Brett Favre
In reaching 500 touchdown passes, Brett Favre became the first quarterback in NFL history to hit that mark — one milestone among several that would eventually carry him into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Born on October 10, 1969, in Gulfport, Favre grew up in the United States and attended Hancock High School and Hancock North Central High School before going on to build a career as an American football player. His path through the professional ranks produced a statistical record that accumulated over years of sustained play at the quarterback position, each season adding to totals that no one in the league had previously reached.
The full scope of those numbers is striking on their own terms. Favre was the first NFL quarterback to attempt 10,000 passes, the first to record 6,000 completions, and the first to surpass 70,000 passing yards. He also stands as the first to have recorded victories against all 32 teams in the league. Taken together, these firsts represent a career of unusual length and consistency — a body of work measured not in single seasons but across decades of professional competition. His place in the Pro Football Hall of Fame reflects the formal recognition those numbers eventually received from the sport's governing institutions.
Beyond football, Favre also worked as a NASCAR team owner, an occupation that placed him in a different corner of American professional sports. The Hall of Fame induction remains the clearest institutional stamp on his football career, a concrete acknowledgment of the records he set as a quarterback — records that, by definition, no one had managed before him. His status as the first to reach 70,000 yards, 10,000 attempts, 6,000 completions, 500 touchdowns, and wins over every franchise in the league collectively defines what his time as an NFL player produced.
Quotes by Brett Favre
Brett Favre's insights on:

Just, you never know what the next day is going to bring. That goes for football, goes for off the field, and I gave up a long time ago trying to predict the future and trying to deal with things I couldn’t deal with.

In the NFL a lot of times everyone gets caught up in the business side of things. For them it’s all about money and it really leaves a sour taste in your mouth.

I know I can still play, but it’s like I told my wife, I’m just tired mentally. I’m just tired.

Sometimes you get caught up in what’s going on around you. The reality is that you are just a regular person. At some point, the career will be over, the bright lights turn off. That can come back to haunt you if you’re not just a regular guy.





