Tobias, I posted a legitimate argument for there being a skillset that you call magic. Your response didn't address any of it. You oversimplified the topic, referred to it again as magic, attacked my intelligence, and threw the whole thing out. I don't think you're so limited in your ability to debate that you can't address it, which leads me to believe that you're aware that your argument is shaky at best. And since I never expect you to give an inch in this or any debate, I will take that for what it is - the most I can expect to accomplish in a debate with you on this topic. I will happily take that small victory, unless you want to address the points I made.I will address your marino argument, though. I do agree that marino was special in that he was able to put up huge numbers compared to his contemporaries. In a copycat league, the fact that nobody successfully copied marinos success right away is impressive. But marino was also the first to really take advantage of the new passing rules that opened up the game. He got to play new rules offense against teams that played old rules defense. And that worked well in the regular season, when teams didn't have time to completely reengineer themselves to beat his style. But in the playoffs, that's all teams do, and it worked. To me, that is a clear sign that he was exploiting the exploitable defenses and rules, but that he was not able to adapt to teams that closed those holes. The same can be said for montana, who led the first west coast offense. But montana was able to adapt to the great teams of his era. Brady and manning were two of the first to really own the modern check with me offense. They ran different offensive styles, but both of them were asked to make constant adjustments. Harrison was particularly adept at changing his route based on the coverage in moores system, and manning and harrison had a great thing going. Contrast that with the mike martz style of making the defense adjust to your playcalling, which was beatable with physical corner play, pass rush, and chucking the running back. brady, manning and warner all put up big numbers for their respective teams with innovations, just like marino and montana did.The fascinating thing about how brady did it is that he evolved based on his teammates. When he had a bunch of below average smurfs, he ran a lot of screens, double screens, quick slants, and short plays. When he got deep threats, particularly moss, he changed his game to a deep passing, making time in the pocket game. When he added these tight ends, he changed his game again and is now more of an intermediate pocket passer. The ability to adapt to different coaches and different styles of offense sets him apart from manning/moore, brees/payton, marino/shula, montana/walsh, and warner/martz. Brady/belichick isn't based on a single, evolving system of play with relative stability in the offensive coaching staff. I think you're the one who sees these things as "magic". You seem to ignore the details of how these guys played, oversimplify the arguments of your opposition and just say marino good, brady not as good. There is no single rating of a quarterback that says good or bad. You need to be good at a lot of different things to achieve sustained excellence, and whether you understand them or not, there are other things you need to do differently to win in the playoffs. The fact that you dont seem to understand that playoff football is, in fact, different, suggests that maybe you just don't understand the game well enough for me to spend further time on this.If you are interested in discussing the playoff skillset, let me ask this: when manning threw four picks in a loss to the patriots in 2003/4, then followed with just three points in 2004/5 after setting the nfl td record, was it just bad luck? Or did something change from game to game? I contend that the 2003 patriots exploited his defense reading, and baited him into bad throws, leading manning to play more conservative, gunshy football in 2004. I contend that, while he had beaten the crap out of denver and kc, he tried and failed to adapt to a different playoff defense he faced. And I contend that that made him exploitable from year to year, which was a substantial flaw in his game. If you just lump all that under skip bayless fairy dust, then we aren't going to get very far