carolinatony
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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.One reasonably objective way to judge top Qbs is by playoff victory totals as starters (or coming off the bench to lead a team to victory), with Sbs victories as a tie breaker. That shows that a Qb was the head of a winning organization over a long period of time. It does not penalize a QB for not "winning the big one", but rewards him for doing so. Since the merger in 1970, here are the QB playoff victory standings:
1. Montana 16 (4 Sb wins)
2. Bradshaw 14 (4 Sbs wins)
3. Elway 14 (2 Sb wins, 3 Sb losses)
4. Brady 12 (3 Sb wins)
5. Staubach 12 (2 Sb wins, 2 Sb losses)
6. Aikman 11 (3 Sb wins)
7. Favre 11 (1 Sb win, 1 Sb loss)
8. Kelly 9 (4 Sb losses)
9. Plunkett 8 (2 Sb wins)
10. Young 8 (1 Sb win)
11. Marino 8 (1 Sb loss)
12. (tie) Stabler 7 (1 Sb win)
Manning 7 (1 Sb win)
14. Theisman 6 (1 Sb win, 1 Sb loss)
15. Simms 6 (1 Sb win)
16. Tarkenton 6 (3 Sb losses)
17. Danny White 6
18. Warner 5 (1 Sb win, 1 Sb loss)
19. Roethlisberger 5 (1 Sb win)
20. McNair 5 (1 Sb loss)
So much of this is gut feel and that's as good a way as any to try to be more objective. Or, you could go by the Passer Rating. I looked at all of the SB Era HOF QB's with Ratings above 80 and at the "usual suspects" among active players with the same; i threw in their numbers of regular season games played and SB Rings held. Most interestingly, there are only two QB's in the TOP FIVE on BOTH your list and my list: Montana and Brady.
Young 96.8 (169 Regular Season Games, one SB ring as starter)
Manning 94.4 (144, one)
Montana 92.3 (192, four)
Brady 88.4 (96, three)
Marino 86.4 (242, zero)
McNabb 85.2 (104, zero)
Favre 85.0 (241, one)
Kelly 84.4 (160, zero)
Staubach 83.4 (131, two)
Dawson 82.6 (211, one)
Jurgenson 82.6 (218, zero--played on 1960 NFL Champion, but not as starter)
Aikman 81.6 (165, three)
Moon 80.9 (208, zero)
Tarkenton 80.4 (246, zero)
Fouts 80.2 (181, zero)
One reasonably objective way to judge top Qbs is by playoff victory totals as starters (or coming off the bench to lead a team to victory), with Sbs victories as a tie breaker. That shows that a Qb was the head of a winning organization over a long period of time. It does not penalize a QB for not "winning the big one", but rewards him for doing so. Since the merger in 1970, here are the QB playoff victory standings:
1. Montana 16 (4 Sb wins)
2. Bradshaw 14 (4 Sbs wins)
3. Elway 14 (2 Sb wins, 3 Sb losses)
4. Brady 12 (3 Sb wins)
5. Staubach 12 (2 Sb wins, 2 Sb losses)
6. Aikman 11 (3 Sb wins)
7. Favre 11 (1 Sb win, 1 Sb loss)
8. Kelly 9 (4 Sb losses)
9. Plunkett 8 (2 Sb wins)
10. Young 8 (1 Sb win)
11. Marino 8 (1 Sb loss)
12. (tie) Stabler 7 (1 Sb win)
Manning 7 (1 Sb win)
13. McNabb 7 (1 Sb loss)
14. Theisman 6 (1 Sb win, 1 Sb loss)
15. Simms 6 (1 Sb win)
16. Tarkenton 6 (3 Sb losses)
17. Danny White 6
18. Warner 5 (1 Sb win, 1 Sb loss)
19. Roethlisberger 5 (1 Sb win)
20. McNair 5 (1 Sb loss)
1. Montana
2. Brady
3. Manning
4. Marino
5. Elway
6. Young
Yes. Because Jim Plunkett was/is a better QB than Peyton Manning.
And Bradshaw is the 2nd best QB ever?
How can you have ANY top QB list without Unitas? I know this is a post merger list, so shouldn't that make this DQ'd right off the bat?
Bradshaw was the Qb of the greatest team in NFL History since the merger, won 4 Sbs, and 2 Sb MVPs. He was a fanstastic big game performer. Those who downgrade Bradshaw do so because they seem offended by his regular season "statistics", as I'm sure a fan of Manning would feel. However, that betrays a lack of hsitorical understanding about the Qb position and how difficult it was to accumulate fantasy stats prior to 1978. Plunkett, like Manning, was the #1 overall pick, and led his team to 2 SB wins in a 4 year span, in one of which he was MVP. When the money was on the table, he won games, and that is the definition of good Qb'ing. Manning's career is a work in progress, not a finished product. If he wins 2 more playoff games in his career he will pass Plunkett on this list, and he is in prime position to do so. As for Unitas, Unitas' prime was in another era, before the merger, when the game and the environment around the game were so different as to not be comparable. It would be an exercise in historical elitism to begin including Otto Graham and Sid Gillman. Nobody can compare those players to todays QBs. Although Unitas' career overlapped into the 1970s, he was a shadow of himself. An interesting list to produce, to quell your unease, would be a pre-1970 list, which would include Otto Graham, Johnny U., Bart Starr, Roman Gabriel and Benny Friedman et. al. Have fun putting that one together...
Vey interesting. The only problem I have with "passer rating" is that it penalizes Qbs who played prior to 1978, when the downfield contact rules were changed and the passing game was opened up. As I'm sure you know (since 1974), that era was one of brutal play in the defensive backfield, contact downfield was legal until the ball was in the air, offensive holding was much more strict, late hits on the Qb were par for the course, and your team was lost unless it had a 6'2'' 230 lb fullback battering ram like Sam Bam Csonka, Van Eghen etc. So passer rating is really only a relevant stat from 1978 onward. That's why I left it out. This way all time greats like Staubach and Bradshaw are given their just due... BTW, given that, isn't amazing that Staubach still shows up on your list? If I were making a list based purely on gut feeling, I would have Staubach and Montana tied at #1. Staubach is constantly overlooked, but he was THE classic NFL QB...
| 18 | 529 |
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| 18 | 434 |
| 13 | 4K |
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