Printer-Friendly
Email this Story
Post a Comment (2)
PART 2: Top 20 QBs of All-Time
Will Brady and/or Favre move up?
Will any of our three active players, Peyton Manning, Brett Favre, or Tom Brady, move up the list compared to how they perform during the rest of the playoffs this year?
Now that Peyton Manning and the Colts are done for the year, Peyton won’t move from where I have him at #9. If he would either make it to another Super Bowl next year, or continue to play at a very high level (like he has the past few years) for 2 or 3 more years, then I think he would have to move up, eventually.
But, with Favre and Brady both still ‘alive’, I think they both have a chance of moving up the list by the time the playoffs and the Super Bowl are over.
If Favre makes it to another Super Bowl, I don’t think that alone would move him up higher, but if he won another Super Bowl and beat the Patriots, I think he would have to move up. His resume would then read: 2 Super Bowl wins, including an upset one over the juggernaut Patriots of this season, along with his record 442 TD passes and 61,657 career passing yards.
If Brady wins another Super Bowl, he could shoot up near the top of the list. He would have four Super Bowl wins in four tries. A strong argument could be made that if he wins a fourth, he should move up to #2, and the list could read: #1. Joe Montana, #2. Tom Brady, #3 Terry Bradshaw… Others might argue that Johnny Unitas and Bart Starr should be in the top 3 or 4.
I decided to post all of the stats that I compared when compiling my list of The Top 20 QBs of All-Time last month. Note: I have made a few changes at the bottom of the list.
The criteria I considered when making the list were: Super Bowl Appearances, Super Bowl Wins, Performance in Super Bowls, Career Passer Rating, Career TD Passes, Career TDs rushing, & Career Passing Yardage. In certain instances, I noted in parentheses if players won additional championships before the Super Bowl was started or Canadian Football League championships (ex. Warren Moon).
SBA SBW CPR PTD RTD CPY
1. Joe Montana 4 4 92.3 273 20 40,551
2. Terry Bradshaw 4 4 70.9 212 32 27,989
3. Steve Young 1 1 96.8 232 43 33,124
4. John Elway 5 2 79.9 300 33 51,475
5. Johnny Unitas 2(+2) 2(+2) 78.2 290 13 40,239
6. Tom Brady 3 3 92.9 197 5 26,370
7. Bart Starr 2(+3) 2(+3) 80.5 152 15 24,718
8. Brett Favre 2 1 85.7 442 13 61,657
9. Peyton Manning 1 1 94.7 306 16 41,626
10. Dan Marino 1 0 86.4 420 9 61,361
11. Troy Aikman 3 3 81.6 165 9 32,942
12. Bob Griese 3 2 81.5 192 7 25,092
13. Warren Moon 0(5) 0(5) 80.9 291 22 50,000
14. Dan Fouts 0 0 80.2 254 13 43,040
15. Roger Staubach 4 2 83.4 153 20 22,700
16. Jim Kelley 4 0 86.6 237 7 35,467
17. Otto Graham 0(+4) 0(+4) 86.6 174 44 23,580
19. Randall Cunningham 0 81.5 207 35 29,979
Just Missed the list:
Kurt Warner 2 1 93.2 152 3 24,008
Joe Namath 1 1 65.0 173 7 27,663
Jim Plunkett 2 2 67.5 164 14 25,882
Sonny Jurgensen 0 0 82.6 255 15 32,224




Steve Young's CPR is 96.8 (still good though), not 112.8. The 112.8 rating was one specific year (1994).
I think putting Young at No3 all time is a bit generous considering that he essentially played on a pre-built all-star team and only managed 1 SuperBowl appearance/victory.
Also, Phil Simms didnt really appear in or win 2 SuperBowl's due to injury (unless that is what your asterick is suppose to mean)
Posted by lytmup
Report Offensive Content
You're right. Steve Young's career passer rating should read 96.8. Thanks for catching that.
Yes, the asterisk by Phil Simms was meant to note that. It was Jeff Hostetler who played during the entire 1990 playoffs, including defeating the 49ers in the NFC Championship game, and then also defeating the Bills in Super Bowl XXV.
Posted by S_Rlitzinger
Report Offensive Content
You must be logged in to post a comment.