Donovan McNabb and the Hall of Fame

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  • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
    Highwayman
    • Feb 2009
    • 15429

    Donovan McNabb and the Hall of Fame

    Ken Anderson is considered widely to be the "best QB not in the Hall of Fame" (IMO, its actually Phil Simms, but whatever, moot point) and I think its a nice litmus test to determine if a QB is Hall of Fame worthy (is QB A better than Ken Anderson?).

    However, IMO, at this moment, McNabb (IMO, a better QB than Anderson) will be the new standard for best QB not to get into the Hall of Fame.

    Best of the rest. About as borderline as you get at QB. Probably the John Brodie of his era.

    Thoughts here?

    Is McNabb a Hall of Famer? If not, is he that "best of the rest" QB or does he come somewhere outside of it. Where do you place him historically amongst QBs?
  • Saluki
    Ball So Hard
    • Oct 2008
    • 9445

    #2
    Depends on how he ends his career. Right now he's flirting with being in the top 10 all-time in most major Passing stats, and he's got a 62% winning percentage under his belt. If he can finish out his career strong, maybe make another Superbowl i could see him getting into the HOF, not as a 1st ballot or anything, but eventually.

    Comment

    • G-men
      Posts too much
      • Nov 2011
      • 7579

      #3
      I think he will get in just because he was the third best quarterback in a decade (behind Manning and Brady). The lack of great quarterbacks of the past decade should help his chances.

      Comment

      • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
        Highwayman
        • Feb 2009
        • 15429

        #4
        Originally posted by G-Men
        I think he will get in just because he was the third best quarterback in a decade (behind Manning and Brady). The lack of great quarterbacks of the past decade should help his chances.
        Breesus and Slim Roethlisberger.

        Comment

        • G-men
          Posts too much
          • Nov 2011
          • 7579

          #5
          Originally posted by LiquidLarry2GhostWF
          Breesus and Slim Roethlisberger.
          Brees didn't put up superstar numbers until he was with the Saints and Roethlisberger is like Terry Bradshaw. He's the above average quarterback on Super Bowl winning teams. If that puts him in the Hall of Fame than so be it.

          Comment

          • FirstTimer
            Freeman Error

            • Feb 2009
            • 18729

            #6
            I say he gets in.

            Do you I think he should?..........Meh, I could either way on the subject.

            Comment

            • Acesuper
              Junior Member
              • Jul 2009
              • 2241

              #7
              He is playing in a decade that has witnessed some of the all time greatest QB's to ever play the game. Statistically and simple on the field. His stats are up there. Shoe in, but debatable on first ballot based off situational moments. And he is a black QB. But I'm not sure if racism exist now a days. So I could be talking out of the 1950's.

              Comment

              • Diivox
                It's the other way.
                • Apr 2009
                • 1773

                #8
                If he finished his career in philly, he could have gotten in after a few ballots even without a ring. if he got the ring, he would have been first ballot. but since neither of these things have happened, alot is going to depend on what he does in Minnesota. Washington is one of the worst run organizations in the NFL right now so I have a feeling the hall will give him a pass if he can do something with the Vikings before he calls it a career. I do not think he is a hall of famer if he cant at least get a couple of deep playoff runs in (and even thats a stretch, I really do think he needs a superbowl ring).

                Comment

                • G-men
                  Posts too much
                  • Nov 2011
                  • 7579

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Diivox
                  If he finished his career in philly, he could have gotten in after a few ballots even without a ring. if he got the ring, he would have been first ballot. but since neither of these things have happened, alot is going to depend on what he does in Minnesota. Washington is one of the worst run organizations in the NFL right now so I have a feeling the hall will give him a pass if he can do something with the Vikings before he calls it a career. I do not think he is a hall of famer if he cant at least get a couple of deep playoff runs in (and even thats a stretch, I really do think he needs a superbowl ring).
                  You are extremely narrow-minded if you think that these next couple years are what are gonna make or break it for him being in the Hall of Fame. His best days are behind him, that's just a fact. The only way his last few years will affect his stock is if he does in fact with a Super Bowl, which is highly unlikely at this point. Voters will be looking at his years in Philly in the early 2000s when he was one of the best quarterbacks in the game leading one of the best teams in the league. His time in Minnesota means almost nothing on whether he is in or not. No voter should be swayed on their opinion of McNabb because of the last few years of his career.

                  Comment

                  • red33
                    Junior Member
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 5065

                    #10
                    no. really? i bet there are other QBs out there that put 3 seasons or so that match mcnabbs and they arent in.

                    was he ever considered the best QB of his time at any point?

                    Comment

                    • Shayn•Da•Pain
                      Laughs Unlimited
                      • Nov 2008
                      • 5204

                      #11
                      Stop it. Stop it right now.

                      Did he show HOF caliber potential for a time, yes. I think if he does get in, he'll have to wait longer than most QB's, and he's really got to make a late career comeback/push IMO. It's just not likely.

                      He never got a ring.

                      He never lead the NFL in any significant stat category.

                      Never threw for 4,000 yards in a decade when we saw forty six 4,000 yard seasons.

                      His most efficient year in terms of completion percentage was in 2004, 64%. He had the 10th best percentage that year, damn near the middle of the pack for starting QB's that season.

                      Hell, Seneca Wallace has a higher career passing percentage than McNabb. Jason Campbell has a higher career passing percentage.

                      His best year for yardage was in 2008, when he was 7th in passing.

                      He's 4th in active career passing yardage, and he'll never see the top spot here. When Brees and Brady both pass him up in career yardage next year, he'll be 6th, and falling.

                      I don't see any leg a McNabb HOF supporter can firmly stand on. Winning percentage? Vick and company showed they could live without him, no problem. Playoffs? Made the conference championship 5 years in a row, very nice. He also lost 4 out of 5 of those championship games, and was 4-6 in TD-INT ratio in those NFC championships. 175 passing average in those games. He wasn't exactly the model of a winner.

                      HOF QB's are either stat whores, or they win championships. McNabb was neither. Just another very good QB who I think will go down in infamy, not in the Hall of Fame.
                      sigpic

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                      • Aso
                        The Serious House
                        • Nov 2008
                        • 11137

                        #12
                        No..

                        Comment

                        • Diivox
                          It's the other way.
                          • Apr 2009
                          • 1773

                          #13
                          Originally posted by G-Men
                          You are extremely narrow-minded if you think that these next couple years are what are gonna make or break it for him being in the Hall of Fame.
                          I think if there was ever a situation where these next couple of years make or break someones candidacy, McNabb is it. Without a strong finish to his career, he's a system QB. he's a glorified Trent Dilfer who was in the right place at the right time. Andy Reid is regarded as one of the best quarterback guys in the business. Without a strong finish, his stats come from playing in Philly for that coach. If he can get a few playoff runs throwing to Percy Harvin for the 50% of games he doesnt have a migraine, he displays that it was at least as much his skill as it was the playcalling.


                          Originally posted by G-Men
                          His best days are behind him, that's just a fact.
                          Agreed completely, pretty much every post I made in the thread about the trade makes this argument, no need to elaborate here.

                          Originally posted by G-Men
                          The only way his last few years will affect his stock is if he does in fact with a Super Bowl,
                          Originally posted by Me in the post you quoted
                          (and even thats a stretch, I really do think he needs a superbowl ring).
                          Originally posted by G-Men
                          which is highly unlikely at this point. Voters will be looking at his years in Philly in the early 2000s when he was one of the best quarterbacks in the game leading one of the best teams in the league. His time in Minnesota means almost nothing on whether he is in or not. No voter should be swayed on their opinion of McNabb because of the last few years of his career.
                          bottom line is those years in philly mean nothing unless he finishes his career strong. those years support Andy Reid's candidacy if McNabb fails spectacularly in Minny. When Reid retires, if McNabb sucks it up with the Vikings, we'll all go "look at the numbers he got out of McNabb, who was awful elsewhere".

                          A ring wearing the horned helmet locks him in. a couple deep playoff runs makes it an argument. being benched by week 10 for Christian Ponder means he really was the most overhyped QB of his generation (if he isnt already)

                          *EDIT* just for the sake of an interesting thread, check out his career stats. I believe stats mean absolutely jack and shit to actual football, but some people put more emphasis on them than I do, and looking at them, they really arent that bad.



                          60% completion, 3500 yards, better than 2:1 TD:INT just a season removed? you could definitely do alot worse (although as i stated in the other thread, it was an awful move given the other options for Minnesota, however, I'm simply posting the image for reference for those who post after me)

                          Comment

                          • Warner2BruceTD
                            2011 Poster Of The Year
                            • Mar 2009
                            • 26142

                            #14
                            McNabb is going to compile a lot of pretty stats in the yardage and TD categories, but when watching him play I never, ever felt like I was watching a HOF level player.

                            He had one dominant season (2004), which was also the only season of his career where you could make a reasonable argument that he was the best QB in the league (and you would still lose the argument).

                            His lifetime completion percentage is under 60% in an era where 60% isn't even spectacular.

                            And no, he isn't as good as Ken Anderson. Anderson was more accurate (in a much tougher era for accuracy), leading the league in completion percentage multiple times (including a season over 70%!). Anderson led the league in passer rating multiple times, cracking 90+ in an era where that was far from routine. Anderson was alomst as good with his feet too, rushing for 2200 yards and 20 scores.

                            Anderson was a better player, so if he is the bar, McNabb falls short.

                            I vote no. But I think he will get in. He's not nearly as good as his rep, and never really was.

                            Comment

                            • Houston
                              Back home
                              • Oct 2008
                              • 21231

                              #15
                              Too inconsistent.

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