NFC
North May Offer QB Soap Opera
The NFC North could be a quarterback soap
opera this fall with major story lines developing in not only
Minneapolis and Chicago, but Detroit and Green Bay, too.
The Lions, 0-16 last season and in worse
shape than General Motors, appear headed for a showdown between former
Viking Daunte Culpepper and rookie Matthew Stafford.
Since 2005, Culpepper, 32, has played nothing like the Pro Bowl player
who was outstanding here in the early years of this decade, but
reportedly he’s been impressive during the off season. He will compete
with Stafford, the No. 1 overall pick in April’s NFL draft.
Watching over it all is new Lions offensive
coordinator Scott Linehean, the same guy who had that title with
the Vikings when Culpepper was most productive (and healthy). While Linehan may favor starting Culpepper early in the season because of his
experience, he’s impressed with Stafford.
“He gets it out so quick, and with so much
velocity,” Linehan said in Sunday’s Chicago Tribune. “And he’s
more accurate than I thought he was.”
In Green Bay, Aaron Rodgers is
surrounded by the ghost of Brett Favre.
Rodgers was last year, too,
but in his first season as the Packers’ No. 1, Favre was based in New
York with the Jets. If Favre decides not to retire and play for the
Vikings (seems likely), he will be perched on the Minnesota-Wisconsin
border, waiting to stir things up between two teams and zealous fans
from both states.
The 2009 Packers and Vikings games could be
historic events, not football games. The first game is Monday, October
5 in Minneapolis; the second on Sunday, November 1 in Green Bay.
The value of tickets for those games will go up like the hottest of stocks the
day Favre signs on with the Purple. The border war goes nuclear in
interest and emotion.
It’s possible Favre and Rodgers will emerge
from the season as heroes with their local fan bases. But then again,
they might not even be welcomed back for another season. The only thing
for sure is that Favre won’t be a god with many cheese-heads in Green
Bay, and Rodgers will draw applause here only if he throws about four
interceptions in each game.
And the happiest soap opera script in the
division could be down in Chicago where new quarterback Jay Cutler
just might be better than any of his rivals. The quarterback- poor Bears
took a gamble with a big offering, acquiring Cutler by giving Denver two
first round picks, a third round choice and quarterback Kyle Orton.
Cutler’s resume says he might be worth it.
He made the AFC Pro Bowl roster after last season, his third in the
NFL. Among his numbers: 4,526 yards passing and 25 touchdown
passes. He joins a Bears offense that in past seasons has often
looked like it was playing with 10 guys, not 11.