GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)—Brett Favre(notes) jogged out of the tunnel in a purple helmet. He might as well have been wearing a black hat.
No, Favre didn’t seem to relish playing the villain in his return to Lambeau Field. But it was going to take more than a chorus of boos to throw him off his game.
For the second time in less than a month, Favre sliced up his former team and stuck it to the franchise that cast him aside as the Minnesota Vikings beat the Green Bay Packers 38-26 at Lambeau on Sunday. Despite being jeered repeatedly by Packers fans who once cheered his every move, Favre completed 17 of 28 passes for 244 yards and four touchdowns without an interception.
“Packer fans cheer for the Packers first,” Favre said. “I know that. But I hope that everyone in the stadium watching tonight said, ‘I sure hate those jokers on the other side, but he does play the way he’s always played.”’
High-stakes, emotional drama aside, this much is clear: The Vikings (7-1) took a firm hold on the NFC North standings.
But given the raw tension between Favre, the Packers’ front office and the fans who felt betrayed when their favorite player came out of retirement—again — to join their biggest rival, cornerback Charles Woodson(notes) acknowledged the game was significant beyond the division standings.
“I think it was disappointing for a lot of people,” Woodson said. “It’s just a loss, but I think a lot of people really wanted this one bad. We let a lot of people down today.”
Under less dramatic circumstances, rookie receiver Percy Harvin(notes) would have been Sunday’s star after catching five passes for 84 yards and a touchdown and returning five kicks for 175 yards.
But Harvin didn’t mind yielding the spotlight to Favre.
“He’s played this game a long time, he sees a lot of stuff that a lot of quarterbacks can’t see,” Harvin said. “And he can make a lot of throws that a lot of quarterbacks can’t make. With us being explosive, to add him was like a blessing in disguise.”
The Vikings’ defense roughed up Favre’s successor, Aaron Rodgers(notes), sacking him six times.
But with the Packers (4-3) on the verge of getting routed, Rodgers rebounded with three second-half touchdowns.
A few of those crunching hits left Rodgers limping at times, but he said he’d be fine.
“I’ll be OK in a couple of days,” Rodgers said. “This one will hurt for a couple of days, though, physically and mentally.”
But Rodgers—who threw for only 38 yards in the first half but finished with 287 and 3 TDs—wasn’t hung up on outdueling Favre.
“I hate to losing to whoever’s at quarterback for them,” Rodgers said. “I hate losing to the Vikings.”
The Packers now recognize that their chances of winning the division are fading, but still can compete for the wild card. And hey, they might even see the Vikings again in the playoffs.
“Hopefully, we’ll have another crack at these guys down the road,” Packers coach Mike McCarthy said.
Already leading 17-3 at halftime, Favre temporarily reverted from game manager to gunslinger on the Vikings’ first possession of the second half—and even that worked. Favre threw into triple coverage under pressure and Harvin came down with the ball while Woodson, Atari Bigby(notes) and Nick Collins(notes) tumbled to the ground like extras in a slapstick comedy as the Vikings took a 24-3 lead.
But Rodgers answered by driving the Packers to three straight scores in the third quarter—a field goal and a pair of touchdown passes to tight end Spencer Havner(notes), a linebacker who switched positions in training camp.
Harvin then returned a kickoff 48 yards. Facing third down at the 2, Favre rolled right and threw to wide open tight end Jeff Dugan(notes) to put the Vikings up 31-20 early in the fourth quarter.
Rodgers wasn’t finished, scrambling for 35 yards to set up a 10-yard touchdown pass to Greg Jennings(notes). After a failed 2-point conversion attempt, the Packers trailed 31-26 with 10:26 remaining.
Driving with a chance to take the lead, the Packers stalled out and Mason Crosby(notes) missed a 51-yard field goal attempt.
Peterson then took a screen pass 44 yards down the left sideline to the 15. With the Vikings facing third-and-11, Favre threaded a ball through the secondary for a touchdown to Bernard Berrian(notes).
Favre left the field surrounded by cameras, pumping his fist to a mix of cheers and boos as he jogged down the tunnel. He hugged cornerback Al Harris(notes) and wide receivers Donald Driver(notes) and Greg Jennings.
Despite the final score, it was an awkward homecoming for Favre, whose standoff with the front office split the loyalties of Packers fans last summer.
There weren’t many signs of a split on Sunday.
Fans booed Favre loudly—first when he walked out of the tunnel for pregame warmups, then again when he ran out of the tunnel for the game, and on every snap during the Vikings’ first few offensive possessions.
“Welcome back to Lambeau Field, Brent,” one fan’s sign read.
Vikings coach Brad Childress said Favre did a great job of staying “in body,” not letting the charged atmosphere get the best of him.
“We talked a little bit about not doing too much,” Childress said.
If Favre didn’t realize the extent to which Packers fans have turned on him, he does now. But Favre says that doesn’t diminish his accomplishments as a Packer—in his mind, anyway.
“What I’ve done here speaks for itself,” Favre said. “What I was part of was awesome. That will never change.”
NOTES: Vikings coach Brad Childress earned his first victory in Lambeau in four tries. … Veteran tackles Chad Clifton(notes) and Mark Tauscher(notes) were active for Green Bay on Sunday but did not play. … Sunday’s crowd was 71,213, the largest regular-season crowd in Lambeau Field history. … Recently re-signed running back Ahman Green(notes) returned 7 kicks for 141 yards and caught a 12-yard pass for the Packers.

Acme Packing Company
Daily Norseman
1357 Comments
1 - 25 of 1357
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
1. Penalties -- Can anything be more boneheaded than a stupid mental penalty that puts seven points on the board rather than three right from the get-go?
2. Offensive line play --
a. Hmmm, can the coaches come up with something other than "The first time we tried to block them in the Metrodome was disastrous, so let's run the same scheme for this game and see if it makes a difference." And OMG -- Allen unblocked late in the game with an unobstructed path to the quarterback? Even when the protection is adequate, Rodgers has too easily become a deer in the headlights. Perhaps he just hangs on to the ball too long because it is the closest thing he has to a security blanket.
b. Thanks to the zone blocking scheme, the quarterback turns out to be the leading rusher. Had Favre still been a Green Bay Packer, he would have been booed for letting fly several interceptions behind this woeful line. Had Rodgers been a Viking, the game would have been out of reach before halftime.
3. Poor special teams play has little negative effect against a lesser opponent. Against a power return team like Minnesota, an already beleagured defense is put on its heels even further.
4. On the defensive side of the ball there is true talent. Too bad the coaching staff chooses to play people out of position on the forward lines.
On the bright side -- The Favre Hoopla is mercifully over. The media can finally shut up. Maybe it will start up again with a playoff rematch. The problem, of course, is that one of these two teams is likely not going to be there.
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
End of story.
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
B) Brees is good, but he makes mistakes! He has had 0 TD games and multiple INT games (something Favre had 0 of so far) this year. The Vikings could really capitalize on those things.
C) Everyone knows that New Orleans biggest weakness is stopping the run. Peterson will run right over them.
D) Favre has been playing like a QB reborn!
E) The Vikings pass rush is a force on its on...something Brees hasn't really faced much of yet.
I could go on, but I won't. I just felt I needed to offer some hard fact reasons as to why the Vikings have a very good shot to stop Brees and gang if given the chance.
Report Abuse
Conclusion: THEY ARE THE REAL DEAL!!! Baring some major injury or something, the Saints will represent the NFC in the SuperBowl this year. Sorry Vikings fans, this will not be your year. If the two teams played, the Saints would score 49 points against the Vikings, Brees would shred the Vikings suspect D and the Vikes Offense would be stiflied by the Saints D. They would stuff Peterson and force Farve into several big Interceptions. I am not convinced thhat these two teams will even meet in the Playoffs though, because I don't believe that Farve can keep up his current pace at his age and the Vikes will lose some games in the 2nd half of the season. Saints will go 16-0, Vikes 11-5.
Book it!!!
Report Abuse
Saints haven't seen a pass rush like the Vikings. In terms of peaking, Vikings have been getting better every week, hopefully, that trend continues. And after seeing what Turner did to their run D last night, I have great confidence in AP to exploit their D in the same way. That said, we have a $hitload of football to play and I hope everybody comes back after the bye week, ready to roll!
Report Abuse
and could have gone anyway.
Your two returens were luck,
The vikings walked ALL over the PIT defense.
So I wouldn't brag too much, because everone with a stable head know YOUR a moron.
And I think you complained when PIT lost to CHI yes??
Nice class loser.
Report Abuse
Yes, there are 2 teams who will be troublesome to the saints. That is the New England Cheatriots, and the Dallas Gayboys. Just wanted to generate a LOL moment. But seriously, those 2 teams are the biggest threat to the Saint's perfect season.
Go STEELERS!!
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Even the Vikings will have a hard time with those guys--it seems like the Saints are really clicking offensively (like the explosive MN offense in 1998). While the Vikings defense has had trouble stopping good QB's this year... Hopefully the Vikes 'D' will get stronger.
Also, I believe that the Vikings have not played their best football yet... hopefully they will peak during the playoffs...
Comment-- Intelligent readers?
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
And to you retard Viking fans still whining about the bogus "tripping" call, shut up. The only thing bogus was that the official called it by the wrong name. It was "legwhipping", not "tripping".
It is against the rules to dive across a defender`s path and kick up your legs to bring him down. That`s what happened on the play.
Try reading the rules before you start your whine and cheese party, moronz.
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
1 - 25 of 1357