Everything about Drew Brees totally explained
Drew Christopher Brees (born
January 15,
1979 in
Austin,
Texas) is an
American football quarterback for the
New Orleans Saints of the
National Football League. He was originally drafted by the
San Diego Chargers in the second round of the
2001 NFL Draft. He played
college football at
Purdue.
Brees has been selected to the
Pro Bowl twice in his career - with the Chargers in
2004 and the Saints in
2006. He was the NFL's
Comeback Player of the Year in 2004.
Early years
Brees attended
Westlake High School in his hometown
Austin, Texas. As a senior, he led Westlake to the 1996 5A Division II State Championship, and won with a 55-15 rout over a powerhouse
Abilene Cooper team led by star running back
Dominic Rhodes, at
Texas Stadium in
Dallas, Texas. Westlake finished that season 16-0, their only undefeated season to date. Brees was named Class 5A's most valuable offensive player that year as he threw for 3,528 yards and 31 touchdowns.
College career
Brees graduated from
Purdue University in
West Lafayette,
Indiana with a degree in
Industrial Management. He is a member of the
Sigma Chi fraternity. He left Purdue with
Big Ten Conference records in
passing yards (11,792),
touchdown passes (90), total offensive yards (12,693), completions (1,026), and attempts (1,678). He also led the
Boilermakers to the
2001 Rose Bowl, Purdue's first appearance in
Pasadena since
1967. Brees was a finalist for the
Davey O'Brien Award as the nation's best quarterback in
1999. Brees won the
Maxwell Award as the nation's outstanding player of
2000 and won the
NCAA's
Today's Top VIII Award as a member of the Class of 2001. Brees was also fourth in
Heisman Trophy voting in 1999 and 3rd in 2000.
In Brees' sophomore season, Brees led the team on an 80 yard drive with 1:25 left in the 1998 Builders Square Alamo Bowl versus #4 ranked Kansas State, capping it off with a 25 yard touchdown pass to senior WR Ike Jones with :45 seconds left in regulation. The win was significant in that it's only one of two times an unranked team has upset a Top 5 ranked team in a bowl game, the other being the 1984 Rose Bowl, in which UCLA, led by future college head coach
Rick Neuheisel at quarterback, engineered a 45-10 upset of #3 ranked Illinois. He also appeared on the cover of the
Sega Sports NCAA College Football 2K2 for the
Sega Dreamcast.
As a senior Brees was named the Academic All-America Player of Year, the first Purdue Boilermaker since Bruce Brineman (1989) to earn national academic honors. Brees also was awarded for his humble and productive attitude when he was the recipient of Purdue’s Leonard Wilson Award for unselfishness and dedication. Additionally, Brees guided the Boilermakers to their first Rose Bowl appearance in over a quarter-century. Brees locked up the bowl berth by leading Purdue to a hard-earned October victory over Ohio State, capping the Big Ten battle with a 64 yard touchdown pass to wideout Seth Morales, a walk-on transfer from Butler University. Replays of the scoring pass show that Brees had the rare discipline to go through his receivers to the fourth option on the play. He also holds the record for the longest pass in NCAA history.
Professional career
San Diego Chargers
2001 NFL Draft
Brees was
drafted by the San Diego Chargers with the first pick in the second round in 2001. Many believed he'd have been a first round but due to his size, most skeptics thought his size would limit him in the NFL.
While Brees was a senior at Purdue, he and
LaDainian Tomlinson (then a running back for
Texas Christian University) joked at a
Heisman awards ceremony about how it would be great if they could be on the same team, because they attended nearby high schools in Texas and even played with each other in a league all star game. With the 2001 draft, they did end up on the same team. Tomlinson and Brees made a vow to turn the Chargers team around. Brees played in his first-career game on
November 4, 2001 against the
Kansas City Chiefs. He won the starting job over
Doug Flutie during training camp before the start of the
2002 season, but was later replaced during the
2003 season by Flutie.
Drew has claimed that his relationship with his mother, Mina Brees, an attorney in Austin, Texas, suffered when he didn't choose her as his agent. Later, during the election season of 2006, Brees threatened to sue his mother if she continued to use his image in her campaign effort to become a judge, citing that their relationship had become "nonexistent" since the draft.
Early career
In his rookie season, Brees played only one game under head coach
Mike Riley and earned a passer rating of 94.8. In his second year, he passed for 3,284 yards and 17 touchdowns under new head coach
Marty Schottenheimer. The Chargers looked to turn Brees' second season into a successful one as they started 4-0. However, a series of losses forced the Chargers into a .500 at 8-8, while Brees earned a 76.9 passer rating for the season. Brees was named the starter for the 2003 season, passing for a career low 2,108 yards and earning a 67.5 rating. The Chargers went 4-12 under the leadership of both Brees and Flutie. San Diego earned the first overall pick with said record, and through a deal with the New York Giants got
Philip Rivers for Eli Manning. However, due to the long contract negotiations between Rivers and the Chargers, Brees started the following season and had a break out year.
Comeback
Brees' career with the Chargers was briefly put in jeopardy after San Diego
acquired N.C. State's Philip Rivers. After the trade, it was almost certain Brees' days as the Chargers' starting QB were over. However, Rivers held out nearly all of training camp. This forced the Chargers coaching staff to give Brees one last look and he persevered to remain the starter throughout the 2004 season and jump to near the top of the league's statistical rankings. Brees held the third best rating in the NFL, at 104.8 (behind
Peyton Manning and
Daunte Culpepper). Brees was selected to the
2005 NFL Pro Bowl following his impressive 2004 season. He was also named 2004
NFL Comeback Player of the Year.
Brees became a free agent after the 2004 season and wasn't expected to return to San Diego, which had already committed a large sum of money to Rivers. The team eventually designated Brees as a franchise player, giving him a one-year contract that quadrupled his pay to $8 million for the 2005 season
Under the terms of the "franchise player" contract, Brees was eligible to be traded, but the Chargers would have had to receive two future first round draft choices in return. He wasn't traded and continued to start the remainder of the 2005 season. In the Halloween 2004 matchup against the
Oakland Raiders, he completed 22 out of 25 passes for 281 yards and 5 TDs in a 41-14 victory. He followed that productive performance the next week versus the
New Orleans Saints, where he went 22 of 36 for 257 yards and 4 TD in a 43-17 triumph. He would finish the season with 3,159 passing yards, 27 TD, and only 7 INT giving him a QB rating of 104.8. In the postseason, he threw for 319 yards and 2 TD with 1 INT on 31 of 42 passing in a losing effort against the
New York Jets in
Qualcomm Stadium in overtime (17-20).
Drew continued his productive play in 2005, as he posted a career high in passing yards with 3,576. Brees also posted an 89.2 rating, which was the 10th best in the NFL. Additionally, during the 2005 season he led the Chargers to a win over the
New England Patriots at New England, thus breaking a home-winning streak held by the Patriots at
Gillette Stadium while posting a 137.5 rating resulting from 19 of 24 passing, 248 yards, 2 TD, and 0 INT. Later that season, Brees led the Chargers to a 48-10 victory over the
Buffalo Bills. He completed 28 of 33 passing for 399 yards and four touchdowns. Brees battled through 3 turnovers (2 INT, 1 fumble) to throw a 54 yard pass that would set up a field goal which regained the lead in a crucial game against the previously undefeated
Indianapolis Colts 26-17.
Shoulder injury
In the last game of the 2005 season against the Denver Broncos, Brees injured his shoulder while trying to pick up a fumble of his after being hit by
Denver Broncos safety
John Lynch. Denver tackle
Gerard Warren hit Brees while he was on the ground, a legal but questionable hit that caused the injury. Brees underwent
arthroscopic surgery to repair the torn
labrum in his right (throwing) shoulder on January 5, 2006. Subsequent reports mention rotator cuff damage as well, making the injury much more serious than it was originally described. Then in an interview given in July 2006, he acknowledged that the labrum injury was much worse than originally known and he'd also suffered a partially torn
rotator cuff.
Brees was selected as first alternate to the
AFC Pro Bowl team in 2006. He would have played in his second consecutive Pro Bowl due to the injury to
Carson Palmer; however, his own injury dictated that the AFC Pro Bowl roster would have to be filled by second alternate
Jake Plummer.
New Orleans Saints
After the injury, San Diego Chargers General Manager
A.J. Smith told Brees that the team wanted him back to full strength and that they wanted him to lead them to a championship. Brees, eligible for free agency, saw the request as a sign that he'd be back in a Chargers uniform. He stated in a local San Diego radio interview that he was willing to take less than "franchise-type" money to be with a Super Bowl contender. However, as negotiations began between Brees' agent
Tom Condon and the Chargers, it became apparent that the Chargers were more concerned about Brees' injury than they'd previously let on. The team offered Brees a 5-year, $50 million contract that paid $2 million in base salary the first year and the rest heavily based on performance incentives, notably that he line up under center 75% of the season. Brees took the incentive-based offer as a sign of no confidence by the Chargers and promptly demanded the type of money a top 5 "franchise" quarterback would receive.
After the Chargers refused to increase their offer, Brees met with other teams. New Orleans and the
Miami Dolphins were interested in him. New Orleans made him a large offer that included $10 million in guaranteed money the first year and a $12 million option the second year. Miami asked Brees if he'd be willing to take less guaranteed money so they could fit him under their salary cap, but Brees refused and also didn't accept the suspicious results of a grueling 6-hour physical in Miami. The Dolphins ended negotiations with him and traded for
Minnesota Vikings QB
Daunte Culpepper instead.
Brees then quickly signed a 6-year, $60 million deal with the New Orleans Saints on March 14, 2006. The Saints hoped the former
Comeback Player of the Year could improve the team and lead them to the playoffs. Brees also claimed he was impressed by the team's newfound commitment to winning and their confidence in him as a player.
Brees had a productive year in 2006. He threw a league-leading 4,418 passing yards, finished third in the league with 26 touchdown passes and 11 interceptions and a 96.2 passer rating. On November 19, 2006 he also achieved a career best 510 passing yards in a game against the Cincinnati Bengals. On December 19, 2006, Brees was named the starting quarterback for the NFC team in the
2007 Pro Bowl. On January 5, 2007, Brees was named the first runner-up behind former teammate
LaDainian Tomlinson for league MVP by the
Associated Press. He was also co-recipient of the
Walter Payton Man of the Year Award (which he shared with LaDainian Tomlinson) at the conclusion of the season.
On January 13, 2007, in his first playoff game for New Orleans, Brees was 20-32 in passing attempts with 1 touchdown and no interceptions vs. the
Philadelphia Eagles in the
Louisiana Superdome.
On
January 21,
2007, Brees led the Saints to the franchise's first
NFC Championship Game against the
Chicago Bears. Though he completed 27 of 49 passes for 354 yards, and two touchdowns, Brees committed three costly turnovers. He was also penalized for an intentional grounding in the endzone, resulting in a safety. The Saints eventually lost to the Bears, 39-14. After the season, Brees dislocated his left elbow during the first quarter of the
2007 Pro Bowl.
On December 16, 2007, Brees had one of his best games of the season, completing 87% (26 of 30) of his passes for 315 yds. and 2 touchdowns.
Career statistics
| Year |
Team |
G-S |
Passing Att.-Comp. |
Yards |
Pct. |
TD |
Int. |
Long |
Sacks-Lost |
Pass Rating |
| 2001 |
San Diego |
1-0 |
27-15 |
221 |
.556 |
1 |
0 |
40 |
2-12 |
94.8 |
| 2002 |
San Diego |
16-16 |
526-320 |
3,284 |
.608 |
17 |
16 |
52 |
24-180 |
76.9 |
| 2003 |
San Diego |
11-11 |
356-205 |
2,108 |
.576 |
11 |
15 |
68 |
21-178 |
67.5 |
| 2004 |
San Diego |
15-15 |
400-262 |
3,159 |
.655 |
27 |
7 |
79 |
18-131 |
104.8 |
| 2005 |
San Diego |
16-16 |
500-323 |
3,576 |
.646 |
24 |
15 |
54 |
27-223 |
89.2 |
| 2006 |
New Orleans |
16-16 |
554-356 |
4,418 |
.643 |
26 |
11 |
86 |
18-105 |
96.2 |
| 2007 |
New Orleans |
16-16 |
652-440 |
4,423 |
.675 |
28 |
18 |
58 |
16-109 |
89.4 |
| Totals | 91-90 |
3,015-1,921 |
21,189 |
.637 |
134 |
82 |
86 |
126-938 |
87.9
|
| Postseason | 3-3 |
123-78 |
916 |
.634 |
5 |
2 |
88 |
8-46 |
92.7
|
Endorsements
In February 2008, Brees signed a promotional deal with
Chili's Grill & Bar to promote the chain's new line of hamburgers.
Brian Westbrook and
Adrian Peterson were also involved in the promotion, which helped to raise money for charity.
Personal
Brees endeared himself to New Orleans far beyond the playing field. He and his wife Brittany chose to purchase and renovate a home in
Uptown New Orleans, and he also involved himself heavily in charities engaged in
Hurricane Katrina recovery.
Drew and Brittany’s
Brees Dream Foundation
announced a partnership in 2007 with international children’s charity
Operation Kids, to rebuild and restore academic and athletic facilities, parks and playgrounds, after-school programs, mentoring programs for the intellectually disabled, neighborhood revitalization projects and child care facilities in
New Orleans. On
February 18th,
2007, Brees was honored by the
Krewe of Bacchus (a New Orleans Mardi Gras parade club) as the 2007 Bacchus Grand Marshal. This was only the second time in the Krewe's 39 year history that they named a Grand Marshal. Brees wears
contact lenses when he plays football; this fact was cited during the first game of the regular season against the Indianapolis Colts vs. New Orleans Saints where Brees had one of them knocked out during a play. Brees had to return to the sideline to get it replaced.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Drew Brees'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://drew_brees.totallyexplained.com">Drew Brees Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |