Bush4Ever wrote:*Casual football fan disclaimer*
My guess would be that Montana was noticeably better than Brady (peer to peer) at the start of their respective careers, but Brady was superior at the back end.
This is very true.
Bush4Ever wrote:*Casual football fan disclaimer*
My guess would be that Montana was noticeably better than Brady (peer to peer) at the start of their respective careers, but Brady was superior at the back end.
Regular Season MVPRobceltsfan wrote:# of times leading/top 5 in a category:
Passing TD's
Montana: 2/7
Brady: 4/9
Unitas: 4/9
Passing Yards
Montana: 0/5
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 4/9
QB Rating
Montana: 2/8
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 3/9
Comp %
Montana: 5/10 (his best category)
Brady: 1/5
Unitas: 1/8
INT %
Montana: 1/9
Brady: 4/7
Unitas: 2/7
TD%
Montana: 2/4
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 4/7
Total Offense
Montana: 0/6
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 5/13
This is all arbitrary and up for debate as to what stats are an indicator of being a good QB....and it also shows 16 seasons of Brady's career as opposed to only 12ish qualified seasons for Montana. Team record as a starting QB is important too, and Brady wins that one going away...
Montana: 117-47....16-7 playoffs
Brady: 183-52.....24-9 playoffs
Unitas 118-63...... 6-3
In the end, Brady and Montana are the only two viable options for "GOAT QB" status.....and I feel Brady has a slight edge. But an argument can be made in favor of Montana (just not arguments revolving around rules/eras/etc.).
elmerjfudd wrote:Regular Season MVPRobceltsfan wrote:# of times leading/top 5 in a category:
Passing TD's
Montana: 2/7
Brady: 4/9
Unitas: 4/9
Passing Yards
Montana: 0/5
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 4/9
QB Rating
Montana: 2/8
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 3/9
Comp %
Montana: 5/10 (his best category)
Brady: 1/5
Unitas: 1/8
INT %
Montana: 1/9
Brady: 4/7
Unitas: 2/7
TD%
Montana: 2/4
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 4/7
Total Offense
Montana: 0/6
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 5/13
This is all arbitrary and up for debate as to what stats are an indicator of being a good QB....and it also shows 16 seasons of Brady's career as opposed to only 12ish qualified seasons for Montana. Team record as a starting QB is important too, and Brady wins that one going away...
Montana: 117-47....16-7 playoffs
Brady: 183-52.....24-9 playoffs
Unitas 118-63...... 6-3
In the end, Brady and Montana are the only two viable options for "GOAT QB" status.....and I feel Brady has a slight edge. But an argument can be made in favor of Montana (just not arguments revolving around rules/eras/etc.).
Unitas - 4
Brady - 2
Montana - 2
All-Pro
Unitas - 7
Brady - 4
Montana - 5
Then I choose The SheriffRobceltsfan wrote:elmerjfudd wrote:Regular Season MVPRobceltsfan wrote:# of times leading/top 5 in a category:
Passing TD's
Montana: 2/7
Brady: 4/9
Unitas: 4/9
Passing Yards
Montana: 0/5
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 4/9
QB Rating
Montana: 2/8
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 3/9
Comp %
Montana: 5/10 (his best category)
Brady: 1/5
Unitas: 1/8
INT %
Montana: 1/9
Brady: 4/7
Unitas: 2/7
TD%
Montana: 2/4
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 4/7
Total Offense
Montana: 0/6
Brady: 2/6
Unitas: 5/13
This is all arbitrary and up for debate as to what stats are an indicator of being a good QB....and it also shows 16 seasons of Brady's career as opposed to only 12ish qualified seasons for Montana. Team record as a starting QB is important too, and Brady wins that one going away...
Montana: 117-47....16-7 playoffs
Brady: 183-52.....24-9 playoffs
Unitas 118-63...... 6-3
In the end, Brady and Montana are the only two viable options for "GOAT QB" status.....and I feel Brady has a slight edge. But an argument can be made in favor of Montana (just not arguments revolving around rules/eras/etc.).
Unitas - 4
Brady - 2
Montana - 2
All-Pro
Unitas - 7
Brady - 4
Montana - 5
Had his career occurred post-merger....he'd be in the running.
I think he's the greatest all-around QB of all-time....but he failed in the limelight too often to ascend to #1. Manning, Marino....all-time greats, but not enough rings.elmerjfudd wrote:Then I choose The SheriffRobceltsfan wrote:elmerjfudd wrote:
Regular Season MVP
Unitas - 4
Brady - 2
Montana - 2
All-Pro
Unitas - 7
Brady - 4
Montana - 5
Had his career occurred post-merger....he'd be in the running.
The majority believe QBs win games so going with Montana or Brady makes the most sense.Robceltsfan wrote:I think he's the greatest all-around QB of all-time....but he failed in the limelight too often to ascend to #1. Manning, Marino....all-time greats, but not enough rings.elmerjfudd wrote:Then I choose The SheriffRobceltsfan wrote:
Had his career occurred post-merger....he'd be in the running.
There's certainly a lot of moving parts in football, but the QB is *usually* the most important piece to the puzzle. There are exceptions to that rule, but a great QB has been the common denominator to many franchises long-term success.elmerjfudd wrote:The majority believe QBs win games so going with Montana or Brady makes the most sense.Robceltsfan wrote:I think he's the greatest all-around QB of all-time....but he failed in the limelight too often to ascend to #1. Manning, Marino....all-time greats, but not enough rings.elmerjfudd wrote:
Then I choose The Sheriff
Sent from my VS985 4G using Tapatalk
Thanks for posting those numbers, Rob. One pair I wanted to take a closer look at was their playoff records...and overall numbers in the postseason.Robceltsfan wrote:# of times leading/top 5 in a category:
Passing TD's
Montana: 2/7
Brady: 4/9
Passing Yards
Montana: 0/5
Brady: 2/6
QB Rating
Montana: 2/8
Brady: 2/6
Comp %
Montana: 5/10 (his best category)
Brady: 1/5
INT %
Montana: 1/9
Brady: 4/7
TD%
Montana: 2/4
Brady: 2/6
Total Offense
Montana: 0/6
Brady: 2/6
This is all arbitrary and up for debate as to what stats are an indicator of being a good QB....and it also shows 16 seasons of Brady's career as opposed to only 12ish qualified seasons for Montana. Team record as a starting QB is important too, and Brady wins that one going away...
Montana: 117-47....16-7 playoffs
Brady: 183-52.....24-9 playoffs
In the end, Brady and Montana are the only two viable options for "GOAT QB" status.....and I feel Brady has a slight edge. But an argument can be made in favor of Montana (just not arguments revolving around rules/eras/etc.).
rileymartin wrote:I think another factor that is overlooked in the Brady/Montana argument is the protection WR's get too...Guys like Welker would not have been nearly as effective working the middle of the field if they had to deal with guys like Kenny Easley and Steve Atwater teeing off on them...you simply cannot make a WR pay for going over the middle in today's game the way you could back in Montana's day...Another huge advantage for Brady...
Rob CRUSHED with facts...rtiff68 wrote:And, to keep with the "peers-to-peers" theme, here's some expanded postseason statistical comparisons...
Montana: 23 games (16-7) / 45 TDs / 21 INTs / 7.9 Y/A / 251.0 Y/G / 62.7% cmp / 95.6 passer rating
Marino: 18 games (8-10) / 32 TDs / 24 INTs / 6.6 Y/A / 250.6 Y/G / 56.0% cmp / 77.1 passer rating
Elway: 22 games (14-7) / 27 TDs / 21 INTs / 7.6 Y/A / 225.6 Y/G / 54.5% cmp / 79.7 passer rating
Brady: 33 games (24-9) / 61 TDs / 30 INTs / 6.8 Y/A / 261.5 Y/G / 62.4% cmp / 88.7 passer rating
Manning: 27 games (14-13) / 40 TDs / 25 INTs / 7.1 Y/A/ / 271.8 Y/G / 63.2% cmp / 87.4 passer rating
Rodgers: 16 games (9-7) / 36 TDs / 10 INTs / 7.5 Y/A/ / 262.2 Y/G / 63.5% cmp / 99.4 passer rating
Statistically speaking, the gap between Montana and his peers in the postseason was far wider than the gap between Brady and his peers.
Da Stars. wrote:Anyone have the numbers on the defensive and offensive rating of the teams Tom and Joe played in the conference championship games and super bowl?
Go back to your fucking camel.l3 o $$ wrote:Da Stars. wrote:Anyone have the numbers on the defensive and offensive rating of the teams Tom and Joe played in the conference championship games and super bowl?
What the hell would you know about football other than it being another excuse for you to drink 12 cans of natty ice...