The story behind the famous Brett Favre draft day jorts photo
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- Brett FavreAmerican football quarterback
On the morning of the 1991 NFL draft, Tim Isbell followed an unpaved road deep into the piney woods of the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
The Biloxi Sun Herald photographer kept driving until he reached a ranch-style house a post pattern away from a stretch of water known as Rotten Bayou.
When Isbell arrived at Brett Favreโs childhood home, the familyโs draft party was already revving up. Dozens of guests were devouring boiled shellfish, sipping cold beer and debating which NFL team would select the rocket-armed Southern Mississippi quarterback.
Irvin and Bonita Favre pointed out the coolers and the seafood smorgasbord to Isbell, but the photographer explained he didnโt come to eat or drink. He instead asked permission to shadow their son, who was holed up in his wood-paneled bedroom monitoring the draft and playing Nintendo video games.
โI wanted to be sure I was there when he got the call,โ Isbell told Yahoo Sports. โUntil he was drafted, other than going to the bathroom, Brett didnโt get out of my sight.โ
Isbell estimates he waited on the floor of Brett Favreโs bedroom for more than five hours before his patience was rewarded. When Favre learned the Atlanta Falcons intended to take him 33rd overall, Isbell snapped an iconic photo that to this day gets spotlighted on TV or shared on social media and even inspired one No. 1 overall pick to memorably recreate it.
To Isbell, the image still resonates because itโs the antithesis of the typical NFL green room shot of a player clad in a dapper suit and seated with his family around a dainty round table. The picture of Favre wearing jorts and reclining on his childhood bed makes people laugh and captures the innocence of a future superstar.
Itโs not just Favreโs rolled-up, mid-thigh jean shorts that are quintessentially 1991. Everything about the photo screams early 1990s, from Favreโs chunky cordless phone, to his familyโs homemade โNFL Draft Dayโ T-shirts, to the posters of Dave Parker and John Elway hanging from his walls.
โThe great thing about that photo is that it has given people so much joy and laughter,โ Isbell said. โSo many journalism photos are so serious and somber. Itโs nice to know that people can latch onto something funny too.โ
For Isbell, the opportunity to photograph Favreโs draft party was a plum assignment. While the fastball-throwing, fiercely competitive gunslinger hadnโt yet blossomed into a Super Bowl champion or an NFL MVP in 1991, he was already a larger-than-life figure in his home state.
This is a kid who landed USMโs last available scholarship and then won the programโs starting quarterback job as a true freshman; who played well enough as a sophomore and junior to draw the attention of NFL scouts, and then promptly flipped his Nissan Maxima and nearly killed himself; who bounced back to help lead the Golden Eagles to a 27-24 upset victory over Alabama five weeks removed from intestinal surgery and 30 pounds underweight.
Many mock drafts projected Favre as a first-round pick in the 1991 draft, but concerns about his accuracy and his health caused him to slip. When the Seattle Seahawks selected Dan McGwire from San Diego State with the 17th pick, Isbell recalls Favre derisively saying, โDan McGwire?โ Favreโs reaction was similar eight picks later when the Los Angeles Raiders nabbed Todd Marinovich from USC.
โBrett was already pretty confident in his abilities,โ Isbell said. โHe couldnโt believe that he wasnโt the first quarterback taken.โ
Favreโs phone finally began ringing early in the second round. New York Jets director of player personnel Ron Wolf coveted Favre at 34th overall. Trouble was the Atlanta Falcons also wanted him one pick earlier.
During their phone conversation, Favre revealed to Wolf that the Falcons were calling on his other line.
โRon Wolf told him not to answer the Falconsโ call,โ Isbell said with a laugh.
Of course, Favre did take that call. And Isbell captured the joyous moment on film. He already had his camera poised and ready while Favreโs family and friends were still crowding into the quarterbackโs bedroom.
Isbellโs photo led the Sun Herald sports section the next morning, but he had no inkling that it would have longstanding impact. In fact, Isbell didnโt even have it in his portfolio until more than a decade later when he flipped on ESPN radio in his car and perked up when he heard Scott Van Pelt dissecting the details of his photo.
โI heard the word โjortsโ come up,โ Isbell said. โFor the life of me, I didnโt know what jorts were. Once I got back to the paper, I had to Google it.โ
Ever since then, Isbellโs Favre photo has become virtually unavoidable for football fans this time of year. Every April, it resurfaces on social media, on TV or even on ESPNโs live NFL Draft show itself. Former college quarterback Julian Edelman remade the photo with his face on Favreโs body. Darren Rovell has called it the โGreatest Draft Day Photo Of All Time.โ
The most memorable recreation of Isbellโs Favre photo was the one done by Baker Mayfield and his family on the eve of the 2018 draft. The Mayfield clan went to great lengths to get every detail right, donning wigs and replica homemade draft shirts, tracking down an old-school cordless phone and camcorder and even plastering the wood-paneled walls with similar photos and bumper stickers.
โThere are those people who are in your corner no matter what, you canโt do any wrong, even when you do wrong. And then there are those people that no matter what you do theyโre going to dislike you and thatโs not going to change.โ - Brett Favre #DraftEve #MMO pic.twitter.com/6bCE9SxqI6
โ Baker Mayfield (@bakermayfield) April 26, 2018
Mayfieldโs recreated photo drew instant praise on social media โ even from Favre himself. Wrote the 11-time all-pro quarterback: โGood luck tonight....and remember to send my Jorts back tomorrow.โ
That stunt helped cement for Isbell that heโll forever be known as the guy who took that Brett Favre photo. Isbell has published many more significant photographs in three decades as a photojournalist on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, but none of his other photos are more beloved or well-known.
โWhen Iโm dead and gone, I think theyโll still show that picture,โ Isbell said.
Isbell and Favre have discussed the infamy of the draft day photo in passing over the years, but the photographer hopes their paths will cross again someday. He has an 11x14 print that heโd love Favre to autograph and pose with for a picture.
Says Isbell with a chuckle, โI think we both realize we are linked for eternity because of that photo. So Iโd love to have a keepsake.โ