Who is the best quarterback? It's a classic sports question, and it's fun to think about. You can do detailed analysis, or you can argue with your friends over fries and a beer.
After a few beers (and plenty of fries), maybe you agree to disagree on Tom Brady and Peyton Manning and Aaron Rodgers, and you remember guys like Joe Montana, who might have been better than any of them. And your buddy brings up Randall Cunningham; man, no one was more fun to watch than Cunningham. You never saw Johnny Unitas, but your grandfather swears he was the best ever. Or maybe he says Unitas was the best, but no one threw the deep ball like Joe Namath. Hey, we can talk about quarterbacks all night.
I have studied NFL history throughout my adult life, and I've talked football with so many people I've lost count. Below is the condensed version of what I'd say from that first plate of fries until last call. We'll go by decade, beginning in the 1950s, which is roughly when the quarterback position became what it is today. And for each decade, we'll name the best downfield passer. This is not only who threw the best deep ball, but who really used it as a weapon. Who made you worry about the deep pass?
We'll also cover the most accurate passer. There's no one statistic that captures this. Accurate passers have high completion percentage, but they also have low interception rates, and they hit receivers in stride, facilitating yards after the catch and high average per attempt. Accuracy doesn't show up in one category, it shows up in every category.
Perhaps no QB is more exciting than the one who can attack you with his legs as well as his arm. For each decade, we'll name not only the best running QB, but also the greatest dual-threat, the player who could beat you through the air and on the ground.
Few things are more frustrating to fans than watching their quarterback get sacked because he holds onto the ball too long. Whether he has a slow release, trouble reading coverages and making decisions, or just poor movement in the pocket, some quarterbacks kill their teams' field position taking coverage sacks. On the other side of the spectrum are the players who never seem to take unnecessary sacks: quick release, evading pressure, whatever it takes. For each decade, we'll name the QB best at avoiding sacks.
Maybe the most intense question in any QB debate is who you'd want at the end of a close game. With your timeouts gone and the clock running out, who's going to drive you into scoring position? From the '50s to the present, we'll look at the best two-minute drill of each generation.
And of course, we won't skip the obvious: every decade's best overall QB. At the end of each section, I'll add a few notes, including close calls and explanations.
1950s
Best Downfield Passer: Otto Graham or Norm Van Brocklin
Most Accurate Passer: Otto Graham
Best Runner: Tobin Rote
Best Run/Pass Dual-Threat: Bobby Layne
Best Avoiding Sacks: Norm Van Brocklin
Best Two-Minute Drill: Johnny Unitas
Best Overall QB: see below
It's hard to identify the greatest quarterbacks of the 1950s, because of a quirk in timing. Otto Graham retired in 1955, and John Unitas debuted in 1956. Graham and Unitas were the two best QBs of the decade, but only playing about five years each. Van Brocklin was probably the greatest QB who played throughout the decade.
One name that doesn't show up here is Y.A. Tittle. He was a highly accurate passer, but not on the same level as Graham and Van Brocklin. Tittle also had three of his best seasons in the early '60s. The best QB of this era not in the Hall of Fame is the Giants' Charlie Conerly, followed by Rote. Van Brocklin and Rote are the only quarterbacks to win a major league championship with two different teams: Van Brocklin with the Rams (1951) and Eagles (1960), Rote with the Lions (1957) and Chargers (1963).
I'm not doing half-decades here, but the best quarterback from 1955-64 was certainly John Unitas.
1960s
Best Downfield Passer: Joe Namath
Most Accurate Passer: Bart Starr
Best Runner: Fran Tarkenton
Best Run/Pass Dual-Threat: Fran Tarkenton
Best Avoiding Sacks: Joe Namath
Best Two-Minute Drill: Johnny Unitas
Best Overall QB: Johnny Unitas or Sonny Jurgensen
Some of the names here are obvious: Namath, Starr, Tarkenton, and Unitas are still famous fifty years later. Sonny Jurgensen is not.
Most passing yards, 1960-69:
1. John Unitas, 26,548
2. Sonny Jurgensen, 26,222
3. Fran Tarkenton, 23,140
Most passing TDs:
1. Sonny Jurgensen, 207
2. Fran Tarkenton, 186
3. Len Dawson, 183
Best passer rating:
1. Bart Starr, 87.7
2. Len Dawson, 87.2
3. Sonny Jurgensen, 82.4
Sonny did everything well. He threw for yardage and touchdowns, kept his INT rate low, and was universally hailed as the best pure passer of his generation. Unitas had a greater career, but some of his best seasons were in the '50s. For the 1960s, you wouldn't go wrong with either one.
I listed Joe Namath as the finest downfield thrower of the decade, and he probably was. But if you wanted to argue for Raiders QB Daryle Lamonica, the Mad Bomber, I couldn't mount a compelling argument to the contrary. They were both phenomenal big-play QBs, maybe the two most exciting passers in the high-octane AFL.
In between decades, Fran Tarkenton was the best quarterback from 1965-74.
1970s
Best Downfield Passer: Terry Bradshaw
Most Accurate Passer: Ken Stabler or Roger Staubach
Best Runner: Bobby Douglass
Best Run/Pass Dual-Threat: Roger Staubach
Best Avoiding Sacks: Jim Hart
Best Two-Minute Drill: Roger Staubach
Best Overall QB: Roger Staubach
This was a great decade for mobile quarterbacks. Bobby Douglass wasn't an NFL-level passer, but Staubach, Bradshaw, Fran Tarkenton, Ken Anderson, Archie Manning, Greg Landry, and Steve Grogan all rank among the great dual-threat QBs. Every one of those seven ranks among the top 20 rushing QBs in NFL history. All rushed for over 2,000 yards in their careers and averaged over five yards per attempt, all except Manning rushed for at least 20 TDs, and all except Landry passed for over 20,000 yards and 100 touchdowns.
Perhaps the most underrated, and unjustly forgotten, QB of this era was Jim Hart. Today, Air Coryell means Dan Fouts and the San Diego Chargers. But in the mid-70s, Don Coryell coached the Cardinals, featuring Hart, Mel Gray, and Terry Metcalf. It was the most exciting offense outside of Oakland, and Hart was the on-field general. Only Tarkenton passed for more yards in the '70s, and Hart took 700 fewer sack yards than Tarkenton. Hart sometimes threw interceptions because he got rid of the ball when pressure closed in, but he also saved his team a lot of yardage.
Sticking with the Coryell theme, Dan Fouts was the best QB from 1975-84.
1980s
Best Downfield Passer: Dan Fouts or Dan Marino
Most Accurate Passer: Joe Montana
Best Runner: Randall Cunningham
Best Run/Pass Dual-Threat: Joe Montana or John Elway
Best Avoiding Sacks: Dan Marino
Best Two-Minute Drill: Joe Montana
Best Overall QB: Joe Montana
I may be wrong about the best downfield passer. Certainly, conventional wisdom says Fouts or Marino, and that's probably right. But in the late '80s, no one did it quite like Boomer Esiason. The nickname had nothing to do with his passing style — he was called Boomer before he was born, because he kicked so much during his mother's pregnancy — but it would have fit. In the '80s, Esiason averaged the second-most yards per completion (to Jay Schroeder) and second-highest TD% (to Marino).
People forget that Joe Montana could run. He didn't run as often as Elway or as dynamically as Randall Cunningham, but for the total package, he was it. The 49ers were going to win Super Bowl XIX anyway, but Montana's running in that game befuddled and demoralized the Dolphins' defense. Montana's two-minute drill in Super Bowl XXIII is among the most famous in history, and his game-winning TD pass to John Taylor remains the latest lead change in Super Bowl history, just :34 remaining. John Elway and Dan Marino ran great two-minute drills, as well.
The best non-HOF QB of this era was Ken Anderson in the early '80s, Cunningham or Esiason in the late '80s. From 1985-94, you've got half a dozen Hall of Famers in or near their primes, but the very best in those years was Dan Marino. He threw 260 TD passes in that 10-year span. Esiason ranks second, with 204.
1990s
Best Downfield Passer: see below
Most Accurate Passer: Steve Young
Best Runner: Randall Cunningham
Best Run/Pass Dual-Threat: Steve Young
Best Avoiding Sacks: Dan Marino
Best Two-Minute Drill: Dan Marino
Best Overall QB: Steve Young
Naming the best downfield passer of the 1990s was the hardest choice in this whole project. I considered a dozen different players, narrowed it down to John Elway, Jim Kelly, Dan Marino, and Steve Young, and gave up. Gun to my head, I might take Young, even though we remember him more for his short-passing efficiency.
In the '90s, Steve Young was the best at everything. While true, this is a little boring. Let's find the second-bests. For downfield passer, Jim Kelly's short throws to Andre Reed and Thurman Thomas were balanced by deep bombs to James Lofton and Don Beebe. Most accurate might be Troy Aikman, and the best dual threat would revert to Cunningham. As best overall QB, there's a case to be made for Aikman or Elway or Marino, but I'll go with three-time MVP Brett Favre. He's also the top quarterback from 1995-2004.
Cunningham and Marino are the first QBs listed at the same position (Best Runner and Best Avoiding Sacks, respectively) in two decades. Cunningham was the greatest running quarterback before Michael Vick, and he was a better passer than Vick. Marino's sack rates, relative to league average, are the best in recorded history. Famously slow, he sensed pressure well and had the quickest release of his generation. I know some fans still think sacks are all about the offensive line. It's not that the line doesn't matter — of course it does — but Marino was the best at avoiding sacks in 1983, and he was the best in 1999. Those teams had completely different offensive lines. If you really believe the Dolphins had the best line in the NFL for 17 years in a row, and it suddenly collapsed when Marino retired, maybe you're not thinking this through.
2000s
Best Downfield Passer: Peyton Manning
Most Accurate Passer: Peyton Manning
Best Runner: Michael Vick
Best Run/Pass Dual-Threat: Donovan McNabb
Best Avoiding Sacks: Peyton Manning
Best Two-Minute Drill: Peyton Manning
Best Overall QB: Peyton Manning
Most of these are obvious. The one I suspect people might dispute is best two-minute drill. People regard Tom Brady as a better clutch player because of his results in the playoffs, but at the end of games, no one equaled Manning. He is the greatest comeback QB of all time. Peyton has the most game-winning drives of any QB in history, but it's not just the sheer numbers, it's the magnitude of the comebacks. Just between 2000-09, Manning led:
* One of the two 17-point comebacks in the last 5:00 of a game
* And the other one
* The biggest comeback in Conference Championship Game history (18 points)
* Five straight wins after trailing in the fourth quarter
* A 15-point second-half comeback
* A 17-point fourth quarter to come back from 10 down
* The game when Bill Belichick was so scared of Manning that he went for it on 4th-and-2 from his own 28-yard line
There are dozens more. A few of these are legendary: 21 points in 3 minutes MNF against the Bucs in '03, the AFC Championship against the Patriots, the biggest comeback in MNF history (2012) ... There are two distinct clutch situations: [1] big games, and [2] the late moments of close games. You might prefer Brady in the playoffs, but for a two-minute drill, you definitely want Peyton Manning.
I recently named my 2005-14 NFL All-Decade Team, with Manning edging Tom Brady and Drew Brees. It's the closest call in any of the half-decades.
2010s
Best Downfield Passer: Aaron Rodgers
Most Accurate Passer: Drew Brees or Peyton Manning
Best Runner: Cam Newton
Best Run/Pass Dual-Threat: Aaron Rodgers
Best Avoiding Sacks: Peyton Manning
Best Two-Minute Drill: Peyton Manning
Best Overall QB: Aaron Rodgers
Obviously, this decade is only half-over. With a few more years experience, Russell Wilson will probably become the finest dual-threat, and possibly surpass Newton as a runner. It's hard to see Andrew Luck or Wilson threatening Rodgers and Manning in the other categories, but it's not out of the question.
The closest call right now is most accurate passer. Brees and Manning are terrifically accurate, but so are Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers. You could pick any of them and it would be reasonable. We'll probably have a clear answer by 2020.
Some of you, if you're interested in the history of the game, may wish to follow the chronology of the categories we've been tracking. Below are the same lists, by category rather than decade. I added two bonus categories, strongest arm and best pure passer.
Best Downfield Passer
1950s: Otto Graham or Norm Van Brocklin
1960s: Joe Namath or Daryle Lamonica
1970s: Terry Bradshaw
1980s: Dan Fouts, Dan Marino, Boomer Esiason
1990s: Steve Young
2000s: Peyton Manning
2010s: Aaron Rodgers
Best downfield passer of all time: Terry Bradshaw
Most Accurate Passer
1950s: Otto Graham
1960s: Bart Starr
1970s: Roger Staubach or Ken Stabler
1980s: Joe Montana
1990s: Steve Young
2000s: Peyton Manning
2010s: Peyton Manning or Drew Brees
Most accurate passer of all time: Steve Young
Strongest Arm
1950s: Bobby Layne
1960s: Roman Gabriel
1970s: Terry Bradshaw
1980s: John Elway
1990s: Brett Favre or Jeff George
2000s: Michael Vick
2010s: Aaron Rodgers
Best arm in history: John Elway
Best Pure Passer
1950s: Norm Van Brocklin
1960s: Sonny Jurgensen
1970s: Kenny Anderson
1980s: Dan Marino
1990s: Dan Marino
2000s: Peyton Manning
2010s: Aaron Rodgers
Greatest pure passer: Sonny Jurgensen or Dan Marino
Best Pure Runner
1950s: Tobin Rote
1960s: Fran Tarkenton
1970s: Bobby Douglass
1980s: Randall Cunningham
1990s: Randall Cunningham
2000s: Michael Vick
2010s: Cam Newton
Greatest pure running quarterback: Michael Vick
Best Run/Pass Dual-Threat
1950s: Bobby Layne
1960s: Fran Tarkenton
1970s: Roger Staubach
1980s: Joe Montana or John Elway
1990s: Steve Young
2000s: Donovan McNabb
2010s: Aaron Rodgers
Most dangerous dual threat: Steve Young
Best Avoiding Sacks
1950s: Norm Van Brocklin
1960s: Joe Namath
1970s: Jim Hart
1980s: Dan Marino
1990s: Dan Marino
2000s: Peyton Manning
2010s: Peyton Manning
Best avoiding sacks: Dan Marino
Best Two-Minute Drill
1950s: Johnny Unitas
1960s: Johnny Unitas
1970s: Roger Staubach
1980s: Joe Montana
1990s: Dan Marino
2000s: Peyton Manning
2010s: Peyton Manning
Best two-minute drill of all time: Peyton Manning
Best Overall QB
1945-54: Otto Graham
1950-59: Norm Van Brocklin
1955-64: Johnny Unitas
1960-69: Johnny Unitas or Sonny Jurgensen
1965-74: Fran Tarkenton
1970-79: Roger Staubach
1975-84: Dan Fouts
1980-89: Joe Montana
1985-94: Dan Marino
1990-99: Steve Young
1995-04: Brett Favre
2000-09: Peyton Manning
2005-14: Peyton Manning
2010-14: Aaron Rodgers
Best quarterback of all time is a pretty big topic. Let's save that for the next time we go out for beer and fries.
March 31, 2015
Cedric kekeke:
Bunch of bullshit. There is no way that u can Call Steve young the best qb of the 90’s. When some guy named brett favre won 3 straight MVP’s and a SB. And he went to straight SB’s.
There is no way u can say that peyton manning was the beat down field passer in the 00’s. I’d argue that both roethlisberger and Philip rivers were better. And brady has the most comebacks how can anyone else be better in the 2min drill. I won’t argue best qb overall bcuz manning did win a bunch of MVP’s.
March 31, 2015
Shecky:
Wow. This is laughable.
Peyton Manning? Mr. “Fall apart when it matters most?”
April 4, 2015
Duane:
Peyton Manning? LOL. 9-11. Playoff record and countless choke jobs. The most embarrassing SB performance for a QB and his offense in the decade. You lose all credibility here. It’s Brady and it’s not close.
April 5, 2015
Brad Oremland:
I never realized there were so many people who don’t know what a two-minute drill is.
April 6, 2015
Joseph:
One of the most sensible and well-informed efforts at “rating the QBs” I’ve seen. Thanks for posting this. Of course a few are judgment calls when the stats don’t really tell the whole story. For me the two most difficult are passing accuracy and the deep pass.
Bart Starr has the accuracy numbers, but if he played for a team with no ground game, his average arm would have encountered trouble getting completions against tight coverage. Unitas was a better, more accurate passer, and as Johnny U himself said, Sonny was even better. On the deep pass, I can’t see Bradshaw that high owing to his mediocre accuracy and very high interception rate (212 Tds to 210 Ints). Staubach threw a much better deep pass. Bert Jones as well, and if not for his shoulder injury would doubtless have reached HOF status.
But still, the analysis here is first-rate, and I doubt if anyone could come up with a better list overall. Thanks again!
April 6, 2015
Brad Oremland:
Thanks, Joseph. You’re right that accuracy and deep passing were the hardest to choose, deep passing in particular, because I was evaluating frequency of deep passes as well as efficiency. Brett Favre, for instance, threw a great deep ball in the ’90s, but most of his passes were underneath, and I wanted someone who really used the deep ball as a weapon.
Terry Bradshaw and Bert Jones had the strongest arms of their generation, and Staubach was a great deep passer. But Bradshaw regularly threatened defenses downfield. I don’t think anything was more terrifying to a defense than Bradshaw unloading downfield to Swann and Stallworth. And I’m remembering Bradshaw at his best, in the late ’70s and early ’80s, not his first five seasons (when he was overwhelmed by the pro game and struggled to stay ahead of Terry Hanratty on the depth chart).
I wouldn’t particularly want to argue against Unitas and Jurgensen, but Bart Starr was an incredibly precise passer, and I have no reservations about selecting him.
Thanks for the good comments!
June 1, 2015
WR:
Sorry Brad, but I have to disagree with your selection of Manning for the best in the 2 minute drill, for both decades. I know Manning has more career game winning drives, but when you factor in that Brady’s career is shorter, Brady come out ahead. Manning has 52 GWDs in 256 starts, 20%. Brady has 46 in 207 starts, 22%.
Between 2000-2009, Manning had 37 GWDs, 3.7 per season. But Brady had 30 in 8 seasons, 3.75 per season. In the playoffs, Brady has had 9 GWDs in 12 chances, a 75% success rate. Manning has only 1 GWD in 9 chances, just 11%.
Here’s a list of Brady’s best comebacks up until 2009
-2001 v. Chargers, Pats score 10 pts in final 3:31 of 4th, win in OT
-2001 tuck rule game v. Raiders
-2002 v. Bears, Brady overcomes 21 point 2nd half deficit
-2003 v. Broncos, GW drive in final minute to win on the road
-2003 SB v. Panthers, 18 4th quarter pts to win SB in final seconds
-2006 playoff game in San Diego
-2007 v. Ravens, comeback in 4th to keep perfect season alive
That’s not even a complete list. Since Brady became a starter in 2001, he has 46 GWDs, Manning only 41. As for the 2010s, Matt Ryan has the most GWDs in that span with 20, Manning is nowhere near the top of the list, with only 8. Brady has 17, tied with Joe Flacco. For best 2 minute drill in the 2010s, I would choose either Flacco, Brady, or Roethlisberger. You could choose Russell Wilson, but it’s certainly not Manning. What am I missing? Where is the evidence that Manning has outperformed Brady in the 2 minute drill?
June 3, 2015
Brad Oremland:
You’re free to disagree with my opinion that “it’s not just the sheer numbers, it’s the magnitude of the comebacks” which determine a great two-minute quarterback, but I don’t find the stats above persuasive.
Manning has half a dozen unique and memorable comebacks. Brady’s most famous comeback relied upon a controversial officiating decision that inspired outrage and led to a rule change.
I would also argue that Manning, at the height of his powers, was unparalleled. I might believe that Brady has been more steady and consistent, but to argue that he’s been as spectacular leading comebacks as Manning seems ridiculous to me. I don’t think “best two-minute drill” is about who has been part of the most comebacks, or even who has led the most game-winning drives. Those are team statistics, without a lot of context to inform them. A two-minute drill is a very specific situation, not synonymous with 4QC or GWD. In the 1980s, Steve DeBerg and Ron Jaworski were credited with about the same number of game-winning drives as John Elway. Does that mean they ran equally effective two-minute drills? GWD is a very limited stat. In a series of posts (http://www.pro-football-reference.com/blog/?p=3392), Scott Kacsmar explains some of the problems with these stats — and the numbers you’ve used above are his stats.
I appreciate your interest in the topic and the research you did to back up your idea, but Peyton Manning ran by far the best two-minute drill of his era. Thanks for reading.
June 4, 2015
WR:
Yes, two people can disagree on this issue, and if there’s a gap we just can’t bridge here, that’s fine with me. I just don’t understand your argument for Manning in the 2 minute drill. You used his number of GWDs, and examples of his best comebacks, in your argument that Manning is the best late game QB. I simply provided similar data that sheds serious doubt on this conclusion. To say that Brady has fewer memorable comebacks than Manning is silly. I stand by the list I provided, which is far from complete, and all of which were games the Pats won in the final 2 minutes or OT.
To say that Brady came back against Oakland only because of the tuck rule is wrong. It was an epic clutch performance, check his stats in the 4th quarter of that game. And the tuck rule call was made correctly. Anderson’s interpretation was within the purview of the rule, as it was written at the time. I agree that GWDs have limited utility, and I’ve read Kacsmar’s work. I was using them because you used them yourself in the article.
Your choice of Manning as the best in the 2 min drill comes off as a subjective opinion. While those are fine, if you’re going to use that opinion to justify ranking Manning ahead of Brady, that becomes a problem. In a separate article you said Manning was better, in part, because he runs a better play fake than Brady. Again, I can’t see this as anything more than just an opinion.
I’d be happy to continue our discussion, but I need you to send me an email. I also just want to say that I really enjoy your work, and I’m eager to see how you rank the best QBs of all time.
June 5, 2015
Brad Oremland:
It sounds like we’re going to disagree on this one.
You’re right that my take on two-minute drills and play-fakes are subjective opinion. I think that’s by necessity. Football doesn’t lend itself to the same quality of objective analysis as baseball. But I have great confidence in my position on these particular issues: I think they’re obvious. If someone wanted to say that Christian Ponder ran better play-action than Peyton Manning, it would be somewhere between difficult and impossible to factually disprove that. But the assertion is foolish.
To suggest that Tom Brady has produced as many historic and memorable comebacks as Manning seems crazy to me. To suggest that Brady — whose completion percentage, first down percentage, average yardage, and TD% are all lower than Manning — is more explosive and a better choice to lead a team the length of the field in the final moments of the game, I can’t understand.
I’m afraid that’s the closest you’ll get to a statistical argument from me, but I’ve watched both players throughout their careers, and the comparison on this particular point doesn’t seem close to me. Thanks again, though, for your interest, and I hope you enjoy the best QB series.
June 28, 2015
Justin:
Be prepared when Brady is not as high on your 10-1 list as New England homers expect, they will explode on this site. They are the most irrational football fans I have ever seen.
Brady is a great QB, but for a QB to be rated the best of all time, his limitations have to be minimal, at least to me. Brady cannot throw the ball down the field. He has completed something like 30% of his career passes over 20 yards. That is pathetic. Can you see him playing pre-1980, when QBs had to throw the ball down the field. Early in his career, the Pats protected him. Example, in his first Super Bowl, he completed 19 passes, for 145 yards. As a matter of fact, they are still protecting him. In his last Super Bowl, taking away YAC, he completed 37 passes, for 111 yards. Does he throw anything but screens, swings, or quick slants? To be considered the best of all time, a QB has to be able to make every throw, and do it.
September 29, 2015
Rob:
Just happened to stumble upon this article. It desperately needs updating. The debate is over as far as Brady vs Manning goes. Tom Brady is not only better than Manning (I lost track of all the 1 and done’s Manning has in the playoffs), he’s now the greatest QB of all-time. #BradyGOAT
January 21, 2016
Andre:
“The debate is over as far as Brady and Manning goes”. You have to laugh! Tell us at what point the debate ended, another Super Bowl ring?! The author of this article does an amazing job of bringing some structure to the debate about best QBs through the decades and we have to read asinine comments like this. Great article
December 21, 2017
K:
I’ll take Len Dawson: still holds the NFL record for most season’s leading pass completion %, he threw more td passes than ANY QB for a 7-year period 1962-1968, & played in 3 Championship Games/2 Superbowl’s &won 2 of the 3.
Dawson as his peers then also did it in an more difficult era than today’s bogus stat QB’s who’ve benefited from various rule changes, every over-rated one of them the past 40 years… that he remains the ONLY member the KC offense in the ‘Hall of Fame’ suggests he must have done a lotta carrying of his teammates, by evidence.
Upshot: Dawson, Starr, Unitas, Jurgensen & Tarkenton - I’ll take ANY of them over ANY QB’s who have played during the modern day farce origin 1978 to date (bump rule change.) (PS) Otis Taylor, Jim Tyrer, Ed Budde and Jerrell Wilson at minimum ALSO Hall of Fame Chiefs.
January 8, 2019
Terence Kivlan:
Johnny Unitas was the best of all time because he was a field general par excellence. He called the plays. He led the team.
May 12, 2019
Clarence Luff:
The person that made the list for the 2000’s and 2010’s must REALLY be a Brady hater. He isn’t on either list anywhere. FACT Brady is the G.O.A.T and is not only the best all time but the best of both decades mentioned above.
June 15, 2021
Dylan Ascencios:
The disrespect to Brady in 2021 here is laughable. Brady clearly better than Rodgers and Manning
September 29, 2024
Clarence Luff:
You are just a hater period. There is no other way to say it. To even pretend that Manning is the greatest QB of the 2000’s and Rodgers is the greatest QB of the 2010’s is just plain idiotic. Brady is the G.O.A.T period and should be the greatest in both of those decades. Brady won when it counted.