Brady never threw a 99 yard interception to a LB just as the half ended in the Superbowl.
Your re-assessed post of what you meant originally is much better. Arguing who the best player is at a position when it's the most team oriented sport is a fair beef as to why the system is incredibly hard to rank.
I agree Warner is a great QB, but let's be honest. He threw two interception touchdowns before the half putting his team behind in the game, as well starting the year after that 0-6, with 3 touchdowns and 11 interceptions before turning the team over to Bulger.
I would say Warner is criminally underrated, but he's not in the upper level of Brady/Montana.
Guys like Peyton Manning also threw interception touchdowns when they were trying to lead their team from behind, which hurts their case. If you want to be the best, you cannot be the person who single handedly throws the game away. Not to mention he was shut down by the Patriots on more than one occasion. Manning is not someone who's post season play was affected by factors out of his control.
I never saw Montana play, so I never will compare Brady vs. Montana, because to me that's like comparing Ty Cobb to Ted Williams.
Let me be clear, i'm not saying Warner is the GOAT. Not even close. I was demonstrating the thin line between how QB's are perceived, and how too much emphasis is put on the Super Bowl game.
Joe Montana's entire legacy is built on 4-0 in the Super Bowl. There is a myth of his herculean post season performances as a result. Because he went 4-0, nobody remembers the three year stretch of garbo from 85-87 (smack dab in the prime years of the stars of that team) where the 49ers couldnt win a playoff game.
85 vs Giants: 26/47, 0 TD's, 1 INT, 65.6 QB rating
86 vs Giants: 8/15, 0 TD's, 2 INT, 35.2 QB rating, Jim Burt hit him so hard people thought he was dead
87 vs Vikings: 12/26, 0 TD's, 1 INT, 42.0 QB rating
And let's not forget the last high profile stinker of "Joe Cool's" career, the AFC Championship game loss to the Bills in '93: 9/23, 105 yards, 1 INT.
'Joe Cool' wasn't so cool when those great Giants teams of the era were smacking him in the mouth and knocking him out of the playoffs three times.
And then we have this...
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Lewis Billups dropped this Montana pass, which hit him directly in the chest. James Harrison caught Warner's pass, which hit him directly in the chest. Both players threw awful passes.
The point? If Montana is 3-1 instead of the mythical 4-0, we perceive him in a different way, we focus on the Billups INT, the bad, bad losses to the Giants,
etc. But because he's 4-0, nobody cares or remembers how bad he was in spots. He's Joe Cool!
Look, i'm not trying to denigrate Joe Montana, who is one of the best of all time. I'm trying to demonstrate how the Super Bowl is ridiculously over credited in both directions of establishing legacies.
We are hearing chatter that if the Giants win Sunday, that it might be time to say Eli is better than Peyton.
Are you fucking kidding me?! This would be based on 2-0 vs 1-1. Nothing more.
To me, win or lose, the way I view Eli will not change. He's still the same player. He's still not better than Marino, Warner, Peyton, or a bunch of other guys who don't have two SB wins. It's laughable.
He's Eli Manning.
Just like win or lose Sunday, Brady doesn't move up or down in my mind, either. A win won't put him over the top, and a loss doesn't knock him down a peg. Why would one fucking game change anything?
Stop over rating the Super Bowl, is basically my point. People wait around for the result of that game, and then slot QB's.
Will Eli become one of the greatest of all time Sunday? Um, no. It's silly.