The Packers are giving Brett Favre his locker. All they need now is the woodworking company to remove it from the premises -- and one of those giant bows you see in car commercials.
After watching the story of why the legendary quarterback's locker remained intact mushroom into a national debate earlier this week, Packers general manager Ted Thompson said the club will remove the locker following the team's June 17-19 mandatory minicamp and give it to Favre as a gift. A replacement will then be installed at the entrance of the locker room in time for training camp at the end of July.
"Obviously I didn't realize it was going to get this kind of attention,'' Thompson admitted Thursday afternoon. "We talked to Brett and (his wife) Deanna several weeks ago, and we thought that anybody who played 16 years here as well as he did might want his own locker. I think it makes it a little easier, quite frankly, for the next guy to go into there.''
Thompson said the team never planned on encasing the locker in glass and keeping it in the locker room. He said he came up with the gift idea while talking with coach Mike McCarthy shortly after Favre's decision to retire in early March.
"I was just sitting here with Mike and said, 'You know what we ought to do ....' I mean, you can't really put anybody in his locker,'' Thompson said.
Asked why he or McCarthy, who was asked specifically about Favre's locker at the NFL meetings in late March and at the rookie orientation camp in early May, didn't make the plans known sooner, Thompson replied, "There was no deep dark secret. I probably messed the timing up. I'm sorry if I caused any angst for anyone.
"Obviously the story sort of got the better of us and took on a life of its own.''
Said McCarthy: "I think it's been totally blown out of proportion. It's been discussed with Brett, and we can talk about it at a later date, but its really a construction concern (that) is the reason why the locker hasn't been taken out of there. So there's nothing more to it.''
When the media was allowed into the locker room after Thursday's organized team activity practice, the "FAVRE" nameplate had been replaced with a generic "PACKERS" one.
"We're doing that just because you guys seem to have so much angst about it,'' Thompson said. "It's still Brett Favre's locker in there, but we switched the nameplate.''
It's up to Favre what he wants to do with the locker after the team removes it, since it could make for an extremely popular exhibit at the Packers Hall of Fame should Favre not want it in his rec room.
New starting quarterback Aaron Rodgers was typically unfazed by the whole thing.
"I have a lot of things to worry about besides whether they keep the locker or not,'' Rodgers said. "I mean, it's not even on my mind. I've got to try to figure out a way to lead this team on my mind -- workouts, OTAs -- so I'm not worried about that at all."
Jason Wilde, a Milwaukee native who graduated from Greendale Martin Luther High School and the University of Wisconsin, is a two-time Associated Press Sports Editors award winner and a Wisconsin Newspaper Association award winner.
His daily coverage can be found on the State Journal's Web site and through his Packers blog on madison.com.