Enough is enough. Peyton Manning is the greatest QB of all time.
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Serously though, the timing of the thread had nothing to do with the Titans game. This is so retarded, I shouldnt even have to address it. You guys are ridiculous.Comment
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I'm doing some research just to show you guys how special you have to be to actually get better in the post-season as a QB, so looking purely at QB Rating, lets find out how some of the top QBs of all time stack up...
Format:
QB
Regular Season QB Rating >>> Post Season QB Rating (Change)
Manning
95.3 >>> 85.0 (-10.3)
Brady
93.3 >>> 88.0 (-5.3)
Staubach
83.4 >>> 76.0 (-7.4)
Roethlisberger
90.9 >>> 87.2 (-3.7)
Bradshaw
70.9 >>> 83.0 (+12.1)
Marino
86.4 >>> 77.1 (-9.3)
Moon
80.9 >>> 84.9 (+4.0)
Warner
93.7 >>> 98.9 (+5.2)
Montana
92.3 >>> 95.6 (+3.3)
Young
96.8 >>> 85.8 (-11.0)
Elway
79.9 >>> 79.7 (-0.2)
Unitas
78.2 >>> 68.9 (-9.3)
Aikman
81.6 >>> 88.3 (+6.7)
Favre
85.9 >>> 85.2 (-0.7)
Quite a lot of QBs from all different eras and note that Manning has the second largest dropoff in the post season as any one of them, even while people in his own era (Warner) were able to increase their performance by over five points.
Again, Manning is a great QB, but putting him in the best ever talk is a joke when he plays his worst football when it matters the most.Comment
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His QB Rating (i'm not sure why you are so fixated on QB Rating being the "be all, end all" anyway, but i'll play along) is essentially the same as Brady's, but because Brady had a K who didnt fail him, under your criteria, Brady would be the better player via his 3 rings and higher playoff QB rating. I don't buy that.
Manning already won a SB, and he's still in his prime. His numbers are off the charts, and he will likely break every record in the books. Disregarding him because something like his QB Rating goes from elite to respectable come playoff time seems silly to me (especially since he has a SB title), but hey, to each his own.Comment
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I agree with that. I'd love for someone to actually tell me what exactly goes into QB rating without googling it.Comment
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You act as if he's Jamarcus Russell come playoff time.
His QB Rating (i'm not sure why you are so fixated on QB Rating being the "be all, end all" anyway, but i'll play along) is essentially the same as Brady's, but because Brady had a K who didnt fail him, under your criteria, Brady would be the better player via his 3 rings and higher playoff QB rating. I don't buy that.
If you want to focus on rings, ok, it is a slam dunk that Manning isn't the best QB. If you want to focus on stats in the games that matter most, again it isn't Manning who is the greatest of all time. THE ONLY POSSIBLE WAY TO SAY MANNING IS THE BEST OF ALL TIME IS TO DISREGARD HIS PLAY WHEN THE GAMES MATTER THE MOST. Not his team's play, not the WR's play, not the defense's play, BUT HIS INDIVIDUAL PERFORMANCE.
If you are comfortable saying that the best QB of all time becomes above average against great competition while others out there actually stay consistently great or actually improve, you are really reaching. Great QBs put up great numbers, and Manning definitely does that, but the greatest QBs do it against the best competition, which Manning cannot claim to have done.Comment
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Completions, Attempts, Yards, Interceptions, and Touchdowns... not exactly strange numbers to use, but the formula is definitely complex, especially the NFL one.Comment
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I'm doing some research just to show you guys how special you have to be to actually get better in the post-season as a QB, so looking purely at QB Rating, lets find out how some of the top QBs of all time stack up...
Format:
QB
Regular Season QB Rating >>> Post Season QB Rating (Change)
Manning
95.3 >>> 85.0 (-10.3)
Brady
93.3 >>> 88.0 (-5.3)
Staubach
83.4 >>> 76.0 (-7.4)
Roethlisberger
90.9 >>> 87.2 (-3.7)
Bradshaw
70.9 >>> 83.0 (+12.1)
Marino
86.4 >>> 77.1 (-9.3)
Moon
80.9 >>> 84.9 (+4.0)
Warner
93.7 >>> 98.9 (+5.2)
Montana
92.3 >>> 95.6 (+3.3)
Young
96.8 >>> 85.8 (-11.0)
Elway
79.9 >>> 79.7 (-0.2)
Unitas
78.2 >>> 68.9 (-9.3)
Aikman
81.6 >>> 88.3 (+6.7)
Favre
85.9 >>> 85.2 (-0.7)
Quite a lot of QBs from all different eras and note that Manning has the second largest dropoff in the post season as any one of them, even while people in his own era (Warner) were able to increase their performance by over five points.
Again, Manning is a great QB, but putting him in the best ever talk is a joke when he plays his worst football when it matters the most.
Look at Terry Bradshaw (the QB with the biggest jump), he posted a 108 QB Rating in the Superbowl against the Vikings. He also threw 14 times for just 96 yards, while his defense held the opposing team to 6 points and Franco Harris ran 35 times for 160 yards. I mean congrats on raising your QB rating in the postseason Bradshaw but who cares.
Manning has never thrown for less than 26 times in a playoff game. Bradshaw did this 12 times. It's not even fair to compare the two, especially when you consider the overall teams.
I wasn't even alive for any of the Steelers' playoff games but I'm guessing his role in the offense wasn't the same as Mannings and with his defense wasn't out there chucking up passes down a few scores in the 4th.Last edited by Bear Pand; 10-19-2009, 05:29 PM.Comment
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This is misleading.
Look at Terry Bradshaw, he posted a 108 QB Rating in the Superbowl against the Vikings. He also threw 14 times for just 96 yards, while his defense held the opposing team to 6 points and Franco Harris ran 35 times for 160 yards. I mean congrats on raising your QB rating in the postseason Bradshaw but who cares.
Manning has never thrown for less than 26 times in a playoff game. Bradshaw did this 12 times. It's not even fair to compare the two, especially when you consider the overall teams.Comment
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This is misleading.
Look at Terry Bradshaw (the QB with the biggest jump), he posted a 108 QB Rating in the Superbowl against the Vikings. He also threw 14 times for just 96 yards, while his defense held the opposing team to 6 points and Franco Harris ran 35 times for 160 yards. I mean congrats on raising your QB rating in the postseason Bradshaw but who cares.
Manning has never thrown for less than 26 times in a playoff game. Bradshaw did this 12 times. It's not even fair to compare the two, especially when you consider the overall teams.
I wasn't even alive for any of the Steelers' playoff games but I'm guessing his role in the offense wasn't the same as Mannings and with his defense wasn't out there chucking up passes down a few scores in the 4th.
Like any other stat, it can be skewed and manipulated to mean different things.Last edited by longhornfan; 10-19-2009, 05:32 PM.Comment
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good for you but that doesn't address why it's silly to look at a QB's rating in the regular season, then his QB rating in the postseason and try to pass any kind of judgment based on that.Comment
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Stats only tell so much, as they're so influenced by other factors such as matchups, teammates, schemes, coaching, etc and in hindsight they can be manipulated to fit almost any argument. This is why I've always been a fan of the eyeball test and for me Peyton Manning is certainly among the best I've seen and given his responsibilities and consistency will more than likely go down as the greatest.Comment
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What this comes down to, is i'm looking at the entire scope of Manning's career, and you choose to penalize him for his postseason QB rating (which really isnt even a bad number).
That's fine, I just disagree.Comment
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Another thing to note is Manning has posted a QB Rating of 97.7 in a playoff loss, his career regular season rating is 95.3. Congrats on posting a high QB Rating in a playoff game Manning, too bad your kicker shanks a kick and Nick Harper doesn't run towards the sideline.
Meanwhile Bradshaw Mr. career QB rating raiser in the playoffs has 7 wins where he posted a lower rating than that 97.7.
Stats only tell so much, as they're so influenced by other factors such as matchups, teammates, schemes, coaching, etc and in hindsight they can be manipulated to fit almost any argument. This is why I've always been a fan of the eyeball test and for me Peyton Manning is certainly among the best I've seen and given his responsibilities and consistency will more than likely go down as the greatest.Last edited by Bear Pand; 10-19-2009, 05:42 PM.Comment
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