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Who is the better HOF candidate right now? (1 Viewer)

Does McNabb belong in the HOF right now

  • Yes

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • No

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
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I voted yes for Warner and no for McNabb right now.I think the raw numbers on Warner are borderline...the kind that keeps you on the ballot for a few years but not in. But the story behind Warner is so great, and the impact of the "greatest show on turf" so memorable, that I think when you throw in his other football success, Warner's resume' tips the scales and he gets in...barely.McNabb is not really very close right now. He doesn't have the titles or the MVP awards. He doesn't have a single WOW season...although he was on pace for one that got derailed week 10 by injury. What he does have is a long looking career witha BUNCH of good to great years, without a single receiver of note (excepting ONE season with TO). One more strong post-season run (Super Bowl berth) and 3-4 more strong seasons from McNabb, and I think his career resume' will be too strong to deny. A Philly win this weekend may actually go a long way towards satisfying the first part of that last statement!A realistic projection of McNabb's career path shows he's probably going to make it, and will probably have the more impressive NFL resume' (not necessarily HOF resume') at it's end.
:lmao:I'm also surprised ~70% of the community here feel Warner is already HOF material. I felt that way but figured I'd be in the minority. This last season and a half has done wonders for his chances.
 
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:threadobviouslystartedbyanEaglesFan:

just a question, but exactly when did McNabb ever become a candidate for the HOF, anyways?!

I mean, if they lost last week, would we still be talking about McNabb and Canton?!! :)

wow.you beat a cheesy minnesota team and suddenly they're making a bronze bust of your head.. :rolleyes:

he has never shown an ability to stay healthy, never won the big game, lost countless championship games,

and he just doesn't have the stats..

can we just put this `McNabb is a hall of fame QB` thing to rest already..

WARNER = LOCK...

2-time MVP, SB mvp, lost a SB by a thread on a low-percentage hail-mary pass from Brady that if it falls incomplete, Warner has his second SB ring..

 
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An interesting thing I realized from reading/participating in the other thread:

When Warner actualy comes up for the HOF, we may be at the tail end of a pretty significant drought of Qb's being inducted. I mean....besides Favre, how many other QB's will be/deserve to be inducted before Warner comes up? Maybe Cunningham finaly sneaks in, but I doubt it.

Fair or not, that can only work in Warner's favor. (assuming he retires soon...next year?)

 
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An interesting thing I realized from reading/participating in the other thread:When Warner actualy comes up for the HOF, we may be at the tail end of a pretty significant drought of Qb's being inducted. I mean....besides Favre, how many other QB's will be/deserve to be inducted before Warner comes up? Maybe Cunningham finaly sneaks in, but I doubt it.Fair or not, that can only work in Warner's favor. (assuming he retires soon...next year?)
While I agree in principle to the limited number of worthy QBs theory, remember that the NFL only allows for 5 players (through normal channels) to be voted in each year. And there's no shortage of players at other positions coming up for entry any time soon (with many deserving candidates still on the ballot). Long story short, I'm not sure that a brief respite from having several worthy QBs will help Warner's case all that dramatically. They'll just vote in more RBs . . . or DBs . . . or linemen . . . or whomever.
 
McNabb is the Joe Namath of this era. Famous for his mouth and talking, but vastly overrated.
I'm not really a fan of either guy, but Namath had 3 winning seasons as a starting QB in 13 years and ended with exactly a .500 winning percentage (those 3 years were obviously very good).McNabb has had 5 years with 10 or more wins as a starting QB and has an 83-44-1 career record as a starter (do they actually have ties in the regular season?).You can say what you want about McNabb's mouth, but at least his teams have consistently won games.
 
An interesting thing I realized from reading/participating in the other thread:When Warner actualy comes up for the HOF, we may be at the tail end of a pretty significant drought of Qb's being inducted. I mean....besides Favre, how many other QB's will be/deserve to be inducted before Warner comes up? Maybe Cunningham finaly sneaks in, but I doubt it.Fair or not, that can only work in Warner's favor. (assuming he retires soon...next year?)
While I agree in principle to the limited number of worthy QBs theory, remember that the NFL only allows for 5 players (through normal channels) to be voted in each year. And there's no shortage of players at other positions coming up for entry any time soon (with many deserving candidates still on the ballot). Long story short, I'm not sure that a brief respite from having several worthy QBs will help Warner's case all that dramatically. They'll just vote in more RBs . . . or DBs . . . or linemen . . . or whomever.
Maybe this will allow Ken Anderson to get in? Or Boomer?
 
An interesting thing I realized from reading/participating in the other thread:When Warner actualy comes up for the HOF, we may be at the tail end of a pretty significant drought of Qb's being inducted. I mean....besides Favre, how many other QB's will be/deserve to be inducted before Warner comes up? Maybe Cunningham finaly sneaks in, but I doubt it.Fair or not, that can only work in Warner's favor. (assuming he retires soon...next year?)
While I agree in principle to the limited number of worthy QBs theory, remember that the NFL only allows for 5 players (through normal channels) to be voted in each year. And there's no shortage of players at other positions coming up for entry any time soon (with many deserving candidates still on the ballot). Long story short, I'm not sure that a brief respite from having several worthy QBs will help Warner's case all that dramatically. They'll just vote in more RBs . . . or DBs . . . or linemen . . . or whomever.
Maybe this will allow Ken Anderson to get in? Or Boomer?
I still don't think that it will really help any other QBs. The voters will just induct guys from other positions. It's not like there's a quota for adding QBs every couple of years. I agree they should catch up on some guys they missed, but it's not like they are devoid of guys that are worthy at many other positions.
 
:threadobviouslystartedbyanEaglesFan:

just a question, but exactly when did McNabb ever become a candidate for the HOF, anyways?!

I mean, if they lost last week, would we still be talking about McNabb and Canton?!! :thumbup:

wow.you beat a cheesy minnesota team and suddenly they're making a bronze bust of your head.. :thumbup:

he has never shown an ability to stay healthy, never won the big game, lost countless championship games,

and he just doesn't have the stats..
If the Super Bowl is the only game you consider to 'the big game', then you're right. However, a knowledgable fan would understand that to get to the Championship game or Super Bowl, you have to win a lot of big games. Just this year alone, the Eagles faced two playoff team (Arizona and the Giants) and a would-be playoff team (Dallas) in must-win games. McNabb and the eagles won them all. In fact, counting Minnesota, the Eagles have won 5 of 6 big games and McNabb has played excellently in all five wins. By ypour way of thinking, he could travel to New York and beat the Giants (as an underdog), travel to Carolina and beat the Panthers (underdog), andf then lose in teh Super Bowl and Mcnabb will still not be able to 'win the big game', despite the fact that he would have just won 7 of 8 big games.Mcnabb is 9-5 in playoff games including this year's win against a 'cheesy Minnesota team' who just happened to have homefield advantage (ask Indy and Atlanta if that matters or not).

 
Danny White led Dallas to 3 straight conference title games and had a .694 winning percentage as a starter. Anyone calling for him to be in the HOF?

 
Obviously, trying to decide if a player is going to the HOF or not before his career is close to over is a bit silly, but the 'can't win the big game' BS about McNabb is totally unfounded. Just like saying Trent Dilfer is a great QB because he did win "the big game", is ridiculous, saying a guy isn't clutch because his team didn't his equally dumb.

Let's check out some big name QBs and their playoff record: (10 starts minimum)

Bart Starr 9-1

Bob Griese 6-5

Brett Favre 12-10

Craig Morton 5-5

Dan Marino 8-10

Danny White 5-5

Donovan McNabb 9-5

Fran Tarkenton 6-5

Jim Kelly 9-8

Jim Plunkett 8-2

Joe Montana 16-7

John Elway 14-7

Ken Stabler 7-5

Mark Brunell 5-5

Peyton Manning 7-9

Phil Simms 6-4

Roger Staubach 11-6

Steve Mcnair 5-5

Steve Young 8-6

Terry Bradshaw 14-5

Tom Brady 14-3

Troy Aikman 11-4

Warren Moon 3-7

So, out of 23 NFL quarterbacks with ten or more appearances, there are onlt seven with a better win-loss perecentage than McNabb. Only 7 of 23. And there are a bunch of QBs with a worse big game win-percentage who are in the Hall of Fame.

So argue all you want about his carreer passing yardage or his knack for getting injured, but he does very well in big games.

 
An interesting thing I realized from reading/participating in the other thread:

When Warner actualy comes up for the HOF, we may be at the tail end of a pretty significant drought of Qb's being inducted. I mean....besides Favre, how many other QB's will be/deserve to be inducted before Warner comes up? Maybe Cunningham finaly sneaks in, but I doubt it.

Fair or not, that can only work in Warner's favor. (assuming he retires soon...next year?)
While I agree in principle to the limited number of worthy QBs theory, remember that the NFL only allows for 5 players (through normal channels) to be voted in each year. And there's no shortage of players at other positions coming up for entry any time soon (with many deserving candidates still on the ballot). Long story short, I'm not sure that a brief respite from having several worthy QBs will help Warner's case all that dramatically. They'll just vote in more RBs . . . or DBs . . . or linemen . . . or whomever.
Maybe this will allow Ken Anderson to get in? Or Boomer?
I don't really see this. Check out this thread: Who Will Be In the Next 10 HOF Classes?, Non Senior/Old Timer NomineesIn that thread, I came up with 35 guys I think will definitely be inducted in the next 10 HOF classes. That group does not include Warner, Terrell Davis, Shaun Alexander, Tiki, Andre Reed, Dermontti Dawson, Jason Taylor, Gradishar, Ronde Barber, Rodney Harrison, Brian Dawkins, John Lynch, any contributor other than Tags, any coach other than Parcells, or any specialist at all. And that's just a sampling. It doesn't include other players I assume won't retire fast enough to get in within that window, like Manning, Brady, McNabb, Owens, Moss, Holt, Champ Bailey, etc.

I hope the voters use this time frame to honor positions other than QB, though I do think this QB "drought" will probably help Warner to make it.

 
An interesting thing I realized from reading/participating in the other thread:When Warner actualy comes up for the HOF, we may be at the tail end of a pretty significant drought of Qb's being inducted. I mean....besides Favre, how many other QB's will be/deserve to be inducted before Warner comes up? Maybe Cunningham finaly sneaks in, but I doubt it.Fair or not, that can only work in Warner's favor. (assuming he retires soon...next year?)
While I agree in principle to the limited number of worthy QBs theory, remember that the NFL only allows for 5 players (through normal channels) to be voted in each year. And there's no shortage of players at other positions coming up for entry any time soon (with many deserving candidates still on the ballot). Long story short, I'm not sure that a brief respite from having several worthy QBs will help Warner's case all that dramatically. They'll just vote in more RBs . . . or DBs . . . or linemen . . . or whomever.
Maybe this will allow Ken Anderson to get in? Or Boomer?
That group does not include Warner, Terrell Davis, Shaun Alexander, Tiki, Andre Reed, Dermontti Dawson, Jason Taylor, Gradishar, Ronde Barber, Rodney Harrison, Brian Dawkins, John Lynch,
I feel you are a perfect 12-12 in your "won't get in" predictions.
 
Obviously, trying to decide if a player is going to the HOF or not before his career is close to over is a bit silly, but the 'can't win the big game' BS about McNabb is totally unfounded. Just like saying Trent Dilfer is a great QB because he did win "the big game", is ridiculous, saying a guy isn't clutch because his team didn't his equally dumb.

Let's check out some big name QBs and their playoff record: (10 starts minimum)

Bart Starr 9-1

Bob Griese 6-5

Brett Favre 12-10

Craig Morton 5-5

Dan Marino 8-10

Danny White 5-5

Donovan McNabb 9-5

Fran Tarkenton 6-5

Jim Kelly 9-8

Jim Plunkett 8-2

Joe Montana 16-7

John Elway 14-7

Ken Stabler 7-5

Mark Brunell 5-5

Peyton Manning 7-9

Phil Simms 6-4

Roger Staubach 11-6

Steve Mcnair 5-5

Steve Young 8-6

Terry Bradshaw 14-5

Tom Brady 14-3

Troy Aikman 11-4

Warren Moon 3-7

So, out of 23 NFL quarterbacks with ten or more appearances, there are onlt seven with a better win-loss perecentage than McNabb. Only 7 of 23. And there are a bunch of QBs with a worse big game win-percentage who are in the Hall of Fame.

So argue all you want about his carreer passing yardage or his knack for getting injured, but he does very well in big games.
Here's the problem with this. McNabb has a career QB rating of 81.1 in the playoffs. More specifically, look at his ratings in the 5 playoff losses: 59.1, 73.1 (NFC Championship), 58.5 (NFC Championship), 19.3 (NFC Championship), 75.4 (Super Bowl). I know QB rating isn't the be all, end all, but it is an approximation and I didn't feel like listing out his stats in those games. And he only added 1 rushing TD in those games, so he didn't overcome poor passing performances with rushing.IMO when people refer to big games for McNabb, they aren't talking about big regular season games or all playoff games. They are talking about conference championship games and the one Super Bowl. Especially since those are the games being watched by the highest number of fans every year. Unfortunately for McNabb, he has been in 5 such games, and he played poorly in 4 of them, which were all losses. (He played well in the NFC Championship game they won to get to the Super Bowl.)

 
McNabb is the Joe Namath of this era. Famous for his mouth and talking, but vastly overrated.
I'm not really a fan of either guy, but Namath had 3 winning seasons as a starting QB in 13 years and ended with exactly a .500 winning percentage (those 3 years were obviously very good).McNabb has had 5 years with 10 or more wins as a starting QB and has an 83-44-1 career record as a starter (do they actually have ties in the regular season?).You can say what you want about McNabb's mouth, but at least his teams have consistently won games.
But is that because of McNabb? I don't think so. A little bit is, of course. But I think he has benefitted from Westbrook and Jim Johnson's defense more than most think. And I thought that their record without him when he has missed time wasn't that bad. Am I wrong about that? Didn't AJ Feeley light it up for a couple of games several years back?
 
Obviously, trying to decide if a player is going to the HOF or not before his career is close to over is a bit silly, but the 'can't win the big game' BS about McNabb is totally unfounded. Just like saying Trent Dilfer is a great QB because he did win "the big game", is ridiculous, saying a guy isn't clutch because his team didn't his equally dumb.

Let's check out some big name QBs and their playoff record: (10 starts minimum)

Bart Starr 9-1

Bob Griese 6-5

Brett Favre 12-10

Craig Morton 5-5

Dan Marino 8-10

Danny White 5-5

Donovan McNabb 9-5

Fran Tarkenton 6-5

Jim Kelly 9-8

Jim Plunkett 8-2

Joe Montana 16-7

John Elway 14-7

Ken Stabler 7-5

Mark Brunell 5-5

Peyton Manning 7-9

Phil Simms 6-4

Roger Staubach 11-6

Steve Mcnair 5-5

Steve Young 8-6

Terry Bradshaw 14-5

Tom Brady 14-3

Troy Aikman 11-4

Warren Moon 3-7

So, out of 23 NFL quarterbacks with ten or more appearances, there are onlt seven with a better win-loss perecentage than McNabb. Only 7 of 23. And there are a bunch of QBs with a worse big game win-percentage who are in the Hall of Fame.

So argue all you want about his carreer passing yardage or his knack for getting injured, but he does very well in big games.
Here's the problem with this. McNabb has a career QB rating of 81.1 in the playoffs. More specifically, look at his ratings in the 5 playoff losses: 59.1, 73.1 (NFC Championship), 58.5 (NFC Championship), 19.3 (NFC Championship), 75.4 (Super Bowl). I know QB rating isn't the be all, end all, but it is an approximation and I didn't feel like listing out his stats in those games. And he only added 1 rushing TD in those games, so he didn't overcome poor passing performances with rushing.IMO when people refer to big games for McNabb, they aren't talking about big regular season games or all playoff games. They are talking about conference championship games and the one Super Bowl. Especially since those are the games being watched by the highest number of fans every year. Unfortunately for McNabb, he has been in 5 such games, and he played poorly in 4 of them, which were all losses. (He played well in the NFC Championship game they won to get to the Super Bowl.)
:shrug: The Eagles have done well in big games. McNabb? Not so much.

 
Danny White led Dallas to 3 straight conference title games and had a .694 winning percentage as a starter. Anyone calling for him to be in the HOF?
Joe Theismann has a better overall resume than White and won't come anywhere near the HOF. I think Theismann is the only QB to appear in back-to-back SBs and not be in the HOF.
 
McNabb is the Joe Namath of this era. Famous for his mouth and talking, but vastly overrated.
I'm not really a fan of either guy, but Namath had 3 winning seasons as a starting QB in 13 years and ended with exactly a .500 winning percentage (those 3 years were obviously very good).McNabb has had 5 years with 10 or more wins as a starting QB and has an 83-44-1 career record as a starter (do they actually have ties in the regular season?).You can say what you want about McNabb's mouth, but at least his teams have consistently won games.
But is that because of McNabb? I don't think so. A little bit is, of course. But I think he has benefitted from Westbrook and Jim Johnson's defense more than most think. And I thought that their record without him when he has missed time wasn't that bad. Am I wrong about that? Didn't AJ Feeley light it up for a couple of games several years back?
;)Seasons in which McNabb missed more than a couple of games:In 2002, the Eagles were 8-4 (including 1-1 in the playoffs) with McNabb and 5-1 without him.In 2005, the Eagles were 4-5 with McNabb and 2-5 without him.In 2006, the Eagles were 5-5 with McNabb and 6-2 without him (including 1-1 in the playoffs).Overall, in these 5 seasons, the Eagles were 17-14 with McNabb and 13-8 without him. In 2 of those 3 seasons, the team had a better winning percentage without him, and in the only season that wasn't the case, McNabb himself had a losing record. At the very least, this would seem to underscore the fact that a strong reason for McNabb's high winning percentage has been the quality of the team around him.ETA: Fixed 2002, since McNabb returned for the two playoff games that season.
 
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JuniorNB said:
Obviously, trying to decide if a player is going to the HOF or not before his career is close to over is a bit silly, but the 'can't win the big game' BS about McNabb is totally unfounded. Just like saying Trent Dilfer is a great QB because he did win "the big game", is ridiculous, saying a guy isn't clutch because his team didn't his equally dumb.

Let's check out some big name QBs and their playoff record: (10 starts minimum)

Bart Starr 9-1

Bob Griese 6-5

Brett Favre 12-10

Craig Morton 5-5

Dan Marino 8-10

Danny White 5-5

Donovan McNabb 9-5

Fran Tarkenton 6-5

Jim Kelly 9-8

Jim Plunkett 8-2

Joe Montana 16-7

John Elway 14-7

Ken Stabler 7-5

Mark Brunell 5-5

Peyton Manning 7-9

Phil Simms 6-4

Roger Staubach 11-6

Steve Mcnair 5-5

Steve Young 8-6

Terry Bradshaw 14-5

Tom Brady 14-3

Troy Aikman 11-4

Warren Moon 3-7

So, out of 23 NFL quarterbacks with ten or more appearances, there are onlt seven with a better win-loss perecentage than McNabb. Only 7 of 23. And there are a bunch of QBs with a worse big game win-percentage who are in the Hall of Fame.

So argue all you want about his carreer passing yardage or his knack for getting injured, but he does very well in big games.
Here's the problem with that list and this post that you're overlooking (yet again). You're fascination with his post-season record simply isn't enough to warrant HOF induction. It may be important to YOU, but it's not as important in HOF consideration unless you take it all the way.The 7 guys with a better win-loss percentage have the hardware. They have the rings (and most of them multiple rings). Thus, the rest of their stats don't matter as much. When you compare those 7 to McNabb, just ignoring career stats and regular season passing rankings, etc, they got it done when it mattered and he didn't. This is why they are in the HOF.

The other guys with a worse win-loss percentage have the stats. McNabb doesn't really have those either. They are good stats, but definitely not great stats. Not HOF stats. He's never led the league in any of those stats in his 10 yrs. He's never topped 4000 yds. He's never done a lot of things that these other guys did. That's why they got in despite having a worse postseason record.

So when you're trying to compare McNabb to guys on this list in terms of post season record, there's a group that deserve to get in because of their championships in the postseason (which McNabb doesn't have) and there's a group that got in because of their stats despite their failures in the postseason (which again McNabb doesn't have). McNabb, at this point, is simply middle of the road in everything. Good but not great. Near the top, but never quite there. Almost won a championship, but didn't. Almost led the league in passing once or twice, but didn't. Almost threw for the most TDs, but didn't. That's not HOF material. A decent post-season record + decent stats != HOF. You need to be great in one or the other (great meaning championships in the postseason).

 
Rings are overrated, in a funny sense. People think the HOF overvalues rings, so when they talk about who should make the HOF, people focus on rings. But the HOF doesn't really focus on rings.

I came up with a system to measure QBs that adjusted for era. The only thing I'm using to grade the QBs are their regular and post-season individual statistics.

Eighteen of my top 20 QBs are in the HOF or will be in the HOF. Ken Anderson should be in the HOF, but isn't. Kurt Warner is the other, and he might make it in. Warren Moon comes in at 22, and he's in the HOF with no rings. Sid Luckman, Y.A. Tittle, Sammy Baugh, Blanda and Layne were simply from a different era. That leaves Kelly, Namath and Griese as HOF QBs who don't rank super high. All four are in the top 40.

Then you get to the Earl Morrall, Ken Stabler, Mark Rypien, Joe Theisman, Doug Williams, Brad Johnson, Phil Simms tier. Obviously none of them are in the HOF despite good, but not great stats. McMahon and Hostetler are farther back, and then the last tier would be Dilfer and Plunkett. Tough to grade Manning or Ben right now. Simms and Plunkett have two ring cases, but they're not getting in because of their stats.

I think only Namath and Griese, and maybe Aikman got in because of their rings. It's hard to separate out "rings" from Aikman's incredible post-season performances. Ken Anderson, Daryl Lamonica and Boomer Esiason would probably be in the HOF with a ring, but that's about it. Going to "rings" is really just a tiebrekaer of last resort, IMO. The first, second and their looks should be their individual production on the field, not their team success. A QB is only worth about 10% of his team, at the max.

 
JuniorNB said:
Obviously, trying to decide if a player is going to the HOF or not before his career is close to over is a bit silly, but the 'can't win the big game' BS about McNabb is totally unfounded. Just like saying Trent Dilfer is a great QB because he did win "the big game", is ridiculous, saying a guy isn't clutch because his team didn't his equally dumb.

Let's check out some big name QBs and their playoff record: (10 starts minimum)

Bart Starr 9-1

Bob Griese 6-5

Brett Favre 12-10

Craig Morton 5-5

Dan Marino 8-10

Danny White 5-5

Donovan McNabb 9-5

Fran Tarkenton 6-5

Jim Kelly 9-8

Jim Plunkett 8-2

Joe Montana 16-7

John Elway 14-7

Ken Stabler 7-5

Mark Brunell 5-5

Peyton Manning 7-9

Phil Simms 6-4

Roger Staubach 11-6

Steve Mcnair 5-5

Steve Young 8-6

Terry Bradshaw 14-5

Tom Brady 14-3

Troy Aikman 11-4

Warren Moon 3-7

So, out of 23 NFL quarterbacks with ten or more appearances, there are onlt seven with a better win-loss perecentage than McNabb. Only 7 of 23. And there are a bunch of QBs with a worse big game win-percentage who are in the Hall of Fame.

So argue all you want about his carreer passing yardage or his knack for getting injured, but he does very well in big games.
Here's the problem with that list and this post that you're overlooking (yet again). You're fascination with his post-season record simply isn't enough to warrant HOF induction. It may be important to YOU, but it's not as important in HOF consideration unless you take it all the way.
I'm not facsinated with post-season record. I'm fascinated with people saying he can't win teh big game. They overlook the regular season big-games that he had to win the make all those playoff appearences. They also pretend all the playoff wins weren't big games. They give me his passer rating in his big game losses (which are way fewer than his big game wins) to prove their point.As I've said, McNabb has been indisputedly great in the Eagles recent 5-1 run to get them where they are now. Perhaps someone can give his passer-rating and TD to Interception ratio in those games. Were they not big games? The Eagles were on the brink of elimination. Was Sundays' road playoff win a big game? He was 23-34 for 300 yards. If they can knock off the Giants in teh Meadowlands, would that be a big game? of course it would. And regardless if Mcnabb went 40-45 for 425 yards anfd three TDs, if he lost to Carolina the following week, they'd say he can't win teh big game.

Of course he loses alot of big games. He plays in a ton of them. 11 out of 12 of each years playoff teams end with their QB losing the big game. 11 of 12.

Did you know that Joe Montana and john Elway both have 7 playoff losses? They are 2 of the top 4 in NFL history in playoff losses. You know why they have so many? because they played a ton of playoff games. Yes, Mcnabb often loses the big game. But his percentage of wins in those big games is higher than all but seven of the QBs in NFL history. See the list above. It means something. I'm not facsinated with post-season records. I',m fascinated with uninformed fans saying McNabb isn't clutch, when the stats say otherwise.

 
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Just Win Baby said:
ConstruxBoy said:
David Yudkin said:
ConstruxBoy said:
McNabb is the Joe Namath of this era. Famous for his mouth and talking, but vastly overrated.
I'm not really a fan of either guy, but Namath had 3 winning seasons as a starting QB in 13 years and ended with exactly a .500 winning percentage (those 3 years were obviously very good).McNabb has had 5 years with 10 or more wins as a starting QB and has an 83-44-1 career record as a starter (do they actually have ties in the regular season?).You can say what you want about McNabb's mouth, but at least his teams have consistently won games.
But is that because of McNabb? I don't think so. A little bit is, of course. But I think he has benefitted from Westbrook and Jim Johnson's defense more than most think. And I thought that their record without him when he has missed time wasn't that bad. Am I wrong about that? Didn't AJ Feeley light it up for a couple of games several years back?
:whistle:Seasons in which McNabb missed more than a couple of games:In 2002, the Eagles were 7-3 with McNabb and 6-2 without him (including 1-1 in the playoffs).In 2005, the Eagles were 4-5 with McNabb and 2-5 without him.In 2006, the Eagles were 5-5 with McNabb and 6-2 without him (including 1-1 in the playoffs).Overall, in these 5 seasons, the Eagles were 16-13 with McNabb and 14-9 without him. In 2 of those 3 seasons, the team had a better winning percentage without him, and in the only season that wasn't the case, McNabb himself had a losing record. At the very least, this would seem to underscore the fact that a strong reason for McNabb's high winning percentage has been the quality of the team around him.
Just to clarify, in '02 McNabb played both playoff games. He missed the last 6 games but came back in time for the playoffs.
 
JuniorNB said:
Obviously, trying to decide if a player is going to the HOF or not before his career is close to over is a bit silly, but the 'can't win the big game' BS about McNabb is totally unfounded. Just like saying Trent Dilfer is a great QB because he did win "the big game", is ridiculous, saying a guy isn't clutch because his team didn't his equally dumb.

Let's check out some big name QBs and their playoff record: (10 starts minimum)

Bart Starr 9-1

Bob Griese 6-5

Brett Favre 12-10

Craig Morton 5-5

Dan Marino 8-10

Danny White 5-5

Donovan McNabb 9-5

Fran Tarkenton 6-5

Jim Kelly 9-8

Jim Plunkett 8-2

Joe Montana 16-7

John Elway 14-7

Ken Stabler 7-5

Mark Brunell 5-5

Peyton Manning 7-9

Phil Simms 6-4

Roger Staubach 11-6

Steve Mcnair 5-5

Steve Young 8-6

Terry Bradshaw 14-5

Tom Brady 14-3

Troy Aikman 11-4

Warren Moon 3-7

So, out of 23 NFL quarterbacks with ten or more appearances, there are onlt seven with a better win-loss perecentage than McNabb. Only 7 of 23. And there are a bunch of QBs with a worse big game win-percentage who are in the Hall of Fame.

So argue all you want about his carreer passing yardage or his knack for getting injured, but he does very well in big games.
Here's the problem with that list and this post that you're overlooking (yet again). You're fascination with his post-season record simply isn't enough to warrant HOF induction. It may be important to YOU, but it's not as important in HOF consideration unless you take it all the way.
I'm not facsinated with post-season record. I'm fascinated with people saying he can't win teh big game. They overlook the regular season big-games that he had to win the make all those playoff appearences. They also pretend all the playoff wins weren't big games. They give me his passer rating in his big game losses (which are way fewer than his big game wins) to prove their point.As I've said, McNabb has been indisputedly great in the Eagles recent 5-1 run to get them where they are now. Perhaps someone can give his passer-rating and TD to Interception ratio in those games. Were they not big games? The Eagles were on the brink of elimination. Was Sundays' road playoff win a big game? He was 23-34 for 300 yards. If they can knock off the Giants in teh Meadowlands, would that be a big game? of course it would. And regardless if Mcnabb went 40-45 for 425 yards anfd three TDs, if he lost to Carolina the following week, they'd say he can't win teh big game.

Of course he loses alot of big games. He plays in a ton of them. 11 out of 12 of each years playoff teams end with their QB losing the big game. 11 of 12.

Did you know that Joe Montana and john Elway both have 7 playoff losses? They are 2 of the top 4 in NFL history in playoff losses. You know why they have so many? because they played a ton of playoff games. Yes, Mcnabb often loses the big game. But his percentage of wins in those big games is higher than all but seven of the QBs in NFL history. See the list above. It means something. I'm not facsinated with post-season records. I',m fascinated with uninformed fans saying McNabb isn't clutch, when the stats say otherwise.
:shrug: This misperception has persisted in the past for other great QB's who took a while to win a ring. Peyton Manning was constantly labeled as a choker until he got a ring. Elway was bashed exactly the same way for nearly a decade!Unfortunately, some guys will see ALL QB's as chokers until they get a ring.
 
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Just Win Baby said:
ConstruxBoy said:
David Yudkin said:
ConstruxBoy said:
McNabb is the Joe Namath of this era. Famous for his mouth and talking, but vastly overrated.
I'm not really a fan of either guy, but Namath had 3 winning seasons as a starting QB in 13 years and ended with exactly a .500 winning percentage (those 3 years were obviously very good).McNabb has had 5 years with 10 or more wins as a starting QB and has an 83-44-1 career record as a starter (do they actually have ties in the regular season?).You can say what you want about McNabb's mouth, but at least his teams have consistently won games.
But is that because of McNabb? I don't think so. A little bit is, of course. But I think he has benefitted from Westbrook and Jim Johnson's defense more than most think. And I thought that their record without him when he has missed time wasn't that bad. Am I wrong about that? Didn't AJ Feeley light it up for a couple of games several years back?
:popcorn:Seasons in which McNabb missed more than a couple of games:In 2002, the Eagles were 7-3 with McNabb and 6-2 without him (including 1-1 in the playoffs).In 2005, the Eagles were 4-5 with McNabb and 2-5 without him.In 2006, the Eagles were 5-5 with McNabb and 6-2 without him (including 1-1 in the playoffs).Overall, in these 5 seasons, the Eagles were 16-13 with McNabb and 14-9 without him. In 2 of those 3 seasons, the team had a better winning percentage without him, and in the only season that wasn't the case, McNabb himself had a losing record. At the very least, this would seem to underscore the fact that a strong reason for McNabb's high winning percentage has been the quality of the team around him.
Just to clarify, in '02 McNabb played both playoff games. He missed the last 6 games but came back in time for the playoffs.
Thanks. I fixed the original post. Fortunately, this doesn't affect the point of the post.
 
I vote No for both at this time but Warner is very close. The stat that stands out to me for McNabb is the 64% completion percentage in 2004 when TO was an Eagle and they made the Superbowl. 64% is about 5 points higher than his career average. McNabb's lack of quality WR targets over his career is a legitimate point that others have brought up in this thread. Warner has been much luckier in that regard but McNabb played on some great teams as well. I do think when it's all said and done, Warner will sneak into the HOF and McNabb will not unless he wins a SB.

 
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I do think when it's all said and done, Warner will sneak into the HOF.
So what is the baseline for sneaking into the HOF vs entering more legitimately? I'm asking because I don't know the answer.As I cited earlier, Warner ranks #1 all-time in passing yards per game and is Top 5 all-time in completion %, QB rating, YPA, and several other adjusted metrics.Does the "sneaking in" part stem from not enough total numbers, not enough SB appearances, not enough good seasons, not ranking high enough in other career categoeis, or something else not covered here?What else has to happen for Warner to be considered more of a deserving candidate vs the sneaking in kind?
 
I do think when it's all said and done, Warner will sneak into the HOF.
What else has to happen for Warner to be considered more of a deserving candidate vs the sneaking in kind?
A good season in non-indoor or non-75 and sunny weather.
So McNabb should be in the HOF because his team has made it to the playoffs a lot (even though they can't ever seem to finish the job) and because McNabb can play in the cold and outside? Got it.Btw, in your other post above, you keep insisting on how McNabb can win the big games. That's great. I'm not even labeling McNabb a choker. He's definitely done his part to get his teams in position to make it that far. But, you're still ignoring the fact that that isn't enough. Just because he isn't a choker and has been in so many playoff games doesn't make him a HOF QB. The stats just aren't there. Again, the guys with similar playoff records to him actually won it all and the guys with worse playoff records had much more impressive stats. He has neither. He's not a HOF (yet).
 
I do think when it's all said and done, Warner will sneak into the HOF.
What else has to happen for Warner to be considered more of a deserving candidate vs the sneaking in kind?
A good season in non-indoor or non-75 and sunny weather.
Do you think Dan Marino and Steve Young should be HOFers? I'm not aware that either of them ever had good seasons in the conditions you describe.
Kurt Warner went to teh giants remember? How'd he do in those 'non-perfect' conditions? How did he do everytime Arizona played in bad weather this year? Terrible!A good example was the New England game. It was cold and snowy. Warner threw for about 40 yards in three quarters. Leinart came in and had over 100 yards in a quarter.Warner has had the luxury of playing on great offense with great receivers, either in a dome or in beautiful Arizona. When he tried venturing outside those conditions, he not only became average, he became a non-starter.
 
JuniorNB said:
Obviously, trying to decide if a player is going to the HOF or not before his career is close to over is a bit silly, but the 'can't win the big game' BS about McNabb is totally unfounded. Just like saying Trent Dilfer is a great QB because he did win "the big game", is ridiculous, saying a guy isn't clutch because his team didn't his equally dumb.

Let's check out some big name QBs and their playoff record: (10 starts minimum)

Bart Starr 9-1

Bob Griese 6-5

Brett Favre 12-10

Craig Morton 5-5

Dan Marino 8-10

Danny White 5-5

Donovan McNabb 9-5

Fran Tarkenton 6-5

Jim Kelly 9-8

Jim Plunkett 8-2

Joe Montana 16-7

John Elway 14-7

Ken Stabler 7-5

Mark Brunell 5-5

Peyton Manning 7-9

Phil Simms 6-4

Roger Staubach 11-6

Steve Mcnair 5-5

Steve Young 8-6

Terry Bradshaw 14-5

Tom Brady 14-3

Troy Aikman 11-4

Warren Moon 3-7

So, out of 23 NFL quarterbacks with ten or more appearances, there are onlt seven with a better win-loss perecentage than McNabb. Only 7 of 23. And there are a bunch of QBs with a worse big game win-percentage who are in the Hall of Fame.

So argue all you want about his carreer passing yardage or his knack for getting injured, but he does very well in big games.
Here's the problem with that list and this post that you're overlooking (yet again). You're fascination with his post-season record simply isn't enough to warrant HOF induction. It may be important to YOU, but it's not as important in HOF consideration unless you take it all the way.
I'm not facsinated with post-season record. I'm fascinated with people saying he can't win teh big game. They overlook the regular season big-games that he had to win the make all those playoff appearences. They also pretend all the playoff wins weren't big games. They give me his passer rating in his big game losses (which are way fewer than his big game wins) to prove their point.As I've said, McNabb has been indisputedly great in the Eagles recent 5-1 run to get them where they are now. Perhaps someone can give his passer-rating and TD to Interception ratio in those games. Were they not big games? The Eagles were on the brink of elimination. Was Sundays' road playoff win a big game? He was 23-34 for 300 yards. If they can knock off the Giants in teh Meadowlands, would that be a big game? of course it would. And regardless if Mcnabb went 40-45 for 425 yards anfd three TDs, if he lost to Carolina the following week, they'd say he can't win teh big game.

Of course he loses alot of big games. He plays in a ton of them. 11 out of 12 of each years playoff teams end with their QB losing the big game. 11 of 12.

Did you know that Joe Montana and john Elway both have 7 playoff losses? They are 2 of the top 4 in NFL history in playoff losses. You know why they have so many? because they played a ton of playoff games. Yes, Mcnabb often loses the big game. But his percentage of wins in those big games is higher than all but seven of the QBs in NFL history. See the list above. It means something. I'm not facsinated with post-season records. I',m fascinated with uninformed fans saying McNabb isn't clutch, when the stats say otherwise.
:unsure: This misperception has persisted in the past for other great QB's who took a while to win a ring. Peyton Manning was constantly labeled as a choker until he got a ring. Elway was bashed exactly the same way for nearly a decade!Unfortunately, some guys will see ALL QB's as chokers until they get a ring.
Peyton Manning would be in the HOF without his Super Bowl Ring See Marino.John Elway would be in the HOF without his Super Bowl rings. See Warren Moon.

Even being labeled as chokers, these 2 QBs are CLEAR HOF QBs. They have the stats to prove it. Elway is still 5th in career TD passes and 3rd in career passing yards. The 2 Super Bowl rings are an exclamation point to a HOF career. Peyton is an obvious shoe-in without the championship.

McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.

 
I do think when it's all said and done, Warner will sneak into the HOF.
What else has to happen for Warner to be considered more of a deserving candidate vs the sneaking in kind?
A good season in non-indoor or non-75 and sunny weather.
Do you think Dan Marino and Steve Young should be HOFers? I'm not aware that either of them ever had good seasons in the conditions you describe.
Kurt Warner went to teh giants remember? How'd he do in those 'non-perfect' conditions? How did he do everytime Arizona played in bad weather this year? Terrible!A good example was the New England game. It was cold and snowy. Warner threw for about 40 yards in three quarters. Leinart came in and had over 100 yards in a quarter.Warner has had the luxury of playing on great offense with great receivers, either in a dome or in beautiful Arizona. When he tried venturing outside those conditions, he not only became average, he became a non-starter.
Nice post. Maybe try answering the question posed now? Should Marino or Young not be in the HOF because they got to play in sunny weather? Apparently you're discounting Warner's accomplishments because of that, so should we do the same for Marino and Young since they benefited from the same type of conditions?
 
I do think when it's all said and done, Warner will sneak into the HOF.
What else has to happen for Warner to be considered more of a deserving candidate vs the sneaking in kind?
A good season in non-indoor or non-75 and sunny weather.
Do you think Dan Marino and Steve Young should be HOFers? I'm not aware that either of them ever had good seasons in the conditions you describe.
Kurt Warner went to teh giants remember? How'd he do in those 'non-perfect' conditions? How did he do everytime Arizona played in bad weather this year? Terrible!A good example was the New England game. It was cold and snowy. Warner threw for about 40 yards in three quarters. Leinart came in and had over 100 yards in a quarter.Warner has had the luxury of playing on great offense with great receivers, either in a dome or in beautiful Arizona. When he tried venturing outside those conditions, he not only became average, he became a non-starter.
The two things missing from your post are explanations. When Warner went to the Giants he had various finger and hand injuries that dramatically impacted how he gripped and threw the ball. That had more to do with his so so numbers than anything else. In the Pats game, it made no difference to Warner or the rest of the Cardinals AT ALL. They already had made the playoffs and the game plan barely involved passing. Of course Leinart had A TON to play for (like A JOB), so to him the game was potentially life altering. Overall I agree that Warner is not a great cold weather QB, but that does not diminish what he's done the rest of the time.A friend of mine is a big advocate of making all teams play in domes to provide a level playing field for all teams. While impractical, it is a decent idea. It's tough having a team win or lose when the weather changes the outcome of games.
 
McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.
These types of comments can be very misleading. Testaverde and Bledsoe rank Top 10 in a lot of passing categories. Because they rank higher on careers numbers in key categories, does that make them more qualified to be HOFers?I personally think career totals are WAY overrated. To me, it's what players did in their peak years and on a per game basis that matters. IMO, a guy with 25,000 passing yards in 100 games is more worthy than a guy with 45,000 passing yards in 250 games.
 
Peyton Manning would be in the HOF without his Super Bowl Ring See Marino.

John Elway would be in the HOF without his Super Bowl rings. See Warren Moon.

Even being labeled as chokers, these 2 QBs are CLEAR HOF QBs. They have the stats to prove it. Elway is still 5th in career TD passes and 3rd in career passing yards. The 2 Super Bowl rings are an exclamation point to a HOF career. Peyton is an obvious shoe-in without the championship.

McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.
Nobody (or very few anyway) is really disputing that last point. My point was that the "choker " label is not just unfair in McNabb's case, but has historicly been over-used and abused.Clearly, many of us are debating whether McNabb will make it assuming another 3-4 years of similar production. Some say he'd still need a ring.. "because he hasn't been clutch" to this point in his career. I'm simply pointing out that the ring alone is a poor/short-sighted indicator of a player's ability to perform in the clutch. I wonder if Elway would have been such an easy HOF choice if he hadn't played his last four seasons...had never gotten a ring or climbed so high in career totals. How do Elway's stats and career arch compare to McNabb at this point? I suspect (but don't know) there are a lot of similarities. McNabb will be very high (with another 4 years) in all of the career totals as well.

 
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A friend of mine is a big advocate of making all teams play in domes to provide a level playing field for all teams. While impractical, it is a decent idea. It's tough having a team win or lose when the weather changes the outcome of games.
I wouldn't be surprised if half the teams had a dome or retractable roof in 20 years.
 
McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.
These types of comments can be very misleading. Testaverde and Bledsoe rank Top 10 in a lot of passing categories. Because they rank higher on careers numbers in key categories, does that make them more qualified to be HOFers?
Not to mention that 34th in passing TDs isn't too far away from 10th for a 32 year old. 70 more TDs (3+ average seasons for McNabb) and he's top 10.
 
I do think when it's all said and done, Warner will sneak into the HOF.
So what is the baseline for sneaking into the HOF vs entering more legitimately? I'm asking because I don't know the answer.As I cited earlier, Warner ranks #1 all-time in passing yards per game and is Top 5 all-time in completion %, QB rating, YPA, and several other adjusted metrics.Does the "sneaking in" part stem from not enough total numbers, not enough SB appearances, not enough good seasons, not ranking high enough in other career categoeis, or something else not covered here?What else has to happen for Warner to be considered more of a deserving candidate vs the sneaking in kind?
By sneaking in, I mean that some voters will be on the fence over his resume. I think a HOF finalist needs a minimum of 80% of the vote from the 44-person Selection Committee to get in. Warner will probably be closer to 80% than 100% and they only select around 5 guys each year. But all candidates who are elected into the HOF are deserving and worthy and I hope Warner makes it. I think he needs more career wins and one or two more very good seasons.
 
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A few notes from a St. Louis scribe who watched Warner last weekend.

KURT WARNER STRENGTHENS HIS HALL OF FAME CREDENTIALS: In Arizona’s 30-24 victory over Atlanta Saturday in an NFC Wildcard game, Warner passed for 271 yards and two touchdowns and took another step closer to Canton. It was fun to watch Warner perform on the postseason stage for the first time in nearly seven years — specifically this was his first game in the NFL tournament since Feb. 3, 2002, when the Rams lost to New England in the 36th Super Bowl. It was the eighth postseason game of Warner’s career, and he boosted his Hall of Fame case.

Some numbers:

* Warner is 6-2 as a postseason starter.

* Among the QBs who have started a minimum eight postseason games, Warner’s average of 311.5 yards passing per games ranks No. 1. Those postseason numbers, provided by STATS LLC, only go back to 1970.

* Among QBs who have started a minimum of eight postseason games, Warner’s passer rating of 92.5 ranks second only to Joe Montana (95.6) since 1970.

* Among those with at least eight starts, Warner ranks fourth in yards per attempt (8.31), fifth in completion percentage (62.7) and sixth in the percentage of passes that go for touchdowns (5.7).

* Warner still holds the record for most yards passing in a Super Bowl (414) and was the MVP of Super Bowl 34. The bottom line: Warner has been one of the best postseason performers of his era. Or any era, actually.

 
McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.
These types of comments can be very misleading. Testaverde and Bledsoe rank Top 10 in a lot of passing categories. Because they rank higher on careers numbers in key categories, does that make them more qualified to be HOFers?I personally think career totals are WAY overrated. To me, it's what players did in their peak years and on a per game basis that matters. IMO, a guy with 25,000 passing yards in 100 games is more worthy than a guy with 45,000 passing yards in 250 games.
On the surface this is a very valid point, but there is something to be said for guys who perform "above average" for a long time. There are always statistical outliers, players who played a decade longer then most. Baseball is chock full of players like this. But there is certainly a balance. Twenty years starting would exceed the average HOF QB career by 30-40% or so, making those career numbers far less impressive. But at 15 years, career numbers would mean a lot, even if still a little bit longer then the average.

And I hate your example. 100 games is only six plus seasons with one playoff game per year added. 250 games would be 15 seasons (adding about 2 playoff games per 3 years). With QB being such a difficult position to adequately man...I would rather have 15 years of above average production then just six years of good production.

 
McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.
These types of comments can be very misleading. Testaverde and Bledsoe rank Top 10 in a lot of passing categories. Because they rank higher on careers numbers in key categories, does that make them more qualified to be HOFers?I personally think career totals are WAY overrated. To me, it's what players did in their peak years and on a per game basis that matters. IMO, a guy with 25,000 passing yards in 100 games is more worthy than a guy with 45,000 passing yards in 250 games.
On the surface this is a very valid point, but there is something to be said for guys who perform "above average" for a long time. There are always statistical outliers, players who played a decade longer then most. Baseball is chock full of players like this. But there is certainly a balance. Twenty years starting would exceed the average HOF QB career by 30-40% or so, making those career numbers far less impressive. But at 15 years, career numbers would mean a lot, even if still a little bit longer then the average.

And I hate your example. 100 games is only six plus seasons with one playoff game per year added. 250 games would be 15 seasons (adding about 2 playoff games per 3 years). With QB being such a difficult position to adequately man...I would rather have 15 years of above average production then just six years of good production.
While I wasn't thinking of anyone in particular, if you assign names to the numbers given, PLAYER 1 is similar to Warner. Player 2 would be someone like Testaverde or Bledsoe. THe numbers work out very close to the same. Still want to induct PLAYER 2?
 
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McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.
These types of comments can be very misleading. Testaverde and Bledsoe rank Top 10 in a lot of passing categories. Because they rank higher on careers numbers in key categories, does that make them more qualified to be HOFers?I personally think career totals are WAY overrated. To me, it's what players did in their peak years and on a per game basis that matters. IMO, a guy with 25,000 passing yards in 100 games is more worthy than a guy with 45,000 passing yards in 250 games.
On the surface this is a very valid point, but there is something to be said for guys who perform "above average" for a long time. There are always statistical outliers, players who played a decade longer then most. Baseball is chock full of players like this. But there is certainly a balance. Twenty years starting would exceed the average HOF QB career by 30-40% or so, making those career numbers far less impressive. But at 15 years, career numbers would mean a lot, even if still a little bit longer then the average.

And I hate your example. 100 games is only six plus seasons with one playoff game per year added. 250 games would be 15 seasons (adding about 2 playoff games per 3 years). With QB being such a difficult position to adequately man...I would rather have 15 years of above average production then just six years of good production.
While I wasn't thinking of anyone in particular, if you assign names to the numbers given, PLAYER 1 is similar to Warner. Player 2 would be someone like Testaverde or Bledsoe. THe numbers work out very close to the same. Still want to induct PLAYER 2?
Nope, but aren't Warner's numbers a bit higher then your player 1? Plus some other unusual oddball things about Warner...like the unbelievable (and easily best in history) % of his starts that he went for 300 yards in?And nobody said the compilors should be nominated/in based on ONE statistic. McNabb will be high in several other significant categories, not the least of which is career winnning %, playoff win %, and TD's.

 
McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.
These types of comments can be very misleading. Testaverde and Bledsoe rank Top 10 in a lot of passing categories. Because they rank higher on careers numbers in key categories, does that make them more qualified to be HOFers?I personally think career totals are WAY overrated. To me, it's what players did in their peak years and on a per game basis that matters. IMO, a guy with 25,000 passing yards in 100 games is more worthy than a guy with 45,000 passing yards in 250 games.
On the surface this is a very valid point, but there is something to be said for guys who perform "above average" for a long time. There are always statistical outliers, players who played a decade longer then most. Baseball is chock full of players like this. But there is certainly a balance. Twenty years starting would exceed the average HOF QB career by 30-40% or so, making those career numbers far less impressive. But at 15 years, career numbers would mean a lot, even if still a little bit longer then the average.

And I hate your example. 100 games is only six plus seasons with one playoff game per year added. 250 games would be 15 seasons (adding about 2 playoff games per 3 years). With QB being such a difficult position to adequately man...I would rather have 15 years of above average production then just six years of good production.
While I wasn't thinking of anyone in particular, if you assign names to the numbers given, PLAYER 1 is similar to Warner. Player 2 would be someone like Testaverde or Bledsoe. THe numbers work out very close to the same. Still want to induct PLAYER 2?
Nope, but aren't Warner's numbers a bit higher then your player 1? Plus some other unusual oddball things about Warner...like the unbelievable (and easily best in history) % of his starts that he went for 300 yards in?And nobody said the compilors should be nominated/in based on ONE statistic. McNabb will be high in several other significant categories, not the least of which is career winnning %, playoff win %, and TD's.
I was mostly speaking in glittering generalities, but since you asked . . .Warner: 285912 yards passing in 110 games with 101 starts

McNabb: 29320 yards passing in 134 games and 128 starts

Bledsoe: 44611 yards passing in 194 games and 193 starts

Testaverde: 46233 yards passing in 233 games with 214 starts

I concur that there's a lot more to evaluate than a single category, but the point was still the same. Given me the guy with elite short term numbers over a compiler any day of the week that happened to play forever.

 
McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.
These types of comments can be very misleading. Testaverde and Bledsoe rank Top 10 in a lot of passing categories. Because they rank higher on careers numbers in key categories, does that make them more qualified to be HOFers?I personally think career totals are WAY overrated. To me, it's what players did in their peak years and on a per game basis that matters. IMO, a guy with 25,000 passing yards in 100 games is more worthy than a guy with 45,000 passing yards in 250 games.
On the surface this is a very valid point, but there is something to be said for guys who perform "above average" for a long time. There are always statistical outliers, players who played a decade longer then most. Baseball is chock full of players like this. But there is certainly a balance. Twenty years starting would exceed the average HOF QB career by 30-40% or so, making those career numbers far less impressive. But at 15 years, career numbers would mean a lot, even if still a little bit longer then the average.

And I hate your example. 100 games is only six plus seasons with one playoff game per year added. 250 games would be 15 seasons (adding about 2 playoff games per 3 years). With QB being such a difficult position to adequately man...I would rather have 15 years of above average production then just six years of good production.
While I wasn't thinking of anyone in particular, if you assign names to the numbers given, PLAYER 1 is similar to Warner. Player 2 would be someone like Testaverde or Bledsoe. THe numbers work out very close to the same. Still want to induct PLAYER 2?
Nope, but aren't Warner's numbers a bit higher then your player 1? Plus some other unusual oddball things about Warner...like the unbelievable (and easily best in history) % of his starts that he went for 300 yards in?And nobody said the compilors should be nominated/in based on ONE statistic. McNabb will be high in several other significant categories, not the least of which is career winnning %, playoff win %, and TD's.
I was mostly speaking in glittering generalities, but since you asked . . .Warner: 285912 yards passing in 110 games with 101 starts

McNabb: 29320 yards passing in 134 games and 128 starts

Bledsoe: 44611 yards passing in 194 games and 193 starts

Testaverde: 46233 yards passing in 233 games with 214 starts

I concur that there's a lot more to evaluate than a single category, but the point was still the same. Given me the guy with elite short term numbers over a compiler any day of the week that happened to play forever.
Holy ####! Why are we arguing this??!?!??
 
McNabb at 33rd and 34th in career passing yds and passing TDs at this point is NOT a HOF QB without doing much more to get in.
These types of comments can be very misleading. Testaverde and Bledsoe rank Top 10 in a lot of passing categories. Because they rank higher on careers numbers in key categories, does that make them more qualified to be HOFers?I personally think career totals are WAY overrated. To me, it's what players did in their peak years and on a per game basis that matters. IMO, a guy with 25,000 passing yards in 100 games is more worthy than a guy with 45,000 passing yards in 250 games.
On the surface this is a very valid point, but there is something to be said for guys who perform "above average" for a long time. There are always statistical outliers, players who played a decade longer then most. Baseball is chock full of players like this. But there is certainly a balance. Twenty years starting would exceed the average HOF QB career by 30-40% or so, making those career numbers far less impressive. But at 15 years, career numbers would mean a lot, even if still a little bit longer then the average.

And I hate your example. 100 games is only six plus seasons with one playoff game per year added. 250 games would be 15 seasons (adding about 2 playoff games per 3 years). With QB being such a difficult position to adequately man...I would rather have 15 years of above average production then just six years of good production.
While I wasn't thinking of anyone in particular, if you assign names to the numbers given, PLAYER 1 is similar to Warner. Player 2 would be someone like Testaverde or Bledsoe. THe numbers work out very close to the same. Still want to induct PLAYER 2?
Nope, but aren't Warner's numbers a bit higher then your player 1? Plus some other unusual oddball things about Warner...like the unbelievable (and easily best in history) % of his starts that he went for 300 yards in?And nobody said the compilors should be nominated/in based on ONE statistic. McNabb will be high in several other significant categories, not the least of which is career winnning %, playoff win %, and TD's.
I was mostly speaking in glittering generalities, but since you asked . . .Warner: 285912 yards passing in 110 games with 101 starts

McNabb: 29320 yards passing in 134 games and 128 starts

Bledsoe: 44611 yards passing in 194 games and 193 starts

Testaverde: 46233 yards passing in 233 games with 214 starts

I concur that there's a lot more to evaluate than a single category, but the point was still the same. Given me the guy with elite short term numbers over a compiler any day of the week that happened to play forever.
I pointed out Warner's career yards per game earlier today in this thread (or the other one). It's ridiculously high and is one of the greatest arguments one can make for him as a HOF QB.McNabb and Bledsoe have virtually identical ypg (230). If yards were the only yardstick used to measure McNabb, I agree he'd fall well short. Tell me, what else of significance did Bledsoe have going for him? (Or Testaverde?) You have only to look back over this thread to find a bunch of nice things to say about McNabb. How about the rushing yards and TD's? What about turnovers??????? Winning percentage? Post-season success? Pro-bowls? McNabb already eclipses both Bledsoe and Testaverde in many of these measurements.

Again...I'm in that group saying "not yet", but McNabb projects to be high up in several other significant measurables. This conversation is taking place 3-5 years too early. Given the entire bulk of McNabb's career to this point, I think it's a bit disingenius to consider him as a pure compiler.

 
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David Yudkin said:
Given me the guy with elite short term numbers over a compiler any day of the week that happened to play forever.
Happened to play forever? You say that as if it's just dumb luck someone gets to have a long career. Sure, injuries are a factor and those to some extent are random. But, for the most part, guys who play forever do so because they are really good players.
 

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