5. Tom Brady- Tom Brady is considered by many as the greatest QB of all time, or at least in the argument. Brady was drafted as a 6th round draft pick (199 overall) in 2000. Brady took over for an injured Drew Bledsoe and the Patriots never looked back winning 3 Super bowls in 4 years with Tom Brady at the helm. Brady is considered by many as the most clutch QB of, all time, but I reserve that right for Joe Montana. Brady has racked up countless stats and in 3007 he threw for 50 touchdowns a record set by Peyton Manning in 2004. Brady helped take the Patriots to a 16-0 record and they were on the door step of being the only team since the ’72 Miami Dolphins to ever complete a perfect season, but the Pats lost the New York Giants in arguably the greatest upset of all time. The next season in the first quarter, Bernard Pollard (the Patriot Killer) hit Brady in the knee and Brady tore his Anterior Crucial Ligament (ACL) and his Medial Crucial Ligament (MCL). Brady would come back the next season to rack up the NFL comeback player of the year and in the very next year he won the NFL MVP. Since his Super Bowl win in 2004 the Playoffs for Tom Brady have been marred, by upsets, late game collapses, and two Super Bowl losses, both to the Giants. That shouldn’t discount from his career achievements and the fact that he was a 6th round draft pick and he couldn’t beat out Drew Henson at Michigan. Brady is also probably the greatest draft steal in NFL history. Sometime you can never measure how much a guy wants it.
4. Brett Favre- Brett Favre, the “old gun slinger” because throughout his career he mad people shout and cheer while watching his games on TV. Brett Favre played for 20 seasons or basically two decades (1991-2012). He racked up countless stats and holds every major statistical record in NFL passing history, (yards, touchdowns, attempts, completions and yes interceptions), but maybe the most impressive stat is the record for career starts in row that started in 1992 and spanned 298 games and finally ended when Arthur Moats of the Buffalo Bills blindsided him. The Record rivals even the great record set by Cal Ripken’s 2632 starts. Brett Favre played for the Atlanta Falcons, Green Bay Packers, New York Jets, and Minnesota Vikings. Brett Favre took two trips to the big game, once in 1996 where he beat Drew Bledsoe and the New England Patriots and a year later where he lost to John Elway in one of the greatest Super Bowl Games of all time. Brett Favre would play for the Packers until 2008 where he retired, but later yearned to play, but the Packers had already committed to Aaron Rodgers. Favre later got traded to the Jets because the Packers still owned his rights. The Jets started off 8-3 and looked like Super Bowl Contenders, but in one of the greatest collapses of all time finished 9-7 down the stretch. Favre retired, again, but still wanted to play. He then signed with of all teams the Minnesota Vikings. In week 4 of the ’09 season Favre played his old team in which became one of the most watched nationally televised game of all time. Favre led the Vikings to a 12-4 record where he faced the Saints for the rights to go to a Super Bowl. Brett Favre was beat to death but managed to keep his team within position to win the game. Then in typical “Brett Favre fashion”, he rolled out to the right and instead of running for it, he through it across his body and it was intercepted by Super Bowl hero, Tracey Porter. The Saints won in regulation and Brett Favre only played for the Vikings for one more season, but could never recapture the magic of his ’09 season. Favre will go down as one of the greatest QBs in NFL history and arguably one of the most exciting to watch.
3. Johnny Unitas- Johnny Unitas was the father of the Two Minute Drill and will go down as one of the most clutch quarterbacks of all time. In the 1958 championship game the Baltimore Colts were down by three points and Johnny Unitas helped lead a drive so that the Colts could kick a field goal to tie the game and send it into sudden death overtime, the first Championship ever to do so. After causing the Giants to turn the ball over, Johnny U led the Colts down the field, where he called ever single play and got the Colts near the goal line where Alan Ameche scored the game winner. Johnny Unitas won two NFL Championships and a Super Bowl in 1970. Johnny Unitas was one of the greatest that ever lived and has cemented himself in NFL lore. He may go down as arguably the greatest QB of all time.
2. Peyton Manning- Peyton Manning or “The Sherriff” as Jon Gruden calls him. Peyton Manning is arguably the greatest QB of all time and his statistics don’t disappoint. Manning is second all-time in touchdowns and has the most NFL MVPs all time (4). Manning is the most cerebral player on the field and is always two steps ahead of the defense. He is probably the only player in the NFL: right now that has the authority to call his own plays. He runs the no-huddle like no one else before, he even runs its better than the man who used it most famously, Hall of Fame QB Jim Kelly. But for all his greatness, Manning’s one daunting statistic is the losing record in the playoffs. In 2006 though, the Season came together and Manning and the Colts won the Super Bowl after being down 21-3 to the New England Patriots in the AFC Championship Game. In 2003 Manning mad one of the greatest comebacks in NFL history where he and the Colts scored 21 points in under 5 minutes against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. When Peyton Manning couldn’t play in the 2011 season because of the neck surgeries the Colts, a team that was a playoff team for 10 years straight went 2-14. The season and record proved how much the Colts needed him. After the season, Manning was cut and he signed with the Denver Broncos and helped lead them to a 12-4 record and on Monday Football, Manning and the Broncos were down the 24-0 to the Chargers at the half. The Broncos ended up winning 35-24 and it remains the single largest comeback in Monday Football history. I believe when its all said and done Manning will be the greatest QB of all time and while there will be some dispute about that I’m sticking true to my prediction.
1. Joe Montana- Right now without any hesitation I can say that Joe Montana is the greatest Qb of all time and I’m not alone in that way. Many have said that Montana is the greatest of all time because he was so clutch in the big game. Montana took 4 trips to the Big game winning all four of them and if that wasn’t enough he was MVP in three of them. Montana emulated being clutch because throughout his career his teammates and coaches believed that they were always in a game because they had “Joe Cool”. One of Montana’s most famous games of all time is Super Bowl XXIV where the Bengals had taken a 16-13 lead late in the 4th quarter and had pinned the 49ers on their own 8. Montana traveled 92 yards where in the final 30 seconds he rifled a pass to John Taylor in the back of the end zone for the win. Earlier that season the 49ers had a week one match up with the Philadelphia Eagles. Montana was sacked 9 times in the first half and he wore Jerome Brown, Clyde Simmons, and Reggie White for that first half. Even though the 49ers were never down more than 11 points, it proved that Montana had the heart of a lion and that is why it’s calls “Montana’s Finest Moment”. There was never a better big game QB and that is why he sits a top of my board with the destiction as the greatest QB of all time.