Dayton Daily News

Brett Favre sees some of his own traits in Mahomes

- By Barry Wilner

Brett Favre sees some of his own traits as a football player in Patrick Mahomes.

The mobility and passing outside the pocket, usually on the run. The willingnes­s to stick with a play and see if it can develop into something grand. The howitzer of an arm.

The Hall of Fame quarterbac­k, who is appearing weekly on SiriusXM NFL Radio for a third NFL season, isn’t exactly looking into a mirror when he watched Mahomes. But it isn’t far off.

“I see the comparison,” Favre says of the Kansas City star. “He may not admit this but he probably feels there is no throw he can’t make or no angle he can’t make it from. Whether he’s flushed left or to the right, his vision always is down the field. I was always looking for the big play first and knew I could always react underneath if I needed, too.

“You have to have a certain confidence or air about you that you can make any throw, and it has been proven he can make any throw. I always felt like, yeah.”

With one major alteration that Mahomes and San Francisco’s Jimmy Garoppolo probably benefit from.

“The one big difference with me and present day quarterbac­ks, when I came into the league I was very unprepared from a passing standpoint,” says Favre, who will do his broadcast from Miami on Jan. 31.

“I could throw it a mile, make any throw, but in college we ran an option offense and when we threw it was off a sprint out. I didn’t know anything about protection­s in general, throwing hot. Never had to worry about anything in college, played free-spirit football, and if there’s a busted play, make something happen with my arm.

“I didn’t know if I could adapt enough to the offense Mike Holmgren or future coaches would want to run before they run me off. I had to make plays outside the pocket.”

Favre sees Garoppolo as a student of the game who had the best kind of teacher.

“These are two different styles of quarterbac­k, and (Garoppolo) is one who knows his limitation­s like the guy he learned from, Tom Brady. He knows what he’s capable of doing and does it exceptiona­lly well. If they protect him and the play calling is on par, he can be very impressive.”

Favre is impressed with both Super Bowl teams and considers the game pretty much a tossup. He’s close with Chiefs coach Andy Reid, who was an assistant coach in

Green Bay, including quarterbac­ks coach in 1997, when the Packers lost to Denver in the Super Bowl, and 1998. And he likes 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan, who has two players from Favre’s school, Southern Mississipp­i: Tarvarius Moore and Nick Mullens.

Southern Miss remains close to Favre’s heart. He and wife Deanna, who have the Favre4Hope foundation, recently raised funds to build a volleyball center at the school, where their daughter, Breleigh, played there.

“We wanted to do something for a high school and (Southern Miss),” he says. “We built one at Oak Grove High School (in Hattiesbur­g, where Favre has done some football coaching). And for Southern Miss, that was difficult — it’s hard to get people to donate for volleyball. But we”ll be opening an $8 million facility that will be as good as any in the country at Southern Mississipp­i.

“...It would be a shame if people who can help don’t help. By no means are we perfect, but we do try to give back.”

 ?? RICH SUGG / KANSAS CITY STAR ?? Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Brett Favre, who also played under Kansas City coach Andy Reid, agreed quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes has “a certain confidence or air” that he can complete any throw similar to his days with Green Bay.
RICH SUGG / KANSAS CITY STAR Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Brett Favre, who also played under Kansas City coach Andy Reid, agreed quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes has “a certain confidence or air” that he can complete any throw similar to his days with Green Bay.
 ?? MIKE ROEMER / AP 1999 ?? Former Packers’ quarterbac­k Brett Favre sees the comparison between him and Patrick Mahomes: “He may not admit this, but he probably feels there is no throw he can’t make or no angle he can’t make it from.”
MIKE ROEMER / AP 1999 Former Packers’ quarterbac­k Brett Favre sees the comparison between him and Patrick Mahomes: “He may not admit this, but he probably feels there is no throw he can’t make or no angle he can’t make it from.”

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