Hi my name is Drew Brees. I was born in Austin Texas and then went to college in Purdue and was drafted by the Chargers. I am now the starting and im getting better.. I'm currently in my 6th season and I plan on staying a Saint for the rest of my carrer.
Also I will not take any pictures to prove i'm the real Drew Brees because 1) I don't have the time and 2) I shouldn't have to prove myself.
DREW BREES DOES NOT RESPOND TO ALL MESSAGES
Heres some of my biography:
Brees was simply fantastic in 2004. He threw 27 touchdown passes and only seven interceptions. No quarterback in team history had ever finished a season with more than 20 touchdown passes and less than 10 interceptions. His 27 touchdown passes tied for third-most in a single season in team history, and they were the most in a single season by a Chargers quarterback since Dan Fouts threw 27 in 1985.
The only quarterbacks to finish the season with a better touchdown-to-interception ratio than Brees (3.86-to-1) were Indianapolis Peyton Manning, who threw 49 touchdowns and 10 interceptions (4.9-to-1) and Philadelphias Donovan McNabb, who threw 31 touchdowns and eight interceptions (3.88-to-1).
Brees set a team record and finished third in the NFL with a passer rating of 104.8. He became the first quarterback in team history to record a season passer rating over 100.0, easily surpassing the previous team mark of 93.6, set by Dan Fouts in 1982.
Brees 2004 passer rating demonstrated a whopping 37.3-point improvement over his 67.5 rating of 2003. That increase was the greatest improvement from one season to the next by any quarterback in NFL history. Former Oakland Raiders signal-caller Ken Stabler previously held that distinction, increasing his rating 36.0 points, from a 67.4 rating in 1975 to a 103.4 rating in 1976.
Already the team record holder for career completion percentage (.613), Brees completion mark in 2004 (.655) fell just shy of Mark Hermanns single-season completion percentage record (.657) set in 1985. Brees was especially accurate during a midseason stretch when he set a team record by throwing 194 consecutive passes without an interception. The streak began on Oct. 17 and didnt end until Dec. 5. In between picks, Brees played five full games and went 23 full quarters and 363 game minutes without throwing an interception.
That streak is all the more impressive when you consider that in 2003 his interceptions outnumbered his touchdown passes 15 to 11. In 2004, he threw just seven interceptions while tossing 27 touchdown passes. Brees threw just five interceptions in his last 364 pass attempts of the 04 season.
One of the areas that Brees showed the most improvement in 2004 was inside the Gold Zone (20-yard line). His 114.7 passer rating in the Gold Zone was second in the NFL behind Philadelphias Donovan McNabb (118.0). Brees 114.7 rating in 2004, when he completed 40 of 60 for 352 yards with 20 touchdowns and one interception, showed an increase of 64.7 points over his Gold Zone rating in 2003, when he was just 19 of 47 for 104 yards with four touchdowns and three interceptions for a rating of 50.0.
While Brees was extremely efficient in the passing game, he did discover that one of the quickest ways to put points on the board was with the deep ball. During a three-game stretch from Dec. 12-26, Brees threw the three longest touchdown passes of his career, all over 70 yards. He became the first quarterback in team history to throw a 70-yard touchdown pass in three consecutive games, and he was the first NFL quarterback to do it since Craig Morton of the Dallas Cowboys in 1970. Brees longest was a 79-yard touchdown pass to Eric Parker against Tampa Bay on Dec. 12.
Brees also demonstrated a knack for the big finish in 2004. He ended the season as the NFLs third-leading passer in the fourth quarter, completing 49 of 78 for 642 yards with six touchdowns and one interception for a rating of 109.0. Brees was at his best on Nov. 28 at Kansas City when he completed all 11 of his fourth-quarter pass attempts for 163 yards and two touchdowns. This led the Chargers to a 34-31 win that ended a seven-game losing streak at Arrowhead Stadium.
Brees was equally adept converting on third downs in 2004. As a passer, he completed 72 of 117 for 872 yards with nine touchdowns and two interceptions for a rating of 102.9, which is fifth-best in the NFL. As a rusher, his number was called 11 times on third-down-and-one plays, and he converted all 11 times, tied for the highest percentage in the league.
When the dust of the season settled, Drew and his wife, Brittany, were able to enjoy the rewards that go along with a successful season. They attended the Pro Bowl, where Drew helped lead the AFC to a 38-27 victory. He brought along his quarterbacks coach Brian Schottenheimer and his wife, Gemmi, as well as tight end Justin Peelle and his wife, Sara. From Hawaii, the Brees traveled to Australia for a three-week vacation. During the trip Down Under, they went diving on the Great Barrier Reef, played golf, went surfing, visited several wineries and attended a professional rugby match.
The Brees enjoy traveling to exotic locales. In 2003, they honeymooned in Tahiti and last February, they spent two weeks in Africa where they rode on several safaris, went diving with great white sharks, attended a rugby match, toured African wineries and visited the jail where former South African President Nelson Mandela was imprisoned.
At home, Brees enjoys a wide range of sports including baseball and golf. A shortstop through high school, Drew has been invited to take batting practice with the San Diego Padres a couple of times. In June, he traveled to Omaha, Nebraska to watch his younger brother, Reid, play in the College World Series for the Baylor Bears. Reid was a senior in 2005 who played in the outfield and batted cleanup. It was Baylors first trip to the CWS since 1978. On the links, Drew was invited to play in the 2005 Buick Open Pro-Am with John Daly and the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic Pro-Am with Jesper Parnevik. He also hosted a golf tournament in April 2005 at the Crosby National Golf Course in Rancho Santa Fe to benefit the Brees Dream Foundation. The tournament raised more than $100,000.
One of the events staged by his foundation was the Brees Gridiron Classic at Qualcomm Stadium last December. The one-day event featured four games between teams from Pop Warner and American Youth Football. Brees foundation provided use of the stadium and took care of all of the costs associated with the event. In June, Drew hosted the Brees on the Seas Fishing for a Cure in which he took a group of kids who are terminally ill with cancer on a day-long ocean fishing trip in San Diego.
On March 14 2006
Free-agent QB Drew Brees signed with New Orleans, agreeing to a six-year deal. Brees entered negotiations with both the Saints and Dolphins, but got a better reception from New Orleans and chose to wear Gold & Black.
The Saints showed vast improvement in the 2006 season. Brees played quite well and led the team to a 10-6 record. With a convincing 42-17 win in Dallas in their 14th game of the season, the Saints clinched the second seed in the NFC and a first-round bye, a franchise first.
Brees had an productive year year in 2006. He threw a league-leading 4,418 passing yards with and finished third in the league with 26 touchdown passes and a 96.2 passer rating. On January 13, 2007, in his first playoff game for New Orleans, Brees was 20/32 in passing attempts with 1 touchdown and 0 interceptions vs. the Philadelphia Eagles in the Louisiana Superdome.
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.
On January 21, 2007 Brees led the Saints to franchise's first National Football Conference 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. After a memorable winning season, the Saints lost to the Bears, 39-14