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Childress didn't throw the 17 interceptions Favre is responsible for this year, but he was the coach of a team that has the NFL's worst giveaway-takeaway ratio. Opponents have turned Favre's turnovers into 71 points, essentially giving everyone the Vikings played a bonus touchdown before the game even began.
Childress should have benched Favre and, indeed, he said he thought about it. But he was so intertwined with his quarterback that benching Favre would have been admitting failure on his part, too.
From the beginning, it was a mismatch of needy team and even needier player. That it worked for one season before an interception thrown by Favre cost the Vikings a chance to be in the Super Bowl was remarkable, but asking for two miracle seasons was asking too much.
Childress was a coach who wanted to control everything his quarterback did. Favre is a quarterback who doesn't want anybody questioning how he gets the job done.
But Childress was desperate for a quarterback, and Favre was his man. When they became even more desperate for a receiver, Randy Moss became that man.
Making moves out of desperation doesn't usually bode well for job security. It didn't help that Childress alienated fans, players and his own owner with some of his moves.
Childress bet the farm on Favre, and lost. He's gone, and no one in Minnesota will hold a goodbye party for him.
Meanwhile, Favre plays on, seemingly unaware that the party is over for him, too.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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