Rodgers claims to remember every single interception and touchdown he's ever thrown — even from as far back as eighth grade. He also remembers specific high-school plays, down to the defensive formation.
When he was 9, Rodgers' family moved from Oregon to California. To be accepted to his new school, Rodgers needed to do an interview, and when asked what he would contribute to school, he said football. When he was 15, he would show up every morning in his coach's office before class to pick his brain about offensive and defensive schemes.
As a senior in high school, he decided to play baseball after getting no Division 1 football offers. Once, he threw at a pitcher's head after the pitcher threw a 94-mile fastball at him while he was at bat. The two were separated moments before the benches cleared.
He kept all his rejection letters from Division 1 schools that weren't interested, and decided to attend Butte Community College despite getting a 1310 on his SAT. After one dominant season, he earned a scholarship to the University of California at Berkley.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAt Cal, Rodgers and some teammates had a weekly poker night. Rodgers never once showed emotion and reportedly won "75% of the time."
Rodgers was picked 24th overall in the 2005 NFL Draft. To this day, he gives Mike McCarthy a hard time about the fact that he was part of the coaching staff that took Alex Smith (the first overall pick) instead of Rodgers.
In 2008, Rodgers and some of his Packers teammates were visiting a military base in Alaska when they wound up in an impromptu pick-up basketball game against some teen-aged military kids. Rodgers got his shot blocked by one of the kids, and on the next play posted the kid up, bodied him into the ground, and scored.
Every year at a Fourth of July barbecue hosted by one of his former Cal teammates, Rodgers takes games like ping-pong and horseshoes so seriously he always immediately calls next whenever he loses.
At former Packer Terrence Murphy's wedding in the Virgin Islands, a brawl almost broke out between Rodgers and some locals during a "friendly" beach volleyball game.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdRodgers and Packers fullback John Kuhn will sometimes go days without talking because of highly contested card games.
Last year, Rodgers won Celebrity Jeopardy!, easily beating Shark Tank's Kevin O'Leary and astronaut Mark Kelly. Still, after missing this Daily Double (mixing up IBM and Apple), he dropped an f-bomb under his breath on air.
He and head coach Mike McCarthy are sometime seen arguing heatedly on the sidelines when the Packers offense isn't clicking.
He still gives Kuhn a hard time for once talking in his backswing while the two were golfing together.
Two weeks after winning Super Bowl MVP, Rodgers decided to improve his nutrition, and eats an insane diet of six meals a day. He eats chicken and fish and brown rice and sweet potatoes, and he has stopped eating steak and starches before games.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdDuring the 2015 playoffs, he played through a slightly torn calf despite not being able to even fully run.
During practice he sometimes tapes potato chips on his heels to force himself to stay on his toes.
He also throws footballs while running on the treadmill, and throws at a net attached to a moving motorcycle to stay sharp.
He watches Packers TV broadcasts to find weaknesses in his game.
And he uses a customized mechanical contraption as a target during training camp because the normal targets were too easy
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdDuring a game of dodgeball with Packers teammates, Rodgers supposedly took it way more seriously than everyone else and mercilessly went after everyone on the other team.
Rodgers once insisted that he and pro golfer Jerry Kelly keep score at a charity golf tournament.
During practice and in the locker room, he always challenges teammates in to small competitions — often about things as random as Eastern European geography.
After the Packers stumbled to a 4-6 record this season, Rodgers said his team could run the table and win the rest of their remaining games. They did, and are now two games away from the Super Bowl.
And like Tom Brady — another quarterback fighting for a Super Bowl — Rodgers says he plans to play well into his 40s.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdNow see if Peyton Manning was more competitive than Aaron Rodgers.