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No one's ever done it like Old Man Favre
Cold, Hard Football Facts for November 22, 2007
By Jonathan Comey
Cold, Hard Football Facts 37-year-old
To great quarterbacks, the age of 38 is not a pretty number.
For many of the game's all-time best QBs, 38 was the year that
the game of football turned on them – hard – leaving them looking like rank
rookies at the bitter end of their career..
Dan Marino. Never had a bad year ... until the year he turned
38, and stunk up the joint in Miami. He was retired before he hit 39, leaving an offer to pilot the Minnesota Vikings on the table.
Joe Montana said goodbye after 38. Steve
Young. Sammy Baugh. Fran Tarkenton, Y.A. Tittle. All of them hung it up after
disastrous and/or injury-plagued seasons the year they turned 38.
But not Brett Favre. As turkey lovers everywhere saw yesterday, Favre still has it at 38 -- well past the time when most QBs watch their glorious NFL stagecoaches turn into rotting pumpkins.
Of all the great QBs to play the game,
only John Elway even came close to the type of mastery Favre is showing at this
ripe "old" age.
We assembled a general list of the 25 greatest retired QBs
of all time, Hall of Famers and Hall of Almost Famers, and Favre's incredible
season shines like a beacon of hope to aging passers everywhere.
Of the 25, 11 didn't even make it to 38. And most of them
wished they hadn't. Only Elway turned in a full season in keeping with his
career numbers, leading the Broncos to the Super Bowl in 1998 (and he missed
three games with injury).
The list, including Favre's projected 2007 numbers:
- Favre: 423-618, 4,879 yards, 32 TD, 12 INT, 101.19 rating
- Elway: 210-356, 2,806 yards, 22 TD, 10 INT, 92.98 rating
- Jurgensen: 39-59, 633 yards, 2 TD, 4 INT, 84.92 rating
- Montana:
299-493, 3,283 yards, 16 TD, 9 INT, 83.58 rating
- Simms: 83-137, 912 yards, 5 TD, 3 INT, 83.35 rating
- Moon: 371-601, 4,264 yards, 18 TD, 19 INT, 79.9 rating
- Baugh: 20-33, 152 yards, 2 TD, 1 INT, 79.36 rating
- L. Dawson: 66-101, 725 yards, 2 TD, 5 INT, 72.42 rating
- Tarkenton: 345-572, 3,468 yards, 24 TD, 32 INT, 68.28 rating
- Marino: 204-369, 2,448 yards, 12 TD, 17 INT, 67.44 rating
- Stabler: 176-311, 1,988 yards, 9 TD, 18 INT, 61.41 rating
- S. Young: 45-84, 446 yards, 3 TD, 4 INT, 60.91 rating
- Blanda: 186-442, 3,287 yards, 17 TD, 27 INT, 55.51 rating
- Unitas: 92-176, 942 yards, 3 TD, 9 INT, 52.32 rating
- Tittle: 147-281, 1,798 yards 10 TD 22 INT, 51.58 rating
- Fouts DNP
- Kelly DNP
- Hadl DNP
- Aikman DNP
- K. Anderson DNP
- Bradshaw DNP
- Graham DNP
- Namath DNP
- Starr DNP
- Layne DNP
-
Van Brocklin DNP
Impressive stuff for Favre, and worthy of all the over-gushing that might have come his way over the years.
Not only is Favre having the greatest season ever by a
38-year-old QB, he's having the greatest season ever by a 38-year-old at any
position – and it's not even close.
Earlier this year, we put together an " All-Old Team" of guys
that had good seasons in their mid-30s and beyond, and nothing compares to what
Favre is doing.
Of that team, the two best performances at 38 and over were by Jerry Rice (1,211 yards for the Super Bowl Raiders at 40) and
Warren Moon (two excellent seasons, for Minnesota
at 39 and Seattle
at 41).
But Rice was the No. 2 option behind Tim Brown for the
Raiders, and Moon's teams were both 8-8 afterthoughts.
Favre, on the other hand, is hands down the NFC's MVP, and in
9 out of 10 years would be the NFL's MVP as well (thanks again, Patriots).
Truly a remarkable turnaround for the man we used to call "Old
Yeller."
Given the history of the NFL, can you blame us for thinking
the guy was done?
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