
More proof that Brett Favre is everywhere: detainees at a Wisconsin National Guard camp in Iraq are invoking his name solely to get a rise out of the Green Bay Packers-supporting soldiers.
Even in war, Favre is a nuisance. WTMJ reports:

When Peter King agreed to write a weekly Monday Morning Quarterback column for the 1997 NFL season, he figured it'd be a few hundred words, a week's worth of stuff that didn't fit into the pages of Sports Illustrated. That's not the way it worked out.
In February of this year, upon his second retirement from the NFL, Vikings quarterback Brett Favre was very clear about his initial return to the league. He reneged on his first retirement as the Packers opened training camp in 2008, and was traded to the Jets for a draft pick.
After declaring last week that his on-again, off-again, on-again, off-again retirement was back on again, Brett Favre acknowledged that his popularity has taken a hit. But Favre says that if you got sick of Favre the last two offseasons, that means you never really loved him.
Norman Chad is a freelance sports writer whose syndicated column runs in several newspapers, including the Washington Post, as well as at SI.com. Chad (who is also well known for appearing on ESPN's Pardon the Interruption and as a commentator for the World Series of Poker) regularly pokes fun at media figures, and so it's no surprise that in his latest column, he took a jab at Peter King.
For all you chumps who enjoyed a Tom Brady-less 2008 New England Patriots team, I got some bad news for you: Dreamboat is back. And to hear Peter King write it (in between uncontrollable sobs of joy, surely), Tommy Terrific is better, faster, stronger, so on and so forth.
It's been six days since FanHouse last wrote about Brett Favre and, well, that just won't do. Last we heard, Favre may or may not have talked to Dr. James Andrews about arm surgery in preparation for one more NFL season.
Jon Gruden made national headlines yesterday when he replaced Tony Kornheiser on ESPN's Monday Night Football. Kornheiser, of course, "stepped down" (as MDS, Ryan and I noted last night, that may or may not be extremely convenient) from his role in the booth with very little noise aside from the original announcement.Get the latest coverage on your favorite teams thanks to CBS Radio. Listen Now