Rodgers hasn't given any interviews on this subject (as far as I could find). He has been seen at The Habit, a burger joint, and he co-owned 8 Twelve MVP Bar & Grill, so it's safe to say that he's a fan of burgers.
Including Super Bowl XLV, Rodgers, the Green Bay Packers' quarterback has a 9-and-7 record in playoff games through the 2016-20157 postseason.
As a starter, Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers is 6-2 against the Cowboys. Here are the results (Green Bay wins in bold):
Aaron Rodgers has one Super Bowl ring from Super Bowl XLV.
As of the 2nd game of the 2009-10 season the Packers overal record in Green Bay is 290-150-1.
NFL player Aaron Rodgers weighs 225 pounds.
He is a very talented quarterback, but to win a Super Bowl or even make it to one, a team needs more than just that. If the Green Bay Packers can fix whatever cracks they have in their armor, Aaron Rodgers may very well lead them to another Super Bowl victory using the incredible skills he has.
He didn't graduate. He attended Butte Commimity College for a year before transferring to University of California Berkeley. He was there for two years before entering the draft at the end of junior year. He never graduated.
As of Febuary 16th 2012 he has played in 6. He is 4-2 with wins against the Philadelphia Eagles, Atlanta Falcons, Chicago Bears, and Steelers in the 2010 season. The loses were against the Cardinals in 2009 and the Giants in 2011
The Packers signed Rodgers to a five-year contract on July 30, 2005. According to the Green Bay Press-Gazette, he received a $1.5 million signing bonus and $620,000 roster bonus in 2005, and received a $3.01 million option bonus in 2006. His base salary was $230,000 in 2005 and $310,000 in 2006. If he is the Packers' full-time starter from 2006 through 2009, he will add $8.25 million to his salaries from 2007 through 2009. If he is the full-time starter in 2007 through 2009, add $5.25 million to his salaries; and if Rodgers doesn't become the starter until 2008, he'll add $2.2 million to his salary.
198 players were drafted ahead of Tom Brady (too many to list here) before he was picked as the 199th player by the New England Patriots in the 2000 NFL draft.
The term 'replacement set' is most often used in algebra, often when describing variables used in inequalities. It is the set of possible values for a variable to hold as "input". So, if we have two variables; M is greater than 6, and N is less than 9, and then some variable X which we know is between them, we can quickly deduce that X is somewhere between 6 and 9. The Replacement Set for M is the set of all numbers greater than 6 (going on to infinity). The Replacement Set for N is the set of all numbers less than 9, going down to zero and negative infinity. If we take both the replacement sets and see what they have in common, we get the set of all numbers that X could possibly be.
In scholastic work it may mean all the possible numbers you reasonably could "plug in" while getting X. Sometimes they will give you a table of numbers to try, and call it the Replacement Set.
If you can plug in any number you like, then the Replacement Set is the set of all numbers. It could be limited to odd numbers, or to 'any number greater than 6', or, if eg. you only sat tables of 8, then your inputs for number of guests would be limited to (or predicted to be) multiples of 8.
I believe it is completely equivalent to the term 'Domain', but as I said before carries with it a connotation of being used with inequalities, or with a discrete list, like a table of inputs.
Sometimes, perhaps most colloquially, it means the set of numbers you currently have the hunch will solve your problem.
Not exactly but it may just be a matter of opinion.