Jesus, had no idea but there would be so many blind Montana fans here
It isn't blind. You have apparently had a tough evening, and have stumbled upon a novel concept that apparently you hold but the world has failed to appreciate.
Montana and Elway played in the same passing era, meaning the rules did not benefit one more than the other. Elway had a career 79 rating. Joe Montana had a career 92 rating. By comparison, Elway had 226 interceptions to 139 interceptions for Montana, so Elway completed about 100 more passes to the other team. TDs? 300 to 273. Almost the same. Elway was not surrounded by chumps. 2 Hall of Fame members, other than Elway and a
ton of Ring of Honor members (All Pros) who played with Elway.
Elway was a better version of Brett Favre - talented but overconfident in his arm and not always accurate. He threw for a lot of yards, and a lot of interceptions. Montana prided himself on accuracy, but did not have Elway's talent. In the end, Elway would never have won a title but for TD. Montana is remembered for a perfect pass to his TE to vault the Niners to the title. Elway, prior to TD on the roster, was remembered for staggering beat-downs in multiple title games (one of which thankfully removed the '85 Pats from infamy).
Greatness eventually wins. The cast around Montana was better, but what happened when he went to KC? The team went from one and done to the conference championship game.
So if greatness is measured on passing yards, clear advantage to Elway. On interceptions? Elway. On talent? Elway. On every other empirical assessment that governs QB comparisons, including titles? Montana, hands down.