Nope. He sucks. Worst intermediate passer i have ever seen. Always hit his WRs in the feet.
Donovan McNabb and the Hall of Fame
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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.
this.
He was consistently overrated by so many people.
Back to Diivox post of his career stats, yes they really don't look bad. Nobody is going to say he wasn't at least a good QB. At times he was great. I can recount a few times when he was just terrible, in the NFC championship games especially when you would expect a HOF QB to play well, he almost never did. He was never ever ever ever the best QB in the league. Which IMO is what you need to be in order to get into the HOF. As I said before, he never once lead the league in any important stat category. This includes, passing yards, percentage, touchdowns, ints, rating...Never. The best he came was 3rd in passing yards in '08. There has been at least 2-3 QB's who were better QB's, even in his best year. He's just not HOF. One of the really good QB's of our time though, but that's as far as he should get.sigpicComment
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This is his legacy in a nutshell.
[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QBUtmyHOvM&feature=related[/ame]sigpicComment
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I hate all the McNabb hate.
25-26 NFL teams would have killed for a QB with his W-L during his Philadelphia run.
I am not saying he is the best QB of his generation or anything, but the amount of hate this guy gets is unbelieveable.My Twitch video link: http://www.twitch.tv/dave374000
Twitch archived games link: http://www.twitch.tv/dave374000/profile/past_broadcastsComment
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you kidding me? You think the Eagles consistently won because of McNabb?Comment
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My Twitch video link: http://www.twitch.tv/dave374000
Twitch archived games link: http://www.twitch.tv/dave374000/profile/past_broadcastsComment
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I don't get the "whiny ass" comment. He was classy as hell about the Rush Limbaugh and TO crap, never commenting. Hell, same thing for Shanahan. Shanahan called him out of shape and McNabb never made a public comment.
How is he a whiny ass?My Twitch video link: http://www.twitch.tv/dave374000
Twitch archived games link: http://www.twitch.tv/dave374000/profile/past_broadcastsComment
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I don't hate McNabb. He's just overrated. He was streaky IMO, and never the model of consistency, irrespective of the Eagles winning percentage for his time there. In 2003, in the middle of the Eagles streak of appearing in 5 consecutive NFC Championship games, McNabb started the season with a 63.5 QB rating over the first 9 games. He was horrible that year, and yet they were still 6-3 by that point, and ended the year 12-4, first in the NFC if I'm not mistaken. I don't know how often I saw McNabb have just 3 horrendous quarters and just one amazing quarter when he'd blow up out of nowhere. It was odd seeing him go from total crap to amazing so quickly, and crash back down again. That's just how I remember the guy, for the most part. He was better at being consistent more in some seasons, but not all of the. Question, wasn't he injured often as well?sigpicComment
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Sure, he hasn't won a ring yet but getting your team to 5 conference championships carries a lot of weight. To say he's a loser is totally unfair. Statistically, he's rarely been pretty but he's effective. But even in his stats there are some things to be uncovered.
2004 was his only statistically dominant year. It also happened to be the only year he had above average talent at the WR position. A big chunk of his career was spent throwing to James Thrash and Todd Pinkston. Yet, he still had a pretty lengthy stretch where he was considered by many to be among the top 5 QB's in the game.
He never threw for 4000 yards or led the league in anything. Part of that is because of a more legit knock on him - he missed games due to injury almost every season. In 2004 through '06 and again in '09 & '10, he was on pace to go over 4K yds but didn't play a full season. 8 times he finished top 10 in passing yards/game. By comparison, John Elway did it 9 times and 3 of those came at age 35 or older. McNabb will be 35 in November. 5 times McNabb has finished among top 10 in passer rating. Elway's done it 5 times, again a couple of those very late in his career.
I don't bring up that sacred name to say McNabb is as good as Elway, because I don't think that at all. I do want to make a couple other points, though. First, early in Elway's career he played with a lot of average joes on offense and so did McNabb. I think he has to be given some credit for getting those guys he played with as far as he did. Yes, he did have better backs early on than Elway had, but none of them could stay on the field to make that much of a difference most of the time. Second, Elway and lots of other QBs have had plenty of success between the ages of 35 & 40, so McNabb's career isn't over. With a back like AP (or AD, whichever you prefer) and the Vikes return to the form they showed on defense a couple years ago, who knows, he just might have a ring in him.
Someone said McNabb's a system QB. I have to debate this. If anything, trying to fit a system hampered him a bit. Over the years, he's really changed his game and forced himself to play more from the pocket. Look at his rushing stats again. His first 5 years he was up around 70-80 rushes almost every year. Ever since he's been down in the 30s most seasons. And its not like he got old, he was 28 starting that 6th year. Still, he made so many great plays off of improvisation.
Statistically, I think he's borderline but all those trips to the NFC Championship game put him over the top for me. I can see the case for leaving him out, but to say he's a flat-out no with no chance doesn't make sense to me. [/rant]
For argument's sake, let's say this is his last season and he essentially does nothing. If so, the case to watch to see how McNabb might be treated by HOF committee is Steve McNair. From a statistical and successful standpoint they're very similar.Comment
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I think McNair is getting in, which will be a travesty, because he's not even as good as McNabb and was largely an average player. But the media (particularly the goofs at ESPN, namely Berman & Tom Jackson) LOVED Steve McNair like no other player of his era.
McNair exceeded 20 TD's three times. His teams had winning records four times in thirteen seasons, which is abysmal when you think about it. He was never even close to being the best QB in the league, and most years he was way outside the top ten. The Titans routinely performed just as well (and most times better) on offense when he was hurt and people like Neil O'Donnell and Billy Volek stepped in. Volek, in particular, would light in up replacing McNair, and McNair would inexplicably get his job back ever time he returned from injury.
I will never, ever understand the facination with Steve McNair.Comment
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A month after the 2010 season ended, Donovan McNabb has no idea where he'll be playing whenever the 2011 season starts.
If you want to discredit the first two links as an agent doing his job, go here:
Redskins quarterback Donovan McNabb says that he agrees with his agent, Fletcher Smith, who five days ago issued a statement harshly criticizing coach Mike Shanahan and offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan.
where he openly supports his agents criticism.
In a move that will shock no one who has been paying attention to the situation, Redskins quarterback Donovan McNabb wants the team to release him, according to Adam Schefter of ESPN.
probably rubber stamped by McNabb.
We've heard a lot of media folks ask the question in recent days: Why doesn't Donovan McNabb defend himself more publicly?
probably rubber stamped too. pretty piss poor agent, to the point of not even being certified by the NFLPA if he doesnt approve the comments.
In his first extensive comments since being benched as the Redskins' quarterback, Donovan McNabb said he felt that coach Mike Shanahan had "disrespected" him.
blatant, open disrespect for the Shannahans.
Redskins quarterback Donovan McNabb issued a terse statement through his publicist today after coach Mike Shanahan announced he had benched McNabb.
more blatant, open disrespect for the Shannahans.
Though the tea leaves have been in place since Sunday, when FOX's Jay Glazer first reported that Redskins quarterback Donovan McNabb could be benched for Rex Grossman, coach Mike Shanahan's decision to flip the switch from franchise quarterback to a guy with the accuracy of a sawed-off shotgun who…
more "my agent said it" bitching.
Rich Eisen of NFL Network put it perfectly Monday evening: "The Shanahan family would like to thank Brad Childress for taking them off the national media griddle today.
yet more bitching.
Eagles bitching.
At one point or another, Eagles coach Andy Reid has pissed off three different quarterbacks this year.
more eagles bitching.
yet more eagles bitching.
When Redskins quarterback Donovan McNabb looks back on his time with the Eagles, he thinks the folks in Philadelphia weren't appreciative enough of the success the team had over the last decade.
even yet more eagles bitching.
Donovan McNabb was booed by Eagles fans the day he was drafted and shipped to the Redskins this offseason, but for the 11 years in between, he says he felt that Philly fans treated him warmly -- and that he won't feel motivated for revenge against the Eagles when he plays them this year.
yet even more eagles bitching. i've been beating a dead horse for a while now. still. because you are THAT wrong.
heres his bitching on the way out.
My girlfriend is out the shower now and it's blu-ray time, so I'm not gonna ride any harder on this. I know I could keep clicking next for TO and limbaugh stuff if i really wanted to, cuz i read it all when it happened.
I could keep digging through the PFT archives, but I think i've hammered this point deeper than a motherfucker. McNabb bitches on a regular basis, and that's just with the redskins thing. I don't need more ammo here, but if you still aren't convinced, google "mcnabb financial apology". he has bitched his his entire career.
The real question is:
how do you miss this shit Dave, as a member of the fucking press? You, of all people on this forum, should have a deep understanding of how much of a crybaby he has been.Comment
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I think McNair is getting in, which will be a travesty, because he's not even as good as McNabb and was largely an average player. But the media (particularly the goofs at ESPN, namely Berman & Tom Jackson) LOVED Steve McNair like no other player of his era.
McNair exceeded 20 TD's three times. His teams had winning records four times in thirteen seasons, which is abysmal when you think about it. He was never even close to being the best QB in the league, and most years he was way outside the top ten. The Titans routinely performed just as well (and most times better) on offense when he was hurt and people like Neil O'Donnell and Billy Volek stepped in. Volek, in particular, would light in up replacing McNair, and McNair would inexplicably get his job back ever time he returned from injury.
I will never, ever understand the facination with Steve McNair.
I keed I keed.
But seriously, you're right about McNair. I mean he did have that one co-MVP season, which he shared with Manning who had had 1,000 more passing yards and a petting winning record. Personally I think the voting was rigged.
He never threw for 4000 yards or led the league in anything. Part of that is because of a more legit knock on him - he missed games due to injury almost every season. In 2004 through '06 and again in '09 & '10, he was on pace to go over 4K yds but didn't play a full season. 8 times he finished top 10 in passing yards/game. By comparison, John Elway did it 9 times and 3 of those came at age 35 or older. McNabb will be 35 in November. 5 times McNabb has finished among top 10 in passer rating. Elway's done it 5 times, again a couple of those very late in his career.
Let's compare McNabb with his peers. Brady & Manning are both guaranteed HOF'ers, wouldn't you agree? You'll have to prove McNabb belongs in the same conversation as these two guys.
Super Bowl Wins
Brady: 3
Manning: 1
McNabb: 0
This is a big deal in HOF voting. McNabb will have no help here, and I doubt he'll take the 5-10 Vikings to win one anytime soon.
Proof of Tier 1 and HOF worth through statistical achievement
Brady: Set the record for most TDs in a season, lead the nfl in touchdowns twice, passing yards twice, rating once, comp % once. Three 4,000 yard passing seasons.
Manning: Set the record for most TDs in a season(until brady broke it) Lead the NFL in TDs three times, rating three times, passing yardage twice, compltion percentage once. Three strait 100+ QB rating seasons. Eleven 4,000 yard seasons, including six strait 4,000 yard seasons, and another 5 strait 4,000 yard seasons.
McNabb: nothing...Has never lead the NFL in any major stat category.
On top of it all, it's been proven McNabb choked often, including in most of his NFC championship games.
Someone said McNabb's a system QB. I have to debate this. If anything, trying to fit a system hampered him a bit. Over the years, he's really changed his game and forced himself to play more from the pocket. Look at his rushing stats again. His first 5 years he was up around 70-80 rushes almost every year. Ever since he's been down in the 30s most seasons. And its not like he got old, he was 28 starting that 6th year. Still, he made so many great plays off of improvisation.
But lets look at the system shall we.
In 2002, AJ Feely came in to replace an injured McNabb and went 5-1, while McNabb was 7-3 on the year. McNabb went on to have a 53.0 rating in the NFC Championship, and lose the game 10-27 after throwing a late 4th quarter INT to Ronde Barber who took it back 92 yards for the touchdown.
In '05 the defense just wasn't the same, McMahon sucks balls, and the team just couldn't weather the storm when McNabb got hurt.
In '06 Jeff Garcia, who's the definitive west coast system passer, stepped in for an injured McNabb. The Eagles defense still wasn't right, but Garcia proved that the team could win without McNabb. He went 5-1, when McNabb was 5-5 before he got hurt. Garcia had 10 TDs and only 2 INTs, compared to McNabbs 18 to 6.
In '09 when Kolb got to start 2 games, he had 391 yard and 327 yard games, 4 tds, 3 ints and 60.8% & 70.6% completion. Lights out, and I think Kolb isn't that great TBH.
Fast forward to last year and the Eagles did just fine without McNabb. More proof he wasn't HOF caliber, at least he wasn't by the time they sent him packing.
Statistically, I think he's borderline but all those trips to the NFC Championship game put him over the top for me. I can see the case for leaving him out, but to say he's a flat-out no with no chance doesn't make sense to me. [/rant]
For argument's sake, let's say this is his last season and he essentially does nothing. If so, the case to watch to see how McNabb might be treated by HOF committee is Steve McNair. From a statistical and successful standpoint they're very similar.
For argument's sake, the only chance he has of making the HOF IMO is to win a Super Bowl. He's not going go to Minnesota and lead the NFL in any statistical category.
Unless you win a Super Bowl, you have to prove to be the best, QB in some significant way, typically through statistical achievement, and he's never done that. In fact he's almost always hovering in the top 6-10 range in all statistical categories.sigpicComment
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Manning had better numbers across the board. Manning beat McNair head to head twice. And Manning's team won the division over McNair's team.
This is a perfect example of the media gushing over McNair. They waited years until he finally had good enough statistics so that they could justify an MVP for him. Manning sharing that award was a travesty.Comment
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