Notice that you added the caveat "and not screw things up terribly" to your statement after the fact. I will take that as an admission that I was right, your condescending commentary notwithstanding.go pak go wrote: ↑16 Oct 2023 09:57No. Any QB could have made the 2002 Bucs, 2000 Ravens and 2015 Broncos go. The defenses were that good. Take the snap. Hand it off to Alstott or watch your CB take a pick 6 to the house.Papa John wrote: ↑16 Oct 2023 09:53This is where you lose me. I don't disagree with most of the names you included in your average QB list. Without having time right now to look up the playoff numbers of those QB's, I would bet that even those guys put up good numbers, were accurate with the football, and did not commit turnovers when it mattered most. In other words, they may have had average careers, but they stepped up and were good during crunch time. Eli Manning is probably the poster child for what I am describing.
You frame it as though any QB with a pulse could have made those machines go and it isn't true. Those QB's deserve more credit than you're giving them.
But the others do require competent QB play. Meaning they can move the chains at points during the game. Can be counted on to put up 24 points. Not "bad" or a guy with a pulse but certainly are not in your perinneal MVP top tier QB lineup either.
If only there was a word for someone who is not exceeding the bar, not elevating those around him, but also not a liability...oh wait. There is! It's called Average
Brad Johnson was 2x Pro Bowl. I even included him on a self-created list called Papa's Unsung Heroes that I made in a post a few years back. And it was for good reason. So you'd better check yourself before talking &%$@.
Trent Dilfer was 1x Pro Bowl and a Sammy Baugh award winner in college. He could throw with accuracy.
I admit that even if you put a &%$@ show of a QB like Johnny Manziel on those Bucs and Ravens teams, they would have been competitive. I don't know that they would have won a Super Bowl.