Now that Favre is officially done, where does he rank all time?

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hooskins
03-04-2008, 07:08 PM
Top 20, probably not Top 10. Here are eight guys that IMO are hands down better: Peyton Manning, Brady, Marino, Elway, Baugh, Graham, Unitas, Montana.

Others to discuss; Steve Young, Aikman, Tarkenton, Kelly. Favre was very good, but many of his numbers are inflated because he was so durable and played so long (not bad things, but they do inflate stats).

I agree with your top 8 there.

budw38
03-04-2008, 07:43 PM
Elway , Montana , Bradshaw, Staubach , Marino , Manning , Favre . Elway and Marino never had great defences , and usually played with no running game . Had Elway or Marino started in DC with Gibbs in 83 ,,, we would have won 5 Super Bowls . Brady , Graham , Sonny J. as well as a few others could make a case for top 10 . I never saw Unitas or Namath , and Tarkenten would get some consideration had he been on a championship winner . I started watching the Skins in 72' , in all those years , Elway and Marino were the only two that I witnessed win with very little around them . For those of you whe are young , many of the " losses " that they had , they put up 30 , 40 and 50 pts in many of those games that they " lost " .

dmek25
03-04-2008, 07:52 PM
i would be hard pressed to find that many qbacks better then Favre. to me, no way Peyton Manning is better. maybe Montana. its really hard to judge the old school guys. they were all tough as nails, considering the amount of punishment they had to take, often after the ball was released. on top of that, they also had to call their own plays. guys like Baugh playing both ways. to me, Marino was nothing more then pistol pete, passing 40-50 times a game, to inflate his stats. in my eyes, it was always about him, not the dolphins.

hagams
03-04-2008, 08:36 PM
IMO, it's a toss up between him and Marino. I'm kinda young, so guys before my time I can't really say much about. But when you take into consideration the type of guy he is, and his off-field accomplishments he's got to be in the FAV 5.

GTripp0012
03-04-2008, 09:23 PM
You can never have truly compare greats from different era's, but we can never have an objective conversation until you agree on the definition of "greatest." If we confine the argument a bit you can start to rank players on an apples to apples basis. Everyone has their own definition of great, unfortunately.

Personally, I think you have to look at the whole package, so my criteria would be as follows:

Wins - Did the player win on a consistent basis
Stats - Did the player contribute significantly on a statistical basis
Longevity - How long did they contribute at a high level
Peak Performance - At their best, how good were they relative to their peers, and how long did they perform at that level.
Intangibles - How did this player affect the outcome of games beyond their play? Where they a great leader, a great personality, did they elevate the play of their teammates?

Based on these 5 criteria, I would have to rank Favre top 10 of all time. He played extremely well, for a very long time. At his best he was equal or better than any of his contemporaries, and he owns almost all of the records. He didn't have the intangibles that a Montana had, and his game management signficantly lowers his ranking, but he certainly elevated the play of those around him. Had he not had several down years at the end of his career, I suspect there would be little question about his place in history.

FWIW, here are my top 10

1) Starr (simply the greatest, 5 NFL championships, owned all the stat records when he retired, lead the league in all statistical categories while he played, 7.85 YPA career and beat 8.2 YPA six times, more than anyone; played best when it mattered - 106 rating and 9.6 YPA in championships; extemely high intangibles...teammates were inspired by and would die for Starr, incredible leader)
2) Montana (4 championships, quickest release ever, pure winner, most clutch player, HUGE leadership intangibles, 127.4 rating in superbowls is INSANE, icewater in his veins)
3) Baugh (2 NFL championships, greatest two way player ever, perfected the forward pass, 109 rating in '45 compared to league average of 43, 7.3 YPA when the rules allow d'backs to mug the receiver)
4) Unitas (3 championships, threw for 40,000 in defensive era, called own plays, 7.8 YPA career)
5) Grahm (3 NFL championships plus 4 AFL championships, gaudy 9.0YPA, only played for 6 years in NFL)
6) Brady (3 championships, best season ever, insane post season stats, finds a way to win)
7) Marino (purest passer ever, limited wins and limited intangibles)
8) Bradshaw (4 championships, great arm, pure winner)
9) Favre (Owns all the records now, and won consistently with flair)
10) Elway (best comeback QB, great deep arm, lots of intangibles, great runner)

Honorable Mention: Manning, Tarkenton, Fouts, Moon, Griese (Bob), Luckman, StaubachGood post on the whole here, but I have a problem with your criteria. Some of the criteria isn't mutually exclusive. You list "stats" but then also "peak performance". Seems that a good chunk of peak performance is statistical production. Winning also factors into peak performance I would think. Intangibles isn't really on the same level as anything else.

I think you have a good start, but the only criteria you can really have is 1) longevity and 2) peak performance. The other 3 are simply tools you use to measure the criterias.

GTripp0012
03-04-2008, 09:26 PM
i would be hard pressed to find that many qbacks better then Favre. to me, no way Peyton Manning is better. maybe Montana. its really hard to judge the old school guys. they were all tough as nails, considering the amount of punishment they had to take, often after the ball was released. on top of that, they also had to call their own plays. guys like Baugh playing both ways. to me, Marino was nothing more then pistol pete, passing 40-50 times a game, to inflate his stats. in my eyes, it was always about him, not the dolphins.Are you asserting that:

1) Marino called his own plays?

and

2) He was more worried about playing from behind to inflate his numbers than winning?

Maybe I'm confused on what you are saying here, but I think you'll have a hell of a time doing anything to substanciate either of those claims. I have never heard anyone argue before that better production somehow was counter-productive to winning.

skinsfan_nn
03-04-2008, 09:28 PM
Very simply put, IMO there are many ways to look at stats and pick them to pieces for a lot of folks. But this guy not only has broke most all of the greatest stats of all time and yes a few of the worst.

But this simple man took the chances that most QB's are scared to take to just let it rip and play ball 100% leaving it all on the field, the way football was meant to be played.

IMO he is one of the very best the game has ever seen, in the Top 10 QB list of all time! This class act is leaving this great game on his terms and of course a first time nod in the Hall of Fame. Well Done Brett, even though I'm not a GB fan, you where fun to watch play!

Riggo44
03-04-2008, 09:48 PM
This would be my top 10 QB's of all time.

#1 John Elway
#2 Joe Montana
#3 Johnny Unitas
#4 Sammy Baugh
#5 Bart Starr
#6 Bret Farve
#7 Dan Marino
#8 Otto Graham
#9 Terry Bradshaw
#10 Troy Aikman :doh:

budw38
03-04-2008, 09:52 PM
i would be hard pressed to find that many qbacks better then Favre. to me, no way Peyton Manning is better. maybe Montana. its really hard to judge the old school guys. they were all tough as nails, considering the amount of punishment they had to take, often after the ball was released. on top of that, they also had to call their own plays. guys like Baugh playing both ways. to me, Marino was nothing more then pistol pete, passing 40-50 times a game, to inflate his stats. in my eyes, it was always about him, not the dolphins. Marino is pistol Pete ,, and Favre ISN'T a " gunslinger " ? How many times did Marino throw up a duck and cost his team a playoff game ? I have no problem with anyone putting Favre at or near the top , but the Elway and Marino are overrated crowd ,, stunning ?

Mc2guy
03-04-2008, 11:26 PM
Good post on the whole here, but I have a problem with your criteria. Some of the criteria isn't mutually exclusive. You list "stats" but then also "peak performance". Seems that a good chunk of peak performance is statistical production. Winning also factors into peak performance I would think. Intangibles isn't really on the same level as anything else.

I think you have a good start, but the only criteria you can really have is 1) longevity and 2) peak performance. The other 3 are simply tools you use to measure the criterias.

Under your criteria, you could have a fantastic year or two, play for a long time, and rank highly? A Randall Cunningham in Minnesota '00 if you will?

I respectfully disagree. From my perspective the greats have to have capacity to play exceptionally and do it often for an extended period of time. In addition to this, intangibles mean something. Great leaders make players around them better and make teams better than they would otherwise be, and that has to count in my book.

I could see how stats and "longevity" could overlap, but that is the nature of performance based metrics, invariably performing well in one area will bleed over to other areas.

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