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John Elway's Career (1 Viewer)

DawnBTVS said:
3: His surrounding cast for most of his career was up there with Tom Brady's 2001-2003 "cast" of teammates offensively in terms of carrying a team despite having very little to really work with. Take a gander at these names... from 1983-1989- RB Sammy Winder- RB Tony Dorsett (Who was 34 years old by 1988)- RB Bobby Humphrey- WR Steve Watson (Solid player but not quite elite)- WR Rick Upchurch- WR Butch Johnson- WR Vance Johnson- WR Mark Jackson- WR Ricky Nattiel- TE Clarence Kay
To quote a very wise man from a post a number of years ago..."I hate the fact that I have to continually bring out the facts in order to set you guys straight.Let's look what Elway had going for him in '86-'89. He had a very good offensive line, a top-notch defense (with Pro-Bowl-quality players like Mark Haynes, Tom Jackson. Rulon Jones, Greg Kragen, Karl Mecklenberg, Dennis Smith, Louis Wright, Tyrone Braxton, Michael Brooks, and Steve Atwater), and strong special teams.He also had the single best home field advantage in professional sports.The only thing he did not have was excellent WRs and RBs. Even then Sammy Winder played well enough in '86 to make the Pro Bowl and the Three Amigos were all at least above average targets.The notion that there was no talent on this team and that Elway took a rag-tag bunch of misfits and single-handedly drug them to the Super Bowl is misguided at best and downright delusional at worst. Let's lay this nonsense to rest."Let me also add that Elway had a top ten defense 9 of his 16 years in the league.
I can see where you're coming from, I suppose. It isn't fair to say he was playing with a bunch of scrubs, but...That vaunted defense you speak of gave up 39, 42, and 55 points respectively in Elway's first 3 Super Bowls.
 
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DawnBTVS said:
3: His surrounding cast for most of his career was up there with Tom Brady's 2001-2003 "cast" of teammates offensively in terms of carrying a team despite having very little to really work with. Take a gander at these names... from 1983-1989- RB Sammy Winder- RB Tony Dorsett (Who was 34 years old by 1988)- RB Bobby Humphrey- WR Steve Watson (Solid player but not quite elite)- WR Rick Upchurch- WR Butch Johnson- WR Vance Johnson- WR Mark Jackson- WR Ricky Nattiel- TE Clarence Kay
To quote a very wise man from a post a number of years ago..."I hate the fact that I have to continually bring out the facts in order to set you guys straight.Let's look what Elway had going for him in '86-'89. He had a very good offensive line, a top-notch defense (with Pro-Bowl-quality players like Mark Haynes, Tom Jackson. Rulon Jones, Greg Kragen, Karl Mecklenberg, Dennis Smith, Louis Wright, Tyrone Braxton, Michael Brooks, and Steve Atwater), and strong special teams.He also had the single best home field advantage in professional sports.The only thing he did not have was excellent WRs and RBs. Even then Sammy Winder played well enough in '86 to make the Pro Bowl and the Three Amigos were all at least above average targets.The notion that there was no talent on this team and that Elway took a rag-tag bunch of misfits and single-handedly drug them to the Super Bowl is misguided at best and downright delusional at worst. Let's lay this nonsense to rest."Let me also add that Elway had a top ten defense 9 of his 16 years in the league.
I can see where you're coming from, I suppose. It isn't fair to say he was playing with a bunch of scrubs, but...That vaunted defense you speak of gave up 39, 42, and 55 points respectively in Elway's first 3 Super Bowls.
It probably would be more telling to point out that Elway's offenses only scored 20, 10, and 10 points in those 3 Super Bowls. Wouldn't you agree?
 
DawnBTVS said:
3: His surrounding cast for most of his career was up there with Tom Brady's 2001-2003 "cast" of teammates offensively in terms of carrying a team despite having very little to really work with. Take a gander at these names... from 1983-1989- RB Sammy Winder- RB Tony Dorsett (Who was 34 years old by 1988)- RB Bobby Humphrey- WR Steve Watson (Solid player but not quite elite)- WR Rick Upchurch- WR Butch Johnson- WR Vance Johnson- WR Mark Jackson- WR Ricky Nattiel- TE Clarence Kay
To quote a very wise man from a post a number of years ago..."I hate the fact that I have to continually bring out the facts in order to set you guys straight.Let's look what Elway had going for him in '86-'89. He had a very good offensive line, a top-notch defense (with Pro-Bowl-quality players like Mark Haynes, Tom Jackson. Rulon Jones, Greg Kragen, Karl Mecklenberg, Dennis Smith, Louis Wright, Tyrone Braxton, Michael Brooks, and Steve Atwater), and strong special teams.He also had the single best home field advantage in professional sports.The only thing he did not have was excellent WRs and RBs. Even then Sammy Winder played well enough in '86 to make the Pro Bowl and the Three Amigos were all at least above average targets.The notion that there was no talent on this team and that Elway took a rag-tag bunch of misfits and single-handedly drug them to the Super Bowl is misguided at best and downright delusional at worst. Let's lay this nonsense to rest."Let me also add that Elway had a top ten defense 9 of his 16 years in the league.
I can see where you're coming from, I suppose. It isn't fair to say he was playing with a bunch of scrubs, but...That vaunted defense you speak of gave up 39, 42, and 55 points respectively in Elway's first 3 Super Bowls.
It probably would be more telling to point out that Elway's offenses only scored 20, 10, and 10 points in those 3 Super Bowls. Wouldn't you agree?
Perhaps if my point were to point out Elway's deficiencies, which it wasn't. Instead, I wanted to point out some of the deficiencies with Elway's supporting cast.Look, I do agree that 40 combined points in 3 Super Bowls is awful. And Elway certainly deserves blame for that. But the bottom line is Denver didn't have a chance against any of those 3 teams, no matter how well Elway played.
 
DawnBTVS said:
3: His surrounding cast for most of his career was up there with Tom Brady's 2001-2003 "cast" of teammates offensively in terms of carrying a team despite having very little to really work with. Take a gander at these names... from 1983-1989- RB Sammy Winder- RB Tony Dorsett (Who was 34 years old by 1988)- RB Bobby Humphrey- WR Steve Watson (Solid player but not quite elite)- WR Rick Upchurch- WR Butch Johnson- WR Vance Johnson- WR Mark Jackson- WR Ricky Nattiel- TE Clarence Kay
To quote a very wise man from a post a number of years ago..."I hate the fact that I have to continually bring out the facts in order to set you guys straight.Let's look what Elway had going for him in '86-'89. He had a very good offensive line, a top-notch defense (with Pro-Bowl-quality players like Mark Haynes, Tom Jackson. Rulon Jones, Greg Kragen, Karl Mecklenberg, Dennis Smith, Louis Wright, Tyrone Braxton, Michael Brooks, and Steve Atwater), and strong special teams.He also had the single best home field advantage in professional sports.The only thing he did not have was excellent WRs and RBs. Even then Sammy Winder played well enough in '86 to make the Pro Bowl and the Three Amigos were all at least above average targets.The notion that there was no talent on this team and that Elway took a rag-tag bunch of misfits and single-handedly drug them to the Super Bowl is misguided at best and downright delusional at worst. Let's lay this nonsense to rest."Let me also add that Elway had a top ten defense 9 of his 16 years in the league.
I can see where you're coming from, I suppose. It isn't fair to say he was playing with a bunch of scrubs, but...That vaunted defense you speak of gave up 39, 42, and 55 points respectively in Elway's first 3 Super Bowls.
It probably would be more telling to point out that Elway's offenses only scored 20, 10, and 10 points in those 3 Super Bowls. Wouldn't you agree?
Perhaps if my point were to point out Elway's deficiencies, which it wasn't. Instead, I wanted to point out some of the deficiencies with Elway's supporting cast.Look, I do agree that 40 combined points in 3 Super Bowls is awful. And Elway certainly deserves blame for that. But the bottom line is Denver didn't have a chance against any of those 3 teams, no matter how well Elway played.
Even if Elway's supporting casts had been equal to those of his opponents', Elway's teams probably would have lost anyway, given Elway's poor performances.
 
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I am still chuckling at CalBear referring to Elway's MVP-winning performance in Super Bowl XXXIII as merely "decent."

Never mind that Elway's only pick was off a pass that bounced off of Shannon Sharpe's hands and into the defender's.

Never mind that his YPA in that game was obscene.

Never mind that he broke the game open by throwing an 80-yard TD pass.

Never mind that his TD run in the 4th quarter all but put the game away.

His performance was only decent. :X

 
BusterTBronco said:
To go back to the OP, no one really believes that Elway is one of the best 3 QBs of all time - not even Denver fans.
Wrong. Elway is one of the 3 best QBs of all time. Easily.
:rolleyes:
I lived in Denver for almost 8 years. Denver fans *definitely* believe that Elway was a top 3 QB all time. Most think he's the best ever. The man is a god in that town, I'm talking total devotion to the guy.And that's why I think his legend has grown since he retired. You have to give credit to Broncos fans - they sing Elway's praises from the rooftops. I was able to see many of this games. He was a very good player. No where near a top 3 QB tho. Broncos fans love the "he carried the team on his back!" argument but they always ignore some very, very good defenses that Elway played with. He also often had solid players around him at the skill positions and a bunch of Pro Bowlers and Pro Bowl caliber offensive linemen, too.I'm not really trying to take anything away from him, he was a very good player. But saying he was a top 3 guy is crazy. He's definitely swung into the "over rated" category to me.
 
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The guy was the closest thing to a one man gang the Nfl has ever seen. If he Elway would have played for the 49ers in the 80's they would have won at least 6 superbowls instead of 4. To the guy who said Warren Moon was better, how many superbowl appearances did he make in his career?If you want to go only off a guys statistics you could easy say guys like Joe Namath and Lynn Swann don't belong in the Hall of fame either. Just because they played in different eras doesn't mean they weren't great.It comes down to wins. Elway is second only to Favre on that list.
13-16 against the Raiders lifetime.
 
Chairshot said:
I'm not really trying to take anything away from him, he was a very good player. But saying he was a top 3 guy is crazy. He's definitely swung into the "over rated" category to me.
He's not top 3, but I do think he's comfortably in the top 10, so I'd have a really hard time calling him "over-rated." He was a stellar, carry-the-franchise type QB. Whether a person has him at #5 or #8 or whatever is kind of irrelevant.
 
Chairshot said:
I'm not really trying to take anything away from him, he was a very good player. But saying he was a top 3 guy is crazy. He's definitely swung into the "over rated" category to me.
He's not top 3, but I do think he's comfortably in the top 10, so I'd have a really hard time calling him "over-rated." He was a stellar, carry-the-franchise type QB. Whether a person has him at #5 or #8 or whatever is kind of irrelevant.
carrying those teams to the super bowl early in his career is pretty significant.
 
Chairshot said:
I'm not really trying to take anything away from him, he was a very good player. But saying he was a top 3 guy is crazy. He's definitely swung into the "over rated" category to me.
He's not top 3, but I do think he's comfortably in the top 10, so I'd have a really hard time calling him "over-rated." He was a stellar, carry-the-franchise type QB. Whether a person has him at #5 or #8 or whatever is kind of irrelevant.
:wall:
 
Chairshot said:
I'm not really trying to take anything away from him, he was a very good player. But saying he was a top 3 guy is crazy. He's definitely swung into the "over rated" category to me.
He's not top 3, but I do think he's comfortably in the top 10, so I'd have a really hard time calling him "over-rated." He was a stellar, carry-the-franchise type QB. Whether a person has him at #5 or #8 or whatever is kind of irrelevant.
carrying those teams to the super bowl early in his career is pretty significant.
Except it never happened.
 
I agree with most of your points, but I think you are a bit off-base here.Of all the great debates in sports, I'm not sure there is any more fierce than Elway/Marino and I think that shows through.A QB isn't generally going to take a bad WR and make him a pro-bowler, but the QB and the system mean a great deal to the numbers of a WR. You mention Rod Smith's draft status as an indicator of his talent level. In 1984, Mark Clayton was 23 year old, former 8th round draft pick, playing in his 1st full season as WR (and that was back in the olden days when WRs were supposed to take time to develop). That didn't stop Marino from connecting with him 73 times, at 19.0 YPR and 18 TDs. Even more impressive, Duper had almost an identical season (with about half the TDs).18.0+ YPR is a huge number. That year, Marino took 2 5'9" WRs, with a combined 1 year of NFL WR experience, and helped them both to 70+ catches and an 18.4+ YPC! That takes a very special QB that can through one hell of a deep ball.Sorry, it's easy to get sidetracked by Marino's '84 season, but the point is, even though we can't really know for sure, it's very likely that Marino made his WRs and his OL look a hell of alot better than they would've looked otherwise. Having an unsackable QB can send some OL to the Pro Bowl.You say WRs are what they are. Do you really believe Clayton and Duper would've made Pro Bowl appearances playing for the Broncos?
I don't know if Clayton/Duper would have made pro bowl appearances in Denver. I would bet that they would. If they had played with Elway and a decent offensive coach (say, Mike Shanahan or Don Shula), then I remain absolutely, positively convinced they both would have been multiple pro bowlers. Regardless of that, I'm also absolutely convinced that they were a huge upgrade over the garbage Elway had at receivers, and I also remain absolutely convinced that good WRs make their QBs look better (See: McNabb, Brady, Cunningham, Warner, etc, etc, etc, etc).
The guy was the closest thing to a one man gang the Nfl has ever seen. If he Elway would have played for the 49ers in the 80's they would have won at least 6 superbowls instead of 4. To the guy who said Warren Moon was better, how many superbowl appearances did he make in his career?If you want to go only off a guys statistics you could easy say guys like Joe Namath and Lynn Swann don't belong in the Hall of fame either. Just because they played in different eras doesn't mean they weren't great.It comes down to wins. Elway is second only to Favre on that list.
Namath absolutely belongs in the Hall of Fame based on the strength of his statistics.
The guy was the closest thing to a one man gang the Nfl has ever seen. If he Elway would have played for the 49ers in the 80's they would have won at least 6 superbowls instead of 4. To the guy who said Warren Moon was better, how many superbowl appearances did he make in his career?If you want to go only off a guys statistics you could easy say guys like Joe Namath and Lynn Swann don't belong in the Hall of fame either. Just because they played in different eras doesn't mean they weren't great.It comes down to wins. Elway is second only to Favre on that list.
At least 6?Why do I smell the excuse of when Elway did well, it was all because of him, but when he played poorly, it was everyone else's fault?
Personally, I agree that Elway likely wouldn't have won 6 SBs. I question if he would have won even 4. Of course, if you had Joe Montana play that decade all over again, I doubt *HE* would have won 4 SBs again, too. Winning the SB is a very difficult feat that requires an extraordinary amount of luck. I do think that the 49ers would have been as good with Elway under center as they were with Montana. Possibly even better, although that's a huge pile of speculation.
To quote a very wise man from a post a number of years ago..."I hate the fact that I have to continually bring out the facts in order to set you guys straight.Let's look what Elway had going for him in '86-'89. He had a very good offensive line, a top-notch defense (with Pro-Bowl-quality players like Mark Haynes, Tom Jackson. Rulon Jones, Greg Kragen, Karl Mecklenberg, Dennis Smith, Louis Wright, Tyrone Braxton, Michael Brooks, and Steve Atwater), and strong special teams.He also had the single best home field advantage in professional sports.The only thing he did not have was excellent WRs and RBs. Even then Sammy Winder played well enough in '86 to make the Pro Bowl and the Three Amigos were all at least above average targets.The notion that there was no talent on this team and that Elway took a rag-tag bunch of misfits and single-handedly drug them to the Super Bowl is misguided at best and downright delusional at worst. Let's lay this nonsense to rest."Let me also add that Elway had a top ten defense 9 of his 16 years in the league.
Top-notch defense? "I hate the fact that I have to continually bring out the facts in order to set you guys straight".In 1989, Elway's defense ranked 1st in points allowed and 3rd in yards allowed (avg = 2 out of 28). That was a top-notch defense. In 1987, the defense ranked 7th in PA and 9th in YA (avg = 8 out of 28). That was a good defense. In 1986, the defense ranked 15th in points and 9th in yards (avg = 12 out of 28). That's an average defense. And, again, Dan Marino was the king of the "if he only had a defense" argument, but Elway's defenses during his first 12 years were almost as bad as Marino's. And Elway's running game was arguably worse, and his offensive line and WRs were pretty clearly worse by a significant margin.How about the point that, despite featuring a HoF QB who most agree was one of the 10 best of all time, ESPN ranked those Broncos SB teams among the worst in SB history?
 
does anyone but me find it odd that Denver went to 3 SB's in 4 years with only one HoF caliber player?

I don't have the time to look it up, but how many HoF players were on the Bills? Vikings of 70's? Steelers of 70's? Patriots of 00's? Cowboys in the 70's or 90's? (just thinking of teams who went to multiple SB's within a short time span.

Seems to me that either (A) Elway was so great he could carry a team which was deviod of top talent or (B) there were other HoF players on those teams (Mecklenburg? Steve Atwater? Dennis Smith?)

 
moleculo said:
does anyone but me find it odd that Denver went to 3 SB's in 4 years with only one HoF caliber player?I don't have the time to look it up, but how many HoF players were on the Bills? Vikings of 70's? Steelers of 70's? Patriots of 00's? Cowboys in the 70's or 90's? (just thinking of teams who went to multiple SB's within a short time span.Seems to me that either (A) Elway was so great he could carry a team which was deviod of top talent or (B) there were other HoF players on those teams (Mecklenburg? Steve Atwater? Dennis Smith?)
Not to mention a record 5 super bowl appearances, no other QB has done that. He was dealt a bad hand for most of his career as far as offensive system that did not exploit his incredible talent, and a lack of great weapons, yet still led his team to 3 super bowls. I can't speak pre-1980 because I didn't see Unitas and others play, but Joe Montana is the only QB I'd take over John Elway, and it'd be a hard choice.
 
moleculo said:
does anyone but me find it odd that Denver went to 3 SB's in 4 years with only one HoF caliber player?

I don't have the time to look it up, but how many HoF players were on the Bills? Vikings of 70's? Steelers of 70's? Patriots of 00's? Cowboys in the 70's or 90's? (just thinking of teams who went to multiple SB's within a short time span.

Seems to me that either (A) Elway was so great he could carry a team which was deviod of top talent or (B) there were other HoF players on those teams (Mecklenburg? Steve Atwater? Dennis Smith?)
OK, I looked it up. I first made a list of teams that went to multiple SB's within a few years - at least two in three years. Then I found all of the HOF players on those teams.

I'm counting HoF players that played in at least one of the SB seasons - casting as big of a net as possible. I'm also counting coaches but not owners or administrators. Players not yet in the HoF (but I think are likely to be there one day) are in italics.

Here's the list:

1966-67 Packers (10): Adderley, Davis, Gregg, Hornung, Jordan, Lombardi, Nitschke, Starr, Taylor, Wood.

1968-1970 Colts (4): Hendricks, Mackey, Shula, Unitas

1970-1971 Cowboys 10): Adderley, Alworth, Ditka, Gregg, Hayes, Landry, Lilly, Renfro, Staubach, Wright

1971-1973 Dolphins (7): Buoniconti, Csonka, Griese, Langer, Little, Shula, Warfield

1973-1976 Vikings (6) Eller, Grant, Krause, Page, Tarkenton, Yary

1974-1975 Steelers (11): Blount, Bradshaw, Greene, Ham, Harris, Lambert, Noll, Stallworth, Swann, Webster, Shell

1975-1978 Cowboys (7): Dorsett, Renfro, Smith, Staubach, White, Wright, Jones

1978-1979 Steelers (11): Blount, Bradshaw, Greene, Ham, Harris, Lambert, Noll, Stallworth, Swann, Webster, Shell

1982-1983 Redskins (5): Gibbs, Green, Grimm, Monk, Riggins

1986-1989 Broncos (2): Elway, Atwater

1988-1989 49ers (6): Lott, Montana, Rice, Walsh, Young, Haley

1992-1995 Cowboys (6): Aikman, Irvin, Smith, Haley, Sanders, Allen

1990-1993 Bills (6) Kelly, Levy, Lofton, Smith, Thomas, Hull

1996-1997 Packers (3): White, Favre, Holmgren

1997-1998 Broncos (6): Elway, Zimmerman, Atwater, Davis, Sharpe, Shanahan

1999-2001 Rams (4): Warner, Vermeil, Faulk, Pace

2001-2004 Patriots (5): Belichick, Brady, Harrison, Seymour, Vinateri

As you can see, the 1986-1989 Broncos have significantly fewer HoF representation compared to other teams that accomplished similar feats. The only teams that come as close to being a one man show are the 1968-1970 Colts and 1996-1997 Packers, two teams represented by QBs who should also be in the GOAT discussion.

If we want to limit to three SB's in four years, we have the 1973-1976 Vikings (6), 1975-1978 Cowboys (7), 1986-1989 Broncos (2), 1992-1995 Cowboys (6), 1990-1993 Bills (6), and 2001-2004 Patriots (5). 1986-1989 Broncos had less than half the # of HoF players than any other team that did what they did.

Again - you can either argue that there should be more 1986-1989 Broncos represented in the HoF (Mecklenburg, Jackson, Reeves, Smith?), or you can acknowledge that Elway did more with significantly less talent surrounding him.

 
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moleculo said:
does anyone but me find it odd that Denver went to 3 SB's in 4 years with only one HoF caliber player?I don't have the time to look it up, but how many HoF players were on the Bills? Vikings of 70's? Steelers of 70's? Patriots of 00's? Cowboys in the 70's or 90's? (just thinking of teams who went to multiple SB's within a short time span.Seems to me that either (A) Elway was so great he could carry a team which was deviod of top talent or (B) there were other HoF players on those teams (Mecklenburg? Steve Atwater? Dennis Smith?)
Or © The AFC was dreadful during that stretch.I grew up in the 80s and watched Elway throughout his career. Elway was a great QB, but IMO is somewhat overrated. As pointed out above, it really is splitting hairs when you start breaking down the top 10 which he definitely belongs in. I say he's overrated though b/c many will argue that he is top 3 and I don't think you can put him there. Though he is top 3 in terms of QB you want leading your team down the field to win a ballgame. I do have some personal bias here as I was a Marino guy and was never a fan of Elway's but I agree with the premise of the OP. And FWIW I've heard from multiple sources that the guy is a major league #####. Not that it matters, but figured I'd mention it.
 
How about the point that, despite featuring a HoF QB who most agree was one of the 10 best of all time, ESPN ranked those Broncos SB teams among the worst in SB history?
That's easy. Just because they don't necessarily stack up against the greatest teams of all time doesn't mean they didn't stack up well with the other teams in the league that season. Of course, the large steamy piles that Elway dropped during those particular SBs probably didn't do much to aid the perception of those teams.
 
Again - you can either argue that there should be more 1986-1989 Broncos represented in the HoF (Mecklenburg, Jackson, Reeves, Smith?), or you can acknowledge that Elway did more with significantly less talent surrounding him.
There is a 3rd option - They were a team with a lot of talent at many positions with only one guy who stood out as an all-time great. Playing in an inferior conference helped a lot also.The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
 
Seems like a lot of revisionist history goes on with how Elway is remembered. He had a ton of hype being the number 1 overall pick and went out on top winning two superbowls at the end of his career. However, for a guy that is consistently mentioned as a top 3 qb, I fail to see how this is so. Elway never passed for more than 27 TD passes in his 16-year career. It wasn't until Elway was in his 11th NFL campaign of 1993 that he ever surpassed 22 TD passes in a season. He averaged 18.75 TD passes per year, while tossing 226 picks (14.13 per year). That is 19-14 average TD:INT ratio. And save for that breakout 1993 campaign, when Elway lead the league in completions (348) and yards (4,030), he never led the league in any major passing categories (completions, yards, TDs, passer rating). I Still am confused to how Elway won an mvp award in the strike shortened season of 1987. Elway had a 54.6 completion % 3,198 yds 19td's and 12int's. For comparison's sake, Joe Montana had a 66.8 completion % 3,054 yds 31 td's and 13int's. That same year, Jerry Rice went 65 catches 1,078 yds and 22tds. Not to be out done, Reggie White had 21 sacks in only 12 games! All of these seasons far outweigh Elway's, yet Elway won the mvp. Elway was a great player and I'm not trying to take that away from him, but to consider him in the top 3 quarterbacks of all time is absurd. I understand numbers don't tell the whole story but when comparing him to the other all time greats, his career numbers are more of a product of him playing 16 years, rather than him being the best at his position. I would like to hear from others regarding how they view John Elway when ranking the all time greats. I was born in 1986, so i missed out on the early years of Elway and only got to see the tail end of his career. I took it as gospel that Elway was one the greatest of all time; However, when looking back on his numbers and his career, things don't seem to add up.
He was the most overhyped player I've seen. I agree he's a HOF QB, but he has no business being mentioned with Unitas, Montana, or Graham. He's on par with Warren Moons and Steve Youngs.I'm sure some Denver fans will talk about his ability to come up big in the 4th quarter....but if he didn't suck for the first 3 quarters, his "comebacks" wouldn't be necessary, right?
 
Seems like a lot of revisionist history goes on with how Elway is remembered. He had a ton of hype being the number 1 overall pick and went out on top winning two superbowls at the end of his career. However, for a guy that is consistently mentioned as a top 3 qb, I fail to see how this is so. Elway never passed for more than 27 TD passes in his 16-year career. It wasn't until Elway was in his 11th NFL campaign of 1993 that he ever surpassed 22 TD passes in a season. He averaged 18.75 TD passes per year, while tossing 226 picks (14.13 per year). That is 19-14 average TD:INT ratio. And save for that breakout 1993 campaign, when Elway lead the league in completions (348) and yards (4,030), he never led the league in any major passing categories (completions, yards, TDs, passer rating). I Still am confused to how Elway won an mvp award in the strike shortened season of 1987. Elway had a 54.6 completion % 3,198 yds 19td's and 12int's. For comparison's sake, Joe Montana had a 66.8 completion % 3,054 yds 31 td's and 13int's. That same year, Jerry Rice went 65 catches 1,078 yds and 22tds. Not to be out done, Reggie White had 21 sacks in only 12 games! All of these seasons far outweigh Elway's, yet Elway won the mvp. Elway was a great player and I'm not trying to take that away from him, but to consider him in the top 3 quarterbacks of all time is absurd. I understand numbers don't tell the whole story but when comparing him to the other all time greats, his career numbers are more of a product of him playing 16 years, rather than him being the best at his position. I would like to hear from others regarding how they view John Elway when ranking the all time greats. I was born in 1986, so i missed out on the early years of Elway and only got to see the tail end of his career. I took it as gospel that Elway was one the greatest of all time; However, when looking back on his numbers and his career, things don't seem to add up.
He was the most overhyped player I've seen. I agree he's a HOF QB, but he has no business being mentioned with Unitas, Montana, or Graham. He's on par with Warren Moons and Steve Youngs.I'm sure some Denver fans will talk about his ability to come up big in the 4th quarter....but if he didn't suck for the first 3 quarters, his "comebacks" wouldn't be necessary, right?
I used to have a wrestling coach that said, "the way you beat an opponent who is better than you is to just keep it close in the first two periods and then open it up in the third." That's basically how Dan Reeves coached in Denver. He was a ball-control, play great D kind of guy. I honestly believe his basic strategy was to make sure that Denver was down by less than 10 going into the 4th quarter, and then let Elway do his thing.
 
And since they were nearly equivalent in stats and you use bowl games to compare, how are the super bowls looking?
Manning is 13 years into his career; at the equivalent point in Elway's career, he was 0-3 in Super Bowls and among the worst-ever Super Bowl QBs, statistically. Manning is 1-1.
Elway was 0-3 in those Super Bowls because he took vastly inferior teams on his back into the Super Bowl. Were you not old enough to see those seasons either?

Honest question. How old are you?
I don't agree with this crutch.The Denver Orange Crush D was awesome during the 80s, Bobby Humphrey was a stud 1st rd pick out of Alabama, and he had 3-4 top notch WRs (the Three Amigos!) as well. Elway led talented teams.

If you want to see what a inferior team is, check out the 1981 49ers that Montana led to the SB Victory.

 
3: His surrounding cast for most of his career was up there with Tom Brady's 2001-2003 "cast" of teammates offensively in terms of carrying a team despite having very little to really work with. Take a gander at these names... from 1983-1989

- RB Sammy Winder

- RB Tony Dorsett (Who was 34 years old by 1988)

- RB Bobby Humphrey

- WR Steve Watson (Solid player but not quite elite)

- WR Rick Upchurch

- WR Butch Johnson

- WR Vance Johnson

- WR Mark Jackson

- WR Ricky Nattiel

- TE Clarence Kay
To quote a very wise man from a post a number of years ago..."I hate the fact that I have to continually bring out the facts in order to set you guys straight.

Let's look what Elway had going for him in '86-'89. He had a very good offensive line, a top-notch defense (with Pro-Bowl-quality players like Mark Haynes, Tom Jackson. Rulon Jones, Greg Kragen, Karl Mecklenberg, Dennis Smith, Louis Wright, Tyrone Braxton, Michael Brooks, and Steve Atwater), and strong special teams.

He also had the single best home field advantage in professional sports.

The only thing he did not have was excellent WRs and RBs. Even then Sammy Winder played well enough in '86 to make the Pro Bowl and the Three Amigos were all at least above average targets.

The notion that there was no talent on this team and that Elway took a rag-tag bunch of misfits and single-handedly drug them to the Super Bowl is misguided at best and downright delusional at worst. Let's lay this nonsense to rest."

Let me also add that Elway had a top ten defense 9 of his 16 years in the league.
:link: Glad you could put that "but he had no talent on the team" argument to bed.

 
moleculo said:
does anyone but me find it odd that Denver went to 3 SB's in 4 years with only one HoF caliber player?I don't have the time to look it up, but how many HoF players were on the Bills? Vikings of 70's? Steelers of 70's? Patriots of 00's? Cowboys in the 70's or 90's? (just thinking of teams who went to multiple SB's within a short time span.Seems to me that either (A) Elway was so great he could carry a team which was deviod of top talent or (B) there were other HoF players on those teams (Mecklenburg? Steve Atwater? Dennis Smith?)
Or © The AFC was dreadful during that stretch....
The AFC was dreadful during that stretch. however, it was no less dreadful when Buffalo put up 4 SB trips (with 6 HoF players). I don't know how interconference battled out overall back then, but between 1968 and 1980, the AFC won 11 SB's and the NFC won two. The Vikings (6) Cowboys (10), Cowboys (7) played in this era of AFC domination, but still were known for having many great players.
 
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
 
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
If Gayle Sayers is in the Hall, then Terrell Davis should be there too.Heck, if Riggins, Namath, and Swann are in, they might as well make it open to darn-near anyone.
 
5Rings said:
And since they were nearly equivalent in stats and you use bowl games to compare, how are the super bowls looking?
Manning is 13 years into his career; at the equivalent point in Elway's career, he was 0-3 in Super Bowls and among the worst-ever Super Bowl QBs, statistically. Manning is 1-1.
Elway was 0-3 in those Super Bowls because he took vastly inferior teams on his back into the Super Bowl. Were you not old enough to see those seasons either?

Honest question. How old are you?
I don't agree with this crutch.The Denver Orange Crush D was awesome during the 80s, Bobby Humphrey was a stud 1st rd pick out of Alabama, and he had 3-4 top notch WRs (the Three Amigos!) as well. Elway led talented teams.

If you want to see what a inferior team is, check out the 1981 49ers that Montana led to the SB Victory.
:fishing: Maybe Nattiel, Jackson, and Johnson can get to the HOF via the oldtimers route. I'm surprised none of them are in yet since they were so great. :(

Ya ever think Elway made those guys look better than they actually were?

 
moleculo said:
Polar Dude said:
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
I think Reeves deserves serious consideration.
 
Ya ever think Elway made those guys look better than they actually were?
Did ya ever think that those receivers could only be as good as the guy trying to get them the ball?
No, because I watched them with my own eyes. Vance Johnson was a good receiver, Mark Jackson was above average, Nattiel was below average. None of them were excellent receivers, none of them were even close to HOF material. Elway made them what they were. There was no 3 Amigos without Elway.
 
Ya ever think Elway made those guys look better than they actually were?
Did ya ever think that those receivers could only be as good as the guy trying to get them the ball?
Exactly.Its not like Elway was throwing the ball to some scrubs. *Ricky Nattiel was a 1st round pick.*Vance Johnson was a 2nd round pick.*Mark Jackson was a 6th round pick. OK.*Bobby Humphrey was a 1st round pickYou have players like Montana, Manning, or Warner who elevated the play of their teammates. Then you have a guy like Mike Vick who runs fast, throws hard, and looks good on posters but restricts his WRs capabilities. IMO, this is the type of player John Elway was. FWIW---> TDavis should be in the HOF. Always liked Randy Gradishar, too.
 
Polar Dude said:
moleculo said:
Polar Dude said:
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
If Gayle Sayers is in the Hall, then Terrell Davis should be there too.Heck, if Riggins, Namath, and Swann are in, they might as well make it open to darn-near anyone.
Terrible argument for multiple reasons. It has been debated numerous times on this board. No need to hijack this thread; just browse the old Terrell Davis threads.
 
moleculo said:
Polar Dude said:
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
I think Reeves deserves serious consideration.
There biggest problem for Reeves is that there are other coaches who seem likely to get in ahead of him, including Parcells, Belichick, Dungy, Holmgren, and Shanahan, and it's difficult to make room for coaches given the restriction on the number of people in HOF classes. I don't think Reeves will ever make it, and, frankly, I don't really think he should.I think Mecklenburg is deserving. I think Atwater is on the bubble, but I think there are other DBs who are more deserving. I'd have to look at Smith's resume more to be sure, but my impression is he is not deserving.
 
moleculo said:
Polar Dude said:
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
I think Reeves deserves serious consideration.
There biggest problem for Reeves is that there are other coaches who seem likely to get in ahead of him, including Parcells, Belichick, Dungy, Holmgren, and Shanahan, and it's difficult to make room for coaches given the restriction on the number of people in HOF classes. I don't think Reeves will ever make it, and, frankly, I don't really think he should.I think Mecklenburg is deserving. I think Atwater is on the bubble, but I think there are other DBs who are more deserving. I'd have to look at Smith's resume more to be sure, but my impression is he is not deserving.
Gradishar should be in for sure.
 
moleculo said:
Polar Dude said:
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
I think Reeves deserves serious consideration.
There biggest problem for Reeves is that there are other coaches who seem likely to get in ahead of him, including Parcells, Belichick, Dungy, Holmgren, and Shanahan, and it's difficult to make room for coaches given the restriction on the number of people in HOF classes. I don't think Reeves will ever make it, and, frankly, I don't really think he should.I think Mecklenburg is deserving. I think Atwater is on the bubble, but I think there are other DBs who are more deserving. I'd have to look at Smith's resume more to be sure, but my impression is he is not deserving.
IMO, the case for Reeves is that he contributed in so many SB's. 4 as a head coach (including multiple teams), and I believe 4 or 5 as a player/assistant coach with Dallas. The knock on Reeves is that I don't believe he innovated anything. He really didn't change the way the game is played, which is why he is behind the guys you listed.I loved Meck, but IMO Atwater is more deserving. He had the hype (Okoye hit) , he had the recognition(8x pro-bowler, 2x all-pro) , he had the big time performance in big-time games (could have been SBXXXII MVP).
 
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
I think Reeves deserves serious consideration.
There biggest problem for Reeves is that there are other coaches who seem likely to get in ahead of him, including Parcells, Belichick, Dungy, Holmgren, and Shanahan, and it's difficult to make room for coaches given the restriction on the number of people in HOF classes. I don't think Reeves will ever make it, and, frankly, I don't really think he should.I think Mecklenburg is deserving. I think Atwater is on the bubble, but I think there are other DBs who are more deserving. I'd have to look at Smith's resume more to be sure, but my impression is he is not deserving.
Shanahan cheated to get his SB wins, try not to forget that. And Dungy is perhaps the most overrated coach in history. Yeah I understand that he is a swell guy but I think he's barely on par with Marty Schottenheimer as a coach.
 
Shanahan cheated to get his SB wins, try not to forget that. And Dungy is perhaps the most overrated coach in history. Yeah I understand that he is a swell guy but I think he's barely on par with Marty Schottenheimer as a coach.
Please not with this again. Harold Henderson of the NFL released the following statement on the NFL's findings of the Broncos' cap violations: "The investigation resulted in the discovery of undisclosed agreements between the club and Broncos players during the same period [1996-1998] pursuant to which various players agreed to defer certain compensation in exchange for a commitment to pay interest on the deferred amounts. These agreements were plainly designed to help the club cope with seasonal cash flow problems exacerbated by the Broncos' need to fund front-end expenditures associated with development of the new stadium in Denver."As for Dungy being overrated... yeah, I can see why someone might think that. I mean, he only took the worst franchise in the history of the NFL and immediately turned it into a perennial contender that eventually won the superbowl the year after he left. And his second stint was really no more memorable, consisting of only 7 10-win seasons in 7 years, a league-record 6 straight 12-win seasons, a SB championship, and a w/l% essentially identical to Madden's modern NFL-record career mark.I can't for the life of me figure out why anyone would think Dungy was even close to HoF-worthy.
 
Shanahan cheated to get his SB wins, try not to forget that. And Dungy is perhaps the most overrated coach in history. Yeah I understand that he is a swell guy but I think he's barely on par with Marty Schottenheimer as a coach.
Please not with this again. Harold Henderson of the NFL released the following statement on the NFL's findings of the Broncos' cap violations: "The investigation resulted in the discovery of undisclosed agreements between the club and Broncos players during the same period [1996-1998] pursuant to which various players agreed to defer certain compensation in exchange for a commitment to pay interest on the deferred amounts. These agreements were plainly designed to help the club cope with seasonal cash flow problems exacerbated by the Broncos' need to fund front-end expenditures associated with development of the new stadium in Denver."As for Dungy being overrated... yeah, I can see why someone might think that. I mean, he only took the worst franchise in the history of the NFL and immediately turned it into a perennial contender that eventually won the superbowl the year after he left. And his second stint was really no more memorable, consisting of only 7 10-win seasons in 7 years, a league-record 6 straight 12-win seasons, a SB championship, and a w/l% essentially identical to Madden's modern NFL-record career mark.I can't for the life of me figure out why anyone would think Dungy was even close to HoF-worthy.
Spin.Dungy is Marty Schottenheimer Part II
 
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
I think Reeves deserves serious consideration.
There biggest problem for Reeves is that there are other coaches who seem likely to get in ahead of him, including Parcells, Belichick, Dungy, Holmgren, and Shanahan, and it's difficult to make room for coaches given the restriction on the number of people in HOF classes. I don't think Reeves will ever make it, and, frankly, I don't really think he should.I think Mecklenburg is deserving. I think Atwater is on the bubble, but I think there are other DBs who are more deserving. I'd have to look at Smith's resume more to be sure, but my impression is he is not deserving.
IMO, the case for Reeves is that he contributed in so many SB's. 4 as a head coach (including multiple teams), and I believe 4 or 5 as a player/assistant coach with Dallas. The knock on Reeves is that I don't believe he innovated anything. He really didn't change the way the game is played, which is why he is behind the guys you listed.I loved Meck, but IMO Atwater is more deserving. He had the hype (Okoye hit) , he had the recognition(8x pro-bowler, 2x all-pro) , he had the big time performance in big-time games (could have been SBXXXII MVP).
The most serious exclusion is Randy Ghadishar. That man deserves to be in the HOF before any other Bronco sans maybe Sharpe.
 
Shanahan cheated to get his SB wins, try not to forget that. And Dungy is perhaps the most overrated coach in history. Yeah I understand that he is a swell guy but I think he's barely on par with Marty Schottenheimer as a coach.
Please not with this again. Harold Henderson of the NFL released the following statement on the NFL's findings of the Broncos' cap violations: "The investigation resulted in the discovery of undisclosed agreements between the club and Broncos players during the same period [1996-1998] pursuant to which various players agreed to defer certain compensation in exchange for a commitment to pay interest on the deferred amounts. These agreements were plainly designed to help the club cope with seasonal cash flow problems exacerbated by the Broncos' need to fund front-end expenditures associated with development of the new stadium in Denver."
Therefore, we will penalize the Broncos the largest single fine ever assessed against a club and demand forfeiture of draft picks for two years.Something doesn't add up.
 
Chaka said:
The Broncos are under-represented in the HOF though, especially when you consider the numbers of SBs they went to and their overall winning percentage.
Thank you. so you will be campaigning for Reeves, Atwater, Dennis Smith, and Karl Mecklenburg to make it to the HoF?
I think Reeves deserves serious consideration.
There biggest problem for Reeves is that there are other coaches who seem likely to get in ahead of him, including Parcells, Belichick, Dungy, Holmgren, and Shanahan, and it's difficult to make room for coaches given the restriction on the number of people in HOF classes. I don't think Reeves will ever make it, and, frankly, I don't really think he should.I think Mecklenburg is deserving. I think Atwater is on the bubble, but I think there are other DBs who are more deserving. I'd have to look at Smith's resume more to be sure, but my impression is he is not deserving.
Shanahan cheated to get his SB wins, try not to forget that. And Dungy is perhaps the most overrated coach in history. Yeah I understand that he is a swell guy but I think he's barely on par with Marty Schottenheimer as a coach.
Notice that I said "seem likely to get in ahead of him" which is different than "deserve to get in ahead of him"... I didn't comment on that.
 
SSOG said:
Chaka said:
Shanahan cheated to get his SB wins, try not to forget that. And Dungy is perhaps the most overrated coach in history. Yeah I understand that he is a swell guy but I think he's barely on par with Marty Schottenheimer as a coach.
Please not with this again. Harold Henderson of the NFL released the following statement on the NFL's findings of the Broncos' cap violations: "The investigation resulted in the discovery of undisclosed agreements between the club and Broncos players during the same period [1996-1998] pursuant to which various players agreed to defer certain compensation in exchange for a commitment to pay interest on the deferred amounts. These agreements were plainly designed to help the club cope with seasonal cash flow problems exacerbated by the Broncos' need to fund front-end expenditures associated with development of the new stadium in Denver."
As if the Broncos didnt have other financial options. The comment is the league protecting its own interests.
 
As if the Broncos didnt have other financial options. The comment is the league protecting its own interests.
Since you've clearly reviewed Pat Bowlen's financial records from the time and aren't just some random guy with no credentials who is posting baseless speculation on an internet message board, I'll defer to your obvious expertise on the subject.
 
As if the Broncos didnt have other financial options. The comment is the league protecting its own interests.
Since you've clearly reviewed Pat Bowlen's financial records from the time and aren't just some random guy with no credentials who is posting baseless speculation on an internet message board, I'll defer to your obvious expertise on the subject.
Yes, because outside investment wasnt a possibility. So instead... lets cheat. And we can excuse it away based on our finances even though we are building a freakin' Stadium.It was cheating, plain and simple.
 
Yes, because outside investment wasnt a possibility.

So instead... lets cheat.

And we can excuse it away based on our finances even though we are building a freakin' Stadium.

It was cheating, plain and simple.
I don't know why we're still arguing. I've already conceded the fact that you are likely Pat Bowlen's CFO and are therefore privy to his detailed financial history. Clearly it's impossible for an NFL owner with no outside business concerns or external revenue streams to possibly suffer cashflow issues while trying to put up $100 million to fund a major stadium construction project. Obviously offering deferred compensation on contracts already on the books was a move designed to gain a competitive advantage (despite creating no new salary cap space), and I'm sure your extensive contacts in the league offices tipped you off to the fact that the league knew all about it but they knowingly issued a blatantly false statement to protect the integrity of the league. Obviously you are a man privy to all sorts of sensitive and confidential information, and we should trust your word implicitly over the word of all involved parties and the lead investigator, because you are an unbiased third party who is only coming forward because your own integrity prevents you from withholding the details of this corporate conspiracy from the public any longer.Thank you for setting the record straight, anonymous internet whistle-blower. I'm sure we'll all sleep better now that we finally know the truth.

 
Yes, because outside investment wasnt a possibility.

So instead... lets cheat.

And we can excuse it away based on our finances even though we are building a freakin' Stadium.

It was cheating, plain and simple.
I don't know why we're still arguing. I've already conceded the fact that you are likely Pat Bowlen's CFO and are therefore privy to his detailed financial history. Clearly it's impossible for an NFL owner with no outside business concerns or external revenue streams to possibly suffer cashflow issues while trying to put up $100 million to fund a major stadium construction project. Obviously offering deferred compensation on contracts already on the books was a move designed to gain a competitive advantage (despite creating no new salary cap space), and I'm sure your extensive contacts in the league offices tipped you off to the fact that the league knew all about it but they knowingly issued a blatantly false statement to protect the integrity of the league. Obviously you are a man privy to all sorts of sensitive and confidential information, and we should trust your word implicitly over the word of all involved parties and the lead investigator, because you are an unbiased third party who is only coming forward because your own integrity prevents you from withholding the details of this corporate conspiracy from the public any longer.Thank you for setting the record straight, anonymous internet whistle-blower. I'm sure we'll all sleep better now that we finally know the truth.
So you jumped to extreme saracasm. Nice form you display.
 
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So you jumped to extreme saracasm. Nice form you display.
Two things that Broncos fans hate: (1). Being reminded that their team cheated its way to their two Super Bowl victories, and (2). Being told that those 80's Super Bowl teams actually deserved to be there.
 
Your selling horseface short.
Do you care to elaborate? From all the reading i've done, you had Montana and Marino in the 80's and Young and Farve in the 90's. Where does Elway fit in after these guys in both of these decades.
Five Super Bowl trips, two wins. A whole lot more than Marino, Young, Farve.If you want to talk numbers, then maybe you have a case.But what matters in the NFL is winning, and plain and simple he was a winner, and made those around him better.You gotta start this conversation with the come back wins. You want to know why there were so many? Simply because Reeves controlled the game for the first 3 quarters, and they were often behind. Only when Elway took control in the 4th quarter, and was able to play his way because Reeves had no choice, were they able to win games. Look what happened when he finally had a coach who let him play his game. Look at those numbers and look at those wins, and then span it out over his career.People here are talking about Reeves as HOF choice; that is a joke. He restrained that team and restrained Elway; he had a great talent and did not know what to do with it. He let his ego get in the way. If Elway would have had a coach like Shanny, or Walsh from the get go, we wouldn't be talking about him being a top 3 QB; simply the best ever.
 
I admitted in my post that I saw him towards the tail end of his career and am trying to get some insight into why he is viewed as the best or the second best of all time. I remembered Elway as being a very good qb but he wasn't as good as Marino, Favre, or Young in the 90's and that was the "prime" of his career.
You need to buy a video of John or something. You are greatly misinformed. If you had taken John Elway and put him in a West Coast Offense, there would be no record left unbroken by him. He and Marino were once in a lifetime talent. They are the best there ever was. And let's not forget...He beat both Marino and Favre to win that superbowl in 97. To say that Favre was better than Elway is joke. Favre played his whole career in a West Coast offense. Put him with Dan Reeves...and you'd have never heard of him much. Elway and Marino were the only two QBs that I can remember, that if it was 3rd and 17...you thought the chances were above 50% that they would convert it. I can't say that about any other QBs.
I remember hoping for a holding penalty against Brroncos on 2nd and 4, only because I know it would force Reeves to let him Throw, instead of pound Sammy into the line again for a gain of one.
 
What about the fine and draft pick thing SSOG?

Was that because they legitimately deferred payment to a couple of players?

Look, they cheated and got away with it relatively unscathed. Good for them. I wish my team was able to accomplish something like that. I'll take the SB wins.

 
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