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If Tom Brady wants to be the best Quarterback of all time, he needs to (1 Viewer)

yeah, and as has already been mentioned, in 3 of those 4 sb winning years montana's d gave up an average, like, 8 or 9 ppg in the postseason just to help him get to the sb so he could get all the credit

 
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Tom Brady was named Super Bowl MVP for the third time in his career on Sunday night, an award that came with a big red truck as a prize.

Judging from paparazzi photos of Brady over the years, he’s not lacking for transportation options to shuttle him around in his day-to-day life so he might find another use for this new set of wheels. During an interview on the Dennis & Callahan show on WEEI Tuesday, Brady talked about the “play of our season” that cornerback Malcolm Butler made to intercept Russell Wilson late in the fourth quarter and was asked if he might reward the undrafted rookie with the keys to the truck.

“I would love to give him the truck. I would love to do that. I’m going to figure out how to make that work,” Brady said.

There are procedural steps associated with gifting a car to someone, although we’d imagine that Brady has a few lawyers and accountants he can ring up to make sure that things are handled as well as Butler, who has already taken the Disney trip normally associated with the Super Bowl MVP, handled his moment in the spotlight on Sunday.
 
Super Bowl 16:

Montana goes 14/22 for 157 yards and a TD. 49ers defense sacks Ken Anderson 5 times, picks him off once inside the 49ers 10yd line, picks him off a 2nd time to start a FG drive on the Bengals 22yd line, has a huge 4th down goalline stand and forces a Collinsworth fumble inside the 49ers 10yd line. Just before halftime, 49ers kick off to the Bengals who fumble it with 5 seconds to go in the half, giving the 49ers a gift 3 points. All this in a 5pt game, albeit the final TD by Cincinnati came very late. The 49ers defense and the Bengals' largess played a monster role in that outcome.

Super Bowl 19:

Montana played outstanding, going 24/35 for 331 yards, 3 passing and 1 rushing TD. 49ers also rushed for 211 yards and had the ball for over 37 minutes. Marino, quick release and all, was sacked 4 times and picked off twice.

Super Bowl 23:

Probably Montana's best SB considering the other team didn't completely crap the bed. Montana went 23/36 for 357 yards and 2 TDs, the latter the famous John Taylor come-from-behind TD. The Bengals played SF tough for the most part, sacking Montana 3 times and recovering two forced fumbles. Esiason had a poor game, going 11/25 for 144 yards, one pick and sacked 5 times, but the rest of his team covered for him for the first 57 minutes.

Super Bowl 24:

Montana was awesome...against a D that didn't bother to show up *at all*. The Broncos were letting guys run free through the secondary, particularly Jerry Rice. So freaking embarrassing. Elway and crew were completely overwhelmed against that great 49ers D. That 89 team was one of history's best.

---

And when the Montana 49ers had to face some tough defenses in the post-season:

1985: 3 points in a loss in the Meadowlands (Hi, Bill Belichick! How's that first year as a D-Coordinator?).

1986: 3 points in an obliteration in the Meadowlands (Hey, Bill!). Montana got KTFO by Jim Burt on an LT pick 6.

1987: 3 points at home before getting benched for Young. Threw a pick 6. This 49ers team was the title favorite heading into January.

1990: 13 points at home in a bad-beat loss to the Giants (Bill, you again?) when Craig fumbled late, after Montana left the game injured.

---

The point of all this is that while Montana's SB record is impeccable, he had help. A lot of help. Either in the form of his defense, his running game, the other team laying a giant egg or a combination of all 3. How would he have done against the Pats' opponents is anyone's guess. How would Brady have done against the those defenseless Dolphins or Broncos and the imploding '81 Bengals is also anyone's guess. And both Montana and Brady have had some bad playoff exits. So the comparison between the two is a lot closer than die-hard Montana fans want to admit.
This is a great post. Thanks for taking the time to put it together. Good stuff, and a nice trip down memory lane for me.Montana was one of my favorite quarterbacks from the moment he sent the Cowboys packing and ended their little mini-dynasty. And your stats match my recollections of Montana back then. When he played a good defense, he really didn't seem to rise to the occasion and play all that well. He was very fortunate to get some pretty crappy defenses to go up against in the Superbowls. The Bengals, Broncos and Dolphins weren't scaring anyone, I can assure you of that. The AFC were lap dogs back then, and if you listened to any John Madden broadcast in the 80's at some point during the game he'd attribute the disparity in conferences to the lack of any good defenses in the AFC. Heck, just look at what Jim McMahon did to the Pats in 86, or what Doug Williams did to Denver a couple years later. I remember going to take a dump in the second quarter and by the time I got back to the game the Redskins had scored 4 touchdowns. True story.

Montana was great quarterback and a cool customer to boot, but he also had some good fortune along the way. He had the best wide receiver to ever set foot on the planet, and let's face it - those Superbowl defenses he played against weren't murderer's row. And as pointed out above, when he did face tough defenses within the NFC conference playoffs his track record was actually pretty bad.

Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.

I watched both QB's - I pulled for both QB's - and at this point I think I can fairly say that after Brady's 4th quarter performance against Seattle last Sunday, he has officially overtaken Montana as the greatest of all-time. And with a good two or three years left - he's going to put some distance between the two before it's all said and done. And Brady did all this in the salary cap era, and without much of a supporting cast beside him on offense. I'm pretty certain we will never see another quarterback get to 9 Championship Games and 6 Superbowls. Not in our lifetimes.

 
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Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.

 
Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
Part 1 - tough to do much in 35 seconds. And should've been PI against Moss.

 
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Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time.
This part just isn't true - and I'm not saying it to down play Brady in anyway.

The lack of a salary cap both helped and hurt the Niners because every team (including their main competition was able to remain in tact for longer periods of time).

While the Super Bowl matchups may have been easier (although how great were Philly, Carolina and the NYGs? All were pretty mediocre teams in the grand scheme of Super Bowl teams) the road to the Super Bowl was far far tougher for Montana than it ever was for Brady. During the Pats run we've had a few good Pitt teams and an occasional good Baltimore pop up, but their biggest rivals were the Colts who were a very good but not great overall team and had a QB that's an all-time great but considered to be a playoff choker.

The NFC was stacked at the top during the Niner's dynasty period (80s-90s): Dallas, NYG, Chicago, Philly, Washington - you had some of the all-time great defenses there and plenty of stars on offense.

Both Brady and Montana are two of the greatest QBs in NFL history - why do we need to (unfairly) knock one down to build the other up?
 
Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
And those Giant teams were not "great" defenses - the '07 team surely played great in that Super Bowl, but the Giants were a 9-7 team that year. Their defense finished 17th in points allowed and 7th in yards.

In 2011 the Giants defense ranked 25th in points and 27th in yards, that's actually terrible not great.

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.

 
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Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
And those Giant teams were not "great" defenses - the '07 team surely played great in that Super Bowl, but the Giants were a 9-7 team that year. Their defense finished 17th in points allowed and 7th in yards.

In 2011 the Giants defense ranked 25th in points and 27th in yards, that's actually terrible not great.
Looking at regular season defensive points allows can be misleading because it doesn't factor in defensive players returning from injuries. If I recall, the Giants had some key defensive injuries early in those seasons (who were back later that year and for the playoffs), that made their regular season defense look worse than it really was?

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2007: 14, 17, 20, 14

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2011: 2, 20, 17, 17

Those look much better than the 17th and 25th ranked defenses in points allowed.

 
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This just in: Tom Brady gives MVP Chevy truck to Malcolm Butler.

Super Bowl hero Malcolm Butler is "overwhelmed by Tom Brady's generosity" ... after hearing that Tom wants to give him the truck he got for being named the MVP of the big game.

Butler, of course, made the interception that sealed the Patriots' victory -- and it's been hailed as one of the greatest plays in Super Bowl history. Still, Brady was named MVP of the game and was awarded the 2015 Chevy Colorado truck that goes along with the honor.

But Brady went on the radio Tuesday morning and insisted he'd LOVE to give it to Malcolm -- saying the play was nothing short of "incredible."

We spoke with Butler's agent, Derek Simpson, who tells us ... Butler has definitely heard what Brady said ... and he couldn't be more fired up about it!

"He's overwhelmed by Brady's generosity," Simpson says ... "He needs the truck. He loves the truck. He wants the truck -- and red's his favorite color!"

Simpson says Malcolm went to Disney World after the game -- and hasn't had a chance to discuss the arrangement yet ... but says he's confident they'll be able to work something out.

"Malcolm is keeping his fingers crossed. He knows there's no commitment ... he'll be ok if it doesn't work out. But if this happens... he realizes how gracious this would be of Tom."
 
Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
And those Giant teams were not "great" defenses - the '07 team surely played great in that Super Bowl, but the Giants were a 9-7 team that year. Their defense finished 17th in points allowed and 7th in yards.

In 2011 the Giants defense ranked 25th in points and 27th in yards, that's actually terrible not great.
Looking at regular season defensive points allows can be misleading because it doesn't factor in defensive players returning from injuries. If I recall, the Giants had some key defensive injuries early in those seasons (who were back later that year and for the playoffs), that made their regular season defense look worse than it really was?

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2007: 14, 17, 20, 14

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2011: 2, 20, 17, 17

Those look much better than the 17th and 25th ranked defenses in points allowed.
Spin it however you want. The Giants did not great defenses that year and a handful of games played in adverse weather conditions (Green Bay) or against a choking team (Atlanta) doesn't change that.

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
This is cherry picking for Montana. He has 20 TDs and 5 INTs in the games used to calculate this number and 25 TDs and 16 INTs in the ignored playoff games. That's why they picked 1989 because it includes his best playoff run and ignores the bad ones.

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
I'm not a DVOA expert, but anything that ranks Mark Sanchez as the 5th best immediately becomes suspect. :lol:

But seriously, maybe some stats guy can determine the confidence intervals after factoring in the different playoff game sample sizes for each player?

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
This is cherry picking for Montana. He has 20 TDs and 5 INTs in the games used to calculate this number and 25 TDs and 16 INTs in the ignored playoff games. That's why they picked 1989 because it includes his best playoff run and ignores the bad ones.
I can't say for sure why they picked 1989 as the starting point but I would assume that it's because the needed data for DVOA and DYAR isn't available before that, not because they're going to bat for Montana. The people that put that stuff together aren't interested in pushing narratives or winning arguments.

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
I'm not a DVOA expert, but anything that ranks Mark Sanchez as the 5th best immediately becomes suspect. :lol:

But seriously, maybe some stats guy can determine the confidence intervals after factoring in the different playoff game sample sizes for each player?
Yeah the sample size is small for Sanchez. But he was pretty good in the playoffs back when his Jets teammates got him there. It's his contributions in getting his teams to the playoffs in the first place that are the problem.

 
Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
And those Giant teams were not "great" defenses - the '07 team surely played great in that Super Bowl, but the Giants were a 9-7 team that year. Their defense finished 17th in points allowed and 7th in yards.

In 2011 the Giants defense ranked 25th in points and 27th in yards, that's actually terrible not great.
Looking at regular season defensive points allows can be misleading because it doesn't factor in defensive players returning from injuries. If I recall, the Giants had some key defensive injuries early in those seasons (who were back later that year and for the playoffs), that made their regular season defense look worse than it really was?

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2007: 14, 17, 20, 14

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2011: 2, 20, 17, 17

Those look much better than the 17th and 25th ranked defenses in points allowed.
Spin it however you want. The Giants did not great defenses that year and a handful of games played in adverse weather conditions (Green Bay) or against a choking team (Atlanta) doesn't change that.
Well, stats can be spun by anyone to prove their point.

https://twitter.com/FO_ScottKacsmar/status/562773391896485888

According to the DVOA, Mark Sanchez is the 5th best playoff QB. If he was so awesome, why did the Jets release him?

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
I'm not a DVOA expert, but anything that ranks Mark Sanchez as the 5th best immediately becomes suspect. :lol:

But seriously, maybe some stats guy can determine the confidence intervals after factoring in the different playoff game sample sizes for each player?
Yeah the sample size is small for Sanchez. But he was pretty good in the playoffs back when his Jets teammates got him there. It's his contributions in getting his teams to the playoffs in the first place that are the problem.
I guess that's why we need confidence intervals or something to account for the differing sample sizes of playoff games for each QB.

 
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Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
And those Giant teams were not "great" defenses - the '07 team surely played great in that Super Bowl, but the Giants were a 9-7 team that year. Their defense finished 17th in points allowed and 7th in yards.

In 2011 the Giants defense ranked 25th in points and 27th in yards, that's actually terrible not great.
Looking at regular season defensive points allows can be misleading because it doesn't factor in defensive players returning from injuries. If I recall, the Giants had some key defensive injuries early in those seasons (who were back later that year and for the playoffs), that made their regular season defense look worse than it really was?

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2007: 14, 17, 20, 14

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2011: 2, 20, 17, 17

Those look much better than the 17th and 25th ranked defenses in points allowed.
Spin it however you want. The Giants did not great defenses that year and a handful of games played in adverse weather conditions (Green Bay) or against a choking team (Atlanta) doesn't change that.
Well, stats can be spun by anyone to prove their point.

https://twitter.com/FO_ScottKacsmar/status/562773391896485888

According to the DVOA, Mark Sanchez is the 5th best playoff QB. If he was so awesome, why did the Jets release him?
You're stretching. One thing has absolutely nothing to do with the other. Some one called the two Giant Super Bowl teams great defenses. Over the course of those two seasons, they were anything but great - especially in 2011 where they were horrendous.

But to answer your question, the Jets released Sanchez because of what he did in the years following those playoff runs (which is turn into a turnover machine) and because it was time to move on. The sample size is extremely small, but Sanchez actually played very well in the playoffs for that two year stretch. At one point (I think Flacco moved ahead of him) he had more road playoff wins than any QB in NFL history. Of course the truly great QBs likely played most of their games at home so that stat is a bit skewed.

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
joe montana 7th, eh?

why you so angry about joe, salty hater?

 
Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
And those Giant teams were not "great" defenses - the '07 team surely played great in that Super Bowl, but the Giants were a 9-7 team that year. Their defense finished 17th in points allowed and 7th in yards.

In 2011 the Giants defense ranked 25th in points and 27th in yards, that's actually terrible not great.
Looking at regular season defensive points allows can be misleading because it doesn't factor in defensive players returning from injuries. If I recall, the Giants had some key defensive injuries early in those seasons (who were back later that year and for the playoffs), that made their regular season defense look worse than it really was?

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2007: 14, 17, 20, 14

Here are the playoff points allowed by the Giants in 2011: 2, 20, 17, 17

Those look much better than the 17th and 25th ranked defenses in points allowed.
Spin it however you want. The Giants did not great defenses that year and a handful of games played in adverse weather conditions (Green Bay) or against a choking team (Atlanta) doesn't change that.
No, but they did have the one thing that stops the NE offense, specifically in 2007, when NE was much more of a downfield passing team. The strong front 4 with pressure on the edge and a big push in the middle collapsing the pocket has always been the best ( maybe only? ) way to truly stop the NE offense.

I remember thinking in '07 that the Giants were the worst possible matchup of any of the NFC teams. Sometimes it doesn't have to be historical greatness. Sometimes, it's just about the matchups.

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
I'm not a DVOA expert, but anything that ranks Mark Sanchez as the 5th best immediately becomes suspect. :lol:

But seriously, maybe some stats guy can determine the confidence intervals after factoring in the different playoff game sample sizes for each player?
Yeah the sample size is small for Sanchez. But he was pretty good in the playoffs back when his Jets teammates got him there. It's his contributions in getting his teams to the playoffs in the first place that are the problem.
so, he's kind of the joe montana of his time?

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
This is cherry picking for Montana. He has 20 TDs and 5 INTs in the games used to calculate this number and 25 TDs and 16 INTs in the ignored playoff games. That's why they picked 1989 because it includes his best playoff run and ignores the bad ones.
I can't say for sure why they picked 1989 as the starting point but I would assume that it's because the needed data for DVOA and DYAR isn't available before that, not because they're going to bat for Montana. The people that put that stuff together aren't interested in pushing narratives or winning arguments.
Looks like they only have estimated DVOA prior to 1989. That being said it would be interesting to see where Montana really stands with their numbers. Unfortunately what we see is wildly skewed for him and probably other QBs who were active prior to 1989.

I did find it interesting that Hostetler is the 2nd best playoff QB of the last 25 years.

 
Does passing DVOA isolate individual QB performance and adjust for things like team offensive line performance?

I noticed that Aikman is #4 on the DVOA list. His offensive line was widely regarded as extremely good, so they would have helped his numbers. I don't think many people would generally put Aikman in their top 5 playoff QBs.

http://sonsofsamhorn.net/topic/81560-dvoa-and-other-topics-in-football-analytics/

Seems that DVOA is kind of a "black box", and no one really knows how it is calculated?

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
I'm not a DVOA expert, but anything that ranks Mark Sanchez as the 5th best immediately becomes suspect. :lol:

But seriously, maybe some stats guy can determine the confidence intervals after factoring in the different playoff game sample sizes for each player?
Yeah the sample size is small for Sanchez. But he was pretty good in the playoffs back when his Jets teammates got him there. It's his contributions in getting his teams to the playoffs in the first place that are the problem.
so, he's kind of the joe montana of his time?
No. First, the DYAR rankings (which may be a better measure of quality of play- here's an explanation of the stats for anyone who's curious) don't think much of his playoff efforts. Second, his sample size is way too small. He's barely above the minimum # of pass attempts for inclusion in the DVOA list.

 
DVOA (Defense-adjusted Value Over Average) calculates a team's success based on the down-and-distance of each play during the season, then calculates how much more or less successful each team is compared to the league average. According to Football Outsiders, DVOA "breaks down every single play of the NFL season to see how much success offensive players achieved in each specific situation compared to the league average in that situation, adjusted for the strength of the opponent. ... Football has one objective -- to get to the end zone -- and two ways to achieve that, by gaining yards and getting first downs. These two goals need to be balanced to determine a player's value or a team's performance."[3]

There is a separate DVOA measurement for special teams, which "compare each kick or punt to the league average for based on the point value of field position at the position of each kick, catch, and return."

 
Using DVOA has always been suspect. It's main use is for cherry picking stats to support a failing argument.

I'd venture to say that a majority of Brady's peers both past and present would say he's the best ever. That's good enough for me. It doesn't have to get complicated.

 
Using DVOA has always been suspect. It's main use is for cherry picking stats to support a failing argument.

I'd venture to say that a majority of Brady's peers both past and present would say he's the best ever. That's good enough for me. It doesn't have to get complicated.
I included DVOA and DYAR. Also, I wasn't attempting to argue that Brady isn't the best ever- he may well be, although I think cross-era arguments in the NFL are impossible. I was just replying to Bostonfred's discussion of cherry-picking and his dismissal of Manning in particular with two objective statistical measures that show the players' individual playoff performances aren't that different. There are others as well- I think Brady has a slightly higher playoff passer rating, Manning has slightly higher completion %, etc.

Again, not trying to denigate Brady, who is amazing. I'm arguing that other players can't be dismissed from the discussion simply because their team's accomplishments don't match up, because a lot of things other than QB play go into winning and losing.

Also- players who don't yet have extensive front office backgrounds are notoriously poor talent evaluators. See the greatest athlete in any American sport in our lifetimes for Exhibit A.

 
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Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
You're wrong on this one. You're smart enough to know it but too busy wagging your bias finger at me. You asked a question. It was your question, not mine, so it's not a biased question.

You asked if manning would have win more championships if we have him "Five seasons each paired with defenses that successful". Yudkin responded with a list of the seasons that manning did in fact have seasons that successful. They're were more than five of them. That's also not biased. It directly answers your question.

But it's also not complete. Because there were many years that manning did not have a top eight defense. It begs the question, would manning have won in those years with a better defense? In order to win those games, the defense would have to allow fewer points than the Colts scored. It doesn't make sense to look at games they won - the results wouldn't change if they had a better defense.

Since I'm answering your question - would manning have won more games if he'd had a better defense - the answer is no, probably not. if you go through every single season that manning went to the playoffs, he either a) had a top eight defense, or b) ended up scoring 17 or fewer in a loss. The only exception is the season that he did actually won a title.

And again, since I'm answering your question, it is absolutely relevant that the Colts defense carried manning to that title. Not because I'm a hater, but because your question is whether manning would have done better with better defensive performances. And it turns out that he did get a great defensive performance in 2006, and it was enough to carry him to a title despite his own poor performance. Which answers the last part of your question - the implication that the only reason he didn't win more rings was his defense's poor performance. when it turns out that the main reason he won his only ring was hours defense's outstanding performance.

So that's the answer to your question. It is a complete answer. I don't need to talk about Brady. I don't need to talk about dvoa or other statistics. I don't need to talk about how many points the Colts scored against the Broncos in the first round of the playoffs ten years ago. I'm just answering the question you asked. if it seems biased its just because the facts suck for you.

 
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
You're wrong on this one. You're smart enough to know it but too busy wagging your bias finger at me. You asked a question. It was your question, not mine, so it's not a biased question.

You asked if manning would have win more championships if we have him "Five seasons each paired with defenses that successful". Yudkin responded with a list of the seasons that manning did in fact have seasons that successful. They're were more than five of them. That's also not biased. It directly answers your question.

But it's also not complete. Because there were many years that manning did not have a top eight defense. It begs the question, would manning have won in those years with a better defense? In order to win those games, the defense would have to allow fewer points than the Colts scored. It doesn't make sense to look at games they won - the results wouldn't change if they had a better defense.

Since I'm answering your question - would manning have won more games if he'd had a better defense - the answer is no, probably not. if you go through every single season that manning went to the playoffs, he either a) had a top eight defense, or b) ended up scoring 17 or fewer in a loss. The only exception is the season that he did actually won a title.

And again, since I'm answering your question, it is absolutely relevant that the Colts defense carried manning to that title. Not because I'm a hater, but because your question is whether manning would have done better with better defensive performances. And it turns out that he did get a great defensive performance in 2006, and it was enough to carry him to a title despite his own poor performance. Which answers the last part of your question - the implication that the only reason he didn't win more rings was his defense's poor performance. when it turns out that the main reason he won his only ring was hours defense's outstanding performance.

So that's the answer to your question. It is a complete answer. I don't need to talk about Brady. I don't need to talk about dvoa or other statistics. I don't need to talk about how many points the Colts scored against the Broncos in the first round of the playoffs ten years ago. I'm just answering the question you asked. if it seems biased its just because the facts suck for you.
Yudkin answered my question just fine, and I thanked him for it. Everything you've posted since then has been cherry-picked nonsense with arbitrary benchmarks like "17 or fewer points" crafted with the goal of making Manning look bad instead of looking at the complete body of work of the player only and ignoring the outsize importance of things like D/ST touchdowns and other things that often make the difference between wins and losses in the playoffs. I responded with context-free stats. You chose to ignore them and instead continued with your arbitrary benchmarks and silly narratives. I don't really feel like indulging your Manning hatred any further, although I do admire your dedication to it. I'm sure there's plenty of people in Boston willing to listen to you rant about how much Manning sucks for days on end. Tell it to them instead, and everyone wins.

 
Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
Congrats - I knew someone would bring that up.Pretty good example of losing the forest through the trees... I don't really consider desperation possessions like that, where there's less than a 5% win probability, to be a reasonable standard to focus on.

 
Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time.
This part just isn't true - and I'm not saying it to down play Brady in anyway.

The lack of a salary cap both helped and hurt the Niners because every team (including their main competition was able to remain in tact for longer periods of time).

While the Super Bowl matchups may have been easier (although how great were Philly, Carolina and the NYGs? All were pretty mediocre teams in the grand scheme of Super Bowl teams) the road to the Super Bowl was far far tougher for Montana than it ever was for Brady. During the Pats run we've had a few good Pitt teams and an occasional good Baltimore pop up, but their biggest rivals were the Colts who were a very good but not great overall team and had a QB that's an all-time great but considered to be a playoff choker.

The NFC was stacked at the top during the Niner's dynasty period (80s-90s): Dallas, NYG, Chicago, Philly, Washington - you had some of the all-time great defenses there and plenty of stars on offense.

Both Brady and Montana are two of the greatest QBs in NFL history - why do we need to (unfairly) knock one down to build the other up?
that's entirely your perception.

I think brady has gotten plenty of 'building' up w/o mention of another qb, and some random guy started this thread to compare great qb, so they're getting compared.

if we point out the bloated payroll or great defenses that helped montana out, that's not knocking anyone down --- that's just reality, so sry if you got disillusioned in the course of discussion.

there's some payroll info earlier in the thread for 1990, so I'll just look at that --- feel free to research other years if you want.

niners - 27m (7m higher than 2nd team)

bears, wash, philly, nyg ~20m

dallas - 16m (24th/28)

rest of niners division:

saints 14m (27th/28)

rams 17m (20th/28)

falcons 16m (23rd/28)

so htf you think a lack of a cap hurt them as much as helped them I have no ####### idea

I do, however, think that's a fair point about beating some stacked nfc teams to get to the sb to play some chump afc team, but every poster in this thread who backs montana does it on the back of 4-0 INSUPERBOWLZOMG!!

I'll take a look at those 4 magic sb years -- he was 4-7 in the playoffs in his other 10 yrs.

1981 - pretty strong, beat giants + cowboys while throwing 5 td to 4 picks en route to sb vs bengals in which montana was 14/22 for 157/1

1984 - beat giants + bears this year while throwing 4 td to 5 picks with a defense allowing 3 + 0 points, en route to sb vs miami in which his defense allowed 16

1988 - beat minny + bears this year with his defense allowing 9 + 3 points en route to sb vs bengals again in which his defense allowed 9

1989 - beat minny + rams with his defense allowing 13 + 3 en route to sb vs broncos where his defense allowed 10

but joe montana 4-0 INSUPERBOWLZOMG!!

 
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Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
And those Giant teams were not "great" defenses - the '07 team surely played great in that Super Bowl, but the Giants were a 9-7 team that year. Their defense finished 17th in points allowed and 7th in yards.

In 2011 the Giants defense ranked 25th in points and 27th in yards, that's actually terrible not great.
That 2011 Giants team came together and got healthy, and by the time the playoffs came around that defense was playing at a very high level. Same with 2007. Both of those two defenses played better in the SB than any of San Fran's opponents. And it's not even close.People have very short memories. When I get grief from a Giants fan about "owning" the Pats, I always acknowledge first and foremost what a great defense they had. The pressure they put on Brady in 2007 was extraordinary. They deserved to win that game.

 
.

there's some payroll info earlier in the thread for 1990, so I'll just look at that --- feel free to research other years if you want.

niners - 27m (7m higher than 2nd team)

bears, wash, philly, nyg ~20m

dallas - 16m (24th/28)

rest of niners division:

saints 14m (27th/28)

rams 17m (20th/28)

falcons 16m (23rd/28)

so htf you think a lack of a cap hurt them as much as helped them I have no ####### idea
The point of "no cap" is that all of the top teams were able to be kept together longer. I'm not talking about one year. Teams stayed together longer in tact making the playoffs a tougher road for the top teams.

I'm addressing only certain points. I think both Brady and Montana are/were great. Who was better doesn't really matter and the stats you throw out don't matter all that much since it was a much different game back then versus now.

 
Montana was great, but Brady had stiffer competition and performed better over a longer period of time. And think about this... In the last three Superbowls, against some great defenses, Brady led his team to go ahead touchdowns on the Pats' last possession in each of those 3 games. You'd never know it though.
This is incorrect.

NE/NYG - They got it back with 35 seconds left and a chance to tie, and Brady threw three incompletions and got it sacked once as they turned it over on downs to end the game.

NE/NYG, Part 2 - They got it back with 57 seconds left and a chance to win, and they could only get as far as around midfield.
And those Giant teams were not "great" defenses - the '07 team surely played great in that Super Bowl, but the Giants were a 9-7 team that year. Their defense finished 17th in points allowed and 7th in yards.

In 2011 the Giants defense ranked 25th in points and 27th in yards, that's actually terrible not great.
That 2011 Giants team came together and got healthy, and by the time the playoffs came around that defense was playing at a very high level. Same with 2007. Both of those two defenses played better in the SB than any of San Fran's opponents. And it's not even close.People have very short memories. When I get grief from a Giants fan about "owning" the Pats, I always acknowledge first and foremost what a great defense they had. The pressure they put on Brady in 2007 was extraordinary. They deserved to win that game.
So the stats don't matter - just your perception?

The 2007 team had a great pass rush and a very poor secondary - that Super Bowl game they got to Brady and yes that's why they won. They surely played great that day, but they weren't a great defense. Brady laughed at the though that the Pats would only score 17 against that defense. Remember?

The 2011 team was not a great defense no matter how much your "memory" is superior to everyone else's or how you want to spin that they got healthy.

I never compared them to any team that SF played in the Super Bowl - but the Giants defenses were far better during that era.

 
.

there's some payroll info earlier in the thread for 1990, so I'll just look at that --- feel free to research other years if you want.

niners - 27m (7m higher than 2nd team)

bears, wash, philly, nyg ~20m

dallas - 16m (24th/28)

rest of niners division:

saints 14m (27th/28)

rams 17m (20th/28)

falcons 16m (23rd/28)

so htf you think a lack of a cap hurt them as much as helped them I have no ####### idea
The point of "no cap" is that all of the top teams were able to be kept together longer. I'm not talking about one year. Teams stayed together longer in tact making the playoffs a tougher road for the top teams.

I'm addressing only certain points. I think both Brady and Montana are/were great. Who was better doesn't really matter and the stats you throw out don't matter all that much since it was a much different game back then versus now.
:lmao: :lmao: :lmao:

yeah, the stats don't matter when they work against montana

I noticed you're only addressing certain points

I think in a thread about who the greatest qb is, who was better probably does have some significance, and I'll stand by my mountain of actual evidence for brady, and let you throw everything out and claim montana cuz that's how you want it to be and he was born 20 yrs earlier, or whatever it was -- oh, and also joe montana 4-0 INSUPERBOWLZOMG!!

 
So the stats don't matter - just your perception?

The 2007 team had a great pass rush and a very poor secondary - that Super Bowl game they got to Brady and yes that's why they won. They surely played great that day, but they weren't a great defense. Brady laughed at the though that the Pats would only score 17 against that defense. Remember?
yeah, I remember -- he laughed that their record setting offense could be held to only 17, 'against that defense' was spin added by you to make some convoluted point

maybe you don't remember so well

 
.

there's some payroll info earlier in the thread for 1990, so I'll just look at that --- feel free to research other years if you want.

niners - 27m (7m higher than 2nd team)

bears, wash, philly, nyg ~20m

dallas - 16m (24th/28)

rest of niners division:

saints 14m (27th/28)

rams 17m (20th/28)

falcons 16m (23rd/28)

so htf you think a lack of a cap hurt them as much as helped them I have no ####### idea
The point of "no cap" is that all of the top teams were able to be kept together longer. I'm not talking about one year. Teams stayed together longer in tact making the playoffs a tougher road for the top teams.

I'm addressing only certain points. I think both Brady and Montana are/were great. Who was better doesn't really matter and the stats you throw out don't matter all that much since it was a much different game back then versus now.
:lmao: :lmao: :lmao:

yeah, the stats don't matter when they work against montana

I noticed you're only addressing certain points

I think in a thread about who the greatest qb is, who was better probably does have some significance, and I'll stand by my mountain of actual evidence for brady, and let you throw everything out and claim montana cuz that's how you want it to be and he was born 20 yrs earlier, or whatever it was -- oh, and also joe montana 4-0 INSUPERBOWLZOMG!!
Did I claim it was Montana - must have missed that?

The last comment I made on that issue is that Brady is the greatest (as in most accomplished) QB of all time now.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
.

there's some payroll info earlier in the thread for 1990, so I'll just look at that --- feel free to research other years if you want.

niners - 27m (7m higher than 2nd team)

bears, wash, philly, nyg ~20m

dallas - 16m (24th/28)

rest of niners division:

saints 14m (27th/28)

rams 17m (20th/28)

falcons 16m (23rd/28)

so htf you think a lack of a cap hurt them as much as helped them I have no ####### idea
The point of "no cap" is that all of the top teams were able to be kept together longer. I'm not talking about one year. Teams stayed together longer in tact making the playoffs a tougher road for the top teams.

I'm addressing only certain points. I think both Brady and Montana are/were great. Who was better doesn't really matter and the stats you throw out don't matter all that much since it was a much different game back then versus now.
:lmao: :lmao: :lmao:

yeah, the stats don't matter when they work against montana

I noticed you're only addressing certain points

I think in a thread about who the greatest qb is, who was better probably does have some significance, and I'll stand by my mountain of actual evidence for brady, and let you throw everything out and claim montana cuz that's how you want it to be and he was born 20 yrs earlier, or whatever it was -- oh, and also joe montana 4-0 INSUPERBOWLZOMG!!
Did I claim it was Montana - must have missed that?

The last comment I made on that issue is that Brady is the greatest (as in most accomplished) QB of all time now.
Just curious Dr. O - and I'm not trolling here - did you watch Montana in the 80's?
 
Even with 4 rings now, I don't think he's quite "the best ever". Probably top 2-3. He's certainly the Most Accomplished though.
It's hard to argue for anyone having a better career than Brady at this point. Is he the "best" QB of all time. It's not outlandish to argue that one either way, but it's probably a better argument to say he's the "greatest" (as you say most accomplished) QB of all time.
See above.

I wouldn't say he's "the best" QB because that's far too subjective and I think there are more talented QBs (but I could see some one arguing that). I'd say he's "the greatest" in that he has the most accomplished career.

 
.

there's some payroll info earlier in the thread for 1990, so I'll just look at that --- feel free to research other years if you want.

niners - 27m (7m higher than 2nd team)

bears, wash, philly, nyg ~20m

dallas - 16m (24th/28)

rest of niners division:

saints 14m (27th/28)

rams 17m (20th/28)

falcons 16m (23rd/28)

so htf you think a lack of a cap hurt them as much as helped them I have no ####### idea
The point of "no cap" is that all of the top teams were able to be kept together longer. I'm not talking about one year. Teams stayed together longer in tact making the playoffs a tougher road for the top teams.

I'm addressing only certain points. I think both Brady and Montana are/were great. Who was better doesn't really matter and the stats you throw out don't matter all that much since it was a much different game back then versus now.
:lmao: :lmao: :lmao:

yeah, the stats don't matter when they work against montana

I noticed you're only addressing certain points

I think in a thread about who the greatest qb is, who was better probably does have some significance, and I'll stand by my mountain of actual evidence for brady, and let you throw everything out and claim montana cuz that's how you want it to be and he was born 20 yrs earlier, or whatever it was -- oh, and also joe montana 4-0 INSUPERBOWLZOMG!!
Did I claim it was Montana - must have missed that?

The last comment I made on that issue is that Brady is the greatest (as in most accomplished) QB of all time now.
Just curious Dr. O - and I'm not trolling here - did you watch Montana in the 80's?
Yes.

He was a great quarterback. I think other than the (lack of) mobility, Brady plays very similar to Montana at this point in his career.

I think, like Brady and Manning, Montana was a master of his (Walsh's) offense and that went a long way towards making him great. He was smart, accurate and had tremendous field vision. He also played in an offenses for which he was perfectly suited and of course had some great weapons to work with.

Just about every all time great QB had a great coach (offensive philosophy) and a great supporting cast. It's just the way it is.

 
Here's one thing to keep in mind in the Brady vs. Montana debate: Montana was nearing the end at age 37 and Brady just won a Super Bowl and seems like he can keep playing at a high level.

From a stats perspective, here are their "Age 37" seasons:

Montana regular season: 60.7% completion, 13 TDs, 7 INTs, 194.9 YPG

Montana playoffs: 56.7% completion, 4 TDs, 3 INTs, 233.3 YPG

Brady regular season: 64.1% completion, 33 TDs, 9 INTs, 256.8 YPG

Brady playoffs: 68.9% completion, 10 TDs, 4 INTs, 307 YPG

Different eras explain some of the differences but at age 37, Joe Montana was the very definition of "game manager" (and a mediocre one at that). Brady is still an elite QB.

 
Here's one thing to keep in mind in the Brady vs. Montana debate: Montana was nearing the end at age 37 and Brady just won a Super Bowl and seems like he can keep playing at a high level.

From a stats perspective, here are their "Age 37" seasons:

Montana regular season: 60.7% completion, 13 TDs, 7 INTs, 194.9 YPG

Montana playoffs: 56.7% completion, 4 TDs, 3 INTs, 233.3 YPG

Brady regular season: 64.1% completion, 33 TDs, 9 INTs, 256.8 YPG

Brady playoffs: 68.9% completion, 10 TDs, 4 INTs, 307 YPG

Different eras explain some of the differences but at age 37, Joe Montana was the very definition of "game manager" (and a mediocre one at that). Brady is still an elite QB.
On the surface, we all obviously attribute some of these drastic stat differences to the rules allowing more passing yards.

However, you also can't overlook the fact that the rules for hitting the QB were different. Their bodies were most likely in completely different shape at age 37

 
Here's one thing to keep in mind in the Brady vs. Montana debate: Montana was nearing the end at age 37 and Brady just won a Super Bowl and seems like he can keep playing at a high level.

From a stats perspective, here are their "Age 37" seasons:

Montana regular season: 60.7% completion, 13 TDs, 7 INTs, 194.9 YPG

Montana playoffs: 56.7% completion, 4 TDs, 3 INTs, 233.3 YPG

Brady regular season: 64.1% completion, 33 TDs, 9 INTs, 256.8 YPG

Brady playoffs: 68.9% completion, 10 TDs, 4 INTs, 307 YPG

Different eras explain some of the differences but at age 37, Joe Montana was the very definition of "game manager" (and a mediocre one at that). Brady is still an elite QB.
On the surface, we all obviously attribute some of these drastic stat differences to the rules allowing more passing yards.

However, you also can't overlook the fact that the rules for hitting the QB were different. Their bodies were most likely in completely different shape at age 37
Montana got knocked out of two conference title games (1990, 1993) and a divisional round game (1986).

I remember being in college watching this with an Eagles fan on TV:

http://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/198909240phi.htm

Montana was sacked EIGHT times and generally harassed all game (Reggie White in his prime was something to behold). That Montana took that kind of abuse, yet threw FOUR 4th quarter touchdowns to come from behind on the road and win was incredible...and also a sign that extended greatness after years of abuse is asking a lot.

 
Here's one thing to keep in mind in the Brady vs. Montana debate: Montana was nearing the end at age 37 and Brady just won a Super Bowl and seems like he can keep playing at a high level.

From a stats perspective, here are their "Age 37" seasons:

Montana regular season: 60.7% completion, 13 TDs, 7 INTs, 194.9 YPG

Montana playoffs: 56.7% completion, 4 TDs, 3 INTs, 233.3 YPG

Brady regular season: 64.1% completion, 33 TDs, 9 INTs, 256.8 YPG

Brady playoffs: 68.9% completion, 10 TDs, 4 INTs, 307 YPG

Different eras explain some of the differences but at age 37, Joe Montana was the very definition of "game manager" (and a mediocre one at that). Brady is still an elite QB.
On the surface, we all obviously attribute some of these drastic stat differences to the rules allowing more passing yards.

However, you also can't overlook the fact that the rules for hitting the QB were different. Their bodies were most likely in completely different shape at age 37
Certainly, the rules for hitting the QB were different back then and Montana took some brutal hits over the years. However, it's not like Brady hasn't been under siege during his career at times. Just last year, Brady was sacked more at age 36 than Montana was in any of his seasons.

 
TobiasFunke said:
bostonfred said:
TobiasFunke said:
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
I'm fine with Brady being one of the best of all time; his record speaks for itself and I don't think he is done yet. Heck it wasn't all that long ago I had a hard time convincing people he was better than Bledsoe, then it was manning, now it's Montana. Whatever helps people sleep at night, as I said, Brady's record speaks for itself.

FTR,

A. Brady was far from horrible vs Oak in 2001.

B. Brady was far from horrible vs a very good Pitt def before he got hurt (multiple cheap shots from Flowers iirc)

C. Brady was far from horrible when he lead the Patriots game winning drive vs STL (#1 def iirc).

When winning doesn't matter (no context) you are forced to reach for formulas demonstrating that Mark Sanchez is the 5th best playoff QB and Brady is the 11th.

Context matters, winning matters, 6 Super Bowls and 9 Conference championship games in 13 years matters. NE fans have no problem acknowledging that luck plays a role in winning championships, but so does talent, determination and heart. You want to pretend that P Manning was "just unlucky" last year vs Sea in the SB while Brady was "just lucky" this year. Nonsense :no:

 
TobiasFunke said:
bostonfred said:
TobiasFunke said:
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
I'm fine with Brady being one of the best of all time; his record speaks for itself and I don't think he is done yet. Heck it wasn't all that long ago I had a hard time convincing people he was better than Bledsoe, then it was manning, now it's Montana. Whatever helps people sleep at night, as I said, Brady's record speaks for itself.

FTR,

A. Brady was far from horrible vs Oak in 2001.

B. Brady was far from horrible vs a very good Pitt def before he got hurt (multiple cheap shots from Flowers iirc)

C. Brady was far from horrible when he lead the Patriots game winning drive vs STL (#1 def iirc).

When winning doesn't matter (no context) you are forced to reach for formulas demonstrating that Mark Sanchez is the 5th best playoff QB and Brady is the 11th.

Context matters, winning matters, 6 Super Bowls and 9 Conference championship games in 13 years matters. NE fans have no problem acknowledging that luck plays a role in winning championships, but so does talent, determination and heart. You want to pretend that P Manning was "just unlucky" last year vs Sea in the SB while Brady was "just lucky" this year. Nonsense :no:
I didn't say any of the bolded items you claim I said, nor did I dispute any of the bolded points you've made. Or really anything else in your post. I'm not sure what you're arguing about, to be honest.

And nobody thinks Sanchez is the 5th best playoff QB of all time. I even said that (1) the sample size is far too small to be considered legitimate, and that (2) DVOA is not the be-all end-all of player stats, in fact I said it's the lesser of the two I cited in that post.

You guys really need to relax and enjoy the victory without going into attack mode on every single comment on the internet that you perceive as a slight to Brady, even ones that are merely nods to other great QBs. You are turning into Kobe-type fans when it comes to Brady, and as Boston sports fans I assume you know how annoying and terrible that can be.

 
TobiasFunke said:
bostonfred said:
TobiasFunke said:
bostonfred said:
TobiasFunke said:
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
You're wrong on this one. You're smart enough to know it but too busy wagging your bias finger at me. You asked a question. It was your question, not mine, so it's not a biased question.You asked if manning would have win more championships if we have him "Five seasons each paired with defenses that successful". Yudkin responded with a list of the seasons that manning did in fact have seasons that successful. They're were more than five of them. That's also not biased. It directly answers your question.

But it's also not complete. Because there were many years that manning did not have a top eight defense. It begs the question, would manning have won in those years with a better defense? In order to win those games, the defense would have to allow fewer points than the Colts scored. It doesn't make sense to look at games they won - the results wouldn't change if they had a better defense.

Since I'm answering your question - would manning have won more games if he'd had a better defense - the answer is no, probably not. if you go through every single season that manning went to the playoffs, he either a) had a top eight defense, or b) ended up scoring 17 or fewer in a loss. The only exception is the season that he did actually won a title.

And again, since I'm answering your question, it is absolutely relevant that the Colts defense carried manning to that title. Not because I'm a hater, but because your question is whether manning would have done better with better defensive performances. And it turns out that he did get a great defensive performance in 2006, and it was enough to carry him to a title despite his own poor performance. Which answers the last part of your question - the implication that the only reason he didn't win more rings was his defense's poor performance. when it turns out that the main reason he won his only ring was hours defense's outstanding performance.

So that's the answer to your question. It is a complete answer. I don't need to talk about Brady. I don't need to talk about dvoa or other statistics. I don't need to talk about how many points the Colts scored against the Broncos in the first round of the playoffs ten years ago. I'm just answering the question you asked. if it seems biased its just because the facts suck for you.
Yudkin answered my question just fine, and I thanked him for it. Everything you've posted since then has been cherry-picked nonsense with arbitrary benchmarks like "17 or fewer points" crafted with the goal of making Manning look bad instead of looking at the complete body of work of the player only and ignoring the outsize importance of things like D/ST touchdowns and other things that often make the difference between wins and losses in the playoffs. I responded with context-free stats. You chose to ignore them and instead continued with your arbitrary benchmarks and silly narratives. I don't really feel like indulging your Manning hatred any further, although I do admire your dedication to it. I'm sure there's plenty of people in Boston willing to listen to you rant about how much Manning sucks for days on end. Tell it to them instead, and everyone wins.
this is just irrational ranting. You asked a question. Everything I've posted relates to that question. nothing you've posted here is related to your own question. you even quoted me, quoting your question, before changing the subject entirely. It's not cherry picking stats to look at manning's playoff losses in years that he didn't have a top 8 defense. Your specific question was whether he would have won more superbowls if he'd had a top eight defense. The answer is thatactually, he often did have a top eight defense, and in the years he didn't, he probably wouldn't have advanced further because the Colts didn't score that many points in the games they ended up losing. That's not cherry picking. It's a direct answer to your question.

You're right though - I didn't look at the complete body of work of the player. That's because I'm answering your question . I didn't bring up a lot of things that don't answer your question. For example, kangaroos can't hop backwards. Apologies for not mentioning that, even though it has nothing to do with your question.

And youre right that I ignored your context free stats. That's because they have nothing to do with the question you asked. you started blathering about bradys stats and bemoaning that i didn't discuss games that manning won, and advised me of being back hater because of it - but none of those things have anything to do with your question.

you're welcome to talk about anything you want. But when you ask a question and I answer it, don't change the subject and say I'm the problem. that's bush league.

 
TobiasFunke said:
bostonfred said:
TobiasFunke said:
Separate question- in Brady's four Super Bowl seasons his team ranked 8th, 6th, 1st and and 2nd in scoring defense. They were also 4th in the season before the first of the team's two SB losses during Brady's career. If we gave Manning and Marino five seasons each paired with defenses that successful do you think they would have won more Super Bowls?
look, I'm answering your question. You asked if manning would have won more superbowls if he had a top eight defense like brady did each year. Yudkin answered with all the years that manning actually did have a top eight defense. I then filled in every single year that he didn't have a top eight defense and the number of points he scored. Together, that's literally every single season he made it to the playoffs.so if he didn't win when he had a top right defense, and he scored 17 or fewer points in every single one of his playoff losses the other years, I think the answer is, no, he probably wouldn't have won another title with a better defense.

That's not a "hater perspective". It just seems that way because the facts suck for you.
No, you listed the number of points he scored in the game his team lost, leaving out his performances in the games they won, and then in the season his team didn't lose at all you pointed to a negative statistic. That's cherry-picking, and that's the hater perspective.

These are facts: Passing DVOA of playoff quarterbacks since 1989. Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field, or give Manning extra credit for winning a ring even though he threw 7 picks on the way there. And for good measure, here's playoff DYAR since 1989.

The fact that other quarterbacks are really good and just haven't had as much good fortune or as much defense/special teams support in the playoffs doesn't make Tom Brady any less awesome. He's still really awesome. It's strange that New England fans can't accept that and have instead chosen to turn into the football equivalent of Kobe fans, responding to praise of every other great quarterback in the league with anger or cherry-picked arguments.
I'm fine with Brady being one of the best of all time; his record speaks for itself and I don't think he is done yet. Heck it wasn't all that long ago I had a hard time convincing people he was better than Bledsoe, then it was manning, now it's Montana. Whatever helps people sleep at night, as I said, Brady's record speaks for itself.

FTR,

A. Brady was far from horrible vs Oak in 2001.

B. Brady was far from horrible vs a very good Pitt def before he got hurt (multiple cheap shots from Flowers iirc)

C. Brady was far from horrible when he lead the Patriots game winning drive vs STL (#1 def iirc).

When winning doesn't matter (no context) you are forced to reach for formulas demonstrating that Mark Sanchez is the 5th best playoff QB and Brady is the 11th.

Context matters, winning matters, 6 Super Bowls and 9 Conference championship games in 13 years matters. NE fans have no problem acknowledging that luck plays a role in winning championships, but so does talent, determination and heart. You want to pretend that P Manning was "just unlucky" last year vs Sea in the SB while Brady was "just lucky" this year. Nonsense :no:
I didn't say any of the bolded items you claim I said, nor did I dispute any of the bolded points you've made. Or really anything else in your post. I'm not sure what you're arguing about, to be honest.

And nobody thinks Sanchez is the 5th best playoff QB of all time. I even said that (1) the sample size is far too small to be considered legitimate, and that (2) DVOA is not the be-all end-all of player stats, in fact I said it's the lesser of the two I cited in that post.

You guys really need to relax and enjoy the victory without going into attack mode on every single comment on the internet that you perceive as a slight to Brady, even ones that are merely nods to other great QBs. You are turning into Kobe-type fans when it comes to Brady, and as Boston sports fans I assume you know how annoying and terrible that can be.
You did when you said, Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field

Didn't you?

I am relaxed, couldn't be happier and far from responding to every single comment, most of us (certainly I do) ignore 75-90% of the hater crap guys like you obsessively write. Just like I have done with most of your posts in this thread; I honestly haven't looked but I bet your anti Brady posts far out number my pro Brady posts.

If you are going to post formulas implying that stiffs like Mark Sanchez are much better playoff QBs than Brady or that the NE offense was horrible with Brady on the field in 2001-2002 then I will occasionally chime in and call you on it. Nothing personal here, but rather than lecturing pats fans on how we need to relax, how about you take your own advice and give it a rest for a while?

 
You did when you said, Removes context, doesn't do stupid things like give Brady extra credit for winning a ring in 2001-02 even though the Pats' offense was horrible when he was on the field

Didn't you?

I am relaxed, couldn't be happier and far from responding to every single comment, most of us (certainly I do) ignore 75-90% of the hater crap guys like you obsessively write. Just like I have done with most of your posts in this thread; I honestly haven't looked but I bet your anti Brady posts far out number my pro Brady posts.

If you are going to post formulas implying that stiffs like Mark Sanchez are much better playoff QBs than Brady or that the NE offense was horrible with Brady on the field in 2001-2002 then I will occasionally chime in and call you on it. Nothing personal here, but rather than lecturing pats fans on how we need to relax, how about you take your own advice and give it a rest for a while?
Re the bolded: The Pats' offense scored a grand total of two touchdowns in ten quarters with Brady behind center in the 2001-02 postseason. That's poor offensive production by any measure. That doesn't mean he was poor on the final drive of one game- that's a completely different question. And it wasn't meant as a slight on Brady as much as a reason why measuring QBs by titles won is kinda silly.

Otherwise, I think you're mis-reading my posts and the discussion. I haven't been hating at all. Go ahead and look back if you don't believe me. Here's how I'd say it went down:

[lots of talk about Brady vis a vis other great QBs, including one post using titles as comparison point]

Me: I don't like using titles to measure players. Would Manning/Marino have more titles with defenses on par with those Brady has played with?

Anarchy99: Probably not. Here's some work I've done looking into that.

Me: Interesting. Thanks.

Conversation could have happily ended here as far as I'm concerned. Instead, we got ...

Bostonfred: OMG MANNING TOTALLY SUCKS LOOK AT HOW FEW POINTS MANNING'S TEAM SCORED IN THE PLAYOFF GAMES HIS TEAM LOST AND ALSO HE THREW LOTS OF PICKS WHEN THEY WON A SUPER BOWL WHAT A LOSER LOL

Me: You're cherry-picking here when you dismiss Manning. You're only looking at negative results, eliminating Manning's many excellent playoff efforts and team wins from the data (except in the one case where it helps your argument), and ignoring the role things like defense, special teams and just plain old luck have to do with postseason success.

Bostonfred: (repeats the above)

Me: Look, here's one objective measure of player value. And here's another. And there are other objective stats that recognize that Manning and Brady have been about the same in the playoffs. None of them are perfect, but taken together they suggest that the difference between their teams' postseason success is more about differences in what their teammates have done than in how they have performed.

A bunch of other people: Mark Sanchez sucks!

Me: Yes. Yes he does.

Sure, I probably got in a jab or two after Bostonfred lost his mind about Manning, because hey, I'm human. And you're right, I shouldn't have "lectured" anyone about how to enjoy their team. My bad there. Enjoy the rest of your parade day and the rest of the careers of your team's incredible QB and head coach.

 

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