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1TheQuarterback. As the player who touches the ball on almost every offensive play, the quarterback position has evolved from just another running back to the most impactful position in UsefulNotes/AmericanFootball whose leadership and decision making is an integral part of the offense's success. Since teams can (and quite often do) depend on solid QB play just to stay competitive, quarterbacks in the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague receive a [[SpotlightStealingSquad disproportionate amount of attention]] compared to every other position in the sport. All of these players were well-known stars in their day; many spun that stardom off into roles in other works, and even those that were more camera-shy are still likely to be referenced in works released during and after their playing careers, so it's worth knowing why they were famous to begin with.
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3Below is a list of some of the most notable quarterbacks in terms of their skill and fame. For more examples of those notable for other reasons, see UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNotoriousFigures; because so much attention and expectation is placed on every NFL QB, the page lists more players from this position than any other.
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5For notable players at other positions, see UsefulNotes/NFLRunningBacks, UsefulNotes/NFLOffensivePlayers, and UsefulNotes/NFLDefensiveAndSpecialTeamsPlayers. For notable non-players, see UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNonPlayerFigures. For quarterbacks who saw more success at the collegiate level, see UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootballNamesToKnow.
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12* '''Troy Aikman''' was the #1 overall pick of the historically competitive 1989 Draft out of UCLA and the QB for the Dallas Cowboys from then until 2000. As the leader of "The Triplets", an offensive group comprised of himself, all-time rushing leader Emmitt Smith, and superstar wide receiver Michael Irvin, Aikman led a dynastic run that included three Super Bowl wins, including winning game MVP in XXVII. A deadly efficient QB regarded as one of the most mechanically perfect and accurate passers ever, as well as one of the greatest playoff performers in NFL history, his career was cut short by chronic back pain and repeated concussions. Famously, he has no memory of Super Bowl XXVIII due to a concussion he suffered in the NFC Championship Game the week before. His success in those twelve years was more than sufficient for a first-ballot induction into the Hall of Fame. He went straight into broadcasting after his retirement and was part of FOX's lead announcing crew from 2002–21, providing color commentary to six Super Bowls with Joe Buck before making the ChannelHop to ESPN.
13* '''Frankie Albert''' was the first QB for the San Francisco 49ers, the franchise's first star, and the credited inventor of the bootleg. Following a stellar career at Stanford, he was drafted #10 overall by the Bears in 1942 but spent several years serving in the Navy during World War II before returning to football in 1945 with the Los Angeles Bulldogs of the Pacific Coast League. The following season, with the formation of the AAFC, Albert signed with the 49ers and guided them to four straight winning seasons and a championship appearance in 1949. He led the league in passing touchdowns twice, with his 29 [=TDs=] in 1948 (where he was named co-MVP with Otto Graham) standing as the single-season record until 1960. He remained the 49ers starter when they joined the NFL in 1950, earning a Pro Bowl while rotating passing duties with Y.A. Tittle. He played the 1953 season in the CFL before retiring from play. He later spent three seasons as the 49ers head coach, guiding them to their first NFL playoff berth in 1957. He died in 2002 from Alzheimer’s.
14* '''Josh Allen''' was drafted #7 overall by the Buffalo Bills out of Wyoming[[note]]where he landed after a season at Reedley College, a JC not far from his California Central Valley hometown[[/note]] in 2018.[[note]]In a bizarre coincidence the #7 overall pick in ''2019'' was also Josh Allen, this time a linebacker that went to the Jaguars. QB Josh Allen and LB Josh Allen have met on the field twice thus far, with the Jaguars winning both games.[[/note]] Allen's highly athletic physical profile made him a highly desirable draft selection, but many teams had reservations about his lack of experience and accuracy issues. However, the Bills benefitted immensely from the pick; Allen experienced almost unprecedented leaps in his passing abilities in each of his first three seasons, culminating in him leading the Bills to their first playoff win and AFC Championship appearance in a quarter-century in 2020 and keeping them near the top of the AFC ever since. He was selected for the cover of ''[[VideoGame/MaddenNFL Madden 24]]'' and led the NFL in combined [=TDs=] the following season. However, Allen (and the Bills by extension) has developed a reputation in the years since for [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut suffering early exits in the postseason]], usually [[AlwaysSomeoneBetter at the hands of the Patrick Mahomes-led Chiefs]].
15* '''Ken Anderson''' was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in the third round out of the small Augustana College of Illinois in 1971.[[labelnote:*]]Augustana was then a member of the NCAA College Division (i.e., "small colleges") and became D-III in 1973 when the College Division was split into today's D-II and D-III. There also was an Augustana College in South Dakota that played in the NAIA. That school moved to NCAA Division II in 1992 and changed its name to Augustana University in 2015.[[/labelnote]] He was one of the most statistically impressive passers of his era[[note]]led the NFL in yards twice, completion percentage thrice, and rating four times[[/note]], and his skill helped to prove the effectiveness of his offensive coordinator Bill Walsh's West Coast offense.[[note]]He notably engineered the Bengals' 1975 win over the O.J. Simpson-led Bills, a game that's often pointed to as the GenreTurningPoint that tipped the scales towards pass-based offenses in the NFL, before Walsh and Joe Montana perfected the West Coast scheme and transformed the league in San Francisco a few years later.[[/note]] Anderson won league MVP (and Offensive/Comeback Player of the Year) in 1981, the year he led the Bengals to their first ever Super Bowl appearance; the next year, he set a single-season completion percentage record that stood for nearly thirty years (his second of three times leading the league in the category). During his [[LongRunner 16 years]] with the young team, he became the franchise leader in passing yards [[ToughActToFollow and still holds that record]]. Football historians regularly cite Anderson as among the biggest examples of a NoRespectGuy in the league's history; despite all of his accomplishments, he has long been excluded from even consideration for the Hall of Fame despite having better numbers, more accolades, and more championship appearances than many other [=QBs=] enshrined in Canton (which may or may not have to do with him playing for an unglamorous small-market team). Anderson became an assistant coach after his retirement from playing, eventually winning a Super Bowl ring as a QB coach for the Steelers in Super Bowl XLIII; he retired the next year and was later enshrined as an inaugural member of the Bengals Ring of Honor.
16* '''Alan Autry''' was a 12th round pick of the 1975 Draft out of Pacific, going to the Green Bay Packers under the name Carlos Brown (his mother's maiden name). He had a very forgettable pro career, starting three games in 1976, losing all three, and being cut after the season. After a failed comeback attempt in the CFL, he became an actor best known for playing Bubba Skinner on the TV series ''Series/InTheHeatOfTheNight" as well as serving two terms as mayor of Fresno, California as a member of the Republican Party.
17* '''Steve Bartkowski''' was the #1 overall pick of the 1975 Draft out of Cal, going to the Atlanta Falcons. Bartkowski led the long-suffering franchise to their first playoff berth/win in 1978 after twelve years of failure and broke out as one of the NFL's better passers in the early '80s, leading the league in several stats[[note]][=TDs=] in '80, rating in '83, completion percentage in '84[[/note]] and making two Pro Bowls. He was pretty easily the best QB in the franchise's history prior to Michael Vick and Matt Ryan, but his talents were not enough to overcome the Falcons' dysfunction; with him under center, the team's reputation shifted from "can't put up a winning season" to "can't put up consecutive winning seasons", a streak that lasted for decades. After a few years of injury issues, Bartkowski was cut after 1985 and retired after one unspectacular year with the Rams; he was subsequently enshrined in the Falcons Ring of Honor.
18* '''Sammy Baugh''' [[TheAce led the league in most passing statistics]] through the 1940s while playing for Washington. The #6 pick in 1937 out of TCU, "Slingin' Sammy" was most notable for being a near GameBreaker in terms of his accuracy--he led the league in completion percentage for eight seasons, still the all-time record, and his 70.3% completion rate in 1945 stood as a single-season record for nearly forty years. For all his talents as a quarterback, Baugh was also [[JackOfAllStats an immensely adaptable player]] and is often considered [[MasterOfAll the best all-around football player in NFL history]]. He was one of the league's best ever punters (he held the record for most yards per punt in a single season for over eight decades) and was an excellent defensive back. In 1943, he led the league in passing yards and completion percentage, interceptions, and punting yards, perhaps the most dominant any player has ever been at all parts of the game.[[note]][[AwardSnub Sid Luckman won the MVP that year.]][[/note]] That talent took Washington to two NFL Championships (the first in his rookie year) and three second-place finishes over his [[LongRunner 16 seasons]] with the team. After retiring from play in 1952 holding most of the NFL's passing records (including [[MedalOfDishonor some negative ones]] like interceptions), Baugh spent a few middling years as a coach in the AFL, where he was the first head coach of the New York Titans (now called the Jets). His #33 was Washington's only official retired number for many decades (and is still one of only two). However, he never participated in a single team function after leaving the capital; he spent most of the rest of his life [[CallToAgriculture working his ranch]] and expressing ambivalence about his exceptional football career. Baugh was the last surviving charter member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, passing away in 2008 at the age of 94. He ''still'' holds the Washington franchise record for passing touchdowns.
19* '''George Blanda''' was a highly successful QB ''and'' kicker best known for his [[LongRunner incredible longevity]]. A twelfth-round draft pick in 1949 out of Kentucky, he played for a record 26 seasons in the NFL and, at the age of 48 in his final game in 1975, was the oldest man ever to play in the NFL, earning him the nickname [[CoolOldGuy "The Grand Old Man"]]. He played for the Chicago Bears from 1949-58, with one game in 1950 played for the Colts due to a contract dispute; Blanda famously feuded with owner/coach George Halas and retired when Halas wouldn't play him at QB. He soon [[TenMinuteRetirement returned from retirement]] to join the new AFL's Houston Oilers, where he played from 1960-66; though he initially was labeled an "NFL reject", he immediately led the team to two championships and won AFL MVP in 1961. He finished his career with the Oakland Raiders (1967-75), where he finally followed Halas' advice and settled into a placekicking role, only stepping in as QB in relief. His longevity was famously {{lampshade|Hanging}}d by Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt, who quipped, "Why, this George Blanda is as good as his father, who used to play for Houston" during a five-game streak in 1970 where Blanda came off the bench to win multiple games under center at 43 years old. Blanda retired as the highest-scoring player in NFL history and held the record for nearly thirty years until Gary Anderson beat it in 2000. He would still be in first place by a huge margin if TD passes counted as points for the QB instead of the receiver; the unofficial stat of "points accounted for" was created by fans specifically to recognize his achievement.[[labelnote:*]]Though still unofficial in the NFL, it's now an official statistic in college football, as is the related "touchdowns responsible for" (passing and rushing [=TDs=]).[[/labelnote]] He still holds the record for the most career PAT kicks made (943). However, his overall career passing statistics were more mixed, reflecting his [[DeathOrGloryAttack gunslinger playstyle]]: while he is one of eight [=QBs=] to ever pass for seven touchdowns in a single game and set a record for single-season TD passes in 1961 that stood for over two decades, he also threw more career [=INTs=] than [=TDs=], holds one of the worst career passer ratings of any QB with more than 1,500 attempts, set [[MedalOfDishonor a likely unbreakable record]] for most thrown interceptions in a season at ''42'' in 1962,[[note]]Impossibly, the Oilers played in the AFL Championship that year, so he was ''still'' selected for the AFL Pro Bowl. Blanda threw another 30 [=INTs=] three years later, making him the only player to pass the 30 mark twice.[[/note]] and held the career INT record (277) for decades until being passed by Brett Favre. Blanda still went into the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility; when it's stressed that Jan Stenerud (see [[UsefulNotes/NFLDefensiveAndSpecialTeamsPlayers "Kickers and Punters"]]) was the first (and for a long while only) ''pure'' specialist inducted there, Blanda (along with Lou Groza in that same folder) is the reason why. He passed away in 2010.
20* '''Drew Bledsoe''' was the #1 pick of the 1993 Draft out of Washington State and one of the more prolific passers in the NFL in the late '90s, even taking his New England Patriots to a Super Bowl (losing to the Packers), leading the NFL in passing yards in his second season, setting a still-standing record for most completions (45) and attempts (70) in a regular season game, and becoming the highest paid QB in the NFL at the time. However, what makes him particularly notable is his status as one of the most prominent [[ThePeteBest Pete Bests]] in NFL history. Early in the 2001 season, Bledsoe took a hard hit from Jets linebacker Mo Lewis, knocking him out of action with internal bleeding. A little-known 2nd-year player by the name of Creator/TomBrady took Bledsoe's place after that, and the rest is history. Bledsoe himself had a few more productive years with the Buffalo Bills and Dallas Cowboys but never got close to the level of success as his successor in New England. (Notably enough, he was similarly replaced in Dallas by an undrafted QB named Tony Romo in 2006.) As of 2023, Bledsoe has the most career pass attempts of any QB not enshrined in Canton.
21* '''Terry Bradshaw''' was the QB of the legendary four-time Super Bowl champion "Steel Curtain" era Pittsburgh Steelers. Despite being the #1 overall pick in 1970 Draft out of Louisiana Tech, he struggled to adjust to the NFL and was unable to lock down the starting job for several seasons.[[note]]In a case of WhatCouldHaveBeen, the Steelers only had the #1 pick the year they drafted Bradshaw because they won a coin flip against the Chicago Bears, with each team having had the same record to end the previous season. Bradshaw, the consensus #1 prospect, would have almost certainly been drafted by the Bears had they won the coin flip, significantly changing NFL history as we know it.[[/note]][[labelnote:Further note]]In his first season of college eligibility in 1967, Bradshaw backed up one Phil Robertson, who was a year ahead of him. Robertson was viewed at the time to have pro potential but was more interested in hunting and left football after that season. Robertson went on to found the Duck Commander hunting equipment company and become the star of ''Series/DuckDynasty''.[[/labelnote]] He often faced ridicule by the media, fans, opponents, and even his own coaches for his [[HalfWittedHillbilly perceived lack of intelligence]], which was not helped by having a DeepSouth accent and GoodOlBoy demeanor while playing in a northern state and sporting an [[GagHaircut often mocked haircut]] (long SeventiesHair despite going PrematurelyBald up top ''very'' early on).[[note]]One opponent, Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson from [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNotoriousFigures the "Notorious Figures" page]], famously stated that Bradshaw "couldn't spell 'cat' if you spotted him the 'c' and the 't'..."[[/note]] However, Bradshaw's powerful arm and on-field leadership eventually won out; he became one of the great quarterbacks of the '70s and was named league MVP in 1978. His passing prowess completed a trifecta with the strong running game and all-time great defense that brought the Steelers to a then-record-setting four Super Bowl victories; Bradshaw won MVP in two of them. Despite his very high ceiling, Bradshaw could be inconsistent on the field; he often struggled with interceptions and put up a record ''three'' games with a dreadful 0.0 passer rating. In his final game in 1983, he managed to throw two touchdown passes despite otherwise struggling that season, allowing him to just barely retire with a positive TD-INT ratio (212 to 210); he was still inducted into the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility. He has been a popular color commentator and analyst ever since, first with CBS and then with FOX, where he has served since the launch of its sports division in 1994. {{He also|Did}} has dabbled in acting and music, appearing in several movies[[note]]''Film/CannonballRun'', ''Film/SmokeyAndTheBandit II'', ''Film/FailureToLaunch'', and ''Film/FatherFigures'', to name a few[[/note]] and TV shows (usually AsHimself) and recording several country albums; he notably was the first NFL player to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
22* '''Creator/TomBrady''' is widely considered [[TheAce the "Greatest of All-Time"]] after leading his teams to ten Super Bowls, winning seven of them, and winning MVP in five, all dominant records that are unlikely to be passed, over a [[LongRunner 23-year career]], the first twenty with the New England Patriots and the last three with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.[[note]]Though debates about whether he is the most "talented" QB/player ever will rage on forever, that level of championship success is peerless. For more perspective: Brady's won more Super Bowls than any NFL ''franchise'' has in the entire 50+ year history of the Big Game.[[/note]] Brady was picked in the sixth round in the 2000 Draft (#199 overall) after a relatively undistinguished college career at Michigan and spent his rookie season as the team's fourth-string QB. He earned the backup job in 2001 and took over as starter after Drew Bledsoe suffered internal bleeding from a nasty hit. Brady started the rest of the season, culminating with a Super Bowl victory over the heavily favored "Greatest Show on Turf" Rams. He won two more Super Bowls after 2003 and '04 while leading the Pats on the longest win streak in NFL history (21 games), then was named league MVP in '07 for leading the then-highest scoring offense of all time[[note]]since surpassed by the 2013 Broncos, led by Brady's most notable [[TheRival rival]] Creator/PeytonManning[[/note]], becoming the first QB to throw 50 [=TDs=] in a season, and contributing to the Patriots' 16-0 regular season; they went on to lose Super Bowl XLII. Brady was seriously injured with an ACL tear in 2008 but quickly returned to form the following year, winning Comeback Player of the Year in 2009, winning League MVP twice more ('10, '17[[note]]winning at age 40, the oldest ever[[/note]]), and playing in five more Super Bowls with the Pats (winning three). In 2020, the Patriots' longest-tenured player ever elected not to return to the team and HC Bill Belichick[[note]]Their relationship having grown acrimonious for various reasons, including Belichick's reported insistence on ''not'' giving Brady special treament despite his immense successes.[[/note]], instead signing with the Buccaneers as a free agent and ending the most successful pairing of a QB and coach in NFL history. In his first year in Tampa, Brady took the long struggling franchise to its first playoff berth in 13 years and first playoff win in 18, all the way to another Super Bowl victory.[[note]]The Patriots, meanwhile, put up their first losing season since Brady started playing.[[/note]] The following year, he became the only player in league history to be selected to 15 Pro Bowls and announced his retirement... [[TenMinuteRetirement which lasted about a month]] before he returned to the field. Despite experiencing his only losing season as a starter, the Bucs still won their division before Brady retired once again, for good this time.
23** In addition to his Super Bowl success, Brady's longevity has helped him secure practically every significant "career" QB record, in addition to many season records. Brady has passed for more touchdowns and yards than any player and led the NFL in passing [=TDs=] five times[[note]]...and completion percentage once, passer rating twice, passing yards four times[[/note]]. He became the fastest QB to record 100 wins (not counting playoffs), doing so in 131 games (the previous record was 139, held by Montana). His constant playoff success gives him most of the postseason records as well, including highest completion percentage in a playoff game (92.9%) and most playoff wins as starter (35, more than ''double'' second place). Much of Brady's success can be attributed to his apparent [[TheAgeless refusal to age]]. While hardly the first QB to play into his 40s, Brady is arguably the only one to stay at an MVP and Super Bowl caliber at a time most players have been forced out entirely due to burnout and injury. He became the oldest starting QB to win a game in 2021 (a year he still led the league in [=TDs=]), became the oldest QB to start a game ''period'' the following year while setting another NFL record for completions in a single season, and played more games than any other position player.[[note]]381 games including playoffs, with the only players ahead of him being kickers and punters.[[/note]] Brady (in)famously associates that longevity with his incredibly strict diet, exercise routines, and meditation practices, the so-called "[=TB12=]" method.[[note]]The questionable scientific value of some of those practices has led some to accuse his athletic trainer, Argentine alternative medicine practitioner Alex Guerrero, of being a SnakeOilSalesman.[[/note]] Off the field, he was known for being a handsome ladies' man; he dated and had a child with actress Bridget Moynahan and was married to supermodel Gisele Bündchen for 13 years before their divorce in 2022. His highly competitive nature is widely renowned and was once subject of a meme known as "Bradying": after throwing an interception in Super Bowl XLVI, he suffered a HeroicBSOD on the field, leading to many people using his slouched over posture sitting on the field [[MemeticMutation as their Facebook picture]], much like Tebowing and planking before it. He's also been the cover athlete for ''VideoGame/MaddenNFL 18'' and ''22'', with the only notable effect of the curse being that those incredible seasons didn't end with a Super Bowl win.
24* '''Drew Brees''' was the face of the New Orleans Saints for [[LongRunner 15 years]] and the longest tenured player in franchise history. Brees played his first five seasons with the San Diego Chargers, who drafted him out of Purdue with the first pick of the 2nd round in 2001. He was relatively small for a QB at just under six feet and his first several seasons were not great, throwing more [=INTs=] than [=TDs=] and culminating with the team "earning" the #1 overall pick of the 2004 Draft. The Chargers picked Eli Manning but wound up trading for Philip Rivers and some other draft picks. Brees still won the starting job and had his best season to date, leading the Chargers to the playoffs and winning Comeback Player of the Year, but he [[GameBreakingInjury badly injured his throwing shoulder]] the following year just before entering free agency. He ultimately joined the [[ButtMonkey long-suffering Saints]], who had just endured another terrible season made worse by them being unable to play in their home stadium due to Hurricane Katrina. Brees immediately led them to their best season in decades and their first NFC Championship game appearance, raising the morale of TheBigEasy as a whole. He later led the team to their first ever Super Bowl after the 2009 season, defeating Peyton Manning's Colts, winning Super Bowl MVP, and landing on the subsequent ''VideoGame/MaddenNFL'' cover. Though he never returned to the Super Bowl, his years with the Saints saw the team go from perennial losers to consistent playoff contenders. This, coupled with his charitable efforts to help rebuild the city and his Boy Scout personality, earned him the respect and gratitude of many of New Orleans' citizens (and the nickname "Breesus") prior to his retirement after 2020. Besides his height, Brees' most notable physical trait is the large DistinguishingMark on his right cheek (a natural birthmark, not a scar).
25** Though he [[AlwaysSomeoneBetter never won a season MVP and is possibly overshadowed by the many championships]] of fellow LongRunner Creator/TomBrady, Brees was perhaps the most statistically dominant passer of his era, [[TheAce breaking many long-standing QB records]] in the back half of his career (LongList incoming). In 2008, he won Offensive Player of the Year after becoming only the second player to pass for more than 5,000 yards in a season after Dan Marino did so 24 years prior; while this became a more common feat in the subsequent decade, Brees is the only one to do so more than twice, doing so ''five times'', and he likewise is the only player to have led the NFL in the passing yards category ''seven'' times.[[note]]He also led in rating twice and [=TDs=] four times.[[/note]] In 2009, he became the most accurate single-season passer in NFL history, completing 70.5% of his attempts; he later broke his own record three more times. In 2011, he won OPOY again after beating Marino's passing yards record, which he held onto for only two years before Peyton Manning inched past it by a single yard. In 2012, he surpassed Johnny Unitas for most consecutive games with a TD pass, setting the record at 54. In 2015, he became the eighth (and most recent) QB to pass for seven [=TDs=] in a single game, doing so in a high-scoring shoot-out against the Giants. He was also briefly the leader in career TD passes, passing yards, and completions, but these records were broken by Brady shortly after Brees' retirement; his career completion percentage record stood a little longer before being bested (at least for now) by Joe Burrow.
26* '''Marlin Briscoe''' played more seasons as a wide receiver but is listed here for the historical significance of being [[JackieRobinsonStory the first black starting QB]] in modern pro football history. A 14th round pick in 1968 by the Denver Broncos out of the smaller Nebraska-Omaha[[labelnote:*]]which shut down football upon moving to NCAA Division I in 2012 and adopting "Omaha" as its athletic identity, with former [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNotoriousFigures draft bust]] Trev Alberts being the athletic director in charge[[/labelnote]] where he had a College Hall of Fame career, he was moved to corner as a rookie. After the Broncos starting QB was injured and the backup played poorly, head coach Lou Saban decided to start Briscoe. He threw 14 touchdown passes and rushed for three more in just five starts, including setting a then-rookie record with 335 passing yards in a game. Briscoe finished the season as starter and hoped that his success would earn him that role the following year. However, Denver brought in CFL Most Outstanding Player Pete Liske as QB and asked Briscoe to switch to another position, leading him to for his release, which the team granted. He signed with the Buffalo Bills, which already had superstar Jack Kemp as starter, so Briscoe switched to WR while serving as backup QB. He put up over 1,000 receiving yards in 1970, earning his lone career Pro Bowl trip, and was traded to the Miami Dolphins where he won two Super Bowls and was part of their 1972 undefeated season. He finished his career with short stops in San Diego, Detroit, and New England, never again playing QB but having established his place in NFL history. He passed away in 2022.
27* '''John Brodie''' played for the San Francisco 49ers for [[LongRunner 17 seasons]] after they drafted him #3 overall out of Stanford in 1957. Brodie took the starting position after the departure of Y.A. Tittle (see below) in 1961 and held the job through the decade, standing out as one of the league's better passers who just happened to be stuck on a constantly underperforming team. He won Comeback Player of the Year in 1965 after leading the league in passing [=TDs=] and yards and experienced a late-career hot streak in the early '70s, taking the Niners to the playoffs for the first time since the year he had been drafted and winning MVP in 1970. The Niners retired his #12 while he was still an active player, the only player in NFL history to be so honored. He retired in '73 behind only Hall of Famers Tittle, Unitas, and Tarkenton in career passing yards, but his team's win record (and potentially his outspoken support of [[ChurchOfHappyology a certain church]]) kept him from similar honors. Brodie then entered into broadcasting, serving as a commentator in Super Bowl XIII. He also had a fairly successful second career as a pro golfer, even winning an event on the Senior Tour (now known as PGA Tour Champions) in '91.
28* '''Ed Brown''' was a sixth round pick in 1952 by the Chicago Bears out of San Francisco[[note]]USF shut down its football program that same year[[/note]] but spent two years serving in the Marines before joining the Bears as QB (and punter). Brown usurped George Blanda for the starting role a year later and earned consecutive Pro Bowls, leading the Bears to a championship appearance in '56 after leading the league in completion percentage, only to get trounced by the Giants. He played inconsistently over the next several seasons, regularly fighting for the starting role and earning notoriety for his off-field exploits, most notably his late night drinking and carousing. He was traded to the Steelers in '62 and took over as the starter a year later, posting career highs in yards and [=TDs=] and nearly taking Pittsburgh to the playoffs. He slumped again the following season and spent '65 as a backup, retiring after one game with the Colts. He died from prostate cancer in 2007. Brown's all-time career record of 16.4 yards per completion is an NFL record unlikely to ever be surpassed due to the evolution of the passing game.
29* '''Mark Brunell''' is the Jacksonville Jaguars' all-time leader in passing yards, pass completions, and passing [=TDs=]. Drafted in the fifth round by the Packers in 1993 out of Washington, he saw limited action in Green Bay due to being the primary backup for Brett Favre. He was traded to the Jaguars in 1995 (the first trade in Jags history) and quickly became a star. He took the Jaguars to two AFC Championship games in 1996 and 1999, led the league in passing yards in 1996, and made the Pro Bowl three times. In 2004, he was traded to Washington and started there for a few seasons before going on to backup roles with the Saints (winning a Super Bowl ring as a backup and holder) and Jets before retiring in 2012 after [[LongRunner 19 seasons]] in the league. Even before retirement, he endured financial hardship on account of failed business investments around the Jacksonville area (including several Whataburger franchises) that declined while he spent much of his time playing in other cities, culminating in him declaring bankruptcy while still with the Jets. Brunell is currently the QB coach for the Detroit Lions and is enshrined in the Pride of Jaguars, the team's Ring of Honor.
30* '''Marc Bulger''' was the Rams' longest-tenured QB during their time in St. Louis. A sixth round pick out of West Virginia by the Saints in 2000, he bounced around practice squads as a rookie before landing with the Rams as a third-stringer. He got his first action in 2002 following injuries to Kurt Warner and his backup Jamie Martin, outperforming both of them and finishing the season 6-1 as a starter. Bulger took over the following season after Warner went down with a concussion in week 1 and gained comparisons to Warner's own [[PutMeInCoach rise from the bench]], guiding the Rams to a 12-4 record and earning his first Pro Bowl. He displaced Warner as starter and put up solid numbers the next several years, earning another Pro Bowl in 2006, but repeated injuries caused him to severely regress, winning just 6 games in his last 3 years with the Rams before he was released in 2010. He retired in 2011 after a year as a Ravens backup. Despite his moderate successes, he is perhaps better known as one of the [=QBs=] selected ahead of Creator/TomBrady, going 31 picks before.
31* '''Joe Burrow''' was drafted #1 overall by the Cincinnati Bengals in 2020 after his record-shattering Heisman/National Championship-winning season at LSU. Though he ranked as one of the most sacked [=QBs=] in the league due to his team's porous o-line, causing his rookie season to be derailed by a knee injury, Burrow emerged as one of the NFL's most productive passers in his sophomore year, in which he won Comeback Player of the Year after leading the league in completion percentage, broke Cincinnati's three-decade playoff victory drought, and led the long-struggling team to a Super Bowl appearance. He has remained one of the league's top young [=QBs=], currently leading the NFL in all-time career completion percentage, and by his third season had already passed every other Bengal QB in playoff wins and become the highest paid player in the league. Off the field, Burrow is well-known for being a SharpDressedMan who wears stylish suits and streetwear before and after games.
32* '''Derek Carr''' holds many of the Las Vegas Raiders' passing records, but his long tenure with the former Oakland franchise has a mixed legacy. His entrance into the NFL was faced with skepticism from the outset; not only had the Raiders not had a winning season in over a decade when he was drafted in the second round in 2014 out of Fresno State, Derek's older brother [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNotoriousFigures David Carr]] had been a pretty notorious former draft bust. However, Carr's passing talent and steady leadership has proved to be a major contributor in returning the still chaotic franchise to competition, taking them back to occasional postseason visits while collecting a number of personal accolades. However, the team as a whole still generally struggled, with Carr also collecting more losses in his first nine seasons than any QB save Archie Manning and Steve [=DeBerg=]. He was released from the team after 2022 and is now with the Saints.
33* '''Virgil Carter''' isn't a particularly well-known name, but his short career had an immense impact on the NFL as we know it. A sixth round pick out of [[UsefulNotes/{{Mormonism}} BYU]] in 1967, he initially played as a backup for the Bears before being picked up by the Cincinnati Bengals in 1970 to replace [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNotoriousFigures Greg Cook]], an extremely promising rookie whose [[CareerEndingInjury rotator cuff injury]] relegated him to being a massive OneHitWonder. Carter was much smaller than Cook and lacked his arm strength, but he was also more mobile and an accurate passer. To compensate for Carter's differing skillset, the Bengals OC devised a scheme based around a short, lateral passing attack, allowing receivers to pick up yards-after-catch and using his mobility to roll out of the pocket for deeper pass attempts. That OC's name? ''Bill Walsh''. The scheme he devised? ''The West Coast Offense''. If not for Cook's injury, there would be much less pressing need for Walsh to develop a short passing game and [[WhatCouldHaveBeen NFL history as we know it may have been quite different]]. Carter started for two seasons, leading the league in completion percentage in 1971, but was succeeded by the more talented Ken Anderson (see above) and bounced around a few other teams before retiring in 1976.
34* '''Chris Chandler''' has a case for being the most successful journeyman QB of all time. Drafted in the third round in 1988[[note]]Oddly making him the highest drafted "pure" QB in the class; the other, fellow third rounder Tom Tupa, was primarily a punter in his pro career.[[/note]] out of Washington by the Colts, Chandler soon became known for his inconsistent play and tendency for injuries, earning him the nickname [[GlassCannon "Crystal Chandelier"]]. He lasted just two seasons in Indy and bounced around four other teams in the '90s (Buccaneers, Cardinals, Rams, Oilers) before finally finding a long-term home with the Atlanta Falcons in 1997. Chandler earned Pro Bowl nods in his first two seasons in Atlanta and took the "Dirty Birds" all the way to a Super Bowl appearance in the second. However, his play started to fall off soon afterwards; he was cut after 2001 in favor of Michael Vick and bounced around to stints with the Bears and Rams before retiring in 2004 after [[LongRunner 17 years]] in the NFL. Chandler was the first QB to throw a TD for seven different franchises, a record only surpassed by Ryan Fitzpatrick.
35* '''Dutch Clark''' was a back for the Portsmouth Spartans (later the Detroit Lions) through the 1930s. Clark played at a time where the position of "quarterback" was really just another type of running back that called plays and could chuck the football forward if things got desperate--he rushed for far more yards than he passed during his seven seasons with the team. While he wouldn't fit well in our modern understanding of the position or the game, [[RedBaron "The Flying Dutchman"]] dominated during his era, regularly leading the league in scoring, completing far more of his passes than his peers, and acting effectively as a field coach while leading the Lions to a championship in 1935, earning him the other nickname "The Old Master". Clark served as the Lions' head coach while still a player for two seasons before retiring from play in 1938, after which he continued to coach for multiple teams in and outside the NFL. His #7 was the first to be retired by the Lions, and he was a charter member of the Hall of Fame. Clark passed away in 1978. The public high school stadium in his hometown of Pueblo, Colorado is named for him.
36* '''Charlie Conerly''' was the signal caller for the New York Giants in the late '40s and '50s. He was drafted by Washington in the 13th round in 1945 out of Ole Miss, being taken so low not because of his lack of talent but because he planned on returning to school after serving for three years in active combat during WWII. When he did join the pros in 1948, his rights having been traded to the Giants, he had a breakout rookie season, setting many Giants records that still stand today and earning him the [[AddedAlliterativeAppeal alliterative]] nickname "Chucking Charlie Conerly". He was a two-time Pro Bowler and led the Giants to the NFL Championship in 1956 and championship berths in 1958-59, starring in "The Greatest Game Ever Played" in the former season and leading the league in passer rating in the latter. He retired in 1961 after spending his whole career with the Giants, who retired his #42 in 1962. He became the original Marlboro Man after his retirement and passed away in 1996. He has been a finalist for the Hall of Fame seven times but has yet to be selected.
37* '''Kirk Cousins''' has carved out a reputation as one of the most statistically prolific passers of the current era. The Michigan State product was drafted in the fourth round by Washington in 2012 to serve as a backup to [=RG3=], which turned out to be a good decision as his career was derailed by injuries. Cousins emerged as a solid passer in his own right, leading the league in completion percentage in his first full season as a starter in 2015, earning a Pro Bowl nod the following year, and setting multiple franchise records. Cousins signed with the Minnesota Vikings in 2018 and has remained a regular Pro Bowler. Despite his individual success, ranking in the top 10 all-time in career completion percentage and passer rating, Cousins' lifetime win record prior to 2022 hovered around .500, with his record in prime-time terms being a poor 10-18, including an abysmal 2-10 on ''Monday Night Football''. However, 2022 marked an apparent turnaround in his fortunes, as Cousins not only led the Vikings to the best win record of his career but mounted the largest comeback in NFL history, overcoming a 33-point deficit to beat the Colts. After an Achilles injury in 2023 ended his season early, Cousins signed with the Falcons in free agency. [[Franchise/StarTrek "Captain Kirk"]] may be best known for his {{Catchphrase}}: "You like that!?"
38* '''Daunte Culpepper''' was drafted #11 overall by the Minnesota Vikings in 1999 out of UCF. After sitting out his rookie season, Culpepper saw immediate success in his first year as a starter, leading the league in passing touchdowns and landing himself on the cover of ''VideoGame/MaddenNFL'' the following year. In one of the most prominent examples of the "Madden Curse", Culpepper's play deteriorated dramatically the next season as he became an interception machine before being benched after a knee injury. He bounced back the next few seasons and led the league in passing yards in 2004, but an even worse knee injury and an off-field legal controversy the next year brought an end to his time in Minnesota and his tenure as one of the NFL's elite [=QBs=]. Culpepper bounced around Miami, Oakland, and Detroit the next four seasons while continuing to battle injuries and ended his pro football career in 2010 after a season in the UFL.
39* '''Randall Cunningham''' was one of the most hyped-up quarterbacks of the late '80s and early '90s, as his athleticism made him a serious triple-threat at the position. During his first eleven seasons in the league with the Philadelphia Eagles, who drafted him in the second round in 1985 out of UNLV, he set league records for QB carries and rushing yards. He was ''also'' a tremendous punter, something that came in handy for trick plays--in 1989, he punted the ball out of his team's end zone for ''91 yards'', the third-longest punt in modern league history. An ACL injury ended his 1991 season after one game, but he returned the next year to lead the Eagles to a playoff appearance, winning Comeback Player of the Year. However, the injury greatly diminished his rushing productivity, he struggled under new coaching schemes, and he ultimately retired after 1995. Cunningham worked in construction for a full year before [[TenMinuteRetirement returning to the NFL]] as a backup with the Minnesota Vikings. After Brad Johnson went out with a sprained ankle in the '98 season, Cunningham experienced a true CareerResurrection, leading Minnesota to a 15-1 record while putting up the best passer rating of his entire career and of any QB that year, though their seemingly assured Super Bowl run fizzled out in a truly heartbreaking NFC Championship loss. He regressed in '99, served two more seasons as a backup in Dallas and Baltimore, and retired in 2002 after signing a one-day contract with the Eagles. After retiring, he became a [[BadassPreacher minister]]; he is currently the team chaplain for the Las Vegas Raiders.
40* '''Jay Cutler''' started his career with the Denver Broncos, who drafted him #11 overall in 2006 out of Vanderbilt, but is most famous for his time with the Chicago Bears, where he was traded after a coaching regime change in Denver in 2009. In starts, wins, and statistics, Cutler was arguably the best overall QB the Bears have had since Sid Luckman in the ''1940s'', but you wouldn't have guessed it by [[NoRespectGuy listening to the fans and media]]. The Bears had one of the worst o-lines in the league for the eight seasons Cutler was with the team, leading to him being among the most sacked (and injured) quarterbacks in a given year in that span, and his very laid-back personality often was described as "mopey" by the media. Most infamously, he was injured in the 2010 NFC Championship game and did not return in the second half, resulting in backlash from the media and other players even though he had a MCL sprain and was benched on coaches' orders. It also didn't help that his record against Chicago's opponent in that game, their long-time rival Packers, was 2-11. After the Bears released him after 2016, Cutler retired and took a broadcasting job, though he was coaxed to [[TenMinuteRetirement come out of retirement]] and sign with Miami for [[OneLastJob one more season]] after a preseason injury to Ryan Tannehill. A diabetic, he was one of the most prominent players in NFL history to suffer from the disease and became involved with several diabetic charities. He was married to Kristen Cavallari (of ''Series/TheHills'' fame) and became perhaps the most prominent competitor in the American Cornhole League, winning the championship in 2022.
41* '''Andy Dalton''', nicknamed [[RedBaron "The Red Rifle"]] after his head of bright red hair, was drafted in the second round in 2011 out of TCU by the Cincinnati Bengals to replace Carson Palmer (see below). Despite helping lead the Bengals to 5 straight playoff appearances in his first five seasons and becoming the franchise leader in passing [=TDs=], he was [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut unable]] to give Bengals fans their first playoff victory since the 1990-91 playoffs. After a disappointing 2019 that gave Cincinnati the #1 overall pick, the Bengals waived him in favor of college star Joe Burrow. He has since bounced around the NFL as a solid backup and stopgap.
42* '''Ed Danowski''' signed with the New York Giants in 1934 out of Fordham and was one of the star passers of the decade. He led the NFL in various passing stats and became the first QB to throw more [=TDs=] than [=INTs=] in a season, a huge deal in an era that was very unforgiving towards passing. He earned two All-Pros while guiding the Giants to four championship appearances and two wins, the first of which being the famous "Sneakers Game" in 1934 when they upset the 13-0 Chicago Bears on a frozen field by swapping out their cleats for basketball sneakers to get better traction on the ice. He retired in 1941 and returned to his alma mater as a head coach from 1946-54. He died in 1997.
43* '''Len Dawson''' was the first starting QB of the Kansas City Chiefs and, by many metrics, the greatest QB of the AFL. Dawson was drafted #5 overall by the Steelers out of Purdue in 1957 but didn't receive much time on the field after they picked up Bobby Layne the next year. He was traded to the Browns in 1960 but continued to sit on the bench and looked set to be a bust in the NFL. He left the Browns in 1962 and signed with the upstart AFL's Dallas Texans, who were coached by Hank Stram, his old college coach. Dawson immediately broke out as one of the AFL's first stars, becoming the league's MVP in his first season. After the Texans moved to Kansas City and became the Chiefs, he continued to top most of the AFL's passing stats (including leading the league in passing [=TDs=] four times and passer rating six times) and later led the Chiefs to a victory in Super Bowl IV, the final game before the NFL-AFL merger, winning Super Bowl MVP and cementing the AFL as a WorthyOpponent to the league that had once rejected him. Dawson retired after 1975, ending a [[LongRunner 19-year career]] in which he set the NFL-AFL record by leading the league in completion percentage ''eight'' times (including his final season), and entered into broadcasting, notably hosting ''Inside the NFL'' on Creator/{{HBO}} for over two decades. Nearly fifty years later, he still holds most of the Chiefs' franchise QB records, only recently being passed in some by Patrick Mahomes, and the franchise retired his #16. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1987 for his playing career and was awarded its Radio-Television Award for his work as an analyst and commentator in 2012. A [[https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CQBxt9dWgAAQnyJ.jpg:large photo of Dawson]] smoking a cigarette in the locker room during halftime of Super Bowl I has since become a MemeticMutation for SmokingIsCool. He passed away in 2022.
44* '''Steve [=DeBerg=]''' had a [[LongRunner 21-year career]] as QB for six teams, eventually becoming the oldest ever on a Super Bowl roster at 45-years-old, and had a reputation as a pioneer of the play action pass and the West Coast offense. However, [=DeBerg=] spent most of his career as a hardworking but [[SoOkayItsAverage middling]] back-up whose starting job was [[ThePeteBest repeatedly ripped from him]] by [[AlwaysSomeoneBetter incoming future Hall of Famers]]. Originally a tenth round pick by the Cowboys in 1977 out of San Jose State, [=DeBerg=] failed to make the roster and signed with the 49ers practice squad. [=DeBerg=] fought his way to the starting job but was replaced when the Niners drafted Joe Montana. He was then traded to Denver, who traded for John Elway not long after. He was ''then'' traded to lowly Tampa Bay, where he had some success before the USFL folded and Tampa suddenly had Steve Young. After a few more years in Kansas City, Tampa (again), and Miami, [=DeBerg=] retired in 1993 and became a QB coach for the Giants for a few years. However, when Giants head coach Dan Reeves moved to the Falcons, [=DeBerg=] followed him to Atlanta and came out of retirement in 1998 for OneLastJob as a backup QB for the team's trip to the Super Bowl; though the team fell just short of getting him a ring, he did step in for a game in the regular season, becoming the oldest man to ever start as an NFL QB before Creator/TomBrady.
45* '''Jake Delhomme''' was one of the greater undrafted QB success stories in NFL history. Originally selected out of Southwestern Louisiana[[note]]now just Louisiana[[/note]] by the Saints in 1997, the self-styled RaginCajun sat on the bench or practice squad for six seasons while mixing in a few stints in NFL Europe. Desperate for playing time, he signed with the Carolina Panthers in 2003, managed to win the starting position, and led the young franchise on a remarkable run to their first Super Bowl appearance, performing well in a narrow loss. He held the starting position in Carolina for several years, setting many franchise records (most since broken by Cam Newton) before retiring in 2011 after two seasons with the Browns and Texans.
46* '''Lynn Dickey''' was a third round pick by the Oilers in 1971 after setting passing records at Kansas State. While he possessed a great arm, he was frequently injured and struggled to win the starting role over the equally struggling Dan Pastorini. Eventually, Pastorini won out and Dickey was traded to the Green Bay Packers in '76, where he was a middling starter plagued with turnovers and injuries, missing all of '78 and most of '79 with a knee injury. He finally bounced back at the turn of the decade, having a breakout year in '82 when he guided the Packers to their first playoff win since Super Bowl II, which he then followed up by leading the NFL in passing yards and [=TDs=] (and [=INTs=]) the following year. He retired after 1985 having never won any accolades but was still added to the Packers Hall of Fame.
47* '''John "Paddy" Driscoll''' was a QB and HB for the Chicago Cardinals and Chicago Bears during the 1920s. Although very few statistics exist from his era,[[note]]The NFL didn’t officially keep track of any statistics outside of scoring until 1932.[[/note]] he was considered the premier triple threat back of the NFL, as he was a fairly accurate thrower who could also break off for long runs, punt for long distances, and was credited as the most accurate drop kicker in the league. A local product out of Northwestern, he was a first team All-Pro six times during his career and led the NFL in scoring twice. He spent his first six years in the NFL with the Cardinals, who were regular contenders under Driscoll and won their first championship in 1925; he was also the team's head coach for their first three years in the league. In 1926, the Cardinals sent Driscoll to their in-town rivals, the Bears[[note]]Driscoll was previously hired by the Bears to play in their final game of the 1920 season, even though he was already under contract with the Cardinals[[/note]] after the upstart AFL attempted to lure him over with a larger salary. He finished out his last four years with the Bears, retiring after 1929. After this, he spent a few years as a college coach before returning to the Bears to serve as the [[TheLancer assistant coach]] to George Halas for nearly two decades, at one point succeeding him as head coach and leading the team to a championship game appearance before Halas reclaimed his throne. Driscoll was named to the 1920s All-Decade Team and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1965, three years before his death.
48* '''John Elway''' spent his entire [[LongRunner 16-year]] career as the QB of the Denver Broncos and is by far the franchise's greatest QB (if not player, as he also played in more games than any other player in team history). The Stanford product was originally drafted #1 overall by the Baltimore Colts in 1983, but he threatened to play baseball instead (he was drafted by the New York Yankees in the 2nd round) rather than play for the then-terrible team and [[DrillSergeantNasty notoriously abusive]] head coach Frank Kush. He was subsequently traded to the Broncos and broke out as one of the league's leading passers, winning MVP in 1987 and leading the league in passing yards in 1993. "The Duke" had a reputation for being a great "comeback artist," retiring with the most [[MiracleRally 4th quarter comebacks]] (46) in NFL history,[[note]]since surpassed by Dan Marino, Peyton Manning, and Creator/TomBrady[[/note]] and for his tendency to subvert the expectations of the defense with fearless head-first runs. After [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut losing three Super Bowls by embarrassing margins]][[note]]39-20, 42-10, 55-10[[/note]] in the late '80s and subsequently suffering declining performance due to a turnover problem, Elway staged a late-career renaissance and led Denver to consecutive Super Bowl wins in 1997 and '98, winning Super Bowl MVP in his final game after defeating former head coach Dan Reeves. At the time of the nine-time Pro Bowler's retirement, his 148 wins were an NFL record. He had his #7 retired by the Broncos and received a first-ballot induction into Canton. In 2011, Elway returned to the Broncos as executive VP of football operations (basically general manager with a few extra responsibilities and a fancier job title). He is widely credited for luring Creator/PeytonManning to Denver, who led the Broncos to two Super Bowls (winning one), though in the post-Manning years he attracted a good deal of criticism, ironically for his inability to identify and draft a franchise quarterback. This led to the worst stretch of seasons for the franchise since the merger; Elway stepped down from the GM role in 2020 and was slowly phased out of the organization before being cut completely in 2023.
49* Norman '''"Boomer" Esiason''' was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in the second round in 1984 out of Maryland.[[note]]He was the first QB selected in that draft, with the majority of the most promising candidates like Steve Young already scooped up by the upstart USFL.[[/note]] Esiason succeeded Bengals legend Ken Anderson in his second year and soon established himself as one of the league's best passers, winning MVP in 1988 and taking the team to a Super Bowl XXIII appearance. After late stints with the Jets and Cardinals, Esiason finished his time as a player with one final year in Cincinnati in 1997 and transitioned to a prolific career as a broadcaster, analyst, and radio host. He briefly served as a commentator with Al Michaels on ''Monday Night Football'' before getting axed for leaving the booth early after Super Bowl XXXIV; he subsequently served as commentator for the next ''18'' straight Super Bowls on the CBS/Westwood One radio broadcast, a broadcasting record. He is enshrined in the Bengals Ring of Honor.
50* '''Jim Everett''' was drafted #3 overall in 1986 out of Purdue by Oilers but was traded immediately to the Los Angeles Rams. He broke out as one of the top passers of the late '80s, leading the league in TD passes in '88 and '89[[note]]Notably, he is the only Hall of Fame-eligible QB since the merger to do so more than once and not be inducted.[[/note]] and becoming the franchise leader in passing yards while earning one Pro Bowl selection. Unfortunately, he was also involved in one of the more infamous plays of the era in the 1989 NFC Championship game against the San Francisco 49ers, the "Phantom Sack", where he collapsed to the ground in the pocket in anticipation of another sack even though no defenders had actually reached him. Everett was lambasted for what was seen as a cowardly act, particularly by acerbic "hot take" commentator Series/{{Jim Rome|IsBurning}}, who had mockingly referred to Everett as "Chris" (a derogatory reference to female tennis player Chris Evert). After Rome called Everett "Chris" during a live interview, Everett flipped the table between them and shoved Rome to the ground. After several years of declining performance and the institution of the salary cap in 1994, Everett was traded to the Saints where he rebounded statistically but the team struggled. He was released following a 3-13 season in '96, spent a final year with the Chargers, and then retired.
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54* '''Brett Favre''' (pronounced "farv") was a first-ballot Hall of Famer who spent most of his [[LongRunner 20-year career]] as the AllAmericanFace of the Green Bay Packers (and the NFL as a whole), though some late-career controversies and [[TenMinuteRetirement repeated un-retirements]] have somewhat complicated his image. After a disastrous first season with the Falcons, who drafted him in the second round (#33 overall) in 1991 out of Southern Miss, Favre was traded to Green Bay, where became the only player to win league MVP three years in a row ('95-'97), led the league in numerous passing stats,[[note]][=TDs=] four times, yards twice, and completion percentage once[[/note]] and took the Pack to its first Super Bowl victory (XXXI) in decades. A renowned {{Determinator}}, he was known for fourth-quarter comebacks, [[MadeOfIron shrugging off injury]], performing well in Green Bay's freezing weather, and generally playing with more grit than anyone else in the league. The best example of this was in 2003 (most of which he played with a [[HandicappedBadass broken thumb on his throwing hand]]) when he elected to play a Monday Night game against Oakland despite his father dying of a heart attack the night before, scoring 4 touchdowns in the first half of a 41-7 victory before [[ManlyTears breaking down in tears on the sidelines]]--many fans hold that game in higher esteem than his Super Bowl victory. He first officially announced his retirement in 2008, only to change his mind late in the offseason. When the Packers denied him a starting position (briefly causing outrage among fans; see Aaron Rodgers below), he was traded to the Jets and played a lukewarm season plagued by a shoulder injury (and sexual harassment allegations), after which he was released and retired again.[[note]]This made Favre one of the more unique victims of "the Madden Curse"; in part of an effort to ''avoid'' what had been a long streak of cover athletes suffering steep declines the year after being featured on the cover of ''VideoGame/MaddenNFL'', EA had decided to honor Favre's retirement by featuring him in his Packers uniform, then had to scramble last-minute to issue out new covers with him in his new colors.[[/note]] He soon came out of retirement ''again'', however, this time being picked up by the Packers’ division rival, the Minnesota Vikings, where he played one of the best seasons of his career, soundly defeating his former team twice and becoming the first player to beat all 32 teams in the NFL and first QB over 40 to win a playoff game. A late-game interception against the Saints (who made him the primary target of the infamous "Bountygate" and briefly knocked him out of the game with a series of vicious hits) cost his team the NFC Championship and a chance at the Super Bowl. He then suffered a terrible 2010, with the Vikings finishing 6-10 while the Packers won the Super Bowl under Favre's former backup.[[note]]Favre himself was 5-8 on his 13 starts, sitting out the last three games from injuries, marking the first season since 1992 where he did not start all 16 games.[[/note]] Favre announced his retirement for [[RuleOfThree a third time]]. This time it stuck; he turned down an offer from the Rams in 2013, preferring to spend time with his family. His #4 was retired by the Packers.
55** Though Favre did not have the longest NFL career by either years or games played, he does holds the record for consecutive starts by a position player (321, including playoffs, stretching from his first start as a Packer in ’92 into his last season as a Viking in 2010). As the rules for keeping injured players off the field grow more stringent, the record is considered virtually unbreakable, which is probably a good thing—Favre became addicted to Vicodin during his playing career to help him play through the pain, which caused a life-threatening seizure the year before his Super Bowl win, and he has expressed post-retirement that his countless concussions caused multiple instances of memory loss. Most of his backup [=QBs=] spent years of their careers on the sidelines (several of them going on to respectable careers of their own[[note]]Aaron Rodgers had the most success as his immediate successor, but Mark Brunell (above) and Matt Hasselbeck (below) had very solid careers with other teams. Doug Peterson and Mike [=McCoy=] became head coaches for Philadelphia and San Diego, respectively. Kurt Warner does not ''technically'' qualify, as he did not make the final roster, but he spent a training camp observing Favre before his NFL career began in earnest.[[/note]]), and in his last few seasons, several of his wide receivers were young enough to still be in diapers when Brett first went pro. He is the only player in league history to have grandchildren during his playing career, and his hair was noticeably gray by the end of his run. This longevity and his [[DeathOrGloryAttack high risk, high reward]] "gunslinger" passing style is why he set so many all-time NFL records, both good (career wins, attempts, completions, touchdowns, and yards) and bad (career interceptions, sacks, and fumbles); unfortunately, most of his positive records have since been passed (though he remains Green Bay's all-time passing yards leader), while his negative ones are ''far'' ahead of the pack and will likely stand for much longer. Unfortunately, much of Favre's post-retirement career has been dogged with controversies, most notably his involvement in the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_welfare_funds_scandal Mississippi welfare funds scandal]].
56* '''Joe Ferguson''' was the Buffalo Bills starter through most of the '70s and '80s. A third round pick out of Arkansas in 1973, he was an above average passer through most of his tenure in Buffalo, leading the NFL in passing yards and [=TDs=] once each and briefly holding the record for most consecutive starts by a QB (107). He never earned any accolades during his career but managed to guide Buffalo to a playoff win in 1981, their first since the merger. After a dismal '84 season, he was traded to Detroit and spent the rest of his career as a backup, retiring in 1990 after one game with the Colts and later being added to the Bills Wall of Fame.
57* '''Frank Filchock''' was drafted in the 2nd round in 1938 out of Indiana by the Pittsburgh Pirates, only to be traded to Washington later that season. He alternated passing duties with Sammy Baugh and proved to be a talented passer, throwing the first 99-yard TD pass in league history and leading the NFL in passing [=TDs=] twice. He was traded to the Giants in 1946, guiding New York to a championship appearance. However, the night before the game, he and his teammate, Merle Hapes, were accused of accepting bribes to fix the game. While Hapes admitted to the offer and was barred from playing, Filchock denied the allegations and started the next day, throwing the Giants' only two scores while tossing six picks in their loss to the Bears. Shortly afterwards, he and Hapes received lifetime bans from the NFL, despite a police investigation concluding Filchock had committed no wrongdoing. Following his banning, he spent several years in the CFL, winning a Grey Cup in 1949 with the Montreal Alouettes, before he was reinstated to the NFL in 1950. He only appeared in one game with the Colts before returning to the CFL, retiring as a player in 1953 to go into a decade-long coaching career, including two seasons as the Denver Broncos' first head coach. He passed away in 1994.
58* '''Ryan Fitzpatrick''' is perhaps not the ''typical'' example of a "journeyman QB", but he was one of the most successful at the "journeying" part, being the only one to score at least one touchdown for ''eight'' of the record ''nine'' teams he started for,[[note]]Those would be the Rams (2005-06), Bengals (2007-08), Bills (2009-12), Titans (2013), Texans (2014), Jets (2015-16), Buccaneers (2017-18), Dolphins (2019-20), and Commanders (2021). Josh Johnson holds the journeyman record for being on the most NFL teams at '''14''', plus stints on another three teams outside the league, but he only actually scored for four and started for three. Josh [=McCown=] was on 12 NFL teams but only thrown [=TDs=] for six.[[/note]] either in the air or on the ground (he did both). Fitz also holds the [[MedalOfDishonor dubious distinction]] of holding most of the career passing records for [=QBs=] who have never reached the postseason, though his [[LongRunner lengthy]] and well-traveled career, coupled with his fun-loving personality and distinctive bushy beard, made him one of the NFL's most [[EnsembleDarkhorse fascinating and beloved figures]]. Drafted in the seventh round in 2005 by the Rams, Fitzpatrick was likely selected more for his brain than his on-field talent. One of the few Harvard graduates to see play in the modern NFL, he is widely rumored to have achieved the highest ever score on the Wonderlic cognitive test of any NFL QB draft prospect after completing the test in only nine minutes. His first season set the tone for the rest of his career. In his first game as a backup, Fitzpatrick led the Rams to an incredible comeback victory from a 24-3 halftime deficit. In his next game, where he appeared as the starter, he threw zero touchdowns and five interceptions; he quickly returned to the bench and was traded after the following season. "Fitz" carried this pattern of boom-or-bust play across one-fourth of the league's teams. Almost every year, he managed to contribute a few impressive, even ''record-setting'' wins after stepping in as a backup (during hot streaks fans have nicknamed "Fitzmagic")[[note]]These include seven more "Player of the Week" wins with four other teams, franchise records for single-season passing [=TDs=] with the Jets and single-game passing [=TDs=] with the Texans, and the league's only three-game streak of 400+ yard passing performances while with the Bucs.[[/note]] before inevitably fizzling out with a terrible performance and returning to the bench ("Fitztragic"). This pattern became so predictable that some conspiratorial fans suspected Fitz of putting enough on the field to ensure that desperate teams would offer him a contract, then [[BrilliantButLazy intentionally give up]] to return to the bench and pragmatically reduce his risk of a career-ending injury.[[note]]In truth, this probably had more to do with Fitz succeeding due to ConfusionFu, having played for so many different teams that his opponents rarely had solid film to prepare for his tendencies; once they had a few games to go on, the teams could better adjust.[[/note]]. After 17 seasons in the league, an injury sustained in his first game playing for Washington in 2021 put him out of commission, and he retired after the season to become an analyst for Amazon.
59* '''Joe Flacco''' became the all-time leading passer for the Baltimore Ravens after they drafted him #18 overall out of Delaware in 2008, but he is likely better known for being the AFC's answer to [[CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass Eli Manning]]. Despite putting up SoOkayItsAverage regular season statistics and never even being selected to a Pro Bowl, Flacco took the Ravens to the playoffs and won at least one playoff game in each of his first five years. After making an AFC Championship berth in his rookie and fourth seasons, Flacco became Super Bowl MVP in his fifth after a historic 2012 playoff run where he outplayed and beat Luck's Colts, Peyton Manning's Broncos, and Brady's Patriots, ultimately defeating the 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII, all while tying Joe Montana's playoff record by throwing 11 touchdowns and 0 interceptions. He never replicated that incredible performance, and after he suffered a midseason hip injury in 2018, his rookie backup Lamar Jackson (see below) won the starting job. Flacco was traded to the Broncos in 2019, played poorly, and was cut beginning the journeyman stage of his career. He bounced around the Jets and Eagles roster as a backup and was unsigned to start the 2023 season before being signed by the Browns as a last resort; despite being the team's fourth option at QB that season, the veteran put together some of his best games in years to lead the struggling franchise back to the playoffs, winning Comeback Player of the Year before signing with the Colts.
60* '''Doug Flutie''' had a modestly successful journeyman NFL career[[note]]playing for the Bears (1986-87), Patriots (1987-89, 2005), Bills (1998-2000), and Chargers (2001-04), as well as one USFL (New Jersey Generals, 1985), and three CFL teams (BC Lions, 1990-91; Calgary Stampeders, 1992-95; Toronto Argonauts, 1996-97)[[/note]] but was most known for his small stature (5'9", 180 lbs), unique playing style, and utterly idiosyncratic career arc. As opposed to the mechanical "drop back and throw from the pocket" style popular in the NFL at the time, Flutie scrambled and improvised, often throwing deep passes once the coverage broke down (not all that dissimilar to Russell Wilson's style). After a Heisman-winning college career at Boston College, Flutie was still deemed a poor pro prospect by NFL scouts and wasn't drafted until the eleventh round in 1985. Flutie instead chose to sign with the USFL's New Jersey Generals the year before that UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump-owned team (and its entire league) folded. He then played with the NFL for a time, memorably being one of the first replacement players to cross the picket line during the 1987 strike. Flutie went to Canada to play in the CFL in 1990, where he won three Grey Cups, six Most Outstanding Player awards, and set many pro football passing records that stand to this day[[note]]He threw for over 6,000 yards in a season... ''twice''[[/note]]. After dominating the CFL for nearly a decade, Flutie returned to the NFL in 1998 and successfully carried over his CFL-style pass attack to the Bills. His return performance led the Associated Press to name him Comeback Player of the Year, reviving the award for the first time in thirty years[[note]]Since 1972, the most esteemed publication to issue the award to NFL players had been ''Pro Football Weekly''[[/note]]. In his [[LongRunner twenty-first]] and final season of pro play, Flutie performed the first (and, to date, the only) [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JA7Yp6UrAWI drop kick]] in a NFL season game since the 1941 Championship game; coach Bill Belichick reportedly called that kick as a sort of retirement present, a unique play to celebrate the unique career of the 43-year-old veteran. While "face on a Wheaties box" is common for athletes, Flutie had ''his own'' cereal: [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flutie_Flakes Flutie Flakes]].[[note]]Coach Jimmy Johnson once had to issue an apology for pouring Flutie Flakes on the ground for his team to step on after beating Flutie's team in the playoffs, due to the fact that that proceeds from the cereal went to Flutie's foundation for autism awareness that was named after his own autistic son.[[/note]]
61* '''Nick Foles''' has had one of the more dramatic career arcs of any NFL player.[[note]]In 2024 [[https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/nfl-free-agency-every-nfl-teams-best-worst-free-agent-signing-nick-foles-makes-list-twice/ a CBS Sports journalist]] named him the best ''and'' worst free-agent signings in the history of two different teams (Eagles best, Jaguars worst).[[/note]] A third-round pick by the Philadelphia Eagles in 2012 out of Arizona, Foles was meant to serve as the backup to then-starter [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNotoriousFigures Michael Vick]] but took the position midseason after a five-game losing streak. In 2013, Foles was named the starter and had a season worthy of a new star, throwing 27 [=TDs=] with only 2 picks, becoming one of eight [=QBs=] in league history to pass for seven [=TDs=] in a single game, and leading the Eagles to the NFC East title, as well as the league in passer rating, which earned him a Pro Bowl nod. However, Foles struggled in the next season and was placed on IR after breaking his collarbone; the Eagles collapsed and missed the playoffs, leading many to label him a [[OneHitWonder one-season wonder]]. He was traded to the Rams, languished there for a year, and was traded again to the Chiefs, where he returned to being a backup. After considering retirement, Foles re-signed with Philly in 2017 to backup and mentor their new QB, Carson Wentz, only to be promoted once again to starter after Wentz tore his ACL in Week 14. Many analysts who had once labelled the Eagles Super Bowl contenders called their season over, to the point they were betting underdogs in the playoffs despite being the NFC's #1 seed. Instead, [[UnderdogsAlwaysWin Foles led the Eagles straight through the playoffs]]. In Super Bowl LII, Foles passed for three [=TDs=] and caught a fourth on a fourth down trick play (nicknamed "the Philly Special"), becoming the first player to throw and catch a TD in a Super Bowl. [[EarnYourHappyEnding Foles was named Super Bowl MVP as the Eagles at long last hoisted their first Lombardi Trophy]], and the Eagles built a statue of him outside their stadium. After 2018, when Foles again replaced an injured Wentz and led the Eagles on a solid playoff run, he signed with the Jaguars for a chance to become a full-time starter but broke a collarbone in the opening game and was ineffective after returning. He was then traded to the Bears for a 4th round pick to compete with the struggling Mitch Trubisky, was only moderately better there, spent a year as a backup in Indy, and is now a free agent. Foles is also on his way to becoming a BadassPreacher, as he's now studying for the ministry[[note]]joining late Eagles great Reggie White (in the "Defensive Linemen" folder of the [[UsefulNotes/NFLDefensiveAndSpecialTeamsPlayers "Defensive and Special Teams" page]]), as NFL players ordained during their careers[[/note]], earning him the nickname "St. Nick".
62* '''Dan Fouts''' was the beard-sporting QB of the San Diego Chargers throughout the '70s and '80s. A third-round draft pick out of Oregon in 1973, his first five seasons in the league were rather inauspicious as he battled injuries, rotated in and out of the starting lineup, and threw more interceptions than touchdowns. In 1978, the Chargers hired a new coach in Don Coryell who transformed Fouts into a superstar. Under Coryell's leadership, Fouts led the league in passing yards for four straight seasons, even though the Chargers [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut never reached the Super Bowl]]. He broke Joe Namath's single-season passing yards record in 1979, utterly blew past his own record by over 600 yards the following year, and broke it ''again'' the next season; his 4,802-yard 1981 season sat behind only Dan Marino's '84 campaign for over a decade and only faded well out of the top ten after the passing revolution of the 2010s. Fouts won Offensive Player of the Year in 1982 after averaging 320 yards a game, which stood as a record for nearly three decades and had him on track to break his yardage record ''again'' and pass the 5,000 mark [[WhatCouldHaveBeen had the season not been shortened by a player strike]]; he was named league MVP by multiple publications that year but ''not'' by the AP, who selected Washington's kicker Mark Moseley (even many who think [=QBs=] are overrepresented as MVP saw that as a major AwardSnub). After his retirement in 1987, Fouts had his #14 retired by the Chargers and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in his first eligible year. He later became a color commentator for both NFL and college games, including two years on ''Monday Night Football'' where he was [[AudienceAlienatingEra bizarrely partnered]] with ''Creator/DennisMiller''.
63* '''Benny Friedman''' was one of the early pioneers of the passing game in the NFL during the late ‘20s and ‘30s. A tremendous college star out of Michigan, he was named First Team All-Pro his first four years in the NFL from 1927-30, leading the league in touchdown passes all four years while setting numerous (unofficial) passing records during this time, including becoming the first player to lead the NFL in both passing and rushing touchdowns in 1928. His passing prowess and popularity was outstanding enough that two early owners bought Friedman's teams essentially just to get him. After leading the Cleveland Bulldogs to a winning season, a group of investors bought the team, moved them to Detroit, and renamed them the Detroit Wolverines to capitalize on the association with Friedman's alma mater. Giants owner Tim Mara purchased the Wolverines the following year and immediately dissolved the team just so he could get the star passer on his roster. Friedman’s first year in New York saw the team score 312 points, over 100 more than the second best offense, while he threw for 20 touchdowns, a record that stood for nearly 15 years. He retired in 1934 after a stint with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Despite all of his success, the NFL [[MissingEpisode didn’t keep track]] of most passing statistics prior to 1932, which [[NoRespectGuy kept him out of Canton for many years]] despite being a charter member of the College Hall of Fame. Friedman developed many health issues later in his life, including bouts with cancer and losing half a leg to gangrene, which contributed to him falling into a depression before dying by suicide in 1982. He was ''finally'' posthumously inducted to the Hall of Fame in 2005.
64* '''Roman Gabriel''' was the first (and currently only) starting NFL QB of Filipino descent[[note]]and only the second QB of Asian descent after Arthur Matsu, who played one season with the Dayton Triangles in 1928[[/note]] and one of the premier passers of the '60s. Drafted #2 overall in 1962 out of NC State by the L.A. Rams[[note]]and #1 overall by the Raiders in the AFL Draft[[/note]], Gabriel had a [[LongRunner 16-year career]], was selected to the Pro Bowl four times, and even won MVP in 1969 after leading the league in passing [=TDs=] (he still remains the Rams' all-time leader in that stat). Due to playing in the L.A. market, Gabriel [[HeAlsoDid also had]] a brief film and TV career, including playing [[FakeNationality a Native American]] in Creator/JohnWayne's ''Film/TheUndefeated''. However, Gabriel twice fell short of bringing the Rams to a championship and was traded to the Eagles in 1973. Gabriel had the most productive statistical season of his career that first year in Philadelphia, leading the NFL in passing yards and [=TDs=] and winning Comeback Player of the Year, but it wasn't enough to turn the team into contenders, and he was out of the NFL in 1977. He subsequently went into a mostly unsuccessful coaching career in the college and minor league ranks (including being the last HC of the Cal Poly Pomona program before its disbanding) and passed away in 2024.
65* '''Rich Gannon''' was a fairly obscure fourth round pick out of Delaware in 1987 who bounced around as a middling starter and quality backup for years with the Vikings (1987-93), Washington (1993), and Chiefs (1995-98).[[note]]He was drafted by the Patriots, but they traded him when he refused to play running back[[/note]] Then he joined the Oakland Raiders in 1999 and excelled under head coach Jon Gruden's system, making four straight Pro Bowls; whenever a previously unheralded QB suddenly finds success late in their career, expect comparisons to be made to Gannon. He won MVP in 2002 as he led the league in passing yards and took the Raiders to an appearance in Super Bowl XXXVII only to lose in embarrassing fashion to a Gruden-coached Buccaneers, which picked off a Super Bowl record ''five'' of his passes for interceptions (and returned three for touchdowns). Injuries brought his playing career to a close shortly afterwards; he retired after 2004 and went into broadcasting.
66* '''Jeff Garcia''' is notable as the last real CFL-to-NFL success story. After going undrafted out of San Jose State in 1994, Garcia was picked up by the Calgary Stampeders, which he led to a Grey Cup victory in '98 and won game MVP. He was picked up by the San Francisco 49ers the following season to back up Steve Young, only to be unexpectedly thrust into the starting position that year when Young's career was ended by an early-season concussion. Garcia put up three Pro Bowl seasons in SF but was cut after 2003, kicking off a lengthy journeyman career; highlights of his stops on six other NFL rosters included taking the Eagles on a playoff run after Donovan [=McNabb's=] mid-season injury in 2006 and a final Pro Bowl season with the Buccaneers in 2007. He retired after 2011.
67* '''Jimmy Garoppolo''' was drafted in the second round in 2014 out of FCS Eastern Illinois by the New England Patriots, seemingly with the intent of eventual succeeding an aging Tom Brady. However, the presence of a new understudy seemed to light a fire under Brady, who immediately got back to winning Super Bowls. Garoppolo only saw action as a backup and briefly as a starter during Brady's suspension from the [[{{Scandalgate}} Deflategate]] controversy, a tenure cut even shorter by injury. Still, his capable performance in relief increased his value, and now unwilling to lose a still-elite Brady (who had earlier requested a trade to San Francisco), the Pats traded him to the San Francisco 49ers mid-way through the 2017 season. While the Niners won a lot of games with the handsome and charming "Jimmy G" as their starter, even reaching a Super Bowl berth after 2019, his [[MadeOfPlasticine frequent absences from injury]] and generally unspectacular performances when he ''was'' healthy often limited the otherwise loaded team. In 2021, believing they were one great QB away from being a real championship contender, the Niners traded three first round picks to go after his presumed successor, [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNotoriousFigures Trey Lance]]. Garoppolo mostly kept hold of the starting role before another injury led to him being replaced by rookie phenom Brock Purdy. He subsequently joined the Raiders, was quickly benched for a fourth round rookie, and was cut after the season, at which point he signed with the 49ers' old NFC West rivals the Rams as a backup for Matthew Stafford.
68* '''Jared Goff''' was the #1 overall pick of the 2016 Draft, going to the Los Angeles Rams in their first year back in California. While the former Cal QB failed to win a single start in his rookie season, the arrival of coach Sean [=McVay=] in his second year made Goff the face of one of the most exciting offenses in the league, notably tying the NFL record for completions in a regular season game and taking the team to an appearance in Super Bowl LIII. However, the Rams' putrid offensive performance in said Super Bowl and a subsequent decline in the team's success led many to identify Goff's passing ability as a weak link. In 2021, he was traded to the Detroit Lions along with a number of draft picks in exchange for their starting QB (Matthew Stafford, see below); the Rams immediately won the next Super Bowl, but Goff soon rebounded, leading the Lions to their first division title in 30 years (and since before the 2002 divisional realignment) and their first playoff win[[note]]ironically against Stafford![[/note]] ''and'' their first NFCCG appearance in ''32 years'' in 2023.
69* '''Otto Graham''' is [[ToughActToFollow still arguably the best QB]] in the history of the Cleveland Browns, bringing the team to their league's championship game ''every year'' during his ten-year tenure. He was drafted #4 overall by the Lions out of Northwestern in 1944 but never signed a contract, preferring to continue to play for his Navy team. After the war ended, he joined the National Basketball League's Rochester Royals, a predecessor to the [[UsefulNotes/NationalBasketballAssociation NBA's]] Sacramento Kings, for a single season until he could join the nascent Browns--they won the championship that year, making Graham arguably one of two American athletes [[JackOfAllTrades to win a professional championship in two major sports]].[[note]]"Arguably" because the NBL was a pretty tiny organization that the NBA doesn't count in its records[[/note]] That basketball prowess served him incredibly well when he then signed with the new AAFC's Browns in 1946, as his ability to pass the ball was leagues ahead of what most defenses at the time were prepared for. This helped the team win championships in all four of the short-lived leagues's seasons; Graham claimed league MVP in '47 and '48. The Browns extended their title streak to five when they joined the NFL in 1950 and won the championship in their first season; they appeared in the next five championship games and won another two, and Graham was named league MVP thrice ('51, '53, '55)[[note]]This award was given by the UPI; there were no other major selectors in that era.[[/note]] while regularly leading the league in passing efficiency. He retired in 1955 after winning his seventh football championship, the most for a QB in pro football history; he held that record to himself for decades until Creator/TomBrady eventually tied it. Graham's #14 was retired by the Browns, and he was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1965. The next year, he briefly returned to the NFL for [[AudienceAlienatingEra an unsuccessful three-year stint]] as the head coach in Washington, being perhaps just too big a leap from his previous head coaching job at the United States Coast Guard Academy. Though he died in 2003, Graham still holds [[TheAce the highest career winning percentage of any NFL quarterback at .814]], a record no other QB has even really come close to (and that would be even ''higher'' if one counted his AAFC record). He also holds the record for yards per pass attempt at a whopping ''9.0'', a record that's unlikely to ever be passed by any modern QB due to modern offenses' heavier use of checkdown throws, and still is the Browns' all-time leader in passing [=TDs=].
70* '''Trent Green''' had a long and winding path through the NFL not dissimilar to Rich Gannon (above) in that he experienced far more success in his second decade in the NFL than his first. An eighth round pick in 1993 out of Indiana by the Chargers, Green never saw the field in San Diego and briefly played in the CFL before managing to land in Washington and [[PutMeInCoach perform admirably when he saw the field]] in '98. This performance earned Green a contract with the Rams as their starter of the future... only to receive a terrible knee injury in the preseason and [[ThePeteBest pave the way for Kurt Warner]]. Green got one last shot in 2001 when he was reunited with former Rams coach Dick Vermeil on the Kansas City Chiefs, and he made the most of it, finally becoming a long-term starter and earning two Pro Bowl nods over the next six seasons. He retired in 2008 after brief stints with the Dolphins and Rams.
71* '''Bob Griese''' was a Hall of Famer who led the legendary '70s Miami Dolphins. Drafted #4 overall in 1967 out of Purdue, he won two AFL All-Star and six Pro Bowl selections through a 14-year career. Griese was known as a "thinking man's QB" who called many of his own plays (his wearing giant NerdGlasses under his helmet during games due to being [[BlindWithoutEm nearly blind in one eye]] certainly helped that reputation). He was injured through most of the Dolphins' perfect '72 season but recovered to help lead them through the playoffs to win Super Bowl VII and returned the next year to also win VIII. He continued to perform well (leading the NFL in passing [=TDs=] in '77 and completion percentage in '78) before he retired after 1980, had his #12 retired by the Dolphins, and entered the booth as a color commentator for college games on ABC, occasionally returning to the NFL (including one stint as a Super Bowl commentator in XX). Griese had the opportunity to broadcast numerous games for his son '''Brian Griese''' during his national championship run at Michigan. Brian himself had an 11-year journeyman QB career in the NFL. Due to Brian backing up John Elway in his rookie 1998 season, Bob and Brian became the first father-son duo to win Super Bowl titles. Brian later had a Pro Bowl season as Elway's successor in which he led the league in passer rating, had a brief tenure with his father's old team in Miami, and rounded it out with a few years in Tampa and Chicago before himself entering the broadcast booth.
72* '''Steve Grogan''' was a mobile QB in an era dominated by the pass and, for many years, the New England Patriots' most notable signal caller. A fifth-round pick out of Kansas State in 1975, Grogan's athleticism allowed the team to run an experimental ground game that brought them some success--his 12 rushing [=TDs=] in 1976 was a record for [=QBs=] for decades, and the 1978 Patriots offense held the record for most single-season rushing yards for over four decades until they were passed by the 2019 Ravens. However, Grogan's frequent use in runs and rushes took its toll on his body, and he spent the latter half of his [[LongRunner 16-year]] tenure with the Patriots on-and-off the bench while battling injuries and competing with younger replacements. Notably, this included being the backup QB during Super Bowl XX, New England's only appearance in the pre-Kraft years, where he scored the Patriots' only touchdown. In his final season in 1990, he started in the Patriots' ''only'' victory that year before nagging injuries benched him for the remaining games.
73* '''John Hadl''' was the #10 overall pick in the 1962 Draft out of Kansas by the Lions, but he didn't go to the NFL, instead opting to join the San Diego Chargers in one of the AFL's first major talent acquisitions. Hadl broke out as a major talent in Sid Gillman's innovative passing scheme, winning an AFL Championship in 1963 and achieving four All-Star selections. His [[DeathOrGloryAttack gunslinger mentality]] helped him lead league in passing yards in 1965 and 1968, the latter year also leading in [=TDs=] (27) and [=INTs=] (a staggering ''32''). Hadl continued to see individual success after the merger, picking up two Pro Bowl nods. He was traded to the Rams after 1972, then was traded to the Packers in the middle of the 1974 season. That trade was one of the most one-sided in history, netting the Rams a king's ransom of draft picks for a QB who put up 9 [=TDs=] to ''29'' [=INTs=] in Green Bay before his release after less than two seasons. Hadl played a few more seasons with the Oilers before retiring after 1977. While he put up better numbers than many of his peers enshrined in Canton (he sat behind only Fran Tarkenton and Johnny Unitas in passing yards when he retired), his turnover issues and that disastrous trade, which helped keep the Packers in the NFL's basement for nearly two decades, have kept him out of the Hall of Fame. Hadl later saw some time as an assistant coach with his alma mater and a few NFL teams and was the head coach of the USFL's Los Angeles Express. He passed away in 2022.
74* '''Parker Hall''' was the #3 overall pick in 1939 by the Cleveland Rams out of Ole Miss and the first rookie to win league MVP, becoming the first player to throw over 100 completions in a season while also excelling as RB, DB, and leading the NFL in punting. While he never matched his rookie performance, he continued to excel as an all-around back on largely unsuccessful Rams teams until he enlisted in the Navy in 1943 during World War II. After returning from the war, he spent one season with the 49ers of the upstart AAFC before retiring. He passed away in 2005.
75* '''James "Shack" Harris''' was a trailblazer for African American quarterbacks. The "Ramblin' Man" from Grambling State was drafted in the eight round in 1969 by the Buffalo Bills, who named him the starter for his rookie season; Harris was only the second Black player to start at QB in the AFL (after Marlin Briscoe, above) and the first to do so to begin the season. His performance in Buffalo was unfortunately subpar; he was soon benched and was cut after 1972. He subsequently signed with the Los Angeles Rams, where he had far more success. After a few years on the bench, Harris was put in at starter in 1974 in relief of a struggling John Hadl and posted a perfect passer rating in his first game. He ultimately led the Rams to a division title, became the first African American QB to start in and win an playoff game, and became the first Black player in the ''NFL'' to start the season at QB the following year. Injuries soon derailed his career, and he was traded to the Chargers in 1977 before retiring from play after 1981. Harris continued to work around the NFL as an exec for several teams before finally retiring in 2015.
76* '''Jim Hart''' was the unlikely face of the St. Louis Cardinals through most of their time in Missouri, playing for the team in some capacity for [[LongRunner 18 seasons]] (13 as the primary starter) despite being an undrafted free agent out of the obscure (and now FCS) Southern Illinois in 1966. Hart won the position despite the Cards trying numerous times to secure a flashier starter. When coach Don Coryell came to town in the mid-'70s to briefly make the long-suffering franchise a playoff contender, Hart became an unlikely four-time Pro Bowler in the "Cardiac Cards" era, leading them in multiple [[MiracleRally game-winning drives]]. Hart was, in many ways, the perfect encapsulation of the St. Louis Cardinals: unassuming, unambitious, and [[SoOkayItsAverage just sorta there]] as a passer, consistently throwing slightly more interceptions than touchdowns and coming in at a ''just'' sub-.500 win record (87-88-5, .497). However, his longevity, coupled with the franchise's continued inability to find a star QB, has left Hart still holding practically all of the franchise's QB records by a wide margin decades after his retirement following a single season as a backup in Washington in 1984; when he retired, he sat behind only Fran Tarkenton and Johnny Unitas in career passing yards.
77* '''Matt Hasselbeck''' was a three-time Pro Bowler best known for his time with the Seattle Seahawks. Originally drafted by the Packers in the sixth round in 1998 out of Boston College, he saw limited action due to being stuck on the depth chart behind Brett Favre (see above). He was traded in 2001 to the Seahawks, reuniting him with HC Mike Holmgren. In 2003, he led the Seahawks to the playoffs where he [[NeverLiveItDown infamously]] guaranteed he was going to score against his former team during the coin toss and ''did''... with a pick six, giving the Packers the win. He still posted several strong years in Seattle, peaking with leading the Seahawks to their first Super Bowl appearance in 2005. In subsequent seasons, he became something of a GlassCannon but still played well when healthy. He later played for the Titans from 2011-12 and finished out his career with the Colts from 2013-15. He is a member of the Seahawks Ring of Honor and now works as an analyst. His younger brother, Tim, also had a lengthy journeyman career before also becoming a TV analyst.
78* Henry '''"Hinkey" Haines''' is a little-known name today but notable as the only athlete to win a championship in both major league football and baseball. Already a World War I vet when he earned football and baseball All-American honors at Penn State, Haines briefly played on the 1923 world champion New York Yankees. When unable to stick around on the roster, he stayed in the Big Apple, joining the New York Giants when they were formed in 1925 and helping them win their first NFL Championship two years later. Haines later served as player coach for the Staten Island Stapletons in 1931 before retiring and passed away in 1979.
79* '''Bobby Hebert''' (pronounced "ay-BEAR") was one of the more prolific passers of the late '80s and early '90s. A real life RaginCajun, he went undrafted out of FCS Northwestern State in 1983 but signed with the USFL's Michigan Panthers, who he led to the first USFL Championship while being named the game's MVP and the season's "QB of the Year". After two more prolific seasons in the USFL, including another championship game appearance, the league folded with Hebert as its career leader in passing yards and attempts. He signed with his hometown New Orleans Saints in the NFL and took over as starter in his third season, leading the long-suffering franchise to its first winning season and playoff appearance. After holding out for all of 1990 in a contract dispute, he returned the Saints and led them to the playoffs two more times but [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut did not win any of them]]. During the NFL's first ever free agency, he signed with the Falcons and made a Pro Bowl in his first year there, but the team struggled and he was benched before retiring in 1996. He currently serves as a sports radio host in New Orleans.
80* '''Arnie Herber''' was the QB of the Green Bay Packers during the '30s. The [[HometownHero Green Bay native]] dropped out of college in 1930 to play with his home team, where he became one of the premier passers of the NFL, known for powerful long balls and for throwing with all five of his fingers on the laces. He became even more of a passing threat in 1935 when the Packers brought in Don Hutson, and the two formed the first dominant quarterback-wideout duo in NFL history. His stats, while laughable by modern standards, were miles ahead of his peers at the time, as he guided the Packers to four championships and helped legitimize passing as an offensive weapon. He initially retired in 1940, but the Giants lured him out of retirement in 1944 due to player shortages caused by World War II. He played sparingly for two years before retiring for good. He was inducted to the Hall of Fame in 1966 and died of cancer in 1969.
81* '''Justin Herbert''' is the current QB of the Los Angeles Chargers, which drafted him #6 overall in 2020 out of Oregon. An athletically gifted prospect that most predicted would require time to refine his talents, Herbert was expected to sit for most if not all of his rookie season until starter Tyrod Taylor's lung was punctured by a team doctor's needle while receiving a painkiller injection shortly before a Week 2 game. Herbert [[PutMeInCoach filled in magnificently]], quickly claiming the starting job and winning Offensive Rookie of the Year after setting multiple rookie QB records, including most [=TDs=] and completions. He continued to ascend the NFL QB ranks after throwing for over 5,000 yards in his second season and breaking a whole host of "fastest to" passing records.
82* '''Taysom Hill''', often referred to as "the Human Swiss Army Knife", is one of the more unique players in the modern NFL. Despite being a very talented athlete, his college QB career was derailed by [[GlassCannon season-ending injuries in all five of his seasons]] at BYU (not to mention delayed due to his [[UsefulNotes/{{Mormonism}} LDS mission trip after high school]]). The 27-year-old Hill went undrafted in 2017 but ended up on the Saints, where he initially saw play not as a backup QB for Drew Brees but as a ''special teams'' gunner and punt returner who gained notably for skillfully blocking punts. After a few seasons, despite being listed on the depth chart as a QB, Hill lined up to play in nearly every position on special teams and offense, serving as a quarterback, running back, tight end, and whatever else necessary to allow coach Sean Payton to bewilder opposing defenses. In 2020, at age 30, he stepped in to replace Drew Brees at QB after a severe rib injury, but he has since retured to his former role as a gadget player, becoming the first player in the Super Bowl era to amass 10+ passing, rushing, and receiving [=TDs=].
83* '''Jalen Hurts''' was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in the second round in 2020 following an acclaimed but unique college career in which he led Alabama to two national championship games (losing the first and being benched in the second) prior to transferring to Oklahoma and finishing as a Heisman runner-up. Despite all that success and his undeniable running ability, Hurts was viewed by draftniks as a limited passer and was taken by the Eagles as a backup to Carson Wentz. However, Wentz's regression led to Hurts becoming the starter late in his rookie season, and he quickly improved. A physically strong QB even compared to other dual-threats (he includes powerlifting in his training regimen), Hurts has quickly established himself as a master of [[SignatureMove a particular variation on the QB sneak]] (a rugby-type scrum nicknamed "the Brotherly Shove" by fans and "the Tush Push" by detractors), with the Eagles almost able to guarantee 1-yard pickups off the strength of his legs [[ForegoneConclusion even when the other team knows it's coming]]. By his third year, Hurts was a MVP runner-up and set a record for combined regular and postseason rushing [=TDs=] while leading the Eagles to the winningest season in franchise history and a Super Bowl berth, narrowly missing a ring. He broke the regular season record for QB rushing [=TDs=] the following year.
84* '''Jeff Hostetler''' was drafted in the third round in 1984 out of West Virginia by the New York Giants. After serving as TheBenchwarmer behind Phil Simms for five seasons, putting up only two starts in that time, "Hoss" led the Giants on one of the more improbable Super Bowl runs ever [[PutMeInCoach after Simms went out from injury late in 1990]]. With just six total starts prior to his Super Bowl appearance, he holds the record for the least experienced QB to ever lead their team in the Big Game; he distinguished himself by winning a ring, serving as a capable signal caller for the run-heavy offense on the way to their victory in XXV. His performance won him the starting role even after Simms' recovery; they fought for the job a few years before Hostetler was cut after 1992. He then moved to the L.A. (and later Oakland) Raiders and saw renewed success, including a Pro Bowl nod, and spent two seasons as a backup in Washington before retiring after 1998.
85* '''Cecil Isbell''' was drafted by the Green Bay Packers #7 overall out of Purdue in 1938. For his first few years, Isbell split passing duties with Arnie Herber while also playing as a running back, leading the NFL in yards per attempt in his rookie season and being named to the Pro Bowl his first two years. While Isbell had already earned praise his first few seasons, he was able to truly emerge as one of the league's top passers following Herber's retirement in 1940; he led the NFL in passing yards and touchdowns in back-to-back years, with his 1942 season seeing him break league records for most passing yards (2,021) and touchdowns (24) in a single season. Isbell abruptly retired after his record breaking season to accept a coaching position at his alma mater; he would later serve as HC of the AAFC's Baltimore Colts and (briefly) the Chicago Cardinals. His brief playing career has kept him out of Hall of Fame consideration despite the numerous accolades he won during that time. Isbell passed away in 1985.
86* '''Lamar Jackson''' is the current QB of the Baltimore Ravens, who drafted him with the final first round pick pick in 2018. Despite a Heisman-winning career at Louisville, Jackson was not considered a great pro QB prospect and several teams asked him to participate in wide receiver drills at the combine (he did not). Infamously, Hall of Fame GM-turned-media analyst Bill Polian was one of Jackson's harshest critics, even referring to him as a "running back" in the lead up to the draft. Still, the Ravens selected him as a QB and were prepared to have him learn under long-time incumbent Joe Flacco. An injury to Flacco midway through Jackson's rookie season derailed that plan and forced him into the starting lineup, where he acquitted himself well, guiding the team to a division title. His second season exceeded all expectations, as he posted the greatest combined passing/rushing season by a QB in NFL history by becoming the first to throw for 3,000+ yards and rush for 1,000+, leading the Ravens to a 14-2 record, and becoming the youngest MVP QB in NFL history (plus only the second to win the award unanimously) and landed on the cover of ''VideoGame/MaddenNFL 21''. Jackson averted the Madden curse, becoming the only QB to run for over 1,000 yards in multiple seasons in 2020 and remaining one of the top passers in the league when healthy. Following a rather contentious 2023 offseason (in which Jackson, who is professionally represented by his mother and has never hired an agent, publicly demanded a trade before being awarded a lucrative contract), he won his second MVP and led the Ravens to their first AFC Championship Game in over a decade. Unfortunately, Jackson has also become known for his recurring case of EveryYearTheyFizzleOut: he currently is the only multi-time MVP of the super bowl era to never win a conference championship, let alone the big game.
87* '''Ron Jaworski''', nicknamed [[RedBaron "The Polish Rifle"]] or simply "Jaws", was a second-round pick out of the small Youngstown State in 1973 by the L.A. Rams but gained the most fame after being traded to the Philadelphia Eagles. Jaws helped lead a franchise that had spent nearly two decades in the bottom of the league's standings back to championship contention, including a Super Bowl appearance in XV. Unfortunately, he put up a fairly poor showing in his sole Big Game appearance and the Eagles regressed not long afterwards. He retired in 1989 after short stints as a backup in Miami and Kansas City and [[LongRunner 17 total seasons]] in the NFL and entered a career in broadcasting, most prominently for ABC/ESPN (giving the name "Jaws" [[IncrediblyLamePun a whole]] [[MeaningfulName new meaning]]).
88* '''Charley Johnson''' was a tenth round pick in 1960 after leading New Mexico State to a truly out-of-place undefeated season, going to the St. Louis Cardinals. He had a good deal of success with the Cardinals, earning a Pro Bowl nod in 1963 and playing there nine seasons before being edged out by Jim Hart (above). After a poor stint with the Oilers, Johnson later guided the Denver Broncos to their first ever winning seasons before retiring after 1975, landing him a spot in the team's Ring of Honor. Besides a solid and long career in the NFL, Johnson is just as notable for his off-field accomplishments; while an active player in St. Louis, he obtained a doctorate in chemical engineering and even worked for NASA.
89* '''Bert Jones''' was drafted #2 overall in 1973 out of LSU by the Baltimore Colts to replace the legendary Johnny Unitas. By 1975, he was looking like a worthy successor, as he started a three-season streak as one of the league's best pure passers, taking the Colts to the playoffs each year. In 1976, Jones won MVP with a league-lead in passing yards and a season passer rating that entered the 100+ territory only visited by Hall of Famers like Roger Staubach and Ken Stabler during that decade. Unfortunately, injuries and the horrible mismanagement of the Colts in their final years in Baltimore took Jones out of contention. He left the team in '81, the Colts went winless the next season, and he retired after a year with the Rams. Jones was part of an excellent football family; his father Dub Jones was a Pro Bowl RB with the Browns in the '40s and '50s.
90* Christian '''"Sonny" Jurgensen''' was a Hall of Famer who played for the Philadelphia Eagles (who drafted him in the fourth round out of Duke in 1957) and Washington (who traded for him in '64). Though he [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut never won a championship as a starter]] (and in fact never even started in a postseason game),[[note]]He did win a championship with the Eagles in 1960, but he was exclusively a backup to Norm Van Brocklin that season.[[/note]] he was one of the most renowned passers of his day. His first ever pass as a starter was a dime thrown [[ImprobableAimingSkills from behind his back while being shoved backwards]]. He set numerous records for passing yards over his [[LongRunner eighteen seasons]] in the NFL, including leading in the category a then-record five times, though his critics point out that he accumulated those numbers largely by focusing only on his arm—Jurgensen almost always refused to move out of the pocket or rush and notably sported a prominent beer gut through most of his career. He retired in 1974 with the highest career passer rating for an NFL QB at the time.[[note]]82.6, which isn't even in the Top 50 now, demonstrating how much passing has evolved in the league in the past half-century. Additionally, Len Dawson tied his record and Otto Graham surpassed it if one includes their time playing in the slightly less competitive AFL and AAFC, respectively.[[/note]] He spent the next four decades as a commentator in Washington; a few years after his retirement, his #9 was retired by the team.
91* '''Colin Kaepernick''' had a brief but solid career with the San Francisco 49ers, who drafted him in the second round in 2011 out of Nevada as a backup to former #1 overall pick Alex Smith (see below). During his second season, Smith suffered a concussion, and Kaepernick played extremely well in relief, leading to a QB controversy when Smith was cleared to return. Head coach Jim Harbaugh decided to stick with the more athletic/higher ceiling Kaepernick, and any controversy quickly died out as he led the 49ers to the playoffs, setting the record for most rushing yards by a QB in a game with 181 in his first postseason start. He led the 49ers all the way to the Super Bowl, becoming one of the youngest and least experienced quarterbacks to accomplish that feat, though his team lost to the Baltimore Ravens. In his third season, his first as a full-time starter, he took the 49ers to the NFC Championship game, but they fell to the Seahawks. After two more strong seasons, the departure of Harbaugh, a bevy of [[GameBreakingInjury injuries]], and multiple surgeries led to Kaepernick's play deteriorating and him being benched behind [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNotoriousFigures noted bust Blaine Gabbert]]. He was still considered one of the better running [=QBs=] of the early '10s, along the lines of Russell Wilson and Robert Griffin III.
92** Kaepernick is most famous, however, for becoming possibly the NFL's biggest BaseBreakingCharacter for his controversial decision in 2016 to sit, then later kneel, during the pregame national anthem in protest of police violence against minorities in the United States. While some people felt that his cause was just and his freedom of speech was protected by the First Amendment, others found the action unpatriotic and disrespectful. Kaepernick and Gabbert split starting duties during the season; each won one game as the 49ers went 2-14 that season, largely due to the team's injury issues and and league-worst defense. However, media figures mainly focused on and even blamed the losses on [[OvershadowedByControversy his controversial activism]], which expanded beyond kneeling to wearing socks depicting police officers as pigs and a UsefulNotes/MalcolmX t-shirt that also featured UsefulNotes/FidelCastro the week before playing in ''Miami''. As figures inside and outside the football world took sides on the issue of kneeling during the anthem, Kaep left the Niners after the season and was subsequently unable to find a job anywhere in the league. This was an almost unprecedented circumstance for a young QB of his caliber that many attributed to him being blackballed by the league's owners, especially after Gabbert was signed and continued his career as a journeyman backup. The reasons for Kaepernick's abrupt end in football are complicated and widely contested.[[note]]As mentioned above, Kaepernick regressed significantly and was prone to injuries during his last two seasons, winning a total of three games and putting up some of the worst numbers in the league during the period. He also asked to be given a starting position with a competitive contract of ~$20 million and turned down offers from smaller leagues that couldn't match his price; though Gabbert secured spots on several NFL teams after he was cut, none of his annual salaries went to even a tenth of that. NFL owners also had many off-field rationales for not paying that high amount beyond personal disagreements with his politics, ranging from fear of boycotts from conservative fans to concerns over dividing the locker room. Still, his running abilities and very solid career stats (lowest interception percentage of any inactive QB with over 1,500 attempts and the highest passer rating of any former QB who did not choose to retire or was forced out by injury) were still impressive, well beyond not only Gabbert but also many starters on other teams.[[/note]] In 2018, he became the face of Nike's 30th anniversary "Just Do It" campaign, as a portrait of him was captioned with "Believe in something, even if it means sacrificing everything." In 2019, Kaepernick and the NFL made a confidential settlement, and he has expressed interest in playing again for the league. While his reputation as an activist in the UsefulNotes/BlackLivesMatterMovement remains strong, his legacy purely relating to football remains contested.
93* '''Joe Kapp''' had a bizarre career trajectory, and his fairly short time in the NFL had an outsized impact on the league's history. After a solid college career at Cal, Kapp was drafted in the 18th round in 1959 by Washington but was never signed. Unable to play for another NFL team due to Washington owning his rights and with the AFL one year away, he traveled north. The Mexican-American QB had a Hall of Fame career in Canada, leading the BC Lions to their first Grey Cup. The Minnesota Vikings, whose GM Jim Finks and HC Bud Grant were both CFL veterans,[[note]]Finks recruited Kapp to the CFL in the first place.[[/note]] negotiated a rare NFL-CFL trade in 1967 to secure him as a replacement for Fran Tarkenton. Kapp's first few years adjusting to the NFL were shaky, but he had a Pro Bowl season in 1969, gaining the nickname "Indestructible" for his aggressive head-first rushing style that was utterly unique for a QB[[note]]In the NFL Championship, he ran through a Browns linebacker so hard he knocked him unconscious, a feat usually reserved for the strongest of power backs.[[/note]] but fit with his trademark HairTriggerTemper. He also threw for seven [=TDs=] in a single game that season, becoming the last to do so for over 40 years. Kapp capped off the year by taking the Vikings to a victory in the last ever NFL Championship game, though they ultimately fell short in Super Bowl IV. Despite his excellent performance, the Vikings did not meet his high demands for a new contract. No other team signed him either, as the "Rozelle Rule" in use at the time would have required teams to fork over draft picks to the Vikings despite Kapp no longer being under contract. Eventually, the Patriots picked him up early in the following season, making him briefly the highest paid QB in the league. Unsurprisingly, being dropped into an unfamiliar team did not result in a great performance; the Pats "earned" the #1 overall pick in the next draft with the worst record in the league, which they used to pick Kapp's replacement, establishing him as a [[OneHitWonder one-season wonder]] in the NFL who never played pro football again.
94** Kapp's importance to the league's history comes less from his playing career then the way it ended. He was not released by the Patriots after they drafted Plunkett; he was still under contract, and his attorney advised him not to sign anything they asked him to when he reported for training camp. Kapp followed that advice, did not sign a standard contract, and was subsequently released. The Patriots claimed that he quit by refusing to sign and did not pay him the rest of his prior contract. Kapp responded by suing the NFL for antitrust violations. After several years, a California District Court judged that the Rozelle Rule, the option clause, and even the draft were all illegal without the consent of the players' union. This eventually forced the league to negotiate with players, setting the stage for both the gradual easing of free agency restrictions and the flurry of player strikes that marred the next two decades. Kapp never received compensation from the Patriots. He became HC at his alma mater and had a brief tenure as a GM for the BC Lions, where he was responsible for bringing Doug Flutie to Canada. Kapp passed away in 2023.
95* '''Jim Kelly''' was one of the NFL's last real "field generals" who called his own plays as opposed to executing plays called in from coaches on the sidelines (the closest thing in recent years is Creator/PeytonManning, who generally had permission to modify plays on the fly). Though he was drafted #14 overall out of Miami by the Buffalo Bills in 1983, Kelly was so opposed to moving to the cold and economically-struggling city that he instead joined the Houston Gamblers of the USFL, winning the league's MVP award in his rookie season. In his second year, Kelly set the standing record for most single-game passing yards in a pro American football game (574) after leading a 20-point fourth quarter comeback, establishing himself as the USFL's most statistically productive QB. After the USFL folded, Kelly finally joined the Bills, where he became the QB of their [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut 4-in-a-row Super Bowl runner-up team]] that reigned over the AFC as the triggerman for their "K-Gun" no-huddle offense.[[note]]It's a common misconception that the "K-Gun" was named after him, but it was actually named after the second tight end Keith [=McKellar=] who was used in the formation.[[/note]] Despite never winning a Super Bowl ring, Kelly was selected to five Pro Bowls and led the league in several passing categories[[note]]passer rating and completion percentage in '90, [=TDs=] in '91[[/note]] before he retired in 1996, had his #12 retired by the Bills, and became a first-ballot Hall of Famer.
96* '''Jack Kemp''' was best known (in football) for his time with the Buffalo Bills during their AFL run of dominance in the '60s. Originally a ''17th'' round pick of the Lions in 1957 out of D-III Occidental (where he also played [[JackOfAllTrades defensive back, kicker, and punter]]), he bounced around the NFL as a third stringer before signing with the Los Angeles Chargers upon the AFL's founding in 1960. Kemp led the Chargers to a winning record as starter but was waived in his second season after breaking two fingers on his throwing hand. He was claimed by the Bills and led Buffalo to four straight AFL title games, winning two. He was named an AFL All-Star seven times, won AFL MVP in 1965, served as a color commentator in Super Bowl II while still an active player, and retired after 1969 (just prior to the merger) as the AFL's all-time leader in passing yards and attempts and pro football's all-time leader in QB rushing [=TDs=] (still fifth all-time). After considering broadcasting as a second career, Kemp instead moved into politics, where he found great success after drawing off his popularity in [[UsefulNotes/NewYorkState upstate New York]] to win [[LongRunner nine terms]] (1971-88) in the [[UsefulNotes/AmericanPoliticalSystem US House of Representatives]], eventually ascending to be chair of the House Republican Conference. He co-authored the 1981 Kemp-Roth tax cuts alongside then-Delaware Senator William Roth and attempted to run for President in 1988, ultimately losing the Republican primary to UsefulNotes/GeorgeHWBush; [[DefeatMeansFriendship Bush appointed him as his Secretary of Housing and Urban Development]]. Kemp closed his political career as the running mate of Kansas Senator UsefulNotes/BobDole in 1996 presidential race, only for the Dole-Kemp campaign to be defeated by incumbent Democratic President UsefulNotes/BillClinton and VP UsefulNotes/AlGore. Kemp died in 2009 after a battle with cancer and was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. His son Jeff also spent several years in the NFL as an undrafted journeyman in the '80s.
97* '''Billy Kilmer''' had an [[LongRunner 18-year]] career with significant tenures on three different teams in the '60s and '70s. Kilmer was drafted #11 overall in 1961 by the San Francisco 49ers; despite being an acclaimed passer at UCLA, he played in a system that listed him as a halfback/tailback, and the Niners primarily utilized him as a runner.[[note]]His most famous moment as a Niner was being the player who fumbled the ball that Jim Marshall recovered for his infamous "Wrong Way" score.[[/note]] Kilmer missed two of his six seasons in San Francisco, the first from a leg injury and the second from a pay dispute, and was picked up by the New Orleans Saints in their 1967 Expansion Draft. The Saints elected to finally use Kilmer as a regular passer, making him the franchise's first starting QB, though he saw little success there. The team traded him to Washington in 1971 after acquiring Archie Manning, where he finally rose to acclaim after over a decade in the NFL as part of George Allen's "Over the Hill Gang". He saw significant playing time filling in for the aging Sonny Jurgensen and led the league in passing [=TDs=] and passer rating in 1972, his [[OneHitWonder sole Pro Bowl year]] in which he led the team to a Super Bowl appearance. Unfortunately, Kilmer lost that game after putting up one of the worst passer performances in Super Bowl history and never saw that level of success again. He retired after 1978.
98* '''Bernie Kosar''' played for the Cleveland Browns during their brief period of dominance in the mid-'80s. After controversially signing with the Browns in 1985 out of Miami by taking advantage of a loophole in the often overlooked Supplemental Draft[[note]]To ensure he could play for his home team, the Browns front office used a complicated series of trades to get the top pick in the Supplemental Draft, then had Kosar, who had by that time already graduated, to forfeit his remaining college eligibility so they could sweep him up, a move that nearly led to the Browns and the entire NFL getting sued by teams that would have otherwise had a shot at drafting him.[[/note]], he led Cleveland to three AFC Championship games... and lost to John Elway's Broncos in all three, though at least those games were some of the most exciting in NFL history. He was benched and cut by Bill Belichick midseason in 1993, and he would be considered among the greatest quarterbacks not to win a Super Bowl... except he ''did'' win one, as a backup with the Dallas Cowboys just a few months after being cut. When Troy Aikman suffered an injury during the regular season, the Cowboys signed Kosar, who kept them competitive during the regular season while Aikman was out and again in the NFC Championship when Aikman got knocked out of the game before halftime. He retired after three more seasons on the Dolphins' bench.
99* '''Tommy Kramer''' succeeded Fran Tarkenton as the Minnesota Vikings' starting QB in 1978, the year after they drafted him #27 overall out of Rice, and held that position for most of the next decade. While the Vikings generally were SoOkayItsAverage with Kramer under center, he led the league in passer rating in 1986 (winning Comeback Player of the Year) and ranks just behind his predecessor in most franchise QB records. He retired after spending 1990 with the Saints.
100* '''Dave Krieg'''[[note]]pronounced like "Craig"[[/note]] was one of the top passers in the '80s and perhaps second only to Kurt Warner (see below) in unlikely NFL QB success stories. Undersized at 6'1", 190 lbs, he went undrafted in 1980 out of tiny Milton College in Wisconsin[[note]]The school closed entirely in 1982[[/note]], which had a minimal passing offense. Krieg did receive All-Conference honors, however... as a ''defensive back''. Krieg received a tryout offer from the Seattle Seahawks and earned a spot on the roster. After some spot starts in his first three seasons as a backup, he earned the starting job in 1983 and took Seattle to a surprising AFC Championship Game appearance. He continued to play well, taking Seattle to the playoffs three more times in the decade while also being named to three Pro Bowls. After a coaching change in 1992, the team decided to go with a youth movement and the then-32-year-old Krieg was pushed out right after he had led the league in completion percentage. He moved on to the Kansas City Chiefs, who he led the playoffs, only to be supplanted the following season when they traded for some guy named Joe Montana. He moved to Detroit as a backup, took over as starter mid-season, and led the Lions to a surprise playoff appearance. He finished his [[LongRunner 19-year]] NFL career with less successful stints with the Cardinals, Bears, and Oilers.
101* '''Daryle Lamonica''' was a late-round draft pick[[note]]twelfth-round in NFL (#168), twenty-fourth in AFL (#188)[[/note]] out of Notre Dame in 1963. He chose to go to the AFL's Buffalo Bills to backup Jack Kemp, figuring he'd be more likely to see the field there. After four seasons in Buffalo, [[TheBenchwarmer sitting on the bench]] through most of their AFL Championship run but proving capable in emergencies, Lamonica was traded to the Oakland Raiders in 1967. He immediately broke out as an exceptional starter, winning AFL MVP and leading the Raiders to a 13-1 record and a Super Bowl appearance. He gained the nickname "The Mad Bomber" for his powerful [[DeathOrGloryAttack (but sometimes inaccurate)]] throwing arm and kept the team competitive for several seasons before being replaced at starter by Ken Stabler (see below) in 1973. He left the Raiders in 1974 to play for the WFL's Southern California Sun; he saw limited gametime and retired from play after the league folded. Lamonica put up the second-highest win percentage of any starting QB in NFL history (.801) and had the best of any in the Super Bowl era[[note]]his AFL win record was even better at ''.900''[[/note]], though the relative brevity of his career, lack of championships, and perceived lack of competition in the AFL meant that he was never in serious Hall of Fame consideration prior to his death in 2022.
102* '''Bobby Layne''' was a first-ballot Hall of Famer who most famously played for the Detroit Lions in the '50s. Layne was drafted #3 overall in 1948 out of Texas by the Steelers but was immediately traded to the Bears, where he was a third-string QB. He demanded a trade to the New York Bulldogs so he could actually play--the team went 1-11 that year, but Layne got the experience he needed. Once with the Lions, Layne immediately led the league in passing yards and also soon became [[JackOfAllTrades the most accurate placekicker]] in the league at the time. He helped to lead the Lions to two championships and set them up for a third in 1957, though he badly broke his leg just before the postseason. When the injured Layne was traded back to the Steelers after the Lions won that championship, he (allegedly) said that the team would not win another for fifty years; this "{{Curse}} of Bobby Layne", while (almost) certainly a myth, has kept the Lions from winning one for well over sixty. When Layne retired in 1962 after a few more productive years in Pittsburgh, he held [[TheAce most of the all-time QB records]] (including [[MedalOfDishonor some negative ones]] like career interceptions), and his #22 was retired by the Lions. He was one of the last players to [[HelmetsAreHardlyHeroic not wear a facemask]]. He was also a notorious [[TheAlcoholic alcoholic]] during and after his playing career, with his peers only half-joking when they said that [[BrokenAce Sunday was the only day he wasn't in the bar]] (only "half" because he was often drunk during games, too). His heavy drinking likely contributed to his early death from heart failure in 1986.
103* '''Eddie [=LeBaron=]''', nicknamed [[RedBaron "The Little General"]], remains [[PintsizedPowerhouse the shortest Pro Bowl QB]] in NFL history at just 5'7". He was drafted by Washington out of Pacific during the 10th round in 1950 but didn’t report to the team until 1952 due to his commitment to the U.S. Marine Corps during the Korean War. Once he arrived in Washington, he filled in for an injured Sammy Baugh and earned all-rookie honors in the process. After a poor showing in his second year, he spent a season with the Calgary Stampeders in the CFL, but returned to Washington the following year and earned three Pro Bowls before retiring after 1959 to study law. He was coaxed out of retirement when he was traded to the expansion Cowboys and named their first starting QB in 1960. He spent four years in Dallas alternating starting duties with Don Meredith, earning his last Pro Bowl in 1962 after he led the league in passer rating, before retiring for good in 1963 having [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut never reached the postseason]]. [=LeBaron=] continued to work in and around the NFL for several years, first as an announcer and later in the front office of the Falcons from 1977-85, before he died in 2015.
104* '''Andrew Luck''' was the #1 overall pick in the 2012 Draft by the Indianapolis Colts. Widely viewed as a generational prospect due to both his on-field talent and football pedigree (his father, '''Oliver Luck''', was a longtime football exec and former NFL QB himself), the Colts elected to take him and move on from the legendary Creator/PeytonManning, who missed the previous season due to a neck injury that many feared would be career-ending. The plan to "Suck for Luck" seemingly worked, as the former Stanford QB was able to step in and play at a high level immediately, setting numerous still-standing rookie passing records[[note]]most passing yards (4,374), most 300+ yards passing games, most wins by a #1 pick rookie QB (11), most game-winning drives and fourth-quarter comebacks (7)[[/note]]. He took the Colts to the postseason in each of his first three seasons in the league, getting closer to the Super Bowl each time and leading the league in passing [=TDs=] in 2014. Besides his talent, Luck was also known for being a quiet introvert, bookworm, and consummate NiceGuy who regularly congratulated opposing players, including those who successfully sacked him. Though his critics insisted that Luck took too many chances with both the ball and his body, the Colts seemed pleased with their investment as they worked toward the levels of success they enjoyed under Manning. Despite an injury to his throwing shoulder which held him to only seven starts in his fourth year, he was signed to the then-largest deal in NFL history. However, the 2015 shoulder injury began his slide toward GlassCannon status, as he missed part of 2016 to rib and kidney injuries, then hurt his shoulder [[HereWeGoAgain again]] in 2017. Luck had risky surgery to repair his shoulder and came back in 2018 with a near-MVP-caliber season to win Comeback Player of the Year. Unfortunately, he got hurt again during the next offseason, this time a calf injury. Rather than endure another rehab process, Luck stunned everyone by retiring during the 2019 preseason shortly before turning 30. As a result, Luck is widely regarded as one of the most talented pro athletes to voluntarily end their career during their prime; he has since explained his decision as being motivated mainly by a desire to be a better husband and father.
105* '''Sid Luckman''' was the Chicago Bears QB through the '40s and arguably is still the best in the history of the franchise. Luckman started life as the child of Russian Jewish immigrants in Brooklyn. The #2 overall pick in 1939 out of [[UsefulNotes/IvyLeague Columbia]], he became the league's first great T-formation QB under the coaching scheme of George Halas, revolutionizing not only the position but also radically changing how offenses were designed. The Luckman-led offense was a total GameBreaker--in 1940, the Bears utterly shellacked Washington [[CurbStompBattle 73-0]] in the Championship Game, scoring 11 touchdowns and more points in one game than any team before or since. Though he only threw for one TD pass in that game, Luckman would set multiple passing records that stood for many years while playing with the "Monsters of the Midway". In 1943 alone, he led the league in passing yards, touchdowns, and rating, became the first to throw for over 400 yards and seven touchdowns in a single game (the latter still an unbeaten record only tied by seven others), threw for more touchdowns than any QB would for another decade, won league MVP, and led the Bears to a third championship. As soon as that season ended, Luckman signed up for WWII; his first season back after the war ended, he won a fourth championship. Luckman retired from play in 1950 but stayed with the Bears until 1969, first as the team's vice president, then as a QB coach. His #42 was retired by the franchise. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1965 and died in 1998. Seven decades after his retirement, he still holds the all-time record for highest percentage of passes for touchdowns at 7.9%, one of those stats that likely can't be beaten due to how offenses have evolved to be ''much'' more pass-happy.
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109* '''Patrick Mahomes''' is the current starter for the Kansas City Chiefs. Renowned for his athleticism and precise ball control, Mahomes has already established himself as one of the league's all-time greatest quarterbacks in a very short period of time. Drafted #10 overall in 2017 out of Texas Tech, he studied behind veteran QB Alex Smith for most of his rookie season. In 2018, in what essentially amounted to his true rookie season, he threw for 5,000+ yards and ''50'' touchdowns (a feat only accomplished once before by Creator/PeytonManning), led the Chiefs to a 12-4 record and #1 playoff seed, was named league MVP, and engineered a comeback for the ages in the AFCCG against New England before ultimately falling short in overtime. Every year since, he has brought the Chiefs to ''at least'' the AFC Championship game. While his second full season didn't see him put up such remarkable numbers, he ''did'' take the Chiefs to a Super Bowl victory and won Super Bowl MVP. 2022 saw him break the all-time record for total offensive yards in a season on the way to his second MVP, Super Bowl win, and Super Bowl MVP; the following year, he led the first repeat champion team since Tom Brady's Patriots and earned his third title and Super Bowl MVP, setting him up as the only current QB who could possibly catch up to the GOAT's records if not ''outright surpass'' him if he could somehow keep up his current pace. Mahomes holds numerous records as is, sitting atop the NFL all-time career lists for net yards per attempt and passing yards per game and having more playoff wins than any QB save Brady. The biracial Mahomes, son of a black father (former MLB pitcher Pat Mahomes) and white mother, strongly pushed the NFL to recognize the UsefulNotes/BlackLivesMatterMovement and was recognized for said activism by ''Magazine/SportsIllustrated'' as one of its five Sportspeople of the Year for 2020. He is seen by many as the "face" of the league entering into the 2020s, being featured on the covers of ''VideoGame/MaddenNFL 20''[[note]]shattering the "curse" with a Super Bowl win[[/note]] and ''22'', and his exemplary skills and unique image (a wild head of curly hair, an almost [[Franchise/TheMuppets Kermit-like]] voice, and [[TrademarkFavoriteFood a sincere love of ketchup]]) have made him [[CelebrityEndorsement ubiquitous in commercials]]. In 2020, the Chiefs signed him to a ten-year extension potentially worth up to $503 million, the largest contract in American sports history at the time. Not long after signing that contract, he became part of the ownership group of the [[UsefulNotes/MajorLeagueBaseball Kansas City Royals]]. He's also one of the ever-growing list of sports figures to invest in American soccer teams; he joined the ownership group of the Kansas City Current of the National Women's Soccer League in 2023 (his wife had been part of the group even before their marriage).
110* '''The Manning Family''': A BadassFamily of NFL quarterbacks consisting of Peyton, Eli, and their dad Archie.
111** '''Archie Manning''' was a good QB on a horrible team: the New Orleans Saints, who at the time were nicknamed "The Ain'ts". The Saints drafted him #2 overall in 1971, and though he played very well for the team for over a decade, regularly ranking high on many statistics and even leading the league in completions in 1972, the Saints went 35-91-3 (.263) with him as a starter, the worst record for any QB with more than 50 starts. Since this was before free agency, he didn't have the option to leave for a better team until late in his career; in fact, when he was taken out for the 1976 season due to a shoulder injury, Archie spent half the season in the team's radio booth just so they could keep him in the building. When he was finally released from New Orleans, he played his last four seasons for the Oilers and Vikings but didn't have a single victory as a starter with either team. He retired in 1984, having played in the NFL for 14 years without ever experiencing a winning season. Archie is likely better known for his College Hall of Fame career at Ole Miss; he's considered the best player in school history.
112** '''Creator/PeytonManning''', nicknamed "The Sheriff", [[TheAce broke nearly every single career statistical record]] held by either Marino, Favre, or Elway[[note]]though many have since been passed by Creator/TomBrady or Drew Brees[[/note]] and won a record ''five'' MVP awards[[note]]four solo (2004, 2008-9, 2013), one shared with Steve [=McNair=] (2003), plus two [=OPotY=] awards to boot[[/note]]. He is known for his intelligence (he was notable for [[XanatosSpeedChess last-second changes to plays at the line]]), efficient passing,[[note]]led the NFL in completion percentage twice, yards and rating thrice, and [=TDs=] four times[[/note]] folksy personality, ubiquity in commercials, and (until the Colts won Super Bowl XLI) choking in the playoffs so consistently that he became the TropeNamer for EveryYearTheyFizzleOut.[[note]]On that last note, he holds the record among all NFL players for most playoff losses at 13.[[/note]] Drafted #1 overall in 1998 out of Tennessee by the Indianapolis Colts, Manning elevated the long-struggling team to success they hadn't seen since they left Baltimore, giving them the most regular season wins in the league during his tenure and shattering Johnny Unitas' long-standing franchise passing records. After thirteen exemplary years with the team that included a Super Bowl win and another appearance, complications from a neck surgery put him out for 2011. The Colts' 2-14 record that year gave substance to Peyton's long-implied LoadBearingBoss status. Following this, he was released by the Colts and, after a recruitment tour that was breathlessly covered by the sports media, signed with the Denver Broncos, displacing fan favorite Tim Tebow. Peyton returned to form and won Comeback Player of the Year in his first year with the Broncos. He followed that up by putting up possibly the best-ever season for an NFL QB in 2013, kicking it off by throwing a record-tying 7 touchdowns in the opening game (the first such performance in over four decades) and going on to set the standing single-season records for passing touchdowns (55) and passing yardage (5,477) and win his fifth MVP, though he ultimately fell short of winning the Super Bowl.[[note]]He was also the oldest player to win league MVP and Offensive Player of the Year awards at the time; Tom Brady later won MVP at 40, but Manning is still the oldest [=OPotY=].[[/note]] He [[DentedIron slowed down noticeably]] over the next two years but wound up with one last chance for a second Super Bowl ring after 2015, this time with a dominant defense backing him up (and becoming the only QB to reach the Big Game with four different head coaches). The Broncos took down [[TheRival Brady, Belichick, and the Patriots]] in the AFC title game before upsetting the Panthers in Super Bowl 50. Manning announced his retirement a month later and earned a first-ballot induction into Canton. His #18 was retired by the Colts.[[note]]It was already retired by the Broncos in honor of Frank Tripucka, but he gave Manning permission to wear it.[[/note]]
113** '''Eli Manning''', the younger brother, doesn't ''quite'' have Peyton's flashy numbers, but that's to be expected as the QB for the more defense- and run-oriented New York Giants (of which he still holds almost every major franchise passing record). Memorably drafted #1 overall out of his father's alma mater in 2004 by the Chargers before forcing a trade to the Giants[[note]]on the advice of his father, who knew all too well the importance of joining a winning organization[[/note]], Eli was considered a bit of a FakeUltimateHero for a while, trading on the Manning name rather than his skills. That all changed after Super Bowl XLII, [[DefeatingTheUndefeatable when he led the wild card Giants to victory against the 18-0 Patriots]] in what is considered one of the greatest upsets in sports history. After the team defeated the Patriots ''again'' in Super Bowl XLVI, he's jokingly been called Bill Belichick's kryptonite. Eli was still considered to be a CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass and a constant source of contention for Giants fans (as well as for the teams they beat), as at some moments he appeared utterly incompetent, while at others (particularly those two Super Bowl playoff runs) he seemed to play as though he were [[Franchise/TheMatrix Neo]]. He generally acted as TheStoic on the field, which could be demoralizing for either his own team (since this didn't get them especially pumped up) or for the opponents (when he performed a NoSell on defenses who rely on punishing hits to scare the quarterback into making mistakes). Unlike Peyton, who struggled with injuries in the latter part of his career, Eli was MadeOfIron: he never missing a game due to injury and set both the third-longest streak for consecutive NFL QB starts and the record for games played in Giants franchise history. After 2019, Eli announced his retirement from the NFL, having spent the majority of the season on the bench. Eli's last game as the Giants' starter was a win against the Dolphins, ending a 9-game losing streak for the team and giving him an even 117-117 career win-loss record in the regular season as a starter. The Giants immediately retired his #10. [[EndOfAnAge His retirement made the 2020 season the first since]] ''[[EndOfAnAge 1997]]'' [[EndOfAnAge without any Mannings playing in the NFL]].
114** There is a third Manning brother, Cooper, the oldest of the three, but he was forced to stop playing football in his first year of college after being diagnosed with [[DreamCrushingHandicap a spinal cord condition]] and became an investment banker. Famously, Peyton donned #18 as a pro in honor of Cooper, who wore their father's Ole Miss and Saints number in high school. Cooper hosts "The Manning Hour" on Fox Sports and is part of the ''Fox NFL Kickoff'' pre-game show.
115** Both Peyton and Eli were subjects of the "[[http://www.manningface.com/ Manning Face]]" meme, coined by then-ESPN columnist [[Creator/TheSportsGuy Bill Simmons]][[note]]Defined by Simmons as the expression you get when you realize that you are one of the best ever, prepare more, work harder, are in total control of the offense... and are still losing[[/note]]. Peyton and Eli are also the stars of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jn5zytfm9No Football on Your Phone]]", a DIRECTV commercial that went viral. Archie also appears in the spot. Starting in 2021, they became the broadcast team for ''Monday Night Football with Peyton and Eli'', a simulcast of ''MNF'' that ESPN airs on [=ESPN2=] and streams on its [=ESPN+=] service. One last family similarity: Archie, Peyton, and Eli all had one game where they put up a 0.0 passer rating.
116* '''Dan Marino''' was the most prolific passer in his day and is frequently cited as [[TheAce the greatest "pure passer" in NFL history]]. Drafted by the Miami Dolphins at #27 overall in 1983 out of Pittsburgh (the sixth QB picked that year), Marino immediately made a splash with his lightning quick release, incredible throw velocity, and pinpoint accuracy. After leading Miami to the playoffs as a rookie, he followed with [[EvenBetterSequel his 1984 MVP/Offensive Player of the Year season]], which is in contention for the greatest single-season performance by a QB ever. In it, he became the first (and, for the next 24 years, only) player to pass for 5,000+ yards in a season[[note]]beating the prior record, set by Dan Fouts two years prior, by over 200 yards[[/note]] while setting the then-record for TD passes with 48[[note]]''demolishing'' the prior record, set by George Blanda over two decades prior, by 12[[/note]]. Comparable seasons only came decades later when NFL rule changes significantly reduced the contact and physicality that defenders were allowed to use in coverage, opening up passing offenses league-wide. Marino made the Super Bowl that season, the youngest starting QB to ever do so (23 years, 127 days), but lost to the 49ers during their dynastic run. Unfortunately, he never returned to the Big Game, having the bad luck to be one of the all-time greats at QB at a time when several other Hall of Famers (Montana, Elway, Aikman, Young, Favre) were playing, nearly all with significantly more offensive weapons and better defenses, meaning the Fins [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut rarely went deep in the playoffs]].[[note]]Notably, when the NFL selected its "All-Time Team" for their 100th anniversary, Marino was the only QB selected who did not win a professional championship.[[/note]] That didn't prevent Marino from leading the league in passing yards four more times (and [=TDs=] twice) while setting one of the most unbreakable records in the NFL, going 19 games and 759 straight pass attempts without taking a sack from 1988-89, a record that no other passer has even gotten halfway to matching.[[note]]While an immense amount of credit obviously has to go to the Fins' fantastic o-line, the scope of the accomplishment is a testament to just how much faster Marino could get rid of the ball than almost any QB before or since.[[/note]] A torn Achilles took him out in the '93 season, but he returned fully to form the next year, won Comeback Player of the Year, and posted several more impressive seasons. In 2000, after a historically lopsided and incredibly demoralizing [[CurbStompBattle 62-7 postseason loss]] to the Jaguars, Marino retired after [[LongRunner 17 seasons]] in the pros. The nine-time Pro Bowler retired holding virtually every significant career passing record, including a then-record 61,361 career yards, and he still sits in the top ten in most categories.[[note]]Notably, he achieved those numbers while rushing for fewer than 100 yards ''his entire career'' due to persistent knee injuries; "pure" passer indeed.[[/note]] His #13 was retired by the Dolphins, where he remains the franchise's longest-tenured player, and he was inducted to the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility. [[HeAlsoDid He also appeared]] AsHimself in ''Film/AceVentura: Pet Detective'' and ''Film/LittleNicky''.
117* '''Josh [=McCown=]''' was a LongRunner known for being one of the NFL's most traveled journeymen. A third round pick by the Arizona Cardinals out of Sam Houston State[[note]]after three years at SMU[[/note]] in 2002, [=McCown=] was cut four years later due to middling production and spent the next 15 years on ''eleven'' different NFL rosters[[note]]Lions (2006), Raiders (2007), Dolphins (2008), Panthers (2008-09), 49ers (2011), Bears (2011-13), Buccaneers (2014), Browns (2015-16), Jets (2017-18), Eagles (2019-20), Texans (2020); his brother, Luke, played for five teams from 2004-15, only adding to his name's apparent omnipresence on jerseys[[/note]] plus a year with the UFL's Hartford Colonials. [=McCown=] saw the field several times over the years and had a few moments of success, but his times as a long-term starter with the Raiders, Buccaneers, Browns, and Jets all failed to produce results, though his perceived value as a mentor and unofficial QB coach kept him in the league for many years. He set a unique record by starting his first ever playoff game at age ''40'' with the Eagles in 2019 in relief of Carson Wentz. [=McCown=] retired after 2020 and transitioned to become an official QB coach with the Panthers, but was fired (along with head coach Frank Reich) after a 1-10 start in his first season.
118* '''Jim [=McMahon=]''' played in the league for [[LongRunner 15 seasons]], most famously for the '80s Chicago Bears. Drafted #5 overall in 1982 after a record-shattering, but turbulent, college career at [[UsefulNotes/{{Mormonism}} BYU]],[[labelnote:*]]The rebellious and Catholic [=McMahon=] was an uncomfortable fit at the straitlaced Mormon school. He also battled for the QB position with fellow All-American Marc Wilson, which led to BYU's unusual decision to redshirt [=McMahon=] in what would've been his junior year in 1979. Then, in what should've been a dominant senior season in 1981, he was hobbled by injuries, forcing his sophomore backup Steve Young (see below) to step in for much of the season.[[/labelnote]] [=McMahon=] self-identified as the Bears' "punky QB" and immediately made a splash in the league less for his on-field play than for his bad boy image and attitude. In addition to mooning journalists and providing plenty of cocky soundbites, [=McMahon=] also had one of the most distinctive images of any football player. Because of an eye injury sustained as a child that made him sensitive to light, [=McMahon=] wore a pair of ''extremely'' '80s CoolShades at all times and was one of the first players to wear a tinted visor in his helmet, earning him some comparisons to [[Franchise/StarWars Darth Vader]]. He also frequently wore a white headband around his [[{{EightiesHair}} mullet]], often writing funny messages or charities on it in Sharpie after he was fined by the league for wearing one with a visible Adidas logo. Despite his popularity and playing for a Super Bowl-winning team that is frequently considered one of the greatest of all time, [=McMahon=] came to be seen as one of the weaker links on a squad that was most renowned for its defense, and interpersonal conflicts with coaches and management led to him being traded to the Chargers in 1989. [=McMahon=] bounced around six teams in the last eight years of his career--he won Comeback Player of the Year backing up an injured Randall Cunningham in Philly, had some success in Minnesota before being replaced by Warren Moon, floundered in Arizona, couldn't make it off the practice squad in Cleveland, and finally wound up with Chicago's arch-rivals in Green Bay. [=McMahon=] won another Super Bowl ring as a backup with the Packers in his final season but famously wore his Chicago jersey on their visit to the White House[[note]]the Bears hadn't been able to visit the White House after their Super Bowl win due to the Challenger disaster, although UsefulNotes/BarackObama would eventually arrange a very belated visit in 2011, 14 years after [=McMahon=] visited with the Packers[[/note]].
119* '''Donovan [=McNabb=]''' is often considered the best QB in Eagles history and holds most of their franchise records, but he's more notable for playing most of his career for a team whose fans [[NoRespectGuy arguably hated him]] and didn't mind letting him know it. Drafted in 1999 out of Syracuse, the same year as the greatly-hyped Ricky Williams, Philly fans actually booed him and the team management when they took him instead with the #2 pick. This would not be the last time they booed him, though at first he mostly won them over, putting up impressive performances as a seemingly unshakable LightningBruiser despite not having much else on the team to work with, landing a spot on the cover of ''VideoGame/MaddenNFL '06'' and taking the team to three straight NFC Championship appearances... and losses. Once the Eagles brass gave him a reliable passing target in Terrell Owens (see below), [=McNabb=] led the team all the way to a Super Bowl appearance, but their loss in that game sealed his image to many Philly fans as a [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut playoff choker]]. The T.O. deal later came back to hurt Philly when he publicly clashed with his QB, leading to the meltdown of that roster. In the following years, despite one more trip to the NFCCG, [=McNabb=] developed a bit of a reputation for being a GlassCannon, which ultimately resulted in his trade to Washington in 2010. He was again traded to the Vikings the following year but remained ineffective. After being out of the league in 2012, he signed a ceremonial contract before the 2013 season to retire with the Eagles, which in turn retired his #5.
120* '''Steve "Air" [=McNair=]''' was the first great QB for the Tennessee Titans after their move from Houston. Drafted #3 overall in 1995 by the Oilers out of the HBCU Alcorn State (the only school that had offered to let him play quarterback), where he was a Heisman Trophy finalist (the only finalist in HBCU history and one of the few Division I-AA[=/=]FCS players at all, ultimately placing third), [=McNair=] was known for having nerves of steel in the pocket, able to scramble well when needed to and willing to take a hit as long as the ball went to the right receiver--this likely contributed to his problems with injuries later in his career. Famous for coming only a yard short of taking Super Bowl XXXIV into overtime, [=McNair=] eventually surpassed Warren Moon's franchise passing yardage and total wins records. He led the league in passer rating in 2003 and became the first African-American QB to win the league MVP award[[note]]He shared the award with Creator/PeytonManning, who led in passing yards that season[[/note]]. [=McNair=] was traded to the Ravens in 2006 due to struggles with injuries and put up one good season in Baltimore before said injuries pushed him into retirement. Outside of football, [=McNair=] was also known for being quite the [[ReallyGetsAround ladies' man]]. Unfortunately, that contributed to his untimely death just two years after his retirement, as he was [[{{Yandere}} killed by an emotionally disturbed mistress in a murder-suicide]]. His #9 was retired by the Titans.
121* '''Don Meredith''' was the first QB for the Dallas Cowboys. A [[EverythingIsBigInTexas Texas native]] and college star at SMU, Meredith was the first player signed to the team, signing a contract with the owner before the organization was even given an NFL franchise.[[note]]As the Cowboys were admitted too late for the 1960 draft, Bears owner George Halas selected Meredith in the third round but did not attempt to sign him to a contract, hoping to help the Cowboys franchise get off to a good start in order to drive out the rival AFL's Dallas Texans. The league honored the contract but did force Dallas to repay the Bears with a third-round pick in the 1962 draft.[[/note]] His natural charisma and grit made "Dandy Don" very popular in the state through his tenure as starter in the '60s, particularly after his admirable performance during the team's 1967 NFL Championship loss to the Packers in the subzero "Ice Bowl". However, his carefree personality clashed with the more serious Tom Landry, leading to him retiring in 1968. He landed a job on ABC's ''Monday Night Football'' in its inaugural season, where he served as a color commentator through the '70s and early '80s alongside Howard Cosell and Frank Gifford, becoming famous for his folksy humor and for singing Music/WillieNelson's "The Party's Over" during garbage time. His charisma played a major role in elevating the league's popularity on television, and he served as color commentator for three Super Bowls for NBC and ABC. He [[HeAlsoDid spun that fame off]] into a modest but steady career as a TV actor. Meredith was given the Hall of Fame's Radio-Television Award in 2007; he passed away in 2010.
122* '''Joe Montana''' was the AllAmericanFace of the San Francisco 49ers during their 1980s dynasty and essentially the face of the entire league for that decade. "Joe Cool" is still considered by some to be [[TheAce the greatest player in football history]]. Drafted in the third round in 1979 out of Notre Dame (which he led to the 1977 national championship)[[note]]though under the WhatCouldHaveBeen section, he was nearly selected by the Dallas Cowboys with the 76th pick but passed on him due to having no need for a QB, allowing the 49ers who had the 82nd pick to scoop him up[[/note]], Montana took the starting position in his second year and quickly became known for his coolness under pressure, pinpoint accuracy, and ability to lead [[MiracleRally game-winning drives]] with apparent ease. He led the NFL in completion percentage five times, twice led in [=TDs=] and passer rating, and broke single-season efficiency records that had stood for decades. He delivered "The Throw" of the famous play known in NFL lore as "The Catch" by Dwight Clark during the 1981 NFC Championship game and led the 49ers on a 92-yard touchdown drive to win Super Bowl XXIII. Montana took the Niners to four Super Bowls, winning each and never having an interception in any of them. He [[{{Determinator}} twice]] came back from injuries that were supposed to be career ending. First, in 1986, he returned from a devastating back injury after barely two months, winning Comeback Player of the Year. More famously, an elbow injury sustained in the 1990 NFC Championship Game kept the Niners from attempting a Super Bowl threepeat and benched Montana for almost two years, leading to his replacement by Steve Young (see below). The eight-time Pro Bowler, two-time MVP (1989-90, with an [=OPotY=] to go with the first), and three-time Super Bowl MVP followed up his legendary Niners run with a brief stint with the Kansas City Chiefs, where he led the struggling franchise to its first division win in 22 years and first AFC Championship appearance since the merger. Montana retired in 1994, had his #16 retired by the 49ers, and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility. He is still known for having possibly the coolest name in sports, so much so that the small town of Ismay, Montana renamed itself Joe in his honor in 1993. He is one of only two [=QBs=] to start and win both a college national championship and a Super Bowl (along with Joe Namath). He is also Creator/TomBrady's childhood hero growing up which inspired him to play football which would lead to Brady down a similar path of greatness [[note]]Brady had envisioned himself joining his iconic hero's legacy as a 49er leading up to the NFL draft but was ultimately selected by the Patriots, and was nearly traded to the 49ers (which Brady privately requested) before the Pats shipped off Jimmy Garoppolo[[/note]].
123* '''Warren Moon''' was a renowned passer who played most of his [[LongRunner 23-year pro career]] with the Houston Oilers. After a successful senior season at Washington that culminated in an upset Rose Bowl victory, Moon went undrafted in 1978 by the NFL, whose teams were still extremely adverse to hiring African-Americans to play quarterback. Luckily, Moon had already been offered a spot with the CFL's Edmonton Eskimos, a team he led to five consecutive Grey Cup championships before he returned to the States in 1984 to play with the Oilers. For a period in the '90s, he very well may have been the best QB in the game--he won Offensive Player of the Year in 1990 after leading in passing yards and [=TDs=] and [[TheAce led the NFL in career passing attempts and completions]] until he was eventually surpassed by Brett Favre. Unfortunately, he's also remembered for [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut fizzling out in the playoffs]]. In his decade with the Oilers, the team made it to the postseason seven times without ever even reaching the conference championship and infamously blew a 32-point lead to the Bills during the first round of the playoffs in '92, the largest margin in playoff history. He was traded to the Vikings in 1994, where he continued to produce great numbers in passing yardage and completions but again failed to take his team to the Super Bowl. After a brief stint in Seattle, where he became the then-oldest non-specialist to be named to a Pro Bowl at age 41, and a few years as a backup in Kansas City, Moon retired from the NFL in 2001. His #1 was subsequently retired by the Tennessee Titans. Moon is considered alongside Marino as one of the best [=QBs=] to never win a Super Bowl and perhaps ''the'' best to never even play in one.[[note]]Though he did ''appear'' in one Super Bowl during his playing career, holding WesternAnimation/MinnieMouse's hand during the rather bizarre Creator/{{Disney}}-sponsored XXV halftime show.[[/note]] He is still widely considered the greatest QB in CFL history thanks to his unreal championship streak. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility, was the first African-American QB to receive the honor, and remains the only player to be enshrined in both the American and Canadian Halls.
124* '''Earl Morrall''' is considered by many to be "The Patron Saint of [[PutMeInCoach Backup Quarterbacks]]". Drafted #2 overall out of Michigan State in 1956, Morrall was traded around three different teams in the first three years of his career, wavering between being a starter and a trusted backup.[[note]]He started out in San Francisco, then was traded to Pittsburgh (where he put up a Pro Bowl season), then was traded to Detroit in exchange for the great (but recently injured) Bobby Layne.[[/note]] After a few years in Detroit, injuries led to him being traded first to the Giants, then the Baltimore Colts to back up the great Johnny Unitas (see below). Entering into his thirteenth season, the time [[TheBenchwarmer most players with injury issues and little play time]] would be considering retirement, Morrall was thrust into the starting position on his new team when Unitas was injured in a preseason game. To say he stepped up would be an understatement--Morrall led the team to a 13-1 record and a Super Bowl appearance, winning league MVP in a Cinderella season that was dimmed by Joe Namath's Jets and their upset victory in Super Bowl III. He ceded his spot to Unitas in that game but got his chance at redemption two years later, filling in for an injured Unitas to win Super Bowl V. Two years after that, Morrall was reunited with coach Don Shula, who signed him as a backup for the Miami Dolphins. Once again, he stepped into a new team with an injured star and produced spectacular results, filling in for the injured Bob Griese for 11 games in the middle of the team's perfect 17-0 season and winning ''Pro Football Weekly'''s first Comeback Player of the Year award. After a few more years in Miami, he retired in 1976 after [[LongRunner 21 seasons]]--though his career wasn't as long as his contemporary George Blanda, who played his final seasons as a placekicker, Morrall held the record for the oldest QB to ''start'' in a game for nearly thirty years. He passed away in 2014.
125* '''Craig Morton''' had an [[LongRunner 18-year]] career from the late '60s to early '80s. His regular season numbers were [[SoOkayItsAverage average]] and he was never selected to a Pro Bowl, but he does have the unique resume of leading two franchises to their first Super Bowl appearance. Morton was drafted #5 overall by the Dallas Cowboys out of Cal in 1965 and succeeded Don Meredith as the team's second starting QB in 1969 after his unexpected early retirement. However, he then had to fight for his starting position, as the Cowboys had finally picked up college star [[TheRival Roger Staubach]]. Morton led the team to an appearance in Super Bowl V the following year, but his poor performance in that game contributed to the team's loss and resulted in Staubach taking the reins the next season and leading the team to a Super Bowl victory. The two continued to battle for playing time for several years, but as Staubach established himself as the superior player when healthy, Morton sought a trade and eventually won a midseason one to the Giants in 1975. Morton performed poorly in New York and was traded to the Denver Broncos in 1977, where he experienced a remarkable CareerResurrection, winning Comeback Player of the Year and leading a franchise that had never even reached the playoffs before to a Super Bowl XII appearance. Unfortunately, Morton [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut once again put up a terrible performance in the Big Game]], producing a 0.0 passer rating while facing off against... Staubach's Cowboys. However, he played several more good years in Denver before retiring after the '82 season. He later briefly served with several other former Broncos on the staff of the USFL's Denver Gold, including a tenure as head coach.
126* '''Kyler Murray''' was the #1 overall pick of the 2019 Draft, selected by the Arizona Cardinals. Murray entered the NFL as one of the most hyped college athletes ever--not only did he succeed Heisman winner Baker Mayfield as Oklahoma's QB and put up his own Heisman-winning season, he did so the year ''after'' being taken #9 overall in the MLB Draft by the Oakland Athletics, making him the only player ever to be drafted in the first round of both sports. At 5'10", Murray is one of the shortest [=QBs=] to ever claim a starting position, but he made use of that size and his quickness to break out as one of the league's premier dual-threat quarterbacks and secure Offensive Rookie of the Year. Murray is also the first NFL starting QB of Korean descent, being the son of an African-American father and Korean-American mother.
127* '''Joe Namath''' was an incredibly popular athlete in the late '60s and '70s. His numbers don't exactly leap off the page today--he had a losing record as a starter,[[note]]exactly .500 if counting playoffs[[/note]] was almost completely immobile due to knee injuries sustained in college at Alabama[[note]]Which he led to the 1964 national championship, making him one of only two [=QBs=] (along with Joe Montana) to win a college championship and a Super Bowl[[/note]], missed large chunks of his pro career due to further injuries, and threw 47 more picks than [=TDs=]. However, Namath was very much the first "modern" quarterback and is largely responsible for the revolution of football offenses emphasizing passing over running. He was the first to pass for over 4,000 yards in a season (a feat no one else matched for over a decade), won AFL MVP twice in 1968-69, and was among the NFL's all-time leaders in several passing stats when he retired before the game evolved to make his stats look pedestrian by comparison. He was also one of the main catalysts of the NFL-AFL merger after he was drafted #1 overall by the Jets and #12 by the St. Louis Cardinals in 1965--his decision to join the Jets gave the AFL the star power to compete with the NFL. He famously "guaranteed" an upset victory for the Jets in Super Bowl III, something that the media portrayed as an almost laughable boast; the first two Super Bowls had been blowout wins for the NFL. Namath then led the Jets to victory, proving that the Super Bowl actually mattered and establishing that the merger would not result in a less competitive league.[[note]]This also started the trend of players "guaranteeing" victory before key games, with varying degrees of success.[[/note]] This unlikely victory, combined with his laid-back charisma, sex appeal, and [[TheDandy the colorful outfits]] and [[PrettyInMink mink coats]] he wore on the sidelines, elevated "Broadway Joe" to massive celebrity in the '70s. He hosted his own short-lived talk show the year he won the Super Bowl, relayed that into countless appearances in movies, commercials, and game shows, and was even the star of his own sitcom, ''The Waverly Wonders'', which premiered in 1978 to poor ratings and reviews and only lasted nine episodes. He also opened his own nightclub, which the NFL forced him to sell due to its connections to UsefulNotes/TheMafia--Namath tearfully threatened to retire due to this, the first of many such announcements that the public [[CryingWolf took less and less seriously over time]]. He ''actually'' retired in 1977 after a lackluster final season with the Rams; his #12 was retired by the Jets and he entered the Hall of Fame. He had a short-lived run as a broadcaster on ''Monday Night Football'' that ended after a single season due to his lack of a filter. Nearly half a century after his retirement, he remains the Jets' all-time leader in most passing categories.
128* '''Cam Newton''' was drafted #1 overall by the Carolina Panthers in 2011 after he won the Heisman and BCS National Championship at Auburn. Initially considered a project dual-threat QB with significant raw talent but lacking in experience (he only started one season in college), Newton found individual success quickly and was named Offensive Rookie of the Year after not just breaking the NFL rookie passing yards record but setting the single-season rushing TD record for ''all'' [=QBs=] (both since passed). Starting in 2013, Newton led the Panthers to three consecutive NFC South titles. He won league MVP[[note]]The first ever African-American QB to be the award's sole recipient, as Steve [=McNair=] split the honor with Peyton Manning[[/note]] (and Offensive Player of the Year) in 2015 and took his team to a 15-1 record and the Super Bowl, where they lost to the Broncos. An outstanding athlete, Newton set numerous franchise and league records and firsts for combined passing and rushing stats, became the only player in NFL history to be a franchise leader in both passing and rushing [=TDs=], and holds the current NFL record for QB rushing touchdowns by a sizable margin. He was one of the most popular players in the league in the 2010s due to his skill and larger-than-life personality, particularly with young fans, which led to him starring in the short-lived Nickelodeon TV show ''All In with Cam Newton''. After several injury-plagued seasons, Newton was released by the Panthers in 2020, signed with the Patriots to a very inexpensive one-year deal after the departure of Creator/TomBrady, briefly [[HesBack returned to the Panthers]] in the middle of the following season, and has since been out of football. Off the field, Newton is probably best known for his seemingly endless supply of [[TheDandy colorful and extravagant fashion choices]] for interviews and press conferences.
129* '''Ken O'Brien''' was drafted by the New York Jets #24 overall in 1983 out of UC Davis, a selection that stunned many who expected the Jets to take Dan Marino instead. While he was never able to break away from the shadow of being drafted ahead of Marino, O'Brien still managed to carve a respectable 11-year career in the NFL, earning two Pro Bowls with the Jets and leading the NFL in passer rating in 1985. He retired in 1993 after a season with the Eagles.
130* '''Carson Palmer''' was the #1 overall pick in 2003, drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals after a Heisman-winning career at USC. Palmer saw a good deal of success early in his pro career, leading the league in passing [=TDs=] and completion percentage in his third season, but a [[GameBreakingInjury severe knee tear]] sustained in the playoffs the next year started off [[GlassCannon a string of injuries]]. Palmer eventually grew sick of being in Cincinnati and essentially forced the Bengals into trading him to the Raiders in 2011 by sitting out and threatening to retire if they did not. After two middling seasons in Oakland, Palmer was traded to the Arizona Cardinals, where he experienced a brief CareerResurrection by putting up the best numbers of his career, first Pro Bowl in a decade, and winning his only playoff game in 2015, though further injuries led him to retire after 2017. As of 2023, he has the most career passing yards, [=TDs=], and completions of any eligible QB not enshrined in Canton. Fun fact: For two seasons in Cincinnati, Carson's backup was [[SiblingTeam his younger brother]] '''Jordan Palmer''', a journeyman backup out of UTEP who currently runs a very successful QB training camp used by many current pros and works in the NFL front office as its director of QB development.
131* Vito '''"Babe" Parilli''' was the first great Patriots QB. Drafted #4 overall by the Packers in 1952 out of Kentucky, Parilli bounced around several NFL and CFL teams before landing with the Boston Patriots in 1961, where he served as the conductor of the team's "Grand Opera" offense for seven years. Parilli spent his last two seasons as a backup for Joe Namath on the Jets, earning a Super Bowl ring before retiring and entering into a lengthy coaching career. He is enshrined in the Patriots Hall of Fame and passed away in 2017.
132* '''Clarence [[TheAce "Ace"]] Parker''' was one of the NFL's biggest stars in the late '30s and early '40s despite not playing on any teams that exist today. A multi-sport star at Duke, he was drafted by the Brooklyn Dodgers in the second round of the 1937 Draft, but Parker initially opted to play baseball instead and signed with the Philadelphia Athletics that same year. After a poor start with the A’s, however, Parker changed his mind and shifted his focus towards football, where he became the feature back of the struggling Dodgers. Considered one of the leading passers of his era, he was also a capable runner, punter, and defensive back, earning All-Pro honors twice and being named NFL MVP in 1940. After 1941 season, the U.S. entered World War II, and Parker put his playing career on hold to enlist in the U.S. Navy. By the time he returned to football in 1945, the Dodgers had merged with the Boston Yanks; after a season in Boston, he signed with the New York Yankees of the AAFC in 1946.[[note]]The owner of the Yankees, Dan Topping, had owned the Dodgers before he had his franchise stripped away by the NFL.[[/note]] Although the Yankees made it to the AAFC Championship game that year, they lost to the powerhouse Cleveland Browns, after which Parker announced his retirement. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1972. Before he died in 2013, he was the Hall’s oldest living member at ''101 years old.''
133* '''Dan Pastorini''' was the #3 overall pick of the 1971 Draft behind Jim Plunkett and Archie Manning out of the now-defunct program at Santa Clara. Pastorini went to the Houston Oilers and, for many years, seemed likely to mimic his draft predecessors' lack of success while playing on a terrible team -- he was regularly injured and went 21 straight starts without a win, still an NFL record. However, he eventually bounced back with a Pro Bowl season in 1975 and sat under center during the successful "Luv Ya Blue" era of the late '70s. After two straight AFC Championship losses, Oilers owner Bud Adams called for a trade with the Oakland Raiders for Ken Stabler (see below); Pastorini [[GameBreakingInjury broke his leg]] after four games with the Raiders, paving the way for Plunkett's comeback story, and was out of football in 1983 after a few poor years with the Rams and Eagles. He then entered a second sports career as a Top Fuel drag racer.
134* '''Chad Pennington''' stands as a prominent example of the impact a GameBreakingInjury can have on a QB's career. Drafted #18 overall by the New York Jets in 2000 out of [[Film/WeAreMarshall Marshall]], Pennington replaced Vinny Testaverde as the starter in 2002 and led the team to win the new AFC East division while leading the NFL in completion percentage and passer rating. Expectations were high for the Jets the following year until a hand fracture benched him for six games and permanently diminished his once-excellent dexterity. The next season, he tore the rotator cuff in his shoulder, a much more serious injury that robbed his arm-strength and benched him for nearly a full year of rehab. He returned in 2006 and led the Jets back to the playoffs by adjusting his playing style, winning Comeback Player of the Year. His performance sharply declined again the next season, however, and he was released by the team. Pennington joined the Miami Dolphins in 2008 and again experienced a remarkable revival with the help of the team's run-heavy "wildcat" offense, winning Comeback Player of the Year ''again'' (the only player who has ever done so twice) and leading the 'Fins to [[HistoryRepeats his second AFC East title while leading the league in completion percentage]]. Like the last comeback, this was short-lived--he continued to injure his GlassCannon shoulder, opposing defenses quickly figured out the wildcat, and he was out of football by 2010, ultimately retiring with the highest career completion percentage in league history at that time. Besides the two comebacks and horrible luck with injuries, Pennington's career is notable for one more reason: He led the only two teams in the AFC East to beat the Patriots during Creator/TomBrady's reign in the division.[[note]]His teams tied the Patriots' record in both seasons, beating them through tiebreakers, and Brady was out from injury in 2008.[[/note]]
135* '''Milt Plum''' was an early outlier for NFL passing efficiency. A second round pick by the Cleveland Browns in 1957, the Penn State grad fit right in providing passing support behind the Jim Brown-led running game. Plum led the NFL in completion percentage in three straight seasons (1959-61), and his passer rating in 1960 (110.4) stood as the season record for three decades. This run was broken up after he was traded to Detroit, where his performance declined. He retired in 1969 after stints on the Rams' and Giants' benches.
136* '''Jake Plummer''' was a prominent mobile QB around the turn of the millennium. Drafted in the second round in 1997 by the Arizona Cardinals out of Arizona State,[[note]]which leased its stadium to the Cardinals at the time[[/note]] where he was a Heisman finalist, Plummer quickly entered the starting lineup and set a number of team rookie records. The Cardinals made the playoffs in his second season, where he led the team to its first postseason victory since ''1947''. His play declined afterwards, especially when it came to committing turnovers, but he remained quite popular with Cardinals fans thanks to [[AHeroToHisHometown his history in the region]], scrambling ability, and [[DeathOrGloryAttack "gunslinger" mentality]]. He moved on as a free agent in 2003 to the Denver Broncos, where he excelled in head coach Mike Shanahan's system, leading Denver to the playoffs in three straight seasons and earning his sole trip to the Pro Bowl in 2005 prior to taking the team to an AFC Championship game. However, his laid-back mentality created friction with Shanahan, and the team traded up in the first round for Jay Cutler (see above) in 2006. Despite leading the Broncos to a 7-4 record, Plummer was benched for Cutler, and the team failed to make the playoffs behind the rookie. The following offseason, a disgruntled Plummer was traded to Tampa Bay, but he refused to report and chose to retire instead. Plummer was notably a close friend of the heroic Pat Tillman from their time together in both college and with the Cardinals; he grew out his hair and beard in honor of Tillman's death in Afghanistan and delivered the eulogy at his funeral. In retirement, he has become a figure in professional handball and is a major advocate for the medicinal benefits of mushrooms.
137* '''Jim Plunkett''' was the #1 overall pick of the 1971 Draft, selected by the New England Patriots after a Heisman-winning career at Stanford. Plunkett was seen as a strong prospect due to his arm strength, but he struggled with interceptions and was traded away after five seasons to the 49ers, where he again fell short of his early promise. The Niners sent him across the Bay to the Oakland Raiders, where he sat as [[TheBenchwarmer an almost completely inactive backup]] for two years as an apparent draft bust. However, after the midseason injury of starter Dan Pastorini (who was drafted two picks after Plunkett in '71) in 1980, the 32-year-old returned to the field and experienced a remarkable CareerResurrection, leading the team to a victory in Super Bowl XV and winning Super Bowl MVP and Comeback Player of the Year. Three years later, Plunkett once again stepped off the bench to relieve the (now-Los Angeles) Raiders starting QB and once again led the team to a Super Bowl victory. He retired after 1986. Despite his many accomplishments over a 15-year career, including being the first Latino/Native American QB to be a #1 draft pick, Super Bowl winner, or Super Bowl MVP, Plunkett's years of middling play, poor career statistics[[note]]including a negative TD-INT ratio and subpar career passer rating and completion percentage[[/note]], and dead even 72-72 win-loss record in the regular season have left him as the only eligible QB to win two Super Bowls and not be in the Hall of Fame. He is one of only two [=QBs=] to win a Heisman and start/win a Super Bowl (along with Roger Staubach).
138* '''Dak Prescott''' is the current starter of the Dallas Cowboys. A fourth round pick out of Mississippi State in the 2016 Draft, Prescott was expected to serve as a backup and learn from franchise QB Tony Romo until a preseason back injury benched the Cowboys' passing record-holder. He saw [[PutMeInCoach unexpected and immediate success]] filling in for Romo, leading the Cowboys to a 13-3 record, securing the starting spot, and winning Offensive Rookie of the Year after setting the record for single-season passer rating among rookies to play a full season. Prescott has since surpassed Romo's career passer rating, though he has (so far) mimicked his predecessor's struggle [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut to take the team deep into the postseason]]. This trait likely played into the Cowboys reluctance to sign him to a long-term deal after he wildly outperformed his rookie contract, instead applying the franchise tag[[note]]A contract device which essentially forces a one-year, fully guaranteed deal equal to the average of the top five highest paid players at that player's position[[/note]] ahead of Prescott hitting free agency in 2020. Prescott unfortunately suffered a [[GameBreakingInjury gruesome ankle injury]] during that season while playing under the tag, but the Cowboys struggled in his absence, and he was rewarded with a record-breaking new contract in 2021. He's mostly rewarded Dallas since, leading the NFL in passing [=TDs=] and completions in '23.
139* '''Brock Purdy''' is currently the starting quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers, but his greatest claim to fame is being the most relevant "Mr. Irrelevant" in NFL history. Despite shattering most of Iowa State's passing records, Purdy's relatively small size and perceived lack of athleticism[[note]]at the combine, he posted below-average scores in all measurables with the exception of his ten-yard split[[/note]] saw him fall all the way to the final pick in the 2022 Draft, where the Niners scooped him up. Most [=QBs=] taken this late in the draft struggle to make final rosters, but Purdy secured a spot as the team's third-stringer and took the field midway through the season after the two players ahead of him, Trey Lance and Jimmy Garoppolo, both sustained season-ending injuries. Purdy unexpectedly led the Niners on an undefeated streak as a starter while setting rookie efficiency records all the way to the NFC Championship game, where an injury to his throwing arm sidelined him for most of what ended up being a blowout loss to the Eagles. After surgery and an intensive bout of rehab, Purdy won the job as the team's starter in 2023, leading the NFL in passer rating, setting the franchise record for single-season passing yards, and taking the team back to the Super Bowl in just his first full year. Purdy's success in spite of his being a final overall pick has seen him gain a significant contingent of detractors (who typically allege that he is the NFL equivalent of a VanillaProtagonist being propped up by HC Kyle Shanahan as well as a [[AllStarCast supporting cast of All-Pro offensive talent]]); nonetheless he's widely regarded as one of the most notable late-round QB draft steals since Tom Brady.
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143* '''George Ratterman''' had a career that could best be described as unique. He spent three years primarily as a backup at Notre Dame before leaving in 1947 to play for the AAFC's Buffalo Bills, where he set the pro football rookie then-record for passing [=TDs=] with 20 [[DeathOrGloryAttack (he also led the league with 22 [=INTs=])]] and guided the Bills to consecutive championship appearances in '48-'49. Despite the team's success, they were not included in the AAFC's merger with the NFL. Ratterman's rights were sent to the New York Yanks, where he led the NFL in [=TDs=] (and [=INTs=]) in 1950 but left the team partway through '51 to play in the CFL. He returned to the NFL with the Cleveland Browns a year later, winning two titles as Otto Graham's backup and later being the first QB to use a radio receiver in his helmet. A [[CareerEndingInjury leg injury ended his career]] in 1956, after which he earned a law degree and began practicing in his home town of Cincinnati. Years later, while running for sheriff in Campbell County, Kentucky, he was involved in a bizarre blackmailing scandal when the local mafia drugged him and placed him in bed with a stripper in an attempt to smear his reputation. When the plot was uncovered, it actually catapulted Ratterman's popularity; he won the election and began to bust organized crime within the county. He also spent 14 years as a broadcaster for ABC and NBC and was a color commentator for the first Super Bowl. He died in 2007.
144* '''Philip Rivers''' spent all but the last of his [[LongRunner 17 NFL seasons]] with the San Diego/Los Angeles Chargers. After being drafted at #4 overall out of NC State by the Giants in 2004, Rivers was immediately traded to the Chargers in exchange for their #1 pick, Eli Manning. After spending two years backing up Drew Brees, Rivers became the Chargers' starter in 2006, beginning the second-longest ever [[MadeOfIron streak of consecutive starts]] for an NFL quarterback behind only Brett Favre. Said streak also included [[{{Determinator}} playing with]] [[DentedIron a torn ACL]] in the Chargers' AFC Championship game loss against the Patriots in his second season as a starter. That was [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut the closest Rivers ever got to a Super Bowl appearance]], though he continued to put up great individual performances with the team for many years to come, earning eight Pro Bowl nods and even winning Comeback Player of the Year in 2013 after coming back from a few down years to lead the league in completion percentage.[[note]]He previously led the NFL in passing [=TDs=] and rating in '08 and yards in '10.[[/note]] He moved on to the Colts for his final season in 2020, leading them to a playoff berth before calling it a career and retiring fifth on the all-time list for passing yards and TD passes. By those metrics, he is the most successful QB to never play in a Super Bowl by a fairly sizable margin. A devout Roman Catholic from Alabama, expect any discussion of Rivers to also mention [[MassiveNumberedSiblings his 10 children]][[note]]Nine when he retired; he and his wife had their 10th in 2023.[[/note]] and [[GoshDangItToHeck his refusal to curse]] while [[IShallTauntYou delivering blistering on-field trash talk]].[[note]]Speaking of which, he announced his retirement on January 20, 2021, the Catholic feast day of St. Sebastian, the patron saint of athletes. Yes, that was deliberate. It was also [[SignificantReferenceDate the anniversary]] of the game he played on a torn ACL.[[/note]] Before his final season, he accepted the head coaching job at a Catholic high school in his home state; the oldest of his three sons became his team's starting QB in 2023.
145* '''Aaron Rodgers''' is the current QB for the New York Jets after serving as the longest tenured player in Green Bay Packers history. He is one of the most accomplished to ever play the QB position, leading all active NFL players in career passing [=TDs=]. Rodgers was drafted #24 overall in 2005 by the Packers out of Cal[[note]]which he entered after two years at Butte Community College[[/note]] in one of the most embarrassing draft slides in NFL history.[[note]]He and Alex Smith were considered the top two [=QBs=] in the class, but the prevailing notion was that Rodgers, a Bay Area native, had the edge. The 49ers instead drafted Smith, and Rodgers sat for ''three hours'' on live television as 22 more teams passed on him. While there have been other great [=QBs=] taken much lower than the first round, a potential #1 QB prospect to fall so far was almost unheard of in the age where potential draftees were invited to attend the televised ceremony. This was likely due to him being the sixth first-round QB coached in college by Jeff Tedford, with the previous five all being busts (see the entry for the "Tedford Five" in the "Quarterback Draft Bust Groups" folder of the [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeagueNotoriousFigures "Notorious Figures" page]] for more details).[[/note]] He [[TheBenchwarmer spent his first three years on the bench]] behind longtime QB Brett Favre, [[ToughActToFollow who left the team holding every major NFL passing record]]. Rodgers was set to replace Favre in '08 when he [[TenMinuteRetirement came out of retirement]] in the offseason; to the surprise of many, Packers management decided to stay the course with Rodgers rather than give Favre the starting job back (see Brett’s entry further up). Fans called for Rodgers' blood; he responded by becoming the first QB in NFL history to throw for 4,000 yards in both his first two seasons as a starter, then led the Packers to victory in Super Bowl XLV. He was the MVP of that Super Bowl and followed it up with four regular season [=MVPs=] ('11, '14, '20, '21), the most for any player besides Peyton Manning. The standout aspect of Rodgers' play has been his ''efficiency''; his career passer rating and interception percentage are [[TheAce the best in league history]] as of 2023, and he has led the league in rating four times (with his 2011 122.5 rating still standing as the single-season record).[[note]]He also led the league in passing [=TDs=] twice and completion percentage once.[[/note]] Those numbers mark him as a SpiritualAntithesis to Favre, who retired with the most [=INTs=] in history; Rodgers still has the best career TD-INT ratio of any QB by a substantial margin and notably passed Favre in career passing [=TDs=] despite not yet passing him in yards. His athleticism is also a key weapon: while a superb pocket passer, he is ''lethal'' outside the pocket and can throw with deadly accuracy on the run. Despite all of his success, Rodgers has developed a reputation for [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut fizzling out]] ''just'' on the cusp of making it all the way; since his Super Bowl victory, the Packers reached four NFC Championships and lost each one, the longest such streak for any QB.[[note]]Ironically, [[AlwaysSomeoneBetter the 49ers in particular have made a habit of thwarting him]], as the team that first passed him in the draft has knocked Rodgers's Packers out all four times they met in the postseason, including one of those NFC Championship games.[[/note]] In 2023, [[HistoryRepeats the Packers decided they were ready to move on to the first round pick they had drafted three years prior (Jordan Love) and traded Rodgers to the Jets]]. He tore his Achilles on his ''fourth snap'' in his first game as a Jet, so it remains to be seen if he can do any better than Favre's stint in New York.
146** Outside of his play, Rodgers is known for his... ''unique'' personality, which can best be described as AcademicAthlete meets NewAgeRetroHippie. He signed on to be one of the guest hosts on ''Series/{{Jeopardy}}'' following the passing of Creator/AlexTrebek, has surprised many an interviewer by going off into [[BadassBookworm tangents about his new favorite book]],[[note]]He once successfully petitioned to be an extra on ''Series/GameOfThrones'', only to be vocally disappointed with the final season.[[/note]] and publically attributed his late-career consecutive [=MVPs=] to an ayahuasca trip in South America. Rodgers has leaned into this image as a part of his [[CelebrityEndorsement many ad spots]] (most prominently with Allstate Insurance), but his mercurial personality has also led to several conflicts between himself, the media, and the Packers organization over the years, including when he misled the media regarding his COVID-19 vaccination status in 2021 after he instead opted to take homeopathic treatments and when he got in a public feud with Creator/JimmyKimmel for using his regular guest spots on ESPN's ''Pat [=McAfee=] Show'' to spout [[ConspiracyTheorist potentially defamatory conspiracies]]. Rodgers is also known for his touchdown celebrations, particularly his "title belt" motion, leading to the iconic image of Clay Matthews giving him an [[http://newsroom.mtv.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/rodgersbelt_575.jpg actual championship belt]] at their Super Bowl victory. His younger brother Jordan got the girl on Season 12 of ''Series/{{The Bachelor}}ette''.[[note]]Aaron has been estranged from his family for the last few years; in fact, Jordan's fiancée admitted not long after the series finale that she had never met Aaron.[[/note]] Aaron has himself been one of the most eligible bachelors in the football world, having been in long-term relationships with famous figures like Creator/OliviaMunn, NASCAR racer Danica Patrick, and Creator/ShaileneWoodley.
147* '''Ben Roethlisberger''' played his [[LongRunner entire 18-season career]] as the starter for the Pittsburgh Steelers, becoming the franchise's longest-tenured player ever after having been drafted #11 overall in 2004 out of the other Miami (the one in Ohio). Nicknamed "Big Ben" for his imposing stature and heavy build which long posed a major challenge for opponents seeking to sack him, he often completed passes with defenders draped over him. His career began with him winning his first 14 starts (the previous all-time record was ''six''), taking his team to the AFC Championship game, and becoming the first QB to win Rookie of the Year since 1970.[[note]]First years usually aren't particularly kind to quarterbacks, as most teams that draft them are lacking other weapons and the QB position has a steeper learning curve than any other when transitioning from college to the pros. Since Ben's win, six [=QBs=] have won [=ORoY=] honors, reflecting the overall emphasis on passing offense in the NFL in that time.[[/note]] He won his first Super Bowl ring the next year in XL, becoming the youngest QB to start and win a Super Bowl, though this often shows up in "worst performance by winning QB" lists.[[note]]He completed an anemic 9/21 passes with no [=TDs=] and two [=INTs=] for a passer rating of 22.6.[[/note]] However, he acquitted himself rather nicely in his second Super Bowl win over the Cardinals in XLIII, leading a comeback in the final minutes. Despite all this success, he's also well known for his various run-ins with the law and media, something that likely contributed to him not being named Super Bowl MVP. First, he crashed his motorcycle in 2005 while riding without a helmet or license. Then came a 2010 scandal when two women accused him of sexual assault; though lack of physical evidence or corroborating witnesses meant no charges were filed in either case, this earned him a brief suspension during the season he led the Steelers to his third Super Bowl appearance. Ben generally kept out of trouble since the suspension and kept his team in contention for another decade, claiming most of the franchise's passing records, twice leading the league in passing yards, posting the most 500+ yard and perfect passer rating games of any QB ever (four apiece), setting the record for most completions in a single game (47, in a very rare loss to the Browns), and cementing his reputation as a master of [[SignatureMove the pump fake]]. The six-time Pro Bowler retired after 2021. He also cameoed as the QB of the Gotham City Rogues in ''Film/TheDarkKnightRises''.
148* '''Tony Romo''' holds many of the Dallas Cowboys career passing records, including passing yards and touchdowns, and is one of the more notable undrafted success stories in NFL history. After a standout career at the relatively obscure FCS school Eastern Illinois, he was signed by the Cowboys, where a fellow Eastern Illinois alum, Sean Payton, served as OC and heavily recruited Romo.[[note]]In an interesting bit of WhatCouldHaveBeen, Sean Payton, upon becoming the head coach of the New Orleans Saints, attempted to trade for Romo. The Cowboys demanded greater compensation than what the Saints were offering, so the Saints backed out. Had they traded for Romo, it's possible that they never would have signed Drew Brees.[[/note]] After spending several seasons as a backup, Romo got an opportunity to play in 2006 when struggling starter Drew Bledsoe (see above) was pulled. He played well enough to earn the starting job and guided the Cowboys to the playoffs. However, his first playoff game resulted in one of his most infamous "[[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut Fizzle Out]]" moments--Romo, still serving as the holder for placekicks[[note]]The backup QB was commonly the holder for much of NFL history, but they were replaced by the punter for almost all teams by the turn of the millennium; Romo was not only the last QB to perform in this role as a backup, but kept it after becoming the starter.[[/note]], botched the hold on the game-winning field goal attempt and was tackled short of the end zone when he tried to run with the ball. Despite his regular season success over the next decade (including leading the league in passer rating and completion percentage in 2014)--not to mention a high-profile relationship with Music/JessicaSimpson that briefly made him a tabloid fixture--Romo struggled each time the Cowboys made the playoffs; he has the highest career passer rating of any retired QB to never win, let alone ''appear'' in, a Super Bowl. A series of injury-plagued seasons led to Romo ending his career in 2016, after which he immediately went into broadcasting. Despite having no prior experience, he was hired by CBS to be the color commentator for their #1 broadcast team. Romo drew significant praise from fans and the media for his fresh perspective and unique style of [[AwesomenessByAnalysis precisely predicting plays seconds before they happen]], so much so that [[FollowTheLeader other networks overhauled their broadcast teams with recently retired players like Romo]]. Romo has so far called three Super Bowls with CBS.
149* '''Tobin Rote''' began his career with the Green Bay Packers, who drafted him in the second round out of Rice in 1950. While in Green Bay, he led the NFL in passer rating ('52), passing [=TDs=] ('55-'56), and went to the Pro Bowl in 1956 after posting a then-record-breaking 29 [=TDs=]. Despite his individual talent, the Packers struggled, and he was traded to the Detroit Lions in 1957, leading them to the championship in his first year while subbing for Bobby Layne (see above) and playing there until 1959. After a three-year stint in the CFL, he signed with the San Diego Chargers in 1963, immediately leading them to the AFL Championship, becoming the only QB to win titles in both the AFL and NFL, and earning the AFL All-Star and MVP awards. He retired in 1966 after a disappointing stint with the Broncos. Despite his accomplishments, he has yet to be enshrined in Canton, largely due to his lopsided TD-INT ratio (148-191). He died from a heart attack in 2000.
150* '''Frank Ryan''' was the last QB to lead the Cleveland Browns to a championship way back in 1964. A fifth round draft pick out of Rice in 1958, he mostly sat on the Rams' bench for several years before forcing a trade to Cleveland in 1962, where he secured three Pro Bowl nods and claimed several franchise passing records (most since passed). However, Ryan is perhaps most notable for his remarkable off-field exploits; during the offseasons of his years with the Browns, Ryan [[AcademicAthlete received a Ph.D in mathematics and served as a full-time professor at Case Western Reserve University]]. While it was still common in the '60s for even star NFL players to have off-season jobs, few other players chose such a unique career path (it was a common joke that Ryan was the only player on the Browns to even know what Einstein's theory of relativity ''was''). Ryan spent his last two seasons in Washington, where he was signed as much to help Vince Lombardi set up some of the league's first computers as for his play. He retired after 1971 and entered straight into a successful career in academia and the burgeoning computer industry; he notably helped install the first electronic voting system for the U.S. House of Representatives and served as AD ''and'' math lecturer at [[UsefulNotes/IvyLeague Yale]] from 1977-86. Ryan passed away on New Year's Day in 2024.
151* '''Matt Ryan''' was drafted #3 overall in 2008 by the Atlanta Falcons out of Boston College. Nicknamed "Matty Ice" for his coolness under pressure, he holds basically every franchise passing record by a wide margin and is normally recognized as one of the best [=QBs=] of the 21st century, at least on paper. He won Offensive Rookie of the Year, brought the Falcons to their only run of sustained success in franchise history, won MVP and Offensive Player of the Year in 2016 for leading the league in passer rating and taking the Falcons to a Super Bowl appearance, and sits in or close to the top ten in almost every career passing statistic. Despite all that, Ryan has never ''quite'' garnered the same degree of [[NoRespectGuy respect and fame]] as some of his peers, likely because of the Falcons' horribly embarrassing loss to the Patriots in Super Bowl LI after his MVP season; for all of Ryan's impressive numbers, "28-3" will probably be the one that follows him for the rest of his career. In 2022, the Falcons traded him to the Colts, where he struggled, suffered yet another historically humiliating loss by blowing a record 33-point lead to the Vikings, and was benched and released. He immediately transitioned into broadcasting for CBS, retiring a year later after signing a ceremonial contract with the Falcons.
152* '''Mark Rypien''' was a sixth round pick for Washington out of Washington State in 1986. After sitting as a backup during the Doug Williams-led Super Bowl XXII victory, the Calgary native replaced the aging QB the following year and broke out as a star for a few seasons, leading the team to another championship in 1991 and being named Super Bowl XXVI MVP. Unfortunately, Rypien began to struggle with injuries not long after; he was cut after 1993 and bounced around several teams as a backup, leaving the game for a time after his son's death from a brain tumor and ultimately retiring after 2001. He has since struggled with mental health issues that he and his family attribute to CTE.
153* '''Matt Schaub''' holds most of the Houston Texans' franchise career passing records, though he started out with the Falcons after they drafted him in the third round in 2004 out of Virginia. He sat as a backup behind Michael Vick for his first three seasons before being traded to Houston. He helped lead the young franchise on its greatest run of sustained success over a few solid seasons which saw him lead the NFL in passing yards in 2009 and tie Warren Moon for the second-most passing yards in a game in 2012. Schaub was traded away in 2014 and bounced around as a backup in Oakland and Baltimore before [[{{Bookends}} landing back in Atlanta]], where he stayed for another five years before retiring.[[note]]Ironically, he spent one more season in Atlanta than Houston despite only starting three total games as a Falcon.[[/note]]
154* '''Phil Simms''' played for the New York Giants for [[LongRunner 16 seasons]] after they drafted him #7 overall in 1979. Their completely unexpected high selection of Simms, an unspectacular college QB from the small Division I-AA Morehead State, was seen as yet another example of an organization that hadn't visited the playoffs in 15 years completely bungling things, especially after his first several seasons were plagued with poor play and injuries. However, he matured immensely after heavily studying film during his time in recovery; while the Giants' '80s renaissance is most commonly attributed to coach Bill Parcells and their Big Blue Wrecking Crew defense led by Lawrence Taylor, Simms proved to be a very capable passer. In Super Bowl XXI, Simms put up the best statistical passing performance in the history of the Big Game with a record 150.9 passer rating[[note]]22/25 completed passes (88% completion, another Super Bowl record) for three [=TDs=][[/note]] on the way to winning Super Bowl MVP and became [[TropeNamer the first player to say]] "ImGoingToDisneyWorld" after winning. A broken foot benched Simms late in 1990 after he helped set the team up for another Super Bowl run under backup Jeff Hostetler (see above). He continued to be troubled by injuries but managed one more Pro Bowl season in '93 before deciding to retire. The Giants retired his #11. Simms then launched a very successful (albeit oft-criticized) second career as a broadcaster, serving as color commentator for two Super Bowls with NBC and six for CBS. Phil's sons '''Chris and Matt Simms''' both had unspectacular careers as journeymen backups, though Chris started most of 2005 with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and spun that off into a career as an analyst, usually on opposing networks to his dad.
155* '''Brian Sipe''' is the franchise passing leader for the Cleveland Browns, who drafted him in the thirteenth round of the 1972 Draft (#330 overall) out of San Diego State. After two seasons on the bench, Sipe worked his way to become the team's starting QB, where he put up a [[SoOkayItsAverage perfectly serviceable]] individual performance for years on a team that was generally not spectacular. He then became one of the more notable examples of a [[OneHitWonder One Season Wonder]] in NFL history in 1980, where he led the Browns squad to the playoffs for the first time since the year they had drafted him. This team earned the nickname "the Kardiac Kids" for their tendency to just ''barely'' [[DownToTheLastPlay win in the fourth quarter or overtime]]. Sipe was not only selected to his only Pro Bowl for this season but won ''league MVP''. However, the miracles ceased once the Browns hit the postseason, as they lost their first game on the infamous Red Right 88 play[[note]]A 3rd down play where, with the Browns down 2 points, Sipe was supposed to throw the ball away if he didn't have anyone wide open and let the team try a field goal. He instead tried to thread a needle into the end zone and got picked.[[/note]], starting the legacy of Browns playoff failures in the '80s. Sipe would be benched before they reached the playoffs again two years later, spent a few years in the USFL, and was out of pro football by 1985.
156* '''Alex Smith''' was one of the best (worst?) examples of NoRespectGuy in NFL history, almost crossing into ButtMonkey territory for many years. After being drafted #1 overall out of Utah in 2005[[note]]That same year, Andrew Bogut went #1 overall in the NBA Draft, giving Utah the distinction of being the only school to produce the #1 pick in each league in the same year.[[/note]] by the 49ers over Aaron Rodgers, Smith languished for the next six years in San Francisco, putting up generally unimpressive performances under a series of different coaches. He finally turned it around in 2011, shaking off his reputation as a bust and leading the team to the NFC Championship game. The next year, he was on-track to set new personal career heights when he missed a game due to a concussion and was replaced by Colin Kaepernick, who then took his place as a starter and led the team to a Super Bowl appearance. Smith was traded to the Kansas City Chiefs, where he consistently brought the team to the playoffs for the next half-decade before once again being replaced at starter [[AlwaysSomeoneBetter by another young wunderkind QB]], Patrick Mahomes, the year after he led the league in passer rating.[[note]]Remarkably, Smith wasn't bitter about this turn of events, choosing instead to take Mahomes under his wing; Mahomes has credited Smith's mentorship as a significant factor in his success.[[/note]] Smith ''then'' became the starter in Washington, where he led the team to an early 6-3 record in 2018 before sustaining a severe leg fracture in a game against the Texans, the same GameBreakingInjury that had ended the career of former Washington QB Joe Theismann three decades prior (see below). Further complications with sepsis led to Smith nearly losing his leg and ''his life''.[[note]]Theismann's injury only required one operation on his injured leg; Smith needed ''17'' to save it, giving it a permanently gnarled appearance.[[/note]] [[{{Determinator}} After enduring a year and a half of intensive rehab]], Smith made Washington's 2020 roster as a third-string backup. After the other two [=QBs=] were benched and injured, respectively, Smith took the field and led the long-struggling team back to the playoffs with a winning record as a starter, earning Comeback Player of the Year. However, [[DentedIron continued pain in his leg]] made him sit out the postseason, and he retired during the offseason.
157* '''Geno Smith''' was drafted in the second round in 2013 by the New York Jets. Despite his generally excellent college production at West Virginia, Smith fell out of the first round. His on-field performance was disappointing in his first two seasons, and he lost the starting role in 2015 after his teammate IK Enemkpali broke his jaw and Ryan Fitzpatrick performed well in Smith's absence. Smith's NFL career seemed over, as he bounced around to stints as a backup with the Giants and Chargers before landing a long-term backup gig behind Russell Wilson with the Seattle Seahawks. Following Wilson's departure in 2022, Smith became the starter and posted one of the most unexpected Cinderella seasons in recent memory; while Wilson struggled mightily with his new team in Denver, Smith broke many of his franchise QB records while leading the NFL in completion percentage, winning Comeback Player of the Year.
158* '''Ken Stabler''' played for [[LongRunner 15 seasons]], most famously for the Oakland Raiders through the 1970s. Nicknamed "Snake" in high school for his evasiveness[[note]]which injuries largely robbed him of by the time he reached the pros[[/note]], Stabler was drafted by the Raiders in the second round in 1968 out of Alabama.[[note]]He was sent to play for the short-lived Continental Football League's Spokane Shokers during the Raiders' brief experiment in using them as a farm team but returned to Oakland after two games.[[/note]] After [[TheBenchwarmer three seasons on the bench]], Stabler took the starting position and became one of the league's most popular and successful players during the decade. He was named MVP and Offensive Player of the Year in 1974, led the league in completion percentage and passing [=TDs=] twice, was selected to four Pro Bowls, and won Super Bowl XI, his sole visit to the Big Game in the midst of [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut five straight AFC Championship appearances]]. He was responsible for multiple legendary plays, from the "Ghost to the Post" pass to Dave Casper in the '77 divisional playoffs to the infamous "Holy Roller"[[note]]also called the "Immaculate Deception" by Raider-haters[[/note]] in '78, where he fumbled the ball forward on the final play of the game and two other Raiders "accidentally" knocked it into the end zone for a game-winning touchdown against the Chargers. He was also well-known for his various hard-partying exploits off the field and for his long mop of SeventiesHair. After a decade in Oakland, an increasingly haggard-looking Stabler played out his last five years with the Houston Oilers and New Orleans Saints before calling it a career. A negative career TD-INT ratio kept him out of the Hall of Fame until 2016, a year after his death from colon cancer.[[note]]He's only the second left-handed QB inducted into the Hall after Steve Young.[[/note]]
159* '''Matthew Stafford''' is the current starter for the Los Angeles Rams after playing his first twelve seasons with the Detroit Lions. The Lions drafted him out of Georgia with the #1 overall pick in 2009 following their 0-16 season in 2008. Stafford's tenure with the Lions was, by almost every metric, the best the long-struggling franchise had with a starting QB in the Super Bowl era; he holds NFL records for most pass attempts (727) and [[MiracleRally comeback wins]] (eight) in a season, is the fastest player in NFL history to pass for 50,000 yards (in 183 games). After struggling with injuries in his first two years, he broke out in 2011, becoming just the fourth QB to pass for over 5,000 yards in a season, and was named Comeback Player of the Year. Despite his stellar stats, the Lions' continued struggles during his tenure (particularly failing to post a postseason win) and his [[GlassCannon numerous injuries]] (most of which he has [[{{Determinator}} insisted on]] [[DentedIron playing through]]) ensured him a role as a NoRespectGuy who only earned a single Pro Bowl nod.[[note]]Expect anyone who brings up his numbers to point out how much of Stafford's career with the struggling team was played in "garbage time" in games where the opponent had all but won and the opposing defense was playing at half-speed.[[/note]] Stafford finally shook this label after he was traded to the Rams in 2021 in exchange for Jared Goff (above) and three future draft picks, two of them first-rounders; in just his first season in L.A., he won more games than he ever had in Detroit and shattered his postseason victory drought by taking the Rams to a Super Bowl victory. Though his next season was cut short by a neck injury, contributing to a historic Super Bowl hangover for the Rams, he has since bounced back and continued to put up great performances in LA. Fun fact: Stafford was the passer behind the two most productive receiving seasons in NFL history (Calvin Johnson in 2012 and Cooper Kupp in 2021) ''and'' the most productive rookie receiving season (Puka Nacua in 2023).[[note]]Another fun fact: He went to the same Texas high school as legendary Lions QB Bobby Layne (where Stafford was also classmates with [[UsefulNotes/CurrentPeopleToKnowInMLB L.A. Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw]]) and even lived on the same street that Layne did.[[/note]]
160* '''Bart Starr''' was the starting QB of the '60s champion Green Bay Packers, for which he played [[LongRunner 15 seasons]] after they drafted him out of Alabama in the ''seventeenth'' round in 1956 (#200 overall) in one of the greatest draft steals in NFL history.[[note]]Why did he go so late? Alabama didn't win a ''single game'' in his senior season, during which he was their #2 QB.[[/note]] Under Vince Lombardi, Starr emerged from obscurity to become a first-ballot Hall of Famer and league MVP in 1966. An extremely accurate and efficient passer for his era, he led the league in completion percentage and passer rating four times and was known for clutch performances in big games, including the "Ice Bowl", an NFL Championship Game won by the Packers over the Cowboys in subzero temperatures. He led the Packers to victories in the first two Super Bowls, winning MVP in both, as well as three other pre-Super Bowl era NFL championships; those 5 championships stood as the record for most NFL titles by a quarterback for more than 50 years until Creator/TomBrady surpassed it. Starr still holds the best playoff win record (9-1) of any NFL QB. Three years after retiring as a player, after a brief foray into broadcasting, Starr became head coach of the Packers and put up [[AudienceAlienatingEra a losing record with only one playoff berth over nine seasons]]. His #15 was retired by the Packers. Starr passed away in 2019.
161* '''Roger Staubach''' was the QB for the Dallas Cowboys during the heyday of "America's Team" during the '70s. One of the most notable draft steals in league history, he was a tenth round pick in 1964 despite a Heisman-winning college career that made him a national star. The reason for that fall? Staubach had played for the U.S. Naval Academy and chose to enter active service in the Vietnam War; he didn't resign his commission to enter the NFL until 1969, earning him one of [[IHaveManyNames his many nicknames]], "ComicBook/CaptainAmerica". Staubach soon won the starting job from then-starter [[TheRival Craig Morton]] (see above) after one of the more notable and lengthy QB controversies in league history (coach Tom Landry even had them trade off every other play in one memorable '71 game). Staubach set himself apart from Morton--and the rest of the league--with his ability to scramble (hence the nickname "Roger the Dodger") and to rally his team from behind in the final seconds, most famously by becoming the TropeNamer for the "Hail Mary" in a game against the Vikings in the '75 playoffs (hence the title "Captain Comeback"). He won two Super Bowls (VI and XII, winning MVP in both and defeating Morton's Broncos in the latter) and appeared in two others (X and XIII; he was also on the bench in V). While he was statistically the most dominant QB of his era, with six Pro Bowl selections and four seasons as the passer rating leader, his Navy commitment kept his career totals well below those of prior greats like Unitas, Tittle, and Tarkenton. He may have had a chance to close the gap with several more years of play, but he retired in 1979, still on the top of his game, following the advice of his doctor after sustaining numerous concussions. Staubach was still inducted into the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility and had a tremendous second career running a multibillion dollar corporate real estate company; he was awarded a Presidential Medal of Freedom by UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump in 2018. Staubach was featured in countless [[CelebrityEndorsement advertisements]] during the peak of his career, was the Cowboys QB in the film adaptation of ''Literature/BlackSunday'', and is the namesake of the elementary school in ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill''. He is one of only two [=QBs=] to win a Heisman and start/win a Super Bowl (along with Jim Plunkett).
162* '''Kordell Stewart''', nicknamed "[[RedBaron Slash]]", was an athletic QB most famous for his time with the Pittsburgh Steelers in the late '90s and early '00s after they drafted him in the 2nd round (#60 overall) in 1995 out of Colorado. Stewart spent his first two seasons in the NFL as a RB/WR hybrid (hence the "Slash" nickname), helping the team to a Super Bowl XXX appearance as a rookie. After several seasons with middling veteran starters at QB[[note]]Neil O'Donnell, Jim Miller, Mike Tomczak[[/note]], Pittsburgh named Stewart as their starter in 1997. He rewarded the team with a breakout performance, throwing 21 touchdowns, rushing for 11 more including a then-NFL record for a QB 80-yard run[[note]]Since surpassed by Terrelle Pryor[[/note]], and leading the team to an 11-5 record and AFC Championship game appearance. His performance earned him a spot on the cover of ''[[VideoGame/NFLBlitz NFL Blitz 98]]''. Stewart struggled in the seasons that followed, ultimately getting benched in 2000 while appearing to be a OneHitWonder... before earning the starting job once again in 2001 and putting up the best season of his career while the Steelers rolled to a 13-3 season, ultimately losing in the AFC Championship game to the Patriots led by a nascent Tom Brady. The now TwoHitWonder went back to struggling the next season, was benched again, and released. He spent a season in Chicago and two in Baltimore before calling it a career, retiring with what was then the second most rushing touchdowns by a QB in NFL history[[note]]behind Steve Young, now fifth all-time (sixth if counting the AFL's Jack Kemp)[[/note]] and going down as a prime example of a frustratingly boom-or-bust player.
163* '''Tua Tagovailoa'''[[note]]full name "Tuanigamanuolepola Tagovailoa"[[/note]] is the current starter for the Miami Dolphins. After an extremely successful college career at Alabama, the lefty QB was drafted #5 overall in 2020. While his career is short and has faced a number of fits and starts due to injuries, Tua has contributed significantly to turning the Dolphins around from well over a decade of mediocrity, leading the NFL in passer rating in '22 and passing yards in '23.
164* '''George Taliaferro''' was a QB/HB/WR/DB/''punter''[[note]][[OverlyLongGag and a punt/kick returner]][[/note]] for a number of teams in the early '50s. Taliaferro has the distinction of being [[JackieRobinsonStory the first African-American player to be drafted by an NFL team]], being picked by the Chicago Bears in the thirteenth round in 1949 after he led Indiana University to its only undefeated season. The first NFL draft was held in 1936, during a period where the league's owners all made an informal agreement to segregate their teams. Several black players had taken the field from the earliest days of the league, before and after this agreement was made, but Taliaferro's drafting was another critical step in fully integrating the league. Taliaferro never actually played for the Bears, as he had already signed a contract with the Los Angeles Dons of the AAFC, a league that had already been hiring black players for a few years. He played in multiple positions, in part because he was fairly talented at all of them and in part because of the racist assumption that black men could not and should not play quarterback. The Dons dissolved after Taliaferro's first season; Taliaferro spent the next six years playing for four different teams in the NFL and was selected to three Pro Bowls before he retired. He went on to a long career as an academic and social activist until his passing in 2018.
165* '''Ryan Tannehill''' was originally drafted #8 overall in 2012 by the Miami Dolphins out of Texas A&M but was largely overshadowed by the other high-profile quarterbacks in his class (Andrew Luck, Robert Griffin III, and Russell Wilson). Tannehill struggled for most of his tenure with Miami and was sent to the Titans in a trade for some late round draft picks in 2019 after seven middling seasons including some injury issues. Tannehill proceeded to have a CareerResurrection after he stepped in for the struggling Marcus Mariota and set career highs in several stats while leading the league in passer rating, taking the Titans to the AFC Championship game, and winning Comeback Player of the Year. He continued his strong performance in 2020 but then returned to struggles both on the field and with injuries in the succeeding years, being benched himself in 2023.
166* '''Fran Tarkenton''' was a Hall of Famer who played for the Minnesota Vikings during their heyday in the 1970s. The Vikings' third ever draft pick, Tarkenton was selected in the third round in 1961 out of Georgia[[note]]The Boston Patriots drafted him in the fifth round that year.[[/note]] and claimed the starting position after the team's first game. His smaller size, mobility within the pocket, and style of running around to avoid being sacked earned him the nickname "Scramblin' Fran"--he is often credited as pioneering the "dual threat" rushing QB archetype. Disagreements with his coach (former QB Norm Van Brocklin, see below) about QB mobility resulted in Tarkenton being traded to the New York Giants in 1967. By the time he was traded ''back'' to Minnesota in 1972, he had [[JackOfAllTrades evolved greatly as a passer]], even winning MVP and Offensive Player of the Year in 1975 after leading the league in passing [=TDs=]. He continued to perform well in this second era, leading the NFL in completion percentage in '77 and passing yards in '78 while taking the Vikings to three Super Bowls; unfortunately, [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut they lost all three]], with Tarkenton performing rather poorly in all of them. By that last Super Bowl appearance, he held [[TheAce both the career passing and rushing records for a quarterback]], which stood for about a decade before they were broken by Dan Marino and Randall Cunningham (respectively). He retired in 1978 after [[LongRunner 18 seasons]]; his #10 was retired by the Vikings, and he still holds most of the franchise's QB records. To this day, he is considered one of the best [=QBs=] to never win a Super Bowl.
167* '''Tim Tebow''' played in the NFL for only five seasons (two on practice squads and only two as a QB) and his accomplishments don't even come close to the rest of those on this list. However, despite (or because) of that short career, he became one of the most [[BaseBreakingCharacter polarizing]] and [[MemeticMutation meme-generating]] players in NFL history. After a Heisman- and championship-winning college career at Florida that left some asking if he was the greatest player ''ever'' at that level, he was drafted #25 overall in 2010 by the Denver Broncos. Pundits widely panned the move, questioning his mechanics and recklessness while seeing him as a backup (or another position entirely) rather than an immediate franchise player, a role he was forced into in his second year. That 2011 season turned into one of the more memorable in NFL history. Despite having the lowest passing completion rate of any starting QB that year, Tebow's Broncos somehow not only made it to the playoffs but managed to beat the defending AFC Champion Steelers in the first round. Tebow's fans saw him as a natural leader and the [[CrazyIsCool walking embodiment]] of CrazyEnoughToWork, pointing to multiple 4th-quarter comebacks he led during his starting tenure (which gained the nickname "Tebow Time"). His critics saw him as a terrible player who ''put'' his team in the position to need those comebacks and succeeded by the efforts of his teammates but [[FakeUltimateHero got all the credit]] due to WolverinePublicity. All that both could agree upon is that his throwing motion was horribly inconsistent, generating some fodder (both good and bad) for the highlight reels but making him impossible to gameplan around, to the point where his own coaches publicly bashed him ''during a winning streak.''[[note]]His slow and awkward throwing motion was pointed out as a problem for NFL play even in college, as a slow release gives pro defenses more time to see where the QB is throwing and react. His attempts to "fix" his throw to a more conventional motion seemingly only made it worse, as it was not only still slower than most pro [=QBs=] but was also ''less'' accurate than before. His passes randomly fluctuated between incredibly precise strikes and wounded ducks that were 5 yards or more off target.[[/note]] Despite his winning record and playoff victory, he was replaced in 2012 by the ''much'' more dependable Creator/PeytonManning and traded to the Jets. After he spent the year mostly warming the bench, he was picked up by the Patriots but couldn't make the roster. After not drawing interest from other NFL teams, he signed a multi-year deal as an analyst for the SEC Network. He gave the NFL another try with the Eagles in 2015 but returned to broadcasting after being cut in the preseason. He then tried his hand at minor league baseball, despite not having played the game since high school, then left that sport behind in 2021 to [[HesBack return to the NFL]], signing with the Jaguars[[note]]who had hired his college coach Urban Meyer as head coach and play in an area where Tebow is still revered for his accomplishments at Florida[[/note]] to play ''tight end'' '''''eight years''''' after his last NFL action. However, Tebow only managed to play in one preseason game before being cut, seemingly ending his NFL career for good.
168** Much of Tebow's polarizing effect comes not from his on-the-field football skills (or lack thereof) but from his off-the-field religious views that color almost anything he does in public. An outspoken evangelical Christian, Tebow regularly wrote Bible verses in his eyeblack and dropped to one knee to pray on the field, inspiring the "Tebowing" meme that quickly replaced "planking" as the go-to Website/{{Twitter}}/Website/{{Facebook}} pic[[note]]ironically just a few years before many of those same fans developed a rather different opinion of kneeling on a football field[[/note]]. More controversially, he appeared in an anti-abortion [[SuperBowlSpecial Super Bowl commercial]] before being drafted, marking the first time a political issue ad saw airtime during the Big Game. Because of this and other stances, there is a small but dedicated group of fans who ardently believe Tebow only lost his starting QB job in the NFL because of his religious beliefs, while there is another group that is equally insistent that Tebow's faith is the only reason he has those fans to begin with. Then there are those in the middle[[note]]including Eagles head coach Chip Kelly, who made comments to this effect[[/note]] that think Tebow just got unlucky and was thrust into the spotlight too early despite clearly needing much more training and practice time to work on his weaknesses and take full advantage of his natural leadership abilities. Despite having been a relatively obscure [[OneHitWonder one-season wonder]] on the field, Tebow remains in the public spotlight and is ''still'' the regular talk of sports pundits.
169* '''Vinny Testaverde''' was a LongRunner who played for 21 seasons across seven teams.[[note]]Buccaneers (1987-92), Browns (1993-95), Ravens (1996-97), Jets (1998-2003, 2005), Cowboys (2004), Patriots (2006), Panthers (2007)[[/note]] After winning the Heisman during his senior year at Miami, Testaverde was drafted #1 overall by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 1987. He set many at-the-time records for the young franchise, [[MedalOfDishonor not all of them good]]--he threw ''35'' interceptions in his first full season as a starter, the second-most ever for a single season.[[note]]The media had a field day when they later discovered that he was ''color-blind'', though he claimed that had nothing to do with the INT issue. A Tampa radio station soon sponsored a blue-painted billboard with the words VINNY THINKS THIS IS ORANGE.[[/note]] He was released at the end of his contract, signed with Bill Belichick's Cleveland Browns, and made the move with the team to Baltimore, becoming the Ravens' first starting QB. Though he improved from his rocky start and even showed a few flashes of his promised brilliance in his subsequent decades of play (including two Pro Bowl seasons with the Ravens and New York Jets, taking the latter to an AFC Championship appearance), Testaverde still only barely recorded a positive TD-INT ratio by the end of his career in 2007 and holds the record for the most losses by a starting QB at 123. His incredibly long career by default places him high on many statistical lists otherwise populated by Hall of Famers.
170* '''Joe Theismann'''[[note]]originally pronounced "Thees-man", but he started rhyming his name with "Heisman" in college to help his odds of winning the award--that version stuck[[/note]] was the starter for Washington in the late '70s/early '80s. A fourth-round pick by the Dolphins out of Notre Dame in 1971, Theismann's high salary demands and stubborn negotiations led to him being cut. With Miami still holding his NFL rights, he signed with the CFL's Toronto Argonauts and performed well until the Dolphins traded him to Washington in 1974.[[note]]In the era they held his rights, Miami won two Super Bowls and put up a perfect season, achieving the latter after their lead QB Bob Griese was injured and the backup they had signed in lieu of Theismann, Earl Morrall, filled in; watching [[WhatCouldHaveBeen what he missed out on]] helped draw him back to the States.[[/note]] After mostly playing as a ''returner'' for a few seasons, he eventually claimed the starting QB position in 1978. Despite a delayed start, he became one of the NFL's biggest stars, leading the team to their first Super Bowl win in '82 against the team that drafted him and winning MVP in '83 before taking the team to another Super Bowl appearance.[[note]]In an interesting but ultimately failed experiment, he served as a color commentator in the next year's Super Bowl while still an active player.[[/note]] Theismann soon claimed the franchise passing yards record (and still holds it decades later), but any hope he had of salvaging his wasted early years for a shot at the Hall of Fame was cut short when he suffered a [[CareerEndingInjury devastating compound fracture in his lower leg]] during a ''Monday Night Football'' matchup against the Giants in 1985, a gruesome event that was seared into the minds of all football fans when the primetime broadcast played a graphic replay of the break multiple times. With medicine and rehab science being nowhere near modern levels, Theismann never played football again and entered a career as a broadcaster and analyst. Fun fact: Theismann was [[LastOfHisKind the last non-kicker]] to wear a single-bar facemask.
171* '''Tommy Thompson''' was the QB of the Philadelphia Eagles during their championship years in the '40s. He was initially signed by the Steelers as an undrafted free agent out of Tulsa in 1940, playing sparingly as QB and DB before leaving the team and signing with Philly. Thompson struggled with interceptions his first two years with the Eagles but later emerged as one of the better passers in the NFL, earning a Pro Bowl in 1942, after which he left the team to enlist in the U.S. Army during World War II. He returned in 1945 buried on the team's depth chart but won back the starting role in 1947. Surrounded by a vastly improved roster, Thompson led the Eagles to three straight division crowns from 1947-49 and back-to-back titles in '48 and '49 (though his performance as a passer in both championship games was very poor, as both were played in terrible weather that favored the run). During this stretch, Thompson led the NFL in touchdown percentage three times, passer rating twice, and passing touchdowns once, cementing himself as one of the league's top [=QBs=]. By the way, he accomplished all of this while being ''[[HandicappedBadass legally blind in one eye]]''. He retired in 1950 and died from brain cancer in 1989.
172* [[EmbarrassingFirstName Yelberton]] Abraham '''"Y.A." Tittle''' was a Hall of Famer who played from [[LongRunner 1948-64]]. One of the most prominent players of his era, Tittle was a first round pick out of LSU but chose to join the AAFC's Baltimore Colts instead. After that team folded, Tittle joined the San Francisco 49ers as part of their "Million Dollar Backfield". Despite the team's strength at the run with three future Hall of Fame running backs, Tittle stood out as an excellent passer--he even [[TropeNamer coined the phrase]] "alley-oop" to describe his SignatureMove, a high-arcing desperation pass. By his 13th season, Tittle was written off and traded to the New York Giants, where he proceeded to put up some of his greatest individual performances as a passer in the twilight of his career. In New York, he put up the fourth-ever seven TD-pass game, broke the then-record for [=TDs=] in a single season, won MVP, and took the Giants to three consecutive championship games, [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut though they lost all three]]. During this era, the aging QB was known as [[RedBaron "The Bald Eagle"]] for his rapidly receding headline. Eventually, time and injuries caught up with Tittle, as captured in one of the [[https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/85/YA_Tittle%2C_Pittsburgh_Post-Gazette.jpg most famous photos]] in sports history, and he retired in 1964 [[TheAce holding most of the league's career passing records]], some [[MedalOfDishonor negative ones]] like career interceptions, and the record for most games played (all since passed). While Tittle's #14 was retired when he first joined the Giants in honor of the now-obscure halfback Ward Cuff, the Giants let him wear it and have since re-retired it. Tittle passed away in 2017.
173* '''Johnny Unitas''', aka [[RedBaron "the Golden Arm"]], was the QB for the Baltimore Colts from [[LongRunner 1956-72]] and [[TheAce the dominant player of his era]]. With his black high-top cleats and flat-top haircut, he still symbolizes the prototype "old school" QB of that era. A major draft steal, Unitas was a ninth-round pick by his hometown Pittsburgh Steelers in 1955 out of Louisville and didn't even make the team; the Colts picked him up the next year, and he immediately broke out as the league's leading passer. He led the league in passing yards and touchdowns four times, won MVP thrice ('59, '64, '67), and was selected to ten Pro Bowls. Unitas led the Colts to victory in two NFL championships in the pre-Super Bowl era, including the "Greatest Game Ever Played", a 1958 match against the Giants that featured the first "sudden death" overtime. He set many passing records, becoming the first QB to pass for over 40,000 yards and the first to throw more than 30 [=TDs=] in a season. Notably, he held the record for most consecutive games with a touchdown pass for ''five decades'' until Drew Brees broke it in 2012. His golden arm--specifically his elbow--[[DentedIron began to decline in his later years]]; he still played in Super Bowl III (Earl Morrall started and played most of the game for the Colts) against Joe Namath's Jets and won Super Bowl V against the Cowboys (but only after being benched for Morrall in one of the sloppiest Super Bowls ever). After retiring in 1973 following a few games with the Chargers that [[FanonDiscontinuity no one remembers]], Unitas settled down in the Baltimore area, had his #19 retired by the Colts, and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility. When the Colts surreptitiously relocated to Indianapolis in 1984, Unitas was so outraged that he cut almost all ties with the franchise and "adopted" the Ravens when they came to Baltimore in 1996, vocally supporting the team until his death in 2002.[[note]]Though the franchise didn't officially retire his number, Baltimore football fans were so incensed when QB Scott Mitchell wore it with Unitas' permission that the Ravens have yet to reissue it.[[/note]]
174* '''Norm Van Brocklin''' was a QB (and punter) for the Los Angeles Rams and Philadelphia Eagles during the 1950s, winning a championship apiece with both teams. A fourth round pick out of Oregon in 1949, "The Dutchman" traded snaps and eventually succeeded fellow Hall of Fame QB Bob Waterfield (see below) and broke out as one of the league's premier passers. Van Brocklin famously holds the all-time record for most passing yards in a single game, putting up 554 yards against the New York Yanks in 1951. Not only was it the first 500+ yard passing game in league history, this game took place in an era where ''400+'' yard passing games were still almost unheard of, as the run dominated offensive schemes, defenses had few restrictions on what they could do to receivers, and even the ''ball'' was not particularly suited to long throws. Even as the passing game has become much more aggressive and 500+ yard games somewhat more common, his achievement remains an almost complete aberration, with no other QB coming within 25 yards of passing it for seven decades.[[note]]The reason for the record's dominance? Van Brocklin and his receivers faced a team that was young, historically terrible, and folded by season's end, and they paraded all over the field [[CurbStompBattle almost unopposed on the way to a 54-14 victory]]. While such blowouts aren't uncommon today, most high passing-yardage games are nail-biters where the pass is used to quickly catch up as the clock winds down. Additionally, few [=QBs=] are put in the position to throw so freely against outmatched opponents, as even fewer coaches would risk injuring their valuable quarterbacks to pursue the record rather than simply run down the clock or put in a backup. However, Van Brocklin ''was'' the backup to Waterfield, so he was allowed to just have at it.[[/note]] After being traded to the Eagles in 1958, he experienced a late-career resurgence, winning his second championship in 1960 and being named league MVP. He then retired and went straight into coaching, becoming the first head coach of the Vikings and the second of the Falcons, though he became better known for [[ClusterFBomb creatively stringing together curse words]] from the sidelines at Minnesota and Atlanta than actually winning games. He also had a [[SitcomArchNemesis complete disdain]] for sportswriters[[note]]After a surgery for a brain tumor, he once joked that the doctors had given him a sportswriter's brain "to make sure I got one that hadn't been used."[[/note]] and European soccer-style kickers[[note]]Furiously stating that they should "change the god-damned immigration laws in this country" to keep them out of the game[[/note]]. He died of a heart attack in 1983.
175* '''Bill Wade''' was the #1 overall pick in the 1952 Draft, though the Vanderbilt product didn't join the L.A. Rams until 1954 due to his military service in Korea. This suited the Rams just fine; they were one of the league's stronger teams (having "earned" the #1 pick from a lottery) and had Norm Van Brocklin (above) under center. After Van Brocklin was traded to the Eagles in 1958, Wade led the league in passing yards in his first year as a starter. Unfortunately, his playing time (and the team's fortunes) declined in subsequent seasons. In 1961, he managed to secure a trade to the Chicago Bears, where he became the team's sole starter and immediately rebounded, leading them to a Championship in 1963. Wade retired after 1966 and served as the Bears QB coach for one season; he was offered the chance to succeed George Halas as head coach the next year but turned it down. He passed away in 2016.
176* '''Kurt Warner''' led the St. Louis Rams to a Super Bowl win in 1999 and earning both the regular season and Super Bowl MVP. That's an impressive year for any QB, but what made Warner's season truly exceptional is a) that it was his first year as an NFL starter and b) he was an ''undrafted player'' several years out of college[[note]]The only undrafted league MVP in league history, as well as the only undrafted starting QB to win a Super Bowl[[/note]]. After an undistinguished career at the FCS Northern Iowa and a few unsuccessful NFL tryouts in 1994, Warner married his college sweetheart, bagged groceries at a supermarket for a while, and bounced around the Arena League (where he led his team, the Iowa Barnstormers, to two Arena Bowls, which they lost) and NFL Europe before finally settling with the Rams in 1998.[[note]]Warner was arguably the biggest name to come out of arena football. He had his name slapped on a ''Kurt Warner's Arena Football Unleashed'' [=PlayStation=] game after his Super Bowl win and is the only player enshrined in both the Pro and Arena Football Halls of Fame. He was also the only player in NFL Europe to reach Canton.[[/note]] An injury to starter Trent Green the following preseason resulted in Warner stepping off the bench and into the spotlight, [[UnderdogsAlwaysWin putting up a record-setting performance while taking the Rams to their first playoff berth in a decade and first championship in nearly half a century]]. He had several more strong years in St. Louis, leading the league in completion percentage three straight years with the "Greatest Show on Turf", winning MVP again in 2001, and coming just short of winning a second Super Bowl. Warner then got to have a ''second'' Cinderella story after poor performance caused by a broken hand led the Rams to release him to the Giants in 2004, where he was usurped by Eli Manning and released after a single season. Warner then fought for the starting position with the Arizona Cardinals for several years, but he eventually reclaimed it and led [[ButtMonkey the long-suffering team]] to their first Super Bowl appearance. He wasn't able to bring the Cards their first win in the Big Game, however, and he retired after 2009, making it to the Hall of Fame in 2017. He currently works as an analyst on the NFL Network and commentator for Westwood One radio. He's also known for being an outspoken evangelical Christian, and a {{Biopic}} on his life titled ''Film/AmericanUnderdog'', starring Creator/ZacharyLevi and directed by Christian filmmaking duo the Erwin Brothers, was released in 2021.
177* '''Bob Waterfield''' was a [[JackOfAllTrades QB, DB, kicker, and punter]] for the Cleveland/Los Angeles Rams. Originally a fifth round pick by the Rams in 1944, he didn't join the team until the following season due to his WWII military service and then a decision to play one more year at UCLA. When he ''did'' join them in 1945, he put up one of the best rookie QB performances the league has ever seen, leading the league in touchdown passes and taking a franchise that had never had a winning season in the NFL and had suspended operations just two seasons prior all the way to a Championship title; he was named league MVP for his efforts. Waterfield's success helped to propel the Rams' move to his former college town the following season, where he continued to shine. In the early '50s, he began to split snaps with Norm Van Brocklin (see above). Despite leading the Rams to a second Championship, having a capable replacement convinced him to retire from football in 1952. He entered into what he thought would be a more lucrative business as a film producer with his then-wife, Hollywood starlet Creator/JaneRussell, but that venture folded rather quickly, and Waterfield came back into the Rams' fold as a coach, including a [[AudienceAlienatingEra short and unsuccessful stint]] as the head coach. Despite his shortened career, Waterfield [[TheAce set several NFL records]] (most of them in kicking and all since surpassed), had his #7 retired by the Rams, and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1965. He passed away in 1983.
178* '''Danny White''' was a [[JackOfAllTrades QB and punter]] drafted by the Dallas Cowboys in the third round in 1974 out of Arizona State. He chose to opt out of playing for the Cowboys, as they were more interested in him as a punter, and took a better offer to be the starting QB (and punter) for the Memphis Southmen in the WFL. After the league folded in 1976, he re-signed with the Cowboys, where he backed up Roger Staubach and got a ring from Super Bowl XII. After Staubach retired unexpectedly in 1980, White capably filled his shoes, being named to the 1982 Pro Bowl and leading the Cowboys to three consecutive NFC Championship games from 1980-82; however, [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut he lost all three]] and [[ToughActToFollow struggled to step out of his predecessor's shadow]]. His throwing wrist was injured in 1986 on a hit by Carl Banks and was never the same afterwards; he retired after 1988. He then became the head coach of the Arizona Rattlers in the Arena Football League from 1992-2004, winning two championships in 1994 and 1997, and then served as the HC of the Utah Blaze from 2006-08. He was named to the Arena Football League Hall of Fame in 2002.
179* '''Doug Williams''' began his career with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who drafted him #17 overall in 1978 out of HBCU Grambling State, the first black QB ever selected in the first round. Though he helped bring the terrible Bucs to their first (and for several decades only) playoff wins, Williams was the only Black starting QB in the NFL at the time and was paid the lowest salary of anyone at his position. The death of his wife from an aneurysm and the Bucs' refusal to increase his pay led him to leave for the USFL. After that league folded, Williams signed with Washington as a backup. In 1987, he won the starting position in time for the playoffs and led Washington in Super Bowl XXII, making him the first Black QB to ever start a Super Bowl. He played spectacularly, upsetting the favored Broncos and setting a Super Bowl record by scoring four touchdowns in a single quarter, resulting in a 41-10 Washington victory and Williams being named Super Bowl MVP. The rest of his career was fairly middling, ending in 1989 with a career passer rating of 69.4, but his place in the history books as the first Black QB to start and win a Super Bowl was secure. After retiring, Williams returned to his alma mater for two runs as head coach and co-founded the Black College Football Hall of Fame. He currently works in the front office for the Commanders.
180* '''Russell Wilson''' is the all-time leading passer for the Seattle Seahawks, who drafted him in the third round in 2012 out of Wisconsin[[labelnote:*]]He played three seasons at NC State but graduated with a year of eligibility remaining and chose to transfer to Wisconsin for one last college season.[[/labelnote]] with the expectation that he would be a quality backup. Unlike his fellow 2012 draftees, college wunderkinds Andrew Luck and Robert Griffin who were instantly anointed as starters, Wilson had to fight his way into the starting lineup in the preseason, winning the job over former Green Bay star backup Matt Flynn. A dual-threat QB who is quite undersized for the position (5'11"), his ability to both run and throw effectively took Seattle to the playoffs, where he became the only rookie QB from that stacked class to win a playoff game, and he tied a since-surpassed NFL record set by Creator/PeytonManning for most TD passes by a rookie with 26. In his second season, Wilson led the Seahawks to a Super Bowl victory over the seemingly unstoppable Broncos and their high-powered offense. He became the second Black QB to win a Super Bowl (after Doug Williams 27 years prior) and the first to do so as a full-season starter (Williams was primarily a backup until the playoffs). After leading the Seahawks to another Super Bowl appearance the following year (where an untimely interception cost them the win), Wilson continued to earn league-wide praise for his passing precision and scrambling ability, earning nine Pro Bowl selections, and leading the league in passer rating in 2015 and passing [=TDs=] in 2017. He gained further off-field attention for his high-profile relationship with and eventual marriage to R&B singer Music/{{Ciara}} and for his [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} eccentric personality]].[[note]]He is also one of an increasing number of athletes who own shares in UsefulNotes/MajorLeagueSoccer teams; he and Ciara hold a small stake in Seattle Sounders FC.[[/note]] In 2022, he was traded to the Denver Broncos for a massive haul including three players and two first round draft picks, with the hope that he would fill Denver's post-Peyton Manning hole under center and return the franchise to its accustomed winning ways. Unfortunately, Wilson experienced ''severe'' regression in Denver (to the point he was [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nl4f0yNcWrI dunked on in-game]] by ''[[Characters/SpongeBobSquarePantsPatrickStar Patrick Star]]''), was benched before the end of his second season with the team, and was ultimately cut with a massive ''$85 million'' of his contract still owed, creating the largest amount of "dead money" against the salary cap ever by a single player and by a massive number (more than double the former record holder). He next signed a very friendly deal with the Steelers, with Denver footing most of the bill.
181* '''Steve Young''' was a Hall of Famer best known for his time with the San Francisco 49ers, where he became known as the epitome of a dual-threat QB, being an elite passer while also being able to gash defenses with his running ability.[[note]]He was also arguably the best ever left-handed QB in NFL history, a relative rarity due to how they require coaches to modify their plays and receivers to acclimate to the ball spinning another direction. Besides most football teams preferring to just pick an equally good righty, most young athletes with a good left arm prefer to capitalize on the SouthpawAdvantage in baseball.[[/note]] After a standout college career at BYU,[[labelnote:*]]One of his great-great-great-grandfathers is ''the'' [[UsefulNotes/{{Mormonism}} Brigham Young]] himself![[/labelnote]] Young entered the pros in 1984 and signed the USFL's Los Angeles Express, which awarded him a then-record $40 million contract that he agreed to have paid out in annuity for the next four decades.[[note]]Even though the league folded after two seasons, Young still receives a million dollars annually from this deal.[[/note]] He then signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who had acquired his rights by making him the #1 overall pick of the USFL and CFL Supplemental Draft two years earlier. After two utterly miserable years with the moribund Bucs where he went 3-19 as a starter with nearly twice as many interceptions as touchdowns, Young was traded to the 49ers to backup Joe Montana. After playing well in limited action as a backup for four years, Young claimed the starting job in 1991 when Montana was lost for almost two seasons with an elbow injury. He won his first MVP (and Offensive Player of the Year) in 1992, playing so well that Montana's return after a two-year recovery created a controversy that divided the locker room, coaching staff, and ownership; Montana requested a trade in 1993 to resolve the situation. Young had the best season of his career that year, setting multiple franchise passing records. The following year, he won MVP again and led the 49ers to a Super Bowl victory in which he threw six [=TDs=], still the record for the Big Game. He continued to play at a high level as one of the best [=QBs=] of the '90s, leading the league in multiple passing statistics[[note]]Specifically in passing [=TDs=] four times, completion percentage five times, and passer rating a record-tying ''six'' times.[[/note]] and being selected to seven straight Pro Bowls before his career was ultimately derailed by injuries. Though he [[ToughActToFollow struggled to fully step out of Montana's shadow]], Young retired in 1999 with [[TheAce the top career passer rating in NFL history]] (since surpassed by several others) and the most rushing [=TDs=] (since surpassed by Cam Newton), and his #8 was retired by the 49ers. He long served as an analyst at ESPN.
182* '''Jim Zorn''' was the first starting QB for the Seattle Seahawks. An undrafted signing by the Cowboys in 1975 out of Cal Poly Pomona, the scrambling lefty signed with the expansion franchise the following year and held the starting position for the next eight seasons before ceding it to fellow UDFA Dave Krieg (see above). He retired from play after 1987 and immediately entered a long coaching career, including a stint as HC in Washington from 2008-09. He is a member of the Seahawks' Ring of Honor.
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