Favre returns to Green Bay, will be added to roster today
FILE/AP
Quarterback Brett Favre flew to Green Bay on Sunday night and will join the Packers today. He could join practice as early as Tuesday.
GREEN BAY, Wis. - Brett Favre is back. It remains to be seen whether he'll still be the leader of the Pack.
The Green Bay Packers reluctantly embraced Favre's forced return to the football field Sunday, after failing to come to a financial agreement that would manage to make Favre happy while staying retired.
The NFL announced Sunday that Favre will be reinstated and added to the Packers' active roster today. Commissioner Roger Goodell had held off on granting Favre's request for reinstatement for nearly a week, hoping Favre and the team could resolve their standoff.
"Although we built this year around the assumption that Brett meant what he said about retiring, Brett is coming back," said team president and CEO Mark Murphy. "We will welcome him back and turn this situation to our advantage."
A private plane carrying Favre, wife Deanna and agent James "Bus" Cook arrived in Green Bay early Sunday night. Favre exited the plane and waved to a crowd of several hundred fans gathered at the airport - in a severe lightning storm, no less - before driving off in an SUV.
The reinstatement will become effective at noon CDT today, when Favre will be added to the Packers' active roster. By reinstating Favre, Goodell is following through on a recent promise to force action.
Earlier this week, the team offered Favre a long-term, multimillion-dollar marketing agreement that likely would have kept him retired. But Favre's decision to report to camp makes such an agreement less likely.
A trade remains a possibility.
"Frankly, Brett's change of mind put us in a very difficult spot," Murphy said in a statement released by the team. "We now will revise many actions and assumptions about our long-term future, all predicated on Brett's decision last March to retire.
"As a result of his decision, we invested considerably in a new and different future without Brett and we were obviously moving in that direction. That's why this wasn't easy. Having crossed the Rubicon once when Brett decided to retire, it's very difficult to reorient our plans and cross it again in the opposite direction - but we'll put this to our advantage."
Could reorienting their plans include a competition between Favre and Aaron Rodgers for the starting job? Team officials have maintained that if Favre returned to the Packers, it would be in some role other than as the starter - and have said Rodgers is their starter.
In his statement, Murphy said only that coach Mike McCarthy would 'talk to the team and the quarterbacks about the plan moving forward, and after he has done that we will share it publicly.'
Favre could be on the field as early as Tuesday.
The team has a scrimmage at Lambeau Field on Sunday night, then does not have another scheduled public practice until Tuesday morning. Favre's arrival in training camp could cause a major disruption to the team, although he would not likely begin practicing with the Packers right away.
Favre retired in March but has been having second thoughts. Team officials have insisted they are moving on with Rodgers, though, causing tensions to rise between Favre and the team.
Team officials publicly have ruled out releasing Favre, fearing he would immediately sign with division rival Minnesota.
McCarthy has said the Packers had a plan in place should Favre report to camp. He first would have to pass a physical exam and a conditioning test, then would likely be limited to individual drills.
Goodell told the NFL Network on Saturday he thinks the situation has lingered long enough.
"I think we have to force it," Goodell said. "I think it's come to the point where there need to be some decisions made on behalf of the Packers, on behalf of Brett, on behalf of all the fans."
Comments
theronce (anonymous) says...
I think that the Packers were caught with their hand in the cookie jar. They talked Favre into retiring, because they did want to move on on their own terms...and they did not want him to play for anyone else. Good old country boy, Favre fell right into it, believing that his billion-dollar employer had only his best interests at heart. The only loyalty displayed was on his part.
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