is a first-ballot Hall of Famer. McNabb a few years ago supplanted Randall Cunningham as the greatest quarterback in Eagles history.
They're two of the most gifted quarterbacks to ever play the game. Or maybe they just used to be.


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