For 2018, I'd probably take Gore.I just laugh st the people who dismiss the older players out of hand. Yeah, and Frank Gore was better than Jim Brown right?
Where do you fall on Hutson? I'm a fan of the Hutson #1 WR overall argument that can easily be made for Hutson from deviation from contemporaries baseline.Unitas yardage totals were about double those of Hall of Fame contemporaries from the same era. Brady, Montana, Bradshaw are no where close to that same sort of relative impact. Starr, his quarterback rating, particularly his post season quarterback rating is still among the very best, and was achieved at a time where he was more or less double his then hall of fame contemporaries.
They are the two Q.B.'s that transcended their times.
I would still rank Jerry Rice over Hutson, but I would put Hutson either 2 or 3. I also like Lance Alworth in the top 3.For 2018, I'd probably take Gore.
Where do you fall on Hutson? I'm a fan of the Hutson #1 WR overall argument that can easily be made for Hutson from deviation from contemporaries baseline.
Good question. Here's the thing, when I opine on Unitas and Starr I actually watched them play back when they were playing. My analysis of them is not simply statistical. I was not around when Hutson was doing his thing. He clearly was a player out of time, one who transcended his generation of football. There are not many of those.For 2018, I'd probably take Gore.
Where do you fall on Hutson? I'm a fan of the Hutson #1 WR overall argument that can easily be made for Hutson from deviation from contemporaries baseline.
BambiI would still rank Jerry Rice over Hutson, but I would put Hutson either 2 or 3. I also like Lance Alworth in the top 3.
I can see leaving out Staubach and Baugh... to leave out Unitas, who for much of modern NFL history was considered the greatest "modern" QB and the first of his mild, is, imo, to have a list that is not worth having.Dancing Bear said:Didn't omit Baugh, Unitas or Staubach. They simply didn't make the threshold of at least 4 championship wins.
Baugh was 2-3
Unitas was 3-2
Staubach was 2-2
As much as I respect their contribution to the NFL, they simply don't match up to the 6 I have presented in the poll.
There should be no other options to click beyond Brady and Montanaby_the_sea_wannabe said:No Marino, Unitas, and Manning probably the worst poll evah well done trolling
This. It simply means people don't want to think about how many people both on and off the field go into winning Super Bowls & playoff games.To ask "greatest of all time" in the question, then base the candidate list entirely on championship totals, is decidedly flawed. Greatness has to do with many more factors than merely how good the people around you were.
Good post. Like comparing Babe Ruth's HR totals to modern day players, it's all relative.Unitas yardage totals were about double those of Hall of Fame contemporaries from the same era.
Interesting way of looking at it.By Game Receptions Yards TD
Rice 5.8 90 0.88
Hutson 4.2 69 0.85
Next Best Receptions Yards TD
Rice Comp 6.5 91 0.86
Huts Comp 3.4 55 0.64
Take Don Hutson's 11 year career. Then, by year, add up the guy not named Don Hutson that had the most receptions, then the most receiving yards, then the most TDs. This makes a mythical WR that had the best possible yearly stats by anyone not named Don Hutson.
Hutson had 25% more receptions, 26% more receiving yards and 34% more receiving TDs more than the best possible receiver that could be put together from everyone else's yearly totals.
When you do the same exercise for Rice, Rice has 11% fewer receptions, 1% fewer yards and 2% more receiving TDs than the best player from 86-96, Rice's best comp years. If you take Rice's career as a whole, that number is much lower.
And, gauging by the way he pancakes so many of Ming's guards, Flash (unlike Brady, Montana, et al) could have played both sides of the ball as LB. Versatiity and heroism!Those other guys won multiple Super Bowls but he was the savior of the universe.
Despite it largely being a team game and Manning being saddled with a terrible defense and incompetent general managers (and sometimes coaches, looking at you Caldwell), people will gladly overlook these facts and just point to the rings. In order to be the GOAT in the eyes of the masses, you must play on a good team with a good coach and have relatively good luck in single elimination playoffs. Your individual play is merely a minor factor.Shouldn't P Manning be on that list? The guy changed how the league plays offense.
Hutson was further beyond his contemporaries than any other WR ever, possibly any other player, period (I suppose Jim Brown could be included there in terms of sheer dominance, if not quite the number separation).For 2018, I'd probably take Gore.
Where do you fall on Hutson? I'm a fan of the Hutson #1 WR overall argument that can easily be made for Hutson from deviation from contemporaries baseline.
I disagree - I think many of us take all that into consideration, and it certainly boosts Manning's resume and placement, as such. However, he himself was simply not quite the gamer in those huge games, not on par with some of the others. That's why this is not a list of all time greats, but even more elite in terms of who is the absolute greatest - and even compensating for the items you list, Manning is simply not there.Despite it largely being a team game and Manning being saddled with a terrible defense and incompetent general managers (and sometimes coaches, looking at you Caldwell), people will gladly overlook these facts and just point to the rings. In order to be the GOAT in the eyes of the masses, you must play on a good team with a good coach and have relatively good luck in single elimination playoffs. Your individual play is merely a minor factor.
I disagree, but FWIW, I think Rodgers is the GOAT. He's been saddled with McCarthy, though.I disagree - I think many of us take all that into consideration, and it certainly boosts Manning's resume and placement, as such. However, he himself was simply not quite the gamer in those huge games, not on par with some of the others. That's why this is not a list of all time greats, but even more elite in terms of who is the absolute greatest - and even compensating for the items you list, Manning is simply not there.
I read the article. It says Brady has benefited mightily from competing in a pass happy rules area, in a era of expanded playoffs providing more games and therefor opportunities, and he has had the good fortune to have benefitted from flukey rules, the legs of a kicker, the hands of a D.B and he has played in a weak ### division in a weak ### conference. Its all right there. It does not go into the nomenclature change from Championship to Super Bowl so as to avoid having to address the accomplishments of his betters, but the transparency of that ploy is an admission.ESPN makes the argument for Tom Brady:
Tom Brady's GOAT status clear after a look at NFL playoff records
Exactly. Baugh should BE the cut, with the rest jockeying for 2nd. Only player who has led/will ever lead the league in passing, punting, and interceptions as a DB. Dude still holds NFL punting records even though he retired 65 years ago. Enshrined in the HOF's first class, whereas Luckman and Graham had to wait a few years.Sammy Baugh should have at least made the cut.
Only QB who can legitmately claim greatness in all three phases of the game (qb, db and P/PR).
And, gauging by the way he pancakes so many of Ming's guards, Flash (unlike Brady, Montana, et al) could have played both sides of the ball as LB. Versatiity and heroism!
Not sure Marino's names fits as cleanly in this debate. The guy was fantastic, but imo not a csndidate for GOAT.
The original post, and the question don't even say "greatest QB of all time," just "greatest." But since Rice and Hutson weren't on the list, I decided to limit my response to QBs.Exactly. Baugh should BE the cut, with the rest jockeying for 2nd. Only player who has led/will ever lead the league in passing, punting, and interceptions as a DB. Dude still holds NFL punting records even though he retired 65 years ago. Enshrined in the HOF's first class, whereas Luckman and Graham had to wait a few years.
I don't get it. Pretty sure they played the same era.I just laugh st the people who dismiss the older players out of hand. Yeah, and Frank Gore was better than Jim Brown right?
You have eliminated all credibility with this post. Congrats, that is rarely done with so few words.Dancing Bear said:Unitas was 3-2
As much as I respect their contribution to the NFL, they simply don't match up to the 6 I have presented in the poll.
For comparisons sake, my top-10 would be:The sad part is that the original poster knows that if he had included Unitas he would have stolen enough votes to cause either Brady to lose to Montana or visa versa. In other words, he wanted this poll to be about Montana vs Brady. He included the other QBs to complete this list.
If I had to rank the greatest QBs of all time QBs I would rank them as follows
1 - Joe Montana
2 - John Unitas - he invented the modern day QB and the two minute drill. A master who would have been even better had he played now. He commanded the huddle and called his own plays. A true field general.
3 - Tom Brady
4 - Peyton Manning
5 - John Elway
6 - Dan Marino
7 - Otto Graham
8 - Brett Favre
9 - Roger Staubauch
10 - Terry Bradshaw
Honorable mention - Warren Moon.
Luckman, Baugh, and Tittle, especially Tittle, shouldn't be on the list. As a Colts fan I've been for 52 years no way is Manning #1. You talk about his longevity, what about Brady's and he's still producing at a high level? Manning is however in the top 5 and I have him #4. No one loves Peyton Manning as much as I do. No way is Montana #9, he's the best ever IMO. I do think Otto Graham is underrated however. Graham - 3× NFL champion (1950, 1954, 1955), 5× Pro Bowl (1950–1954), 4× First-team All-Pro (1951, 1953–1955), 3× NFL Most Valuable Player (1951, 1953, 1955). He led the Cleveland Browns to 10 championship games in the 10 seasonsFor comparisons sake, my top-10 would be:
1= Peyton Manning, its amazing to me how little credit he gets for basically being in the MVP conversation from 1999 through 2014. Nobody touches his longevity as an elite player, and his peak was the best passing season in NFL history. We've seen what happened to the Colts and Broncos without him.
2= Otto Graham
3= Johnny Unitas
4= Sid Luckman
5= Sammy Baugh
6= Tom Brady
7= Brett Favre
8= Dan Marino
9= Joe Montana
10= Y.A. Tittle
Honorable mention= Steve Young
Of course they do... You think if they published an article right now about Montana or Manning being the greatest of all time it would get anywhere near the same number of clicks? Heck no...ESPN makes the argument for Tom Brady:
Tom Brady's GOAT status clear after a look at NFL playoff records
How you feel about Luckman, Baugh and Tittle is how I feel about Elway and Staubach. Good QB's who were carried by great teams, Staubach in particular.Luckman, Baugh, and Tittle, especially Tittle, shouldn't be on the list. As a Colts fan I've been for 52 years no way is Manning #1. You talk about his longevity, what about Brady's and he's still producing at a high level? He is however in the top 5 and I have him #4. No one loves Peyton Manning as much as I do. No way is Montana #9, he's the best ever IMO. I do think Otto Graham is underrated however.
Tittle simply isn't in the same league as the top QBs of all time. He had 248 ints to 242 tds and only had 2 great years (1962 and 1963). I will give him credit however that those two years were at the end of his career. You talk about Manning never having a WR as talented as Moss, but you forget he had Harrison, Wayne, James, and Clark. Don't talk to me about Manning with lack of offensive weapons. What he didn't have compared to Brady was a defense. Also, Adam Vinatieri did bail Brady out early in his Super Bowls and he seemed to be a part of great teams that won Super Bowls, not the reason for winning them. However, Brady has been great all these years and set records too and is still playing at a high level. You cannot take that away from him. IMO Montana was the most Unitas like QB of his era. He was the most field general like QB since Unitas IMO. Yes, he had great players and coach around him, but so did Unitas in 1958 and 1959 (Raymond Berry, Lenny Moore, Gino Marchetti, Gene Lipscomb, Art Donavan, Jim Parker). With Montana and Unitas you could get a sense of their greatness when they played. The same cannot be said about a lot of other QBs when talking about the greatest ever. The thing about Manning that still bothers to me this day is that he played some of his worst games on the biggest stage. Even the Super Bowl he won he was pedestrian and almost seemed like his MVP was a gift of past accomplishments. Dominic Rhodes should have been MVP. Don't get me wrong, I think Manning is one of the greatest QBs of all-time (#4), but his deficiencies stand out on the biggest stage and as a Colts fan I cannot rank him #1 as you do.How you feel about Luckman, Baugh and Tittle is how I feel about Elway and Staubach. Good QB's who were carried by great teams, Staubach in particular.
Brady's longevity was part of being on the best coached team of the last 20 years, and arguably didn't really start until 2007, as the Pats were considered a defense first team until then. Manning had Jim Mora, Jim Caldwell, and while Dungy was good, he contributed nothing offensively, and was not even remotely on Belichick's level. I'd also argue Brady has had a better supporting cast than Manning did. Not in 2001, when he took over, but in the years since. Manning never had a WR as talented as Moss, or anybody who was a mismatch on the level of Gronkowski.
My issue with Montana is somewhat similar to why I don't have Favre higher. When he left, he wasn't missed at all. If Rodgers plays at the level he was at before this year, he'll crack this list in a couple years. Also, how much of Montana was Bill Walsh? How much was Jerry Rice? I can see having Montana higher than 9th, I have him Brady, Favre and Marino in the same tier.
What is it you don't like about Tittle, Baugh and especially Luckman?
I had Tittle and Young as a tossup for 10th. Considering your view of Montana, I'm very curious on your view of Young then, especially since he didn't get to start until Walsh was gone.Tittle simply isn't in the same league as the top QBs of all time.He had 248 ints to 242 tds and only had 2 great years (1962 and 1963). I will give him credit however that those two years were at the end of his career. You talk about Manning never having a WR as talented as Moss, but you forget he had Harrison, Wayne, James, and Clark. Don't talk to me about Manning with lack of offensive weapons. What he didn't have compared to Brady was a defense. Also, Adam Vinatieri that bailed Brady out early in his Super Bowls. IMO Montana was the most Unitas like QB of his era. He was the most field general like QB since Unitas IMO. Yes, he had great players and coach around him, but you could get a sense of his greatness when he played. The same cannot be said about other QBs, even Manning. The thing about Manning that still bothers to me this day is that he played some of his worst games in the biggest stage. Even the Super Bowl he won he was pedestrian and Dominic Rhodes should have been MVP. Don't get me wrong, I think Manning is one of the greatest QBs of all-time (#4), but his deficiencies stand out on the biggest stage and as a Colts fan I cannot rank him #1 as you do.
No, you don't give the MVP because of one interception, even the clincher. Dominic Rhodes clearly won MVP of that Super Bowl.Also, I agree Manning had no business winning the MVP of that Super Bowl. I thought that Kelvin Hayden deserved it. His pick-6 sealed the game. Until that play, the Bears had a decent shot of winning. Rhodes and Addai were interchangeable in that game, Rhodes had a better day on the ground, but Addai kept multiple drives moving with his receiving work. At least that is how I remember that game as a Bears fan.
Well, Hayden he also contained Berrian, who had been the only big play weapon for the Bears offense that year. 38 yards on 7 targets, mostly in Hayden's coverage.No, you don't give the MVP because of one interception, even the clincher. Dominic Rhodes clearly won MVP of that Super Bowl.
timing of the plays. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9prBOsKb4cWell, Hayden he also contained Berrian, who had been the only big play weapon for the Bears offense that year. 38 yards on 7 targets, mostly in Hayden's coverage.
How was Rhodes clearly better than Addai? Rhodes had 121 yards on 22 touches. Addai had 143 on 29 touches, including catching 10 of 10 targets.
Fair enough.timing of the plays.
I certainly like Steve Young more than Y A Titlte and had him #12 in my list, just missing out on honorable mention. He had 4 great years and finally got the monkey off his back with a Super Bowl win. I like Young a lot because he was a good passer and could run. I have no problem to replace Moon with Young in the Honorable mention spot, but I had to choose one.Fair enough.
I would like to steer back into your opinion on Steve Young, as you had Montana #1 and Young outside the top-11.
This idea that championships are any more than a bonus for individual players is silly I think. They are a team accomplishment, and if you give credit to any one person for it, it should likely go to the GM/Coach who acquired all those players to begin with.
One player doesn't win a championship in football, its simply not possible. So saying so and so has this many rings so he's better than someone who had less is starting with a bad argument. For example, Joe Flacco and Aaron Rodgers both became starters in 2008, they each have 1 ring, are they equals? Obviously not, Rodgers is better than Flacco in every conceivable way, other than agent hiring(maybe don't use State Farm for NFL contracts Aaron.) Similar examples would be Peyton Manning=Trent Dilfer, or Brett Favre=Brad Johnson.
The team with the best QB doesn't win the Super Bowl every year, in fact it almost never happens. Looking through history, I see the following examples where the best QB won the Super Bowl:
1999=Kurt Warner
1996=Brett Favre
1994=Steve Young
1989=Joe Montana
1978=Terry Bradshaw
1966=Bart Starr
6 times in the entire Super Bowl era.
Wait, what?The team with the best QB doesn't win the Super Bowl every year, in fact it almost never happens. Looking through history, I see the following examples where the best QB won the Super Bowl:
1999=Kurt Warner
1996=Brett Favre
1994=Steve Young
1989=Joe Montana
1978=Terry Bradshaw
1966=Bart Starr
6 times in the entire Super Bowl era.
So Brady’s 4Q comebacks in multiple superbowls doesn’t count as being his best in biggest games?I started watching pro sports about 1980-81 and i like to say I only cover that timeframe. Anything else is just stats and highlights and that just is not a true representation.
Brady gets high marks for amount of championships but for the consistency of the success of NE of which the only two constants have been him and BB. His leadership and absolutely meant volumes off the field, he has helped set that culture. But he's not the best and deep in his heart even I think he knows he's not as good as Joe Montana. Joe was the best and the absolute major difference was that Joe was at this best in the biggest games. Like always. He was even underrated good with the Chiefs, his body just gave out on him late that first year.
This dude can't even follow his own rules. No Red Dunn.by_the_sea_wannabe said:No Marino, Unitas, and Manning probably the worst poll evah well done trolling
Probably the best 4th quarter in the history of football. No hyperbole here. I challenge anyone to find anything better.So Brady’s 4Q comebacks in multiple superbowls doesn’t count as being his best in biggest games?
Brady’s 4Q vs Atlanta last year might be the best quarter by a QB in the history of the super bowl, all things considered.
Doug Williams down?Brady’s 4Q vs Atlanta last year might be the best quarter by a QB in the history of the super bowl, all things considered.
To be fair, Brady was a big reason why they were behind in the first place in that game. Sure he had a great quarter, but he had a pretty awful entire first half.So Brady’s 4Q comebacks in multiple superbowls doesn’t count as being his best in biggest games?
Brady’s 4Q vs Atlanta last year might be the best quarter by a QB in the history of the super bowl, all things considered.
Wow, I couldn't be more diametrically opposed to you here.This is effectively a beauty contest and how can you judge beauty? IMO, the closest we can get is debating people from similar eras and then having a pantheon of all time greats. That being said, I loathe the discussions focused around if PLAYER X played for TEAM Y instead or had COACH Z then everything would have come out differently. That may all be true, but that's not what actually happened.
So while there might be some gee, I wonder what would have happened if Peyton Manning played with Jerry Rice with the 85 Bears coached by Bill Belichick, yes that team may have never lost a game.
There was a similar discussion I heard on the radio and someone was trying to make a case that Drew Brees had been a better QB than Tom Brady based on how many years Brees had over 5,000 yards passing. But lost in the debate was that Brees played way more games indoors and that he threw a zillion passes each year.
Joe Montana (SB23): 23 of 36 (64%) / 357yd / 2TDtravdogg said:Taking the entire game into account, I wouldn't even call that a top-2 game in Brady's Super Bowl career. Both the Seattle and Carolina games were more impressive. I'd probably have it in the 6-10 range just among QB's in the Super Bowl that overcame a deficit in the 4th quarter. The best Super Bowl QB 4th quarter in my opinion is Montana in Super Bowl 23 against the Bengals.
Tom Brady(SB51), completely useless in the first half. Was responsible for Patriots being behind in the first place. Created more points for Falcons than Patriots until late in the 3rd quarter.Joe Montana (SB23): 23 of 36 (64%) / 357yd / 2TD
Tom Brady (SB51 4th Qtr ONLY): 21 of 27 (78%) / 246yds / 1TD
Tom Brady (SB51): 43 of 62 (69%) / 466yds / 2TD
Led 3 scoring drives in 4th: Two TDs (BOTH w/ 2pt conversions), and a FG. Then led a TD Drive (5 for 7 for 63yds) in OT as a cherry on top.
You are insane, IMO![]()