So far the NFL season has been one for the ages.
Whether it will be remembered as a good age or a bad age is still a matter of debate.
With a series of teams battling for the number one draft pick next season it seems that there is very little good to say about the play of a quarter of the teams in the league as the season nears the halfway point.
Currently 7 of the 32 teams in the NFL have won less than two games. Conversely only four teams have one loss or less showing a huge divide between the haves and the have nots.
Aside from being a season of poor play by a quarter of the league the 2013 NFL season has turned into a season of last quarterback standing with several teams already using their third or fourth quarterback of the year.
Some quarterbacks have been replaced by injury, while others have been replaced by poor play. One quarterback was even cut by one team for poor play and then injured the following week for an entirely different team.
With more openings for good quarterbacks than available good quarterbacks, teams have had to get creative with filling the vacancies.
Let me just say that with so many quarterback slots open I find it appalling that Tim Tebow is still unemployed with no team seeming to be willing to hire the former Heisman winner who happens to have more playoff victories for the Denver Broncos than Peyton Manning.
While no one has called to offer Tebow a job apparently a call was made to another, albeit slightly older, former Jets quarterback.

Photo R. Anderson
I am of course talking about Brett Favre the man who seems to retire and unretire more times than Andy Pettitte.
If published reports are to be believed the St. Louis Rams reached out to Favre, who last played three seasons ago for the Minnesota Vikings, to see if he was interested in coming out of retirement once again to fill-in for Sam Bradford who is out for the year following a knee injury.
It should be noted that Favre