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Packers Training Camp Info (1 Viewer)

Leroy's Aces

Footballguy
Some highlights from today's paper:

Rookie guards Daryn Colledge and Jason Spitz (both expected to start) will need to be "coached up" by the o-line coach and Jeff Jagodzinski. Both looked athletic and talented but made a bunch of rookie mistakes. Both struggled at times in one-on-one pass blocking drills.

Donald Driver beat Charles Woodson on a deep pattern for a TD from Favre (no suprise from any of those three)

Robert Ferguson (back), Ahman Green (quad) and Rod Gardner (hamstring) did NOT pass their training camp physicals and were held out of practice.

Backup o-lineman Kevin Barry will be placed on IR after tearing a quad in the 2nd minicamp.

Najeh Davenport DID practice and was seen as smiling and jumping around. (that got a load off his back :) ). He said he missed football, yada, yada.

Coach McCarthy did say he expects Green to be cleared to practive soon. He is just being cautious.

Al Harris reported despite his contract concerns and all picks will be signed as of today, as Hawk finalizes his deal.

 
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More on that Driver play -

Forty-million dollar cornerback Charles Woodson looked like just another rank-and-file player or at least someone who had skipped most all of the Packers' offensive workouts. Woodson said he was in tip-top shape, but Brett Favre repeatedly smoked him in seven-on-seven. Rookies Greg Jennings and Chris Francies caught hooks from Favre in front of Woodson. Free agent Ruvell Martin beat Woodson deep by a good step, but couldn't haul the pass in when their feet got tangled. Donald Driver climaxed the second 7-on-7 period by blowing past Woodson on a go pattern for and catching a 75-yard touchdown pass from Favre.

(sigh) Nice signing. :wall:

 
More on that Driver play -

Forty-million dollar cornerback Charles Woodson looked like just another rank-and-file player or at least someone who had skipped most all of the Packers' offensive workouts. Woodson said he was in tip-top shape, but Brett Favre repeatedly smoked him in seven-on-seven. Rookies Greg Jennings and Chris Francies caught hooks from Favre in front of Woodson. Free agent Ruvell Martin beat Woodson deep by a good step, but couldn't haul the pass in when their feet got tangled. Donald Driver climaxed the second 7-on-7 period by blowing past Woodson on a go pattern for and catching a 75-yard touchdown pass from Favre.

(sigh) Nice signing. :wall:
Don't read too much into 7 on 7 drills, it's a lot easier to burn DBs when there's no pass rush to speak of.
 
More on that Driver play -

Forty-million dollar cornerback Charles Woodson looked like just another rank-and-file player or at least someone who had skipped most all of the Packers' offensive workouts. Woodson said he was in tip-top shape, but Brett Favre repeatedly smoked him in seven-on-seven. Rookies Greg Jennings and Chris Francies caught hooks from Favre in front of Woodson. Free agent Ruvell Martin beat Woodson deep by a good step, but couldn't haul the pass in when their feet got tangled. Donald Driver climaxed the second 7-on-7 period by blowing past Woodson on a go pattern for and catching a 75-yard touchdown pass from Favre.

(sigh) Nice signing. :wall:
Once D Sanders stopped playing full-time, Woodson easily become the most overrated CB around. This is news??
 
More on that Driver play -

Forty-million dollar cornerback Charles Woodson looked like just another rank-and-file player or at least someone who had skipped most all of the Packers' offensive workouts. Woodson said he was in tip-top shape, but Brett Favre repeatedly smoked him in seven-on-seven. Rookies Greg Jennings and Chris Francies caught hooks from Favre in front of Woodson. Free agent Ruvell Martin beat Woodson deep by a good step, but couldn't haul the pass in when their feet got tangled. Donald Driver climaxed the second 7-on-7 period by blowing past Woodson on a go pattern for and catching a 75-yard touchdown pass from Favre.

(sigh) Nice signing. :wall:
Once D Sanders stopped playing full-time, Woodson easily become the most overrated CB around. This is news??
Most feared CB to ever play and one of my personal favorites. Overrated, not at all.
 
I found this at Packers.com today:

I can't find anything about Gado, but it seems Green will be out at least for 2 more weeks. :rolleyes:

Eight players did not pass their physicals and did not practice. Among those who sat out were wide receivers Robert Ferguson (back) and Rod Gardner (hamstring). McCarthy said both players were day-to-day. Their absence left Marc Boerigter working with the No. 1 offense opposite Driver.

Running back Ahman Green (torn quad tendon) said after practice it would be about two weeks before he expects to return to the field. Najeh Davenport did pass his physical and returned to practice at full speed.

 
C Woodson was overrated, in his last year in Oakland he was used less as a CB and more as a S moving around the field. Ashamumbbajumba and Washington were Oakland's top CBs last year.

Glad to see that bum go. NOt worth the money he was asking for.

 
Any news on which RB was seeing the first team action and who was the #2 WR with Fergueson and Gardner out and was he expected to continue there even if they got healthy?

 
Any news on which RB was seeing the first team action and who was the #2 WR with Fergueson and Gardner out and was he expected to continue there even if they got healthy?
Gado ran with the first team, Davenport with the second.
 
Here is some more stuff from local writers:

Running Backs: (Davenport looks good.)

RAVE: Najeh Davenport has been impressive. He is running with authority, confidence and a burst, and he seems to have a grasp of the scheme. Regardless of what the depth chart says, Davenport would be the No. 1 running back ahead of the injured Ahman Green and the inexperienced Samkon Gado. Green is working diligently to return from injury, and Gado is doing everything he can to earn a roster spot.

The running back position is a long way from being a sure thing, but the prospects look much better with Davenport on the field.

Wide Receivers: (Ferguson long on potential - short on health)

Ferguson got on the practice field Saturday afternoon after a back injury caused team doctors to fail him on his physical and hold him out of Friday's opening practice, and Gardner didn't pass his exam for the second straight day due to a hamstring injury that is lingering from June's organized team activities.

Only once since the Packers selected him in the second round of the 2001 draft has Ferguson played all 16 regular-season games. He has teased the Packers with his ability and size (6-foot-1, 210 pounds) but disappointed them by his inability to consistently contribute.

All along, he has demanded an opportunity to be a starter, and now that the Packers have such an opening following the offseason trade of Javon Walker to Denver, they don't know whether Ferguson will seize it.

"We're hoping so," said Reggie McKenzie, the Packers' director of pro personnel. "I'm hoping this is his year. The biggest thing with Ferguson is trying to make it through training camp. That will be touch and go. I know in his mind, he obviously wants to be healthy for an entire season. This is his opportunity, and I think he sees that."

Donald Driver, the Packers' only proven receiver, also thinks Ferguson realizes that. The two spent a portion of the offseason talking about how Ferguson can take the kind of step Driver made early in his career.

"He wants it, and right now, knowing him and talking to him, he wants it more than anyone," Driver said after Saturday's practice. "He said he wants to be a Pro Bowler, and when you have a guy who wants it, sooner or later, it's going to happen."

"He knows what his downfall is, and that downfall has been injuries. He has never been out there for a whole season. In 2002, he got hurt. In 2003, he got hurt. In 2004, he was hurt. I think if he can be out there for a whole season, he can be dangerous."

Case of the drops

Through two training camp practices, the Packers have made screen passes as difficult to complete as Hail Mary's. They haven't strung together enough completions to eke out back-to-back first downs, let alone sustain a lengthy drive. And that's in the seven-on-seven and one-on-one passing drills. What happens when there is a pass rush?

Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers have been fine, and Donald Driver has been exceptional. Beyond that, the Packers' most reliable targets are a rookie receiver, a veteran tight end and an ancient fullback.

Greg Jennings, Bubba Franks and William Henderson aren't merely the Packers' most reliable options behind Driver. They are the only reliable options. What they may lack in speed, they make up for in hands.

They catch the ball. Well, most of the time, at least.

The same can't be said of Robert Ferguson, Marc Boerigter, Cory Rodgers, Vonta Leach, Ben Brown and A.J. Cooper.

"The drops are way up, definitely," Packers coach Mike McCarthy said Saturday. "I thought the route-running was a lot better. I thought the timing was a lot better. The two negatives were too many dropped balls and too many pre-snap penalties."

If it continues, Jennings is going to be the starter opposite Driver in the Sept. 10 regular-season opener. Robert Brooks and Antonio Freeman were fabulous receivers, but they couldn't crack the starting lineup as rookies. Then again, they weren't playing behind Ferguson, Boerigter, Rodgers and Rod Gardner.

 
C Woodson was overrated, in his last year in Oakland he was used less as a CB and more as a S moving around the field. Ashamumbbajumba and Washington were Oakland's top CBs last year.

Glad to see that bum go. NOt worth the money he was asking for.
I 've had the unfortunate privilege of watching the Raiders the last three years, and Woodson made VERY FEW plays . . . he isn't worth anywhere near what they gave him, or what Oakland paid him the last few years . . .
 
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Some highlights from today's paper:

Robert Ferguson (back) did NOT pass their training camp physicals and were held out of practice.
Why is this COMPLETE LOSER and waste of time still eating a roster spot?
 
Klemm possibly gone for the season - See FBG new blogger.

Looks to me like 5 rookies will start, 6 if Rogers is the return man. If they all play well, would that make it the best draft ever??

 
Here is some more stuff from local writers:

Running Backs: (Davenport looks good.)

RAVE: Najeh Davenport has been impressive. He is running with authority, confidence and a burst, and he seems to have a grasp of the scheme. Regardless of what the depth chart says, Davenport would be the No. 1 running back ahead of the injured Ahman Green and the inexperienced Samkon Gado. Green is working diligently to return from injury, and Gado is doing everything he can to earn a roster spot.
Now you've done it, the Gado love onslaught will commence shortly....
 
Any word on the TEs. Rumour was the Bubba would again become a primary target on 3rd down and at the goal line. Also, the TE would be more involved.

Dallas & NE are supposed to be running two TEs sets. Any plans for the Packers to do something similar? Most defenses are now set up for 3 or 4 wr sets. Parcells & Bellicek feel there is a short term opportunity to take advantage to this using multiple TEs.

 
Najeh Davenport DID practice and was seen as smiling and jumping around. (that got a load off his back :) ).
Not surprising that Najeh is still dropping loads. Nonetheless, the article mentions that Greg Jennings is the favorite to start out wide but how has he looked? Seems to me an excellent late round sleeper choice. Will he be returning kicks or was that Kelly Jennings?
 
Any word on the TEs. Rumour was the Bubba would again become a primary target on 3rd down and at the goal line. Also, the TE would be more involved.

Dallas & NE are supposed to be running two TEs sets. Any plans for the Packers to do something similar? Most defenses are now set up for 3 or 4 wr sets. Parcells & Bellicek feel there is a short term opportunity to take advantage to this using multiple TEs.
http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=471220New offense puts more focus on tight ends

Unit could be best in division

By ROB REISCHEL

Special to Packer Plus

Posted: July 20, 2006

Green Bay - Jeff Jagodzinski has tremendous respect for the tight end position.

Green Bay's first-year offensive coordinator was the Packers tight ends coach from 1999-2003 and held that same position in Atlanta in 2004. In that time, Jagodzinski helped mold Pro Bowl players Bubba Franks and Alge Crumpler.

Jagodzinski loves what the tight end position can do for an offense. And when the Packers begin play Sept. 10, it's a safe bet that positional group will see more action than it did in recent years under Mike Sherman and Tom Rossley.

"I have no complaints as of this point," Franks said recently. "They're actually going to put the tight end in every different position - even the backfield - and that means we're going to be involved more. Were even going to be split out more.

"It will be every single position that you can put a tight end in and still run the play. It's not like they're going to change plays, they're just going to put us in different spots, and I'm anxious to run a fade from split out. That'll be exciting."

Jagodzinski is excited about what this collection of tight ends can do.

Although there isn't an Antonio Gates or Tony Gonzalez on the roster, the trio of Franks, David Martin and Donald Lee is quite solid.

And on an offense where questions abound, the tight ends could be an extremely important part of the attack.

"We've got talent. We've got talent here," Jagodzinski said of his tight ends. "We just have to put guys in position to succeed."

For Franks, that means staying on the field.

The 2005 season was the most frustrating of Franks' career. First, he missed four weeks of training camp while management took its sweet time during contract negotiations. Then, knee, back and neck injuries limited Franks to 10 games and he saw his consecutive-games streak end at 82.

Franks, now in his seventh year, caught a career-low 25 passes last season. And over the past three years, he's averaged just 29.7 catches.

Both Jagodzinski and first-year coach Mike McCarthy have hinted that they want Franks to have a more active role in the offense, much as he did early in his career. In 2002, Franks had a career-high 54 receptions and in 2001 he had a career-best nine touchdowns.

And no one wants a return to that level more than Franks himself.

"My mentality is I missed last year, and then I've got this year," Franks said. "How do you make that up? Balls out and have double the amount of catches - hopefully if I get them - and score double the amount of touchdowns. That's the only way I know how to make it up. Just . . . last year was difficult. Very difficult.

"I'm kind of now just getting over it."

Franks, an extremely prideful player and a locker room favorite, was extremely bothered how his 2005 season unfolded.

He suffered a bruised left knee early in the year that sidelined him for virtually all of Weeks 3-5. Late in the season, Franks was drilled by Philadelphia safety Brian Dawkins and carted off the field on a stretcher.

Franks was cleared to play the following week at Chicago, but on Green Bay's first possession, he was leveled by Bears linebacker Lance Briggs. Franks later developed neck and back soreness and didn't play the final four weeks.

Franks never has, and never will run particularly well. But when healthy, Franks (6-6, 265) can be a huge weapon in the red zone and a solid possession receiver in the middle of the field. Franks is also a very good blocker who "Pro Football Weekly" recently named the ninth best tight end in the league.

"What I see in Bubba is he's a short to medium guy in the passing game," Jagodzinski said. "He's a guy that can move the sticks for you and get first downs, and that's really what you want tight ends to be able to do. He's a superb blocker. He's really going to be good on the edge for our running game."

Green Bay's most explosive tight end could be Lee. The Packers signed Lee five days before their regular-season opener last year. And he was one of the biggest surprises in their dismal season.

Lee (6-4, 248) led Green Bay's tight ends in receptions (33) and receiving yards (294) last season. And his first two receptions were for touchdowns.

Lee is probably Green Bay's most athletic tight end, running the 40-yard dash in 4.62 seconds. He has the potential to get vertical, listens well to coaching and could be an even greater contributor after a full training camp with the team.

"It kind of surprised me that the coaches asked me to do so many things," Lee said of his 2005 season. "I'm really blessed by that. I got more snaps than I ever dreamed of.

"But man, this is the way I look at it: each year, you're either going to get better or you're going to get worse. You don't ever stay the same. (This) year, I'm expecting a lot more out of myself and a whole lot more big plays. I want to make a lot more explosive plays."

Martin has always had the ability to make explosive plays. Doing it was another story.

In 2005, though, Martin had his best year as a pro. Martin finished with 27 catches, led the tight ends group with three touchdowns and his blocking was better than any other time in his Green Bay career.

Martin missed four games, bringing his five-year total to 21. And he averaged just 8.3 yards per reception.

But Martin proved last season he's more than a career "tease" and he's already given Green Bay more than the average sixth-round draft choice ever does.

"I thought I did some good things when I got the chance," Martin said. "Now I definitely want to build on that. We've got a pretty good group of tight ends here, I think as good as any in football. So when I get my chances, I just want to take advantage."

Martin's far too exuberant when comparing Green Bay's tight end collection to the NFL's best. Teams such as New England, Dallas and Tennessee have far more explosiveness and productivity than the Packers do.

But Green Bay's group of tight ends rivals Minnesota's as the best in the NFC North. And if used properly, could have a highly productive season.

"Obviously being a former tight ends coach, I know what that position can bring an offense," Jagodzinski said. "And we've got a group here that can do some damage.

"Bubba's caught a ton of passes and has been big for us through most of his career. David Martin has come on and I like what I've seen from Donald Lee. I think top to bottom, we can stack our guys up against almost anybody's."

From the July 20, 2006 editions of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

 
Free agent Ruvell Martin beat Woodson deep by a good step, but couldn't haul the pass in when their feet got tangled.
what unit is Martin running with? 1st string yet? :)
 
Packers | Rodgers has a good morning practice

Published Sun Jul 30 11:59:00 p.m. ET 2006

(KFFL) Cliff Christl, of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, reports Green Bay Packers backup QB Aaron Rodgers was six of six passing in team drills during the morning practice Sunday, July 30. He ran the first-team offense because QB Brett Favre (ankle) did not practice. It probably was his best practice so far.

 
Packers | Davenport back for evening practice

Published Sun Jul 30 11:55:00 p.m. ET 2006

(KFFL) Cliff Christl, of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, reports Green Bay Packers RB Najeh Davenport (ankle) returned to practice Sunday evening, July 30, after he had been held out of morning practice.

 
Packers | Favre back for evening practice

Published Sun Jul 30 11:54:00 p.m. ET 2006

(KFFL) Cliff Christl, of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, reports Green Bay Packers QB Brett Favre (ankle) returned to practice Sunday evening, July 30, after he had been held out of morning practice.

 
Packers | Clifton back for evening practice; but he has to leave

Published Sun Jul 30 11:56:00 p.m. ET 2006

(KFFL) Cliff Christl, of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, reports Green Bay Packers OT Chad Clifton (knee) returned to practice Sunday evening, July 30, after he had been held out of morning practice. However, he dropped out later in practice and had an ice pack strapped to his right knee.

 
More on that Driver play -

Forty-million dollar cornerback Charles Woodson looked like just another rank-and-file player or at least someone who had skipped most all of the Packers' offensive workouts. Woodson said he was in tip-top shape, but Brett Favre repeatedly smoked him in seven-on-seven. Rookies Greg Jennings and Chris Francies caught hooks from Favre in front of Woodson. Free agent Ruvell Martin beat Woodson deep by a good step, but couldn't haul the pass in when their feet got tangled. Donald Driver climaxed the second 7-on-7 period by blowing past Woodson on a go pattern for and catching a 75-yard touchdown pass from Favre.

(sigh) Nice signing. :wall:
Woodson picked off Favre 3 times yesterday, does that now make this a good signing? :lmao: at everyone ripping a player for plays during training camp.

 
C Woodson was overrated, in his last year in Oakland he was used less as a CB and more as a S moving around the field. Ashamumbbajumba and Washington were Oakland's top CBs last year.

Glad to see that bum go. NOt worth the money he was asking for.
I 've had the unfortunate privilege of watching the Raiders the last three years, and Woodson made VERY FEW plays . . . he isn't worth anywhere near what they gave him, or what Oakland paid him the last few years . . .
I enjoy how all the Woodson haters fail to acknowledge that he picked off 3 passes as well.
 
Here is some more stuff from local writers:

Running Backs: (Davenport looks good.)

RAVE: Najeh Davenport has been impressive. He is running with authority, confidence and a burst, and he seems to have a grasp of the scheme. Regardless of what the depth chart says, Davenport would be the No. 1 running back ahead of the injured Ahman Green and the inexperienced Samkon Gado. Green is working diligently to return from injury, and Gado is doing everything he can to earn a roster spot.
Now you've done it, the Gado love onslaught will commence shortly....
Still waiting for the onslaught. Could you define 'onslaught' in case I miss it?
 
August 1, 2006, 08:24

Packers :: QB, DB

QB Favre Picked Off Five Times Yesterday

Bob McGinn, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel - [Full Article]

QB Brett Favre fired an incredible five interceptions Monday afternoon in practice. CB Charles Woodson picked off three of them. Just as he does after almost every play, HC Mike McCarthy spoke with Favre immediately after the interceptions. "What do you want me to say?" OC Jeff Jagodzinski said. "No, that's not acceptable. And let me tell you. We're going to get it corrected."

 
August 1, 2006, 08:24 Packers :: QB, DBQB Favre Picked Off Five Times YesterdayBob McGinn, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel - [Full Article]QB Brett Favre fired an incredible five interceptions Monday afternoon in practice. CB Charles Woodson picked off three of them. Just as he does after almost every play, HC Mike McCarthy spoke with Favre immediately after the interceptions. "What do you want me to say?" OC Jeff Jagodzinski said. "No, that's not acceptable. And let me tell you. We're going to get it corrected."
And? :confused: Practice right? :shrug: :lmao: :lmao: :lmao:
 
August 1, 2006, 08:24 Packers :: QB, DBQB Favre Picked Off Five Times YesterdayBob McGinn, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel - [Full Article]QB Brett Favre fired an incredible five interceptions Monday afternoon in practice. CB Charles Woodson picked off three of them. Just as he does after almost every play, HC Mike McCarthy spoke with Favre immediately after the interceptions. "What do you want me to say?" OC Jeff Jagodzinski said. "No, that's not acceptable. And let me tell you. We're going to get it corrected."
And? :confused: Practice right? :shrug: :lmao: :lmao: :lmao:
:confused: I thought Woodson, the Packs prized FA acquisition, pulling in three picks was newsworthy.Guess not. :shrug:
 
C Woodson was overrated, in his last year in Oakland he was used less as a CB and more as a S moving around the field. Ashamumbbajumba and Washington were Oakland's top CBs last year.

Glad to see that bum go. NOt worth the money he was asking for.
I 've had the unfortunate privilege of watching the Raiders the last three years, and Woodson made VERY FEW plays . . . he isn't worth anywhere near what they gave him, or what Oakland paid him the last few years . . .
I enjoy how all the Woodson haters fail to acknowledge that he picked off 3 passes as well.
Favre threw a few INTs??? No way. :lmao:
 
Big Score said:
MrPack said:
Big Score said:
August 1, 2006, 08:24 Packers :: QB, DBQB Favre Picked Off Five Times YesterdayBob McGinn, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel - [Full Article]QB Brett Favre fired an incredible five interceptions Monday afternoon in practice. CB Charles Woodson picked off three of them. Just as he does after almost every play, HC Mike McCarthy spoke with Favre immediately after the interceptions. "What do you want me to say?" OC Jeff Jagodzinski said. "No, that's not acceptable. And let me tell you. We're going to get it corrected."
And? :confused: Practice right? :shrug: :lmao: :lmao: :lmao:
:confused: I thought Woodson, the Packs prized FA acquisition, pulling in three picks was newsworthy.Guess not. :shrug:
:lmao: :lmao: You think we can't see right through you? You posted that to bash Favre.Nice try though, but thanks for the smile you provided me today. I needed it.
 
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Big Score said:
MrPack said:
Big Score said:
August 1, 2006, 08:24 Packers :: QB, DBQB Favre Picked Off Five Times YesterdayBob McGinn, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel - [Full Article]QB Brett Favre fired an incredible five interceptions Monday afternoon in practice. CB Charles Woodson picked off three of them. Just as he does after almost every play, HC Mike McCarthy spoke with Favre immediately after the interceptions. "What do you want me to say?" OC Jeff Jagodzinski said. "No, that's not acceptable. And let me tell you. We're going to get it corrected."
And? :confused: Practice right? :shrug: :lmao: :lmao: :lmao:
:confused: I thought Woodson, the Packs prized FA acquisition, pulling in three picks was newsworthy.Guess not. :shrug:
:lmao: :lmao: You think we can't see right through you? You posted that to bash Favre.Nice try though, but thanks for the smile you provided me today. I needed it.
:goodposting: :own3d:
 
The Davenport bandwagon starts here! Actually he's the type of player that can truly excel if he can stay healthy. He's a beast in the Lamont Jordan mold.

 
The Davenport bandwagon starts here! Actually he's the type of player that can truly excel if he can stay healthy. He's a beast in the Lamont Jordan mold.
I have always been a big fan of Davenport, but a broken ankle is not something that is easy to come back from, especially for a power runner. Add to that the fact that several Packer offensive lineman have already gone down with injuries, and I'm not sure that we will see Davenport's Lamont Jordan mold this year. I do think that Davenport should have been starting over Green early last year, as he was much more effective.
 
Donald Driver climaxed the second 7-on-7 period by blowing past Woodson on a go pattern for and catching a 75-yard touchdown pass from Favre.
Does Driver usually climax this early in training camp?
 
Big Score said:
MrPack said:
Big Score said:
August 1, 2006, 08:24

Packers :: QB, DB

QB Favre Picked Off Five Times Yesterday

Bob McGinn, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel - [Full Article]

QB Brett Favre fired an incredible five interceptions Monday afternoon in practice. CB Charles Woodson picked off three of them. Just as he does after almost every play, HC Mike McCarthy spoke with Favre immediately after the interceptions. "What do you want me to say?" OC Jeff Jagodzinski said. "No, that's not acceptable. And let me tell you. We're going to get it corrected."
And? :confused: Practice right? :shrug:

:lmao: :lmao: :lmao:
:confused: I thought Woodson, the Packs prized FA acquisition, pulling in three picks was newsworthy.

Guess not. :shrug:
:lmao: :lmao: You think we can't see right through you? You posted that to bash Favre.

Nice try though, but thanks for the smile you provided me today. I needed it.
I don't appreciate you one bit, trying to tell me what I think and my reason behind the posting.The reality is, there were a few posts in this thread on Woodson being overrated and a bust of a FA acquisition for the Pack. There was a previous post mentioning Woodson had three picks, but it was just thrown out there with no confirmation.

Just pointing out the so called FA bust had three picks and confirmation...even if it was only in practice.

The fact that Favre threw the picks was not the news. He always has and he always will. The guy is a gunslinging gambler and that's what makes him so good.

You can read it however you like and think what you want. That's your preogative.

However, in the future, don't tell me what I think or the reasoning behind my posts. :thumbdown:

TIA.

 
Big Score said:
MrPack said:
Big Score said:
August 1, 2006, 08:24

Packers :: QB, DB

QB Favre Picked Off Five Times Yesterday

Bob McGinn, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel - [Full Article]

QB Brett Favre fired an incredible five interceptions Monday afternoon in practice. CB Charles Woodson picked off three of them. Just as he does after almost every play, HC Mike McCarthy spoke with Favre immediately after the interceptions. "What do you want me to say?" OC Jeff Jagodzinski said. "No, that's not acceptable. And let me tell you. We're going to get it corrected."
And? :confused: Practice right? :shrug:

:lmao: :lmao: :lmao:
:confused: I thought Woodson, the Packs prized FA acquisition, pulling in three picks was newsworthy.

Guess not. :shrug:
:lmao: :lmao: You think we can't see right through you? You posted that to bash Favre.

Nice try though, but thanks for the smile you provided me today. I needed it.
I don't appreciate you one bit, trying to tell me what I think and my reason behind the posting.The reality is, there were a few posts in this thread on Woodson being overrated and a bust of a FA acquisition for the Pack. There was a previous post mentioning Woodson had three picks, but it was just thrown out there with no confirmation.

Just pointing out the so called FA bust had three picks and confirmation...even if it was only in practice.

The fact that Favre threw the picks was not the news. He always has and he always will. The guy is a gunslinging gambler and that's what makes him so good.

You can read it however you like and think what you want. That's your preogative.

However, in the future, don't tell me what I think or the reasoning behind my posts. :thumbdown:

TIA.
:lmao:
 
Now you've done it, the Gado love onslaught will commence shortly....
Still waiting for the onslaught. Could you define 'onslaught' in case I miss it?
Onslaught definedLooks like TC didn't last a week before the bandwagon blew a tire.
JWVDCW would have a different definition of onslaught
:yes: Heres a quick 13 man:

4

4

4

4

4

4

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