Fox Sports has brought on NFL legend Drew Brees as a guest analyst for to replace Julian Edelman due to his induction into the New England Patriots‘ Hall of Fame.Joining Charissa Thompson, Terry Bradshaw and Charles Woodson in the studio, Brees was asked to name his Mount Rushmore of all-time quarterbacks, one of which came as a huge surprise to the crew. GettyBrees went rogue with his QB shout[/caption]“As a kid, my idol was Joe Montana,” Brees said. “Of course, current generation is Tom Brady.“A guy who I don’t think ever got enough credit at the quarterback position – this is gonna surprise you – Doug Flutie.“Played 20 years of professional football at all levels. He was a guy doing Patrick Mahomes stuff before Patrick Mahomes and nobody ever gave him the credit for it. “I learned so much from my four years with Doug Flutie. I would not have become the quarterback I was without him as a mentor.”Flutie was an 11th-round draft pick out of Boston College, selected by the Los Angeles Rams, and fell so low having already signed with the United States Football League (USFL), while there were some concerns about his height, standing at 5-foot-10. With a career spanning two decades, Flutie played just 12 seasons in the NFL after spending eight years of his career playing in the Canadian Football League between the BC Lions, Calgary Stampeders and Toronto Argonauts. With his return to the NFL in 1998, joining the Buffalo Bills, the 1984 Heisman Trophy winner earned his lone Pro Bowl nod after going 7-3 in his 10 starts that season. He would retire in 2005 having thrown for 14,715 yards and 86 touchdowns, but not before he mentored an upcoming star quarterback in Brees, doing so between 2001-2004 when with the San Diego Chargers. After five seasons with the Chargers in which he earned his first Pro Bowl honor, Brees moved to the New Orleans Saints where he became a superstar earning a further 12 Pro Bowl nods, becoming a seven-time NFL passing yards leader, and helped the Saints clinch Super Bowl XLIV victory over Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts, in a game in which he was named MVP.As part of his role as an analyst with FOX for Week 3, Brees will be part of the coverage for the Sunday Night Football showdown between the Kansas City Chiefs and the New York Giants, both teams who currently sit at 0-2. Reid, Mahomes and Kelce might not be able to rely on their defense this seasonGettyDespite the unprecedented position Patrick Mahomes and co find themselves in, with only 12.2 percent of 0-2 teams having made the playoffs since 1990, Brees doesn’t yet believe it’s time to sound the alarm on Andy Reid‘s men. “I don’t think the Chiefs have been a fast-starting team the last couple of years,” he said. “Typically they are the King of the one-possession game. You look at last year and they weren’t playing great for 10/11 games, they just happened to win them all. “They played the [Los Angeles] Chargers, who I think are going to be one of the best teams in the AFC, and to the former champions [Philadelphia] Eagles. “So, they’re going to be okay. They just need to get Rashee Rice back, get Xavier Worthy back, but everyone calm down on the Chiefs right now.”But three-time Super Bowl MVP Mahomes enters the potentially pivotal clash carrying a knock to his wrist on his throwing arm. However, Big Red has reassured fans that it likely shouldn’t impact his performance in the contest at Met Life Stadium. “It was something that happened during the game against Philadelphia, but we managed to reduce the swelling,” the Chiefs head coach explained.The Chiefs have never come away with victory in their seven road trips to the Giants since 1978, and this is one piece of history Kansas City will be hoping to make on Sunday as they seek to get back to winning ways at last. Stay up to date with the latest from the NFL across all platforms – follow our dedicated talkSPORT USA Facebook page and subscribe to our talkSPORT USA YouTube channel for all the offseason news, interviews and more.