Starr also played behind one of the GOAT OL's in history. Smith and Aikman get discredited for playing behind the aircraft carriers of the Cowboys in the early 90's...those Packer teams were jacked up on the OL. Forrest Gregg (Hall of Famer), Jerry Kramer (should be in the Hall of Fame), Jim Ringo, Fuzzy Thurston, Bob Skoronski...what an All-Time OL.
Enough is enough. Peyton Manning is the greatest QB of all time.
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BTW, Elway played an AFC championship game in Buffalo 2 years earlier. He went 11-21 126 yds 0 TD 1 INT. Not bashing Elway, just saying not an easy place to play under those conditions.Comment
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In Joe's defense, he came into the game hurt. Secondly, this was smack dab in the middle of the Bills super bowl run where they were blowing everyone out at home in their AFC championship games. Thirdly, the game was in Buffalo in late January. Kelly only threw for 160 yards. They won that game behind their defense and Thurman Thomas (160 yds).
BTW, Elway played an AFC championship game in Buffalo 2 years earlier. He went 11-21 126 yds 0 TD 1 INT. Not bashing Elway, just saying not an easy place to play under those conditions.Comment
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Didn't seem to matter the two previous games.
Secondly, this was smack dab in the middle of the Bills super bowl run where they were blowing everyone out at home in their AFC championship games. Thirdly, the game was in Buffalo in late January. Kelly only threw for 160 yards. They won that game behind their defense and Thurman Thomas (160 yds).
What a pussy.Comment
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I guess? While he certainly not in the Manning/Farve mold of durability, he certainly wasn't Chris Chandler either. He really only had the back thing in 86 and the Leonard Marshall hit that knocked him out of football for 2 years. If his injuries are the biggest argument against Joe being the GOAT, it's a little flimsy IMO.Comment
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No, it didn't. It's amazing how far he went in his condition. A testament to his fortitude and on the field prowess. :D
I know right? He couldn't get a Marty Schottemheimer coached team into the Super Bowl. Montana blew.
You got me there..Comment
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I guess? While he certainly not in the Manning/Farve mold of durability, he certainly wasn't Chris Chandler either. He really only had the back thing in 86 and the Leonard Marshall hit that knocked him out of football for 2 years. If his injuries are the biggest argument against Joe being the GOAT, it's a little flimsy IMO.Comment
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A lot going on in this thread. Here are my comments:
*Bart Starr was a very good QB. Was he better than Favre? In the postseason. But Favre had less help, had a much longer "prime", and really was the key player on every team he's been on. I'd say Favre was "better" than Starr.
*Those Broncos teams under Dan Reeves played a very archaic style of football, which hurt John Elway's QB rating. Lots of running between the tackles, throwing on 3rd downs, and throwing to WRs downfield. I don't think Elway's QB rating really captures how good he was. Comparing Elway to Montana and basing it on rating would be like comparing Terry Bradshaw to Ken Anderson...Anderson was in a system that was designed to have a high QB rating, Bradshaw wasn't.
*That said, I think Montana is better than Elway. And Montana might not have had the mobility or big-play ability on the Chiefs that he once had, but he was still a very good QB.Comment
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What defines the "best" quarterback. Wins, stats, both? Bart Starr or Joe Montana would be the best if winning was what mattered, Dan Marino if stats were the factor. With a mix of both, idk.
Originally posted by Miggyfan99I would get fucked in the ass for WS tickets too... only if Miguel was playing thoughComment
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My one and only knock on Favre is being so careless at the most important times. You can throw picks in the regular season, have the brain cramp moments in the regular season, and still have great regular season stats. You CAN NOT be that careless in the playoffs. You have those brain cramp games and brain cramp moments in the playoffs and your team is done. I have to downgrade Favre for this.Comment
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To me it's how you play when it matters the most. In games that get you to the playoffs, in playoff games, in championship games. Not necessarily if your teams wins those games or not, but how does the QB play in those games and how do they play at the most crucial times in those games. Brett had a history of consistently making huge mistakes in the playoffs at the most crucial times. If GB loses those same playoff games with Brett not making the mistakes he made, then I don't hold him at all responsible for the loses. But the fact is, he did END playoff games with ints.Comment
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It's already easy to see that Rodger's makes better decisions. That kick 6 as you call it was a great play by the pass rusher, and a bad block by College. That wasn't a bad decision on Rodgers part. Brett's playoff ints were BAD CARELESS DECISIONS.
We will see if Rodgers continues to make better decisions in upcoming playoffs, or if he ends up as careless as Brett was. Either way, GB is still in good shape at QB and has been since the early 90's. Still hoping Aaron keeps showing to be smarter than Brett. Jesus, can you imagine having a smart Brett.Don't Sit Down 'Cause I've Moved Your ChairComment
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Originally posted by AaronSSure it does.
bucky was blathering on and on that Brett is merely a great regular season QB. I'd say it's quite relevant that his POST season QB rating is actually higher than his regular season rating.
.. sorry that facts had to interrupt another bucky Favre-hatefest though.Originally posted by AaronSIf the D could only have stopped Terrell Davis..
If Sharper would have squeezed off T.O.'s route...
If Mike Sherman didn't fold like a cheap deck chair in the playoffs....
If the D didn't give up 17 unanswered points to Atlanta.....
If only the D could have made a stop on 4th-and-26......
.. blame Favre all you want, but the bottom line is, the Packers weren't up to the task post-1996.
Yr W/L Cmp Att Cmp % Yds TD Int Rate
1997 W 15 28 53.6% 190 1 2 57.1
1997 W 16 27 59.3% 222 1 0 98.1
1997 L 25 42 59.5% 256 3 1 91
1998 L 20 35 57.1% 292 2 2 79.7
2001 W 22 29 75.9% 269 2 1 112.6
2001 L 26 44 59.1% 281 2 6 53.5
2002 L 20 42 47.6% 247 1 2 54.4
2003 W 26 38 68.4% 319 1 0 102.9
2003 L 15 28 53.6% 180 2 1 82.4
2004 L 22 33 66.7% 216 1 4 55.4
2007 W 18 23 78.3% 173 3 0 137.6
2007 L 19 35 54.3% 236 2 2 70.7
2009 W 15 24 62.5% 234 4 0 134.4
2009 L 28 46 60.9% 310 1 2 70
Total 6W-8L 287 474 60.5% 3425 26 23 80.7Comment
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Originally posted by AaronSbucky was blathering on and on that Brett is merely a great regular season QB. I'd say it's quite relevant that his POST season QB rating is actually higher than his regular season rating.
.. sorry that facts had to interrupt another bucky Favre-hatefest though.
Like I said, I don't blame Brett for the playoff loses on his own, but I do blame him for being the QB throwing the playoff game ending picks that ended the teams chances of winning. That is far from GOAT to me.
All of you can make as many excuses as you want, but no one can prove that wrong. Brett is what he is. Thrilled we had him in GB for those 16 years. But he was careless with the football at the most crucial times.
You can say GB wasn't up to the task, but they were in a position to WIN those playoff games when those ints happened.Comment
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Originally posted by AaronSIf the D could only have stopped Terrell Davis..
If Sharper would have squeezed off T.O.'s route...
If Mike Sherman didn't fold like a cheap deck chair in the playoffs....
If the D didn't give up 17 unanswered points to Atlanta.....
If only the D could have made a stop on 4th-and-26......
.. blame Favre all you want, but the bottom line is, the Packers weren't up to the task post-1996.
How many times do I have to say that I DON'T blame Favre alone for the playoff losses. He didn't lose those games on his own. What we should be blaming Brett is for those horrible decisions and playoff game ending ints that ended any chance of GB winning those playoff games. That's not unfair, it's just accurate.Comment
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