Joe Flacco is getting too much hate, he may not have been the best QB of his era or anything but he lead his team to playoffs for 6 years and lead them to an incredible Super Bowl run. he also posted better stats than many HOF within the playoffs . Someone that should be here instead of Flacco is Nick foles. He could not maintain a starting QB job.
Foles wasn't really supposed to be a starter. However, I do somewhat agree, because he is the only qb to throw 4 td's against Brady(in a loss, too 31-28 i believe)
@@laserxman779sports He threw a pick each to Troy Polamalu in 2008 and Ryan Clark in 2010 in the playoffs. Or do you just mean the 2012 super bowl run?
If there would be a 6th spot for "Best that never won", I would give it to another Chargers QB. That would be Philip Rivers. He had a pretty good passing career as well. Also, kudos to these guys for getting Warren Moon on the "Best to never win" list. This guy put up some amazing stats for only being in the NFL later in his career (he started in the CFL). Super strong arm and a nice tight spiral. Yeah, he played for a team that used the run and shoot offense for a lot of his NFL career (this has a tendency to inflate stats), but, who cares, credit is due for a great player who never made it to the SB.
Did they really say that? I remember Randy Moss giving Randall Cunningham a hard time for trying to make too many plays with his legs, saying, "you're not Fran Tarkington". I'm fairly sure Moss was born after Tarkenton retired. That's like referring to Dan Marino as "the ultimate run-pass threat".
Just goes to show how hard it is to win a Super Bowl. A lot of fans seem to forget that labeling their seasons a failure if they don’t even get to the big game
I remember the media comparing Joe Flacco and Matt Ryan, two quarterbacks that were drafted in the first round of 2008. The perspective of Joe Flacco is different then than it is now. Let’s be honest, the majority of negative thoughts towards Joe Flacco occurred after the failure in Denver. Joe Flacco‘s regular season record was 54-26 leading up to Super Bowl 47, and that SB victory was his 9th postseason win. Tom Brady and Patrick Mahomes took six years to win nine playoff games. Joe Flacco did it in five. After signing a huge blockbuster deal, Joe Flacco would have one more postseason appearance in 2015 when the Ravens beat the Steelers, but lost to the Patriots in the divisional round. It was all downhill from there, and for some reason, what Joe Flacco has done following his Super Bowl win has encapsulated his entire career.
Uh please check where you get your stats in Tom Bradys first six years he had 10 post season wins and three SB rings. While Patrick Mahomes has had 10 wins and 2 SB rings. So 9 post season wins in 6 years is not hard to do when your good and they both have more rings than Flacco. Put Flacco on a team with a not top5 defense and his records would be pedestrian at best.
Ryan was looked at as better because he was on the terrible Falcons and not a semi loaded Ravens team.. Flacco had better team success but other than the period of his amazing postseason run, Ryan has always been seen as the better QB.. His team and front office and ownership just sucked where Flacco had Ozzie.. Joe should have won more honestly seeing Baltimore barely missed a step after his fall due to their consistency of the last decade at the time
@@dawdeuce250 In five years, Joe Flacco had as many AFC championship appearances as Tom Brady in six (3). If you wanted to judge Joe Flacco based on his defense, then you should judge Tom Brady by the same standard. The Patriots defense in Tom Brady’s first six years is far superior than the Ravens defense during Joe Flacco‘s tenure. The Patriots went 14-2 back to back years (2003, 2004) thanks to that defense. Many can argue Tom Brady would have never won his first three Super Bowls if it wasn’t for the Patriots defense.
Flacco's throw to Jacoby is one of the best throws of all time based on when the throw happened (down 7 in final minutes on other side of field). And he was torching a strong 49ers D until lights went out. Winning on the road against the likes of Brady, Manning and Ben makes him underrated
Jim Plunkett was 72-72 as a starter. He completed 52.5 percent of his passes with 164 touchdowns and 198 interceptions, but won two Super Bowls without being the game one starter in either season.
He had a magical run with the Raiders who were taking players off the scrap heap and turning them into winners,alot of people think Plunkett is a Hall of Famer,his life is a great story,just not a Hall of Famer!
Jim Plunkett was still better than Doug Williams who only had a 49.5 completion percentage during his career. You didn’t know that until I educated you. You’re welcome.
Plunkett WAS the game 1 starter during the 83' season. He rode the bench for 4 games midway in the 83' season mostly because of injuries but then came back as the starter for the last 5 or 6 games of the regular season and into the playoffs and Super Bowl.
Surprised you didn't name The Ultimate Weapon Randall Cunningham, especially since Fran Tarkenton was the prototype for him. If Randall Cunningham put more effort into his game he'd easily be a top 5 QB all-time, maybe even the GOAT at any NFL position.
ok i wouldn't say better then Marino but in a top 5 qbs who never won a superbowl he clearly should be there my list in no order Dan Marino Philip Rivers Fran Tarkenton Jim Kelly Matt Ryan @@fletchbg
Joe Burrow recently said he wants to be in Cincinnati his whole career. Glad to know he's committed to being on some future version of this video in the "Best to never..." category. 😁
I know it was a different era and stats from back then don't really compare,but Joe Namath was an average quarterback at his best , his career completion percentage was barely above 50% ,he threw more interceptions than touchdowns and in the Super Bowl he won, he didn't really have a good game(he threw for 208 yards with no touchdowns, but still won MVP)
Underrated? Are you kidding me? Only ONCE in his career did check down Flacco make the top 10 in DYAR (Football Outsiders) He was and always will be stunningly AVERAGE and one of the worst QBs to win a Super Bowl
Thanks for preparing and posting this! I wonder who would appear on a list of the 5 worst QBs to play in a Superbowl (regardless of whether they won or lost the big game). Rex Grossman of the Chicago Bears would certainly be one of them.
Flacco should been in multiple superbowls if not for blown plays and missed field goals. Matt Ryan is constantly heralded as a much better version but lost while leading 28-3 and threw to Roddy white and Julio Jones most of his career. The Flacco slander has GOTTA stop lol
Flacco was good no doubt, but his career fell so massively after his SB 47 win. Its hard to remember to good of a past great when your recent memory of them is terrible.
Phillip Rivers is just Eli Manning without the SBs. He just played a long time so his stats look really good. In another decade the modern QBs will have washed him out of history for the most part
Honorable mention that never won: Ken Anderson He was the first NFL QB to successfully run a pass-heavy offense under Bill Walsh (who would go on to lead the 49ers to 4 SB titles in the 80's), led the league in passer rating 4x, led the league in yards 2x, led the league in Completions 3x, was a 4x Pro Bowler, all-pro selection twice, and league MVP in 1981. He got the Bengals to Super Bowl 16 (his only appearance) but fell just short to Joe Montana. Had he won that game (or not been hurt so often) I have no doubt he would be considered a legend.
That is an excellent catch. Kenny is the best quarterback not in the Hall of Fame. I have a formula that measures how much better a quarterback was than the average quarterback during his career. I then take those numbers and compare all the great quarterbacks. Ken comes out as a middle of the pack Hall of Famer scoring better than 14 quarterbacks that have been inducted.
@@bryanjones4444 If the media and the players of a particular generation don't hype up a player that much, it will be harder for them to get into the HOF. Anderson was in a small market, didn't have a terribly long career, and didn't win a Superbowl.
@@ryanjacobson2508 His career was plenty long enough, 13 years as the main starter, especially for that era it was longer than most of the greats. Your other points are well taken but my point is that why should 5 points in a Super Bowl or the fact that a player did not spend his time in one of the bigger media markets rob him of what should have been induction into the Hall of Fame. He probably should have been elected in the first year of his eligibility since at that time he was the 7th greatest quarterback to retire in the previous 35 years.
Surprised not to see Doug Williams on this list. I was under the impression that he had an underwhelming career outside of that one Super Bowl win over Denver.
Actually DW was drafted by Tampa Bay and single highhandedly took an perennially awful TB to the play offs numerious times but the Buc's were, understandably, one and done kings. The Fans and Management labeled him a choker. When his contract came up he wanted to be paid starter money but TB would only offer backup money so he went to the USFL and TB returned to cellar dwellers. He returned to the NFL as a backup. When the starter went down he stepped in and mustered up enough of his old magic for his one year wonder season.
Jim Kelly was the opposite of Flacco. He was the man in the regular season (surrounded by an incredible team), but never really played that well/consistently in the playoffs. He was usually playing hurt in January, but then again, so is everyone
We took a time travel to 2013 when everyone was bashing on Flacco for getting a contract that made him the highest paid player for a brief few months. Joe Performed great in the regular season before he won that Super Bowl in the Big Easy and was awesome in the playoffs. His seasons after that in Baltimore were not as successful but he still was putting in career highs. Worse QBs would be the pairs from Washington ( Doug Williams, Mark Rypien) and the Raiders ( Jim Plunkett, Ken Stabler) that won.
Lmaaao i don’t even know where to start with that comment lol. Flacco after that season never went back to the playoffs Stabler was an MVP led the league in categories Doug Williams had 4 TD passes in 1 Super Bowl tied for the most until Steve Young broke it Plunkett won 2 Super Bowls Mark led Washington to a 14-2 record threw 28-11 and win a superbowl
The 2000 Ravens switched quarterbacks and the offenses still didn’t improve. Brian Billick would have been better off sticking with Tony Banks, who I think had an amazing arm.
It is crazy how life goes on and everything evolves… so it’s still an amazing accomplishment to win a Super Bowl, that basically catapults you above the rest… but this day and age winning just one Super Bowl is like, “uh, ok but you only won one SB”… In the current NFL, and from here on out winning ONE(1) Super Bowl doesn’t cut it! You have to win two or three or more ….🎯
The video is titled "Starting" quarterbacks. Henne never started for the Chiefs. Except for a game or two when Mahomes was injured. Kadaurius Toney will probably be released by the Chiefs. He has two Super Bowl rings too. He did earn one of those rings with a punt return for almost a TD and catching a TD pass. He definitely earned the first Super Bowl ring. Not the second one.
Steve McNair. Two legendary Titans teams and a Ravens team he led to a (then) team record 13-3 season. But after the super bowl run he had a tough time winning in the post season.
Joe Flacco was a great game manager and doesn't deserve to be in the worst to win a SB conversation. Besides, the guy was a good playoff QB and won some road playoff games as well. He didn't lit the league on fire or anything else, but he knew how to win
I know this is going to sound weird coming from an Eagles fan, but the only change I would make to your list is that I would drop Joe Flacco, and in his place, I would add Nick Foles. Yes, Foles could pull a few tricks out of his hat, but there's a reason that he ended up as the backup quarterback on most team for which he played.
As eagles fan, I totally agree. Foles is totally inconsistent. Had amazing 1st season then struggled and was traded became a backup. Got back to the eagles won the superbowl was backup. Then he left and hasn’t been able to hold down the job even on some bad teams
Ok so I agree and disagree. Foles is less inconsistent then you think its more injuries that have been his problem through the years. He does hold eagles records for yards in a game and is tied nfl records for tds in a game and 26 straight completions. He also outdueled brady in that superbowl when the defense failed miserably. Flacco made a great run but that defense was the driving force of that win. Idk it's close.
Trent Dilfer really went in an interview and said Brady's achievements aren't impressive because of "how the game has changed" as if Brady didn't play at the same time as Dilfer lol
I'm pretty sure he's talking about the changes during Brady's career since Dilfer left the game. Trent was drafted in 1994. Brady was drafted in 2000. Dilfer played in the 90s, Brady didn't.
So is Dilfer diminishing Brady’s 7 rings because the league has become MORE quarterback-dependent? I’m thinking maybe Trent is a tad bit jealous cuz his name only comes up as a Super Bowl qb on lists like this one.
@@latarribell4152 it's not just QB dependant because of the new offensive gameplans, also the rules changes about the QB protection, now the defense can't hit or tackle like before because of the penalties
@@ezequielmartinez238 I’m familiar with the rule changes. Yet the Jets were unable to make the playoffs because they had all the pieces except they whiffed(again) on a qb. As stacked as the ‘9ers were, they couldn’t survive having to go to their 4th string qb, and once he got hurt, the NFC chip was unwatchable. Mahommes lost Hill to Miami, yet has his team in the Super Bowl and another MVP award under his belt. Bears are in a position to rack up draft picks from a qb-hungry team if they stay with Fields and build around him. For Odin’s sake, their was still a sizable market for Tom Brady at 45 coming off,what for him, was a down year before he decided to retire(again).
@@latarribell4152 The league isn't becoming more "quarterback dependent." There's never been more RB, WR, and TE coming out of college. Players who become day 3 picks or go undrafted would be day two or even day one picks twenty years ago. The league is more quarterback-friendly. There's a difference. Just like how the ground game was more important prior to the WR contact changes in 1980 that make the league more WR-friendly. Teams can still find success through the old avenues. There's just new avenues that exist that, frankly, are easier to pursue because it requires less-talented teams.
Fun fact: Trent Dilfer was undefeated as a starter for the Ravens that season. He salvaged the season for the Ravens, as Tony Banks led the Offense to a 4-4 record at mid season. He damned near pissed away the season despite having one of the greatest defenses ever to step on a field
That year Jeff Hostetler played great in the playoffs & the Superbowl . His lifetime stats weren't great but that year when Simms went down he carried us. Just shows that statistically you're right but in reality you don't know what you are talking about.
Tarkenton "...one of the first true great pocket passers"? Seriously? I think you meant he was the first scrambling quarterback. The coach of the Vikes, Norm Van Brocklin and a great pocket passer, feuded with Tarkenton. That feud led to Bud Grant being hired, Tarkenton being traded for a ton of high draft picks, building the foundation of the four Super Bowl teams. Tarkenton rejoined the Vikings and was on three of their Super Bowl teams.
"...one of the first true great pocket passers" Right whoever said that doesn't know football. Fran was a great pocket passer because he was a grat QB. But he could run too, and scramble as well, and survive which most running QBs don't do.
@@fletchbg “Philip Rivers never carried a team single handed like Dan Marino did without a running game or defense, so he should be ahead of Rivers.” There fixed it for you.
These are all great choices although I don't know if I'd say Joe flacco belongs on the list of worst to have won the Super bowl though. I do think Philip Rivers and Tony Romo would be great quarterbacks to put on the list of best that didn't win. It's been years since I've watched a TPS video and it looks like it's done differently. Haven't heard this narrator before but he sounds good, and the editing style looks different in a good way
Troy Aikman. Dude was stacked with talent around him. Any halfway decent QB would have thrived in that system. Put him on a team that wasn't filled with all star talent and he would have sucked.
In Jim McMahon's defense, he played QB with a reckless linebacker mentality and didn't protect his body( and he more than often liked to party a bit too much for his own good)...If only he would have played it a bit more safe and taken better care of himself he could have been a little more than an above average QB...But, that just wasn't meant to be. I can say that as a diehard Bears fan, if the game was on the line and Da Bears needed a big play it always felt like Mad Mac, with his attitude, cockiness,and reckless abandon (he headbutted his linemen while they were wearing a helmet and his hard ass head was uncovered, hated to slide and would rather take on a LB or hard-hitting DB like Ronnie Lott and take the hits) had the ability to deliver that big play and pull one out when it was needed the most. It didn't always workout that way, but with him there was always the belief that 'we aren't done yet and until the clock has 00:00- we are still in it'.. The audacity to go at a LB or heavy hitting SS rather than slide or run out of bounds endeared him to Bear fans but definitely didn't do his career or body any favors at all.. It was quite a ride and gave the teenage me some great memories of living in Chicago, being a diehard Bear fans, and watching Mac play like only this moment,this play, and this game matters, and let's worry about tomorrow in the morning because it's the here and now that he was playing for.. That often breeds excitement in the moment,but definitely doesn't do much for career longevity and the "what might have been, what could have been" if only he would have had a little more respect for his body will always be a great "what if" for old school Bears fans... Oh well, those were great days to be a Bears fan, and to watch that crazy bastard play...lol. Now, sadly, Jim is paying off those checks that his body and style of play wrote for him so long ago, but it definitely wasn't boring when he was lined up under Center because with him-nothing was off the table and anything might, and probably would, happen... But, that just my simple half-assed observation and opinion from over 30 long years ago.....
undisputed the first qb to ever break 50,000 and 60,000 passing yards in a career he held the Number 1 spot for all time passing yards for 12 years before he was finally passed by Bret Farve
@@kurtpunchesthings2411, really? So that's what he's MOST known for, eh? How about having Staubach so desperate that Roger 'The Dodger' had to invent 'The Hail Mary' pass? Or maybe knocking America's Team out of the 1973 NFC championship game? For me, I'll never forget those home field games at the old Metropolitan Stadium. Especially when warm weather teams came to single digit temperature!
In 1999 there was trade rumors that Dan Marino was gonna go to the Minnesota Vikings and that would’ve been something special with Randy Moss and Chris Carter and Robert Smith i think Dan Marino would of been the missing piece to get to the Super Bowl and maybe win it
I agree. McMahon won 70% of his starts and was one of the toughest guys to ever play QB. I feel he was a little too exceptional to go on the list, despite not having great statistics.
Feel good that you brought up Marino. It's like what am I crazy? He was the best. Hate to think it all comes down to a ring. This is a right on segment. Can't wait to see if some others, even my own guys, mediocre, but got the ring. Yup, you got him, Hostetler. I am amazed. You even got Fouts. I seen him in a shootout with Montana. They both were high yardage and Dan was over 400 yds. San Fran won. Joe threw for 360 yds, abouts.
As a Lions fan, I had a lot of love for Matt Stafford and was happy as hell when he won, keeping him off any of these future list. I can only think of any of the Marino's, Kelly's Etc being given the opportunity to go to better teams and win their Superbowls. Like, Marino on the 1992 Lions with Barry Sanders for instance, or the Late 80s Bears? That would be a fun hypothetical game to play.
I luv the fact that you're showing luv to Warren moon one of the greatest ever with some of the worst luck it really makes up for the fact that you didn't make Eli Manning the worst to win two
tbf the problem wasn't Mcmahon it's that the 85 bears were so Disgustingly stacked and Overpowered he looked mid in comparison be honest Superbowl 20 ? the only thing people remember from that game was the Fridge scoring that TD in Garbage time when they were already winning by over 30 points LOL i mention this moment because it's relevant to the Seahawks superbowl guys this this is why you should have handed it off to Marshawn Lynch 9 years later and i still can't believe the Seahawks didn't run the ball
Worst to Win: Jim Plunkett -Career TD-INT Ratio: 164-198, -Career Passer Rating: 67.5 -Won 2 Super Bowls with the Raiders Best That Never Won: Randall Cunningham -Career TD-INT Ratio: 207-134 -Career Passer Rating: 81.5 -Career Rushing TDs: 35 -Never played in, or even won, a Super Bowl (Closest he came to the Super Bowl was in 1998 with the Minnesota Vikings, who lost to the Atlanta Falcons in the NFC Championship Game)
Bob Griese needs to be on this list for multiple he was as the quarterback. They had a three headed monsters in the backfield and no name defense was lights out great.
Calling Flacco one of the worst QBs to ever win a Super Bowl is laughably stupid. Nick Foles, Doug Williams, Mark Rypien, Jim Plunkett, Joe Theismann, and Joe "I wanna kiss you now" Namath all need to be on the list well before Flacco.
Marino is the best that never won hands down. Possibly the greatest qb talent we've ever seen he was putting up all time great stats by modern day standards in 1984
Best meaning stats, but how about results - showing composure and leadership getting your team past the conference championship more than once or twice. That's Kelly #1. Lamonica tied with Marino for 5th.
I'd have to disagree with your worst picks list on Flacco and McMahon. Statistically, Joe Flacco has posted better numbers than Troy Aikman over the same period of time. It could be argued that what Flacco lacked in his career was a hall of fame running back and receiver to make a consistent deep playoff run/super bowl run. McMahon's problem was that he was always hurt. If you look at the Bears from 84-86 they're a contender who could have won another bowl game but in both 84 and 86 McMahon was out with season ending injuries (a lacerated kidney in 84 and a separated shoulder in 86). Better choices for worst starting QBs would be Doug Williams who was streaky and for his career completed less than half of his passes and was Jay Shroeder's backup for most of the year, a similar scenario to Hostetler. The other is Plunkett who benefit was able to get two super bowl wins with a hall of fame running back (Marcus Allen) Pro Bowl Tight End (Todd Christensen) and a defense that was loaded with pro bowl and hall of fame players.
At the time Flacco won his ring, he was most certainly considered a very good QB. At that point he was 54-26 in the regular season and 9-4 post-season. It’s everything after that which has tarnished his resume.
As far as How did Jim Kelley not win a SB? How did his teams never win? Had some studs on that team. Just went up to a better team in the big dance. And thanks for mentioning Moon. As an Oiler fan since early 70s till they moved he was the funnest QB to watch. Don't think I missed a single game of his career here
Dilfer was actually a pretty good qb, he was held back early in his career in Tampa due to the ultra conservative Dungy style of football. He goes to Baltimore and with an offensive minded head coach and wins a super bowl. No coincidence there.
Moreno had the Michael Jordan effect he played against Joe Montana and countless other good quarterbacks and great teams that were better offenses than the dolphins defense Yes Dan carved everybody up but if the defense can't stop nothing and don't make a difference remember Dan was sitting records in his 30-year while somebody's guys that takes all these years to do it so it's just one of those things that happened he had the effect of he had to play against teams that destroyed the defense
Doug Williams should be on this list He was not really a good quarterback Starting with Tampa Bay and was a backup until half way through the Superbowl season They won because forgotten one game wonder Timmy Smith ran for a record 204 yards 🤨
Surprised Doug Williams didn't make the list. Though he did win the Super Bowl. And considering he had a fairly great career. Though he played his first 5 years as a Buccaneer he made the playoff 3 times the only other time he played in the NFL was with the Redskins. Where he come in during the playoffs and won the Super bowl. He did play 1 more season with the Redskins going 4-6. So 6 whole seasons led his team to 3 playoff births and won the Super bowl. But his stats run weak after that partially with Tampa which wasn't known at the time to be an offensive team but great defensive team. He did have to run for his life there. And relievers used to çlaim to not like receiving passes from him because it felt like being shot by a shotgun.he has a career r9% completion rate 100 tds 93 ints.
As a lifelong bucs fan I immediately called out Trent dilfer and Brad Johnson. Both so bad but solid for the amazing d we had and for Trent he got lucky to be on an amazing Baltimore team
I would take McMahon off the list and replace him with Mark Rypien. Other than that, your list is on point. Drew Bledsoe deserves an honorable mention, but I can't pull someone off your list to replace him.
I remember Dilfer bouncing a screen pass to a back in the SB. Unrushed. Un hurried. Back was wide open in the flat. Just horrible as a qb. Pretty good at hand-offs though. 👍👍
The main reason Eli is a HoF is cause he’s the little brother of Peyton Manning. I still love Eli as a commentator, person, and NFL personality though. Same goes for Peyton.
That is just non-sense...think about it...2 Superbowl's it takes a team. Eli had a D but you have to have a QB and receiver's and special teams. Talent was equally distributed in that organization. ONE maybe a fluke... TWO Nope!!
Tony Romo should be on the list of best QBs to never win. He holds numerous team and league records, multiple Pro Bowl nods, and always had the Cowboys contending for the division title or the playoffs. But he also had historically bad defenses that he had to constantly overcome. He led Dallas to over 30-35 points so many times yet Dallas lost those games because the defense gave up more and the blame fell to Romo. In fact, in 2012, Dallas had the worst defense in NFL history, yet Romo still had them contending for the division title at the end of the year. Plus in 2014, the league screwed Dallas against GB when they admitted that Dez Bryant had caught that ball and the refs got it wrong. Dallas, no doubt, would've beaten Seattle in the NFC championship game since they beat them earlier that year in Seattle and gone on to SB 49. I could list so many examples, but Romo never gets his due credit.
Joe Flacco is getting too much hate, he may not have been the best QB of his era or anything but he lead his team to playoffs for 6 years and lead them to an incredible Super Bowl run. he also posted better stats than many HOF within the playoffs . Someone that should be here instead of Flacco is Nick foles. He could not maintain a starting QB job.
Perfectly said
Yeah
Foles wasn't really supposed to be a starter. However, I do somewhat agree, because he is the only qb to throw 4 td's against Brady(in a loss, too 31-28 i believe)
Plus during the postseason Flacco threw 0 picks that’s hard to do
@@laserxman779sports He threw a pick each to Troy Polamalu in 2008 and Ryan Clark in 2010 in the playoffs. Or do you just mean the 2012 super bowl run?
If there would be a 6th spot for "Best that never won", I would give it to another Chargers QB. That would be Philip Rivers. He had a pretty good passing career as well.
Also, kudos to these guys for getting Warren Moon on the "Best to never win" list. This guy put up some amazing stats for only being in the NFL later in his career (he started in the CFL). Super strong arm and a nice tight spiral. Yeah, he played for a team that used the run and shoot offense for a lot of his NFL career (this has a tendency to inflate stats), but, who cares, credit is due for a great player who never made it to the SB.
I think Warren Moon threw a football better than anyone who ever lived.
@WD not 100% sure on that but Def would be or should be in Top 5 in that category
Finally he gets some props. I grew in Houston in the 70s-90s watching the Oilers. He threw such a nice ball.
Bs Flacco had a historic playoff run no way in hell he’s “worst to win”
Nobody remembers him. Action Jackson is the best QB RAVENS ever had.
its a top 5 worst. Who do you think is more deserving?
@@ArchetypeApollo I think Flacco should be 6. Foles should be ahead of him.
@@duanehellier fair. Its definitely a debate there.
Take your pick. Doug willams. Rypien. Morrall. Not flacco though i like him but a bit underachiever. He had rice and a very good defense
George Blanda. He was an AFL Champion 3 times but never won a Super Bowl. Blanda is in my top 3 favorites of all time. Great video 👍
Calls Tark a pocket passer, shows him being mobile 💀
Right 🤣
Fran was literally the first great scrambler
@@justinmathewson3692
Exactly!!
He was Fran the Scram
He wasno way pocket passer he was mostly a rollout quarterback to avoid the front line. Because he was short
Did they really say that? I remember Randy Moss giving Randall Cunningham a hard time for trying to make too many plays with his legs, saying, "you're not Fran Tarkington". I'm fairly sure Moss was born after Tarkenton retired.
That's like referring to Dan Marino as "the ultimate run-pass threat".
Marino, Moon, Fouts, Tarkenton and Kell y
Yeah, that's 5 legends that all should have won at least one ring.
@Jax Pillow Bledsoe has a ring
@@sportsstudios3263 he said as starter but ok.
Just goes to show how hard it is to win a Super Bowl. A lot of fans seem to forget that labeling their seasons a failure if they don’t even get to the big game
Phillip Rivers
Phillip Rivers, Matt Ryan too
Let’s not forget, that 02 TB team also had the good fortune to have Oakland’s former HC, whom knew their whole playbook going into that Super Bowl.
Yes but they still had to dominate their way to GET to that super bowl
I remember the media comparing Joe Flacco and Matt Ryan, two quarterbacks that were drafted in the first round of 2008. The perspective of Joe Flacco is different then than it is now. Let’s be honest, the majority of negative thoughts towards Joe Flacco occurred after the failure in Denver. Joe Flacco‘s regular season record was 54-26 leading up to Super Bowl 47, and that SB victory was his 9th postseason win. Tom Brady and Patrick Mahomes took six years to win nine playoff games. Joe Flacco did it in five. After signing a huge blockbuster deal, Joe Flacco would have one more postseason appearance in 2015 when the Ravens beat the Steelers, but lost to the Patriots in the divisional round. It was all downhill from there, and for some reason, what Joe Flacco has done following his Super Bowl win has encapsulated his entire career.
The media does that kind of like Vince young and kurt Warner wich who sucked for being a shopper then he won one
Worst to win Flacko best never to win Dan Marino.
Uh please check where you get your stats in Tom Bradys first six years he had 10 post season wins and three SB rings. While Patrick Mahomes has had 10 wins and 2 SB rings. So 9 post season wins in 6 years is not hard to do when your good and they both have more rings than Flacco. Put Flacco on a team with a not top5 defense and his records would be pedestrian at best.
Ryan was looked at as better because he was on the terrible Falcons and not a semi loaded Ravens team.. Flacco had better team success but other than the period of his amazing postseason run, Ryan has always been seen as the better QB.. His team and front office and ownership just sucked where Flacco had Ozzie.. Joe should have won more honestly seeing Baltimore barely missed a step after his fall due to their consistency of the last decade at the time
@@dawdeuce250 In five years, Joe Flacco had as many AFC championship appearances as Tom Brady in six (3). If you wanted to judge Joe Flacco based on his defense, then you should judge Tom Brady by the same standard. The Patriots defense in Tom Brady’s first six years is far superior than the Ravens defense during Joe Flacco‘s tenure. The Patriots went 14-2 back to back years (2003, 2004) thanks to that defense. Many can argue Tom Brady would have never won his first three Super Bowls if it wasn’t for the Patriots defense.
Flacco's throw to Jacoby is one of the best throws of all time based on when the throw happened (down 7 in final minutes on other side of field). And he was torching a strong 49ers D until lights went out. Winning on the road against the likes of Brady, Manning and Ben makes him underrated
Then never went back to the playoffs
Do you realise that the Broncos safety blew the coverage, that play is a pick 99 out of a 100
@@dylandelrio6071yeah he did in 2014 and now with the browns lol
Jim Plunkett was 72-72 as a starter. He completed 52.5 percent of his passes with 164 touchdowns and 198 interceptions, but won two Super Bowls without being the game one starter in either season.
He had a magical run with the Raiders who were taking players off the scrap heap and turning them into winners,alot of people think Plunkett is a Hall of Famer,his life is a great story,just not a Hall of Famer!
Jim Plunkett was still better than Doug Williams who only had a 49.5 completion percentage during his career. You didn’t know that until I educated you. You’re welcome.
Plunkett WAS the game 1 starter during the 83' season. He rode the bench for 4 games midway in the 83' season mostly because of injuries but then came back as the starter for the last 5 or 6 games of the regular season and into the playoffs and Super Bowl.
@@JDCUSA Jim Plunkett spoke better English than German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. You didn’t know that until I educated you. You're welcome.
Surprised you didn't name The Ultimate Weapon Randall Cunningham, especially since Fran Tarkenton was the prototype for him. If Randall Cunningham put more effort into his game he'd easily be a top 5 QB all-time, maybe even the GOAT at any NFL position.
He was hurt a lot. He was knocked-out during the first game of the season, 2-years in a row … which was good for Jim McMahon
I really like Randall Cunningham but he choked in the playoffs,I hate to say it,he is a real nice,humble guy,just couldn't win the big one.
I thumbs up and then saw the goat comment. Thats a bridge too far
@@markalton4610 He had the physical talent and he had the luck. Just never put it together as he'll admit himself.
Another one that never failed to disappoint. Physical talent justa best of the rest
Honorable mention Phillip Rivers and Steve McNair two greats who never won the super bowl
Youre the third person I've seen here to use "honorable mention" with Rivers. The video just plain gets it wrong; Rivers was better than Marino
@@fletchbg hardly
ok i wouldn't say better then Marino but in a top 5 qbs who never won a superbowl he clearly should be there my list in no order
Dan Marino
Philip Rivers
Fran Tarkenton
Jim Kelly
Matt Ryan
@@fletchbg
@@fletchbg🤣
Joe Burrow recently said he wants to be in Cincinnati his whole career.
Glad to know he's committed to being on some future version of this video in the "Best to never..." category.
😁
Here's a name, Ken Anderson...amazing qb lost his only SB appearance to Joe Montana and the 49ers.
And I’m pretty sure he would of been in the HOF had he won that superbowl
He should also be in the HOF.
@@MrGmart64 I agree.
Where Vick at ??
Anderson and Moon are a tie for this list
For Trent Dilfer, he chose not to resign but the ravens did give him a offer to keep him in 2001
no, they signed elvis grbac
There is a lot more to this coverup……
I know it was a different era and stats from back then don't really compare,but Joe Namath was an average quarterback at his best , his career completion percentage was barely above 50% ,he threw more interceptions than touchdowns and in the Super Bowl he won, he didn't really have a good game(he threw for 208 yards with no touchdowns, but still won MVP)
Joe Namath has more career interceptions than TD's. He also somehow was named MVP of his Super Bowl without throwing a TD pass in the game.
Different era of football back then
I can't believe I'm agreeing with a Buckeyes fan you're definitely right no you can compare era
It was more his presence in the Super Bowl, plus his headline of predicting a Jets win and then actually getting his wish
Different era. Namath was probably the greatest QB of his time.
He lost more games than he won..also
Joe Flacco is one of the most underrated quarterbacks of all time he constantly gets hate but as a Ravens fan Baltimore misses Joe and his cannon arm
Agreed. He definitely doesn't belong on any "worst to win" list. Especially when the narrator talks about his elite playoff numbers
Underrated? Are you kidding me? Only ONCE in his career did check down Flacco make the top 10 in DYAR (Football Outsiders) He was and always will be stunningly AVERAGE and one of the worst QBs to win a Super Bowl
@@lunaticfringe896 he always rose to the occasion in bigger games never forget 11 touchdowns 0 interceptions jn the 2012 playoffs
@@lunaticfringe896 if you think the only metric to measure a quarterbacks talent is yards then you don’t know ball 😂
@@Zunez52 Oh really? Fine. Tell me what games (not counting meaningless preseason games) that weren’t important. God damn child care on here….
Thanks for preparing and posting this! I wonder who would appear on a list of the 5 worst QBs to play in a Superbowl (regardless of whether they won or lost the big game). Rex Grossman of the Chicago Bears would certainly be one of them.
That would be fun
Video idea Every teams golden child
Flacco should been in multiple superbowls if not for blown plays and missed field goals. Matt Ryan is constantly heralded as a much better version but lost while leading 28-3 and threw to Roddy white and Julio Jones most of his career. The Flacco slander has GOTTA stop lol
Flacco was good no doubt, but his career fell so massively after his SB 47 win. Its hard to remember to good of a past great when your recent memory of them is terrible.
So you make excuses for Flacco while downing Ryan? Sad
Where’s Phillip Rivers? He’s a great who never won a Super Bowl.
That's because he wasn't clutch plus you really think he was great Lmao
Common TPS L
Easy to look good when u have LT Michael Turner n goes off to the Falcons Darren Sproles Antonio Gates i can go on and on how his sucked
@Madden Mike Gaming ah yes, and pat Mahomes is only good cuz tyreek. Oh wait that's not the reason at all
Phillip Rivers is just Eli Manning without the SBs. He just played a long time so his stats look really good. In another decade the modern QBs will have washed him out of history for the most part
Honorable mention that never won: Ken Anderson
He was the first NFL QB to successfully run a pass-heavy offense under Bill Walsh (who would go on to lead the 49ers to 4 SB titles in the 80's), led the league in passer rating 4x, led the league in yards 2x, led the league in Completions 3x, was a 4x Pro Bowler, all-pro selection twice, and league MVP in 1981. He got the Bengals to Super Bowl 16 (his only appearance) but fell just short to Joe Montana. Had he won that game (or not been hurt so often) I have no doubt he would be considered a legend.
That is an excellent catch. Kenny is the best quarterback not in the Hall of Fame. I have a formula that measures how much better a quarterback was than the average quarterback during his career. I then take those numbers and compare all the great quarterbacks. Ken comes out as a middle of the pack Hall of Famer scoring better than 14 quarterbacks that have been inducted.
@@bryanjones4444 If the media and the players of a particular generation don't hype up a player that much, it will be harder for them to get into the HOF. Anderson was in a small market, didn't have a terribly long career, and didn't win a Superbowl.
@@ryanjacobson2508 His career was plenty long enough, 13 years as the main starter, especially for that era it was longer than most of the greats. Your other points are well taken but my point is that why should 5 points in a Super Bowl or the fact that a player did not spend his time in one of the bigger media markets rob him of what should have been induction into the Hall of Fame. He probably should have been elected in the first year of his eligibility since at that time he was the 7th greatest quarterback to retire in the previous 35 years.
Surprised not to see Doug Williams on this list. I was under the impression that he had an underwhelming career outside of that one Super Bowl win over Denver.
Actually DW was drafted by Tampa Bay and single highhandedly took an perennially awful TB to the play offs numerious times but the Buc's were, understandably, one and done kings. The Fans and Management labeled him a choker. When his contract came up he wanted to be paid starter money but TB would only offer backup money so he went to the USFL and TB returned to cellar dwellers. He returned to the NFL as a backup. When the starter went down he stepped in and mustered up enough of his old magic for his one year wonder season.
Jim Kelly was the opposite of Flacco. He was the man in the regular season (surrounded by an incredible team), but never really played that well/consistently in the playoffs. He was usually playing hurt in January, but then again, so is everyone
We took a time travel to 2013 when everyone was bashing on Flacco for getting a contract that made him the highest paid player for a brief few months. Joe Performed great in the regular season before he won that Super Bowl in the Big Easy and was awesome in the playoffs. His seasons after that in Baltimore were not as successful but he still was putting in career highs.
Worse QBs would be the pairs from Washington ( Doug Williams, Mark Rypien) and the Raiders ( Jim Plunkett, Ken Stabler) that won.
Lmaaao i don’t even know where to start with that comment lol.
Flacco after that season never went back to the playoffs
Stabler was an MVP led the league in categories
Doug Williams had 4 TD passes in 1 Super Bowl tied for the most until Steve Young broke it
Plunkett won 2 Super Bowls
Mark led Washington to a 14-2 record threw 28-11 and win a superbowl
The 2000 Ravens switched quarterbacks and the offenses still didn’t improve. Brian Billick would have been better off sticking with Tony Banks, who I think had an amazing arm.
They won a blowout Superbowl. Sounds like the moves they made worked.
It is crazy how life goes on and everything evolves… so it’s still an amazing accomplishment to win a Super Bowl, that basically catapults you above the rest… but this day and age winning just one Super Bowl is like, “uh, ok but you only won one SB”…
In the current NFL, and from here on out winning ONE(1) Super Bowl doesn’t cut it! You have to win two or three or more ….🎯
Even that isn't enough. Roethlisberger won 2 but got disrespected for his entire career.
I'm from Dallas but live in Houston and I can say that over 20 years later, we Texans lament that Texas Bowl in 92 that could have been!
Chad Henne is now retired with two Superbowl rings. It's good to be Mahomes' backup.
The video is titled "Starting" quarterbacks. Henne never started for the Chiefs. Except for a game or two when Mahomes was injured. Kadaurius Toney will probably be released by the Chiefs. He has two Super Bowl rings too. He did earn one of those rings with a punt return for almost a TD and catching a TD pass. He definitely earned the first Super Bowl ring. Not the second one.
Steve McNair. Two legendary Titans teams and a Ravens team he led to a (then) team record 13-3 season. But after the super bowl run he had a tough time winning in the post season.
Facts! I don't remember Flacco being talked about so bad until after he won a superbowl smh
I loved him after the way he played,yeah,he didn't play better but that was great what he did!!!
Joe Flacco was honestly pretty impressive for a couple of years there with the ravens, and this is coming from a Die-Hard Steelers fan.
Joe Flacco was a great game manager and doesn't deserve to be in the worst to win a SB conversation. Besides, the guy was a good playoff QB and won some road playoff games as well. He didn't lit the league on fire or anything else, but he knew how to win
Flacco is good
I know this is going to sound weird coming from an Eagles fan, but the only change I would make to your list is that I would drop Joe Flacco, and in his place, I would add Nick Foles. Yes, Foles could pull a few tricks out of his hat, but there's a reason that he ended up as the backup quarterback on most team for which he played.
As eagles fan, I totally agree. Foles is totally inconsistent. Had amazing 1st season then struggled and was traded became a backup. Got back to the eagles won the superbowl was backup. Then he left and hasn’t been able to hold down the job even on some bad teams
agreed and imma eagles fan too
Definitely add Nick Foles. From a Pats fan.
Ok so I agree and disagree. Foles is less inconsistent then you think its more injuries that have been his problem through the years. He does hold eagles records for yards in a game and is tied nfl records for tds in a game and 26 straight completions. He also outdueled brady in that superbowl when the defense failed miserably. Flacco made a great run but that defense was the driving force of that win. Idk it's close.
I could have swore Randell Cunningham would be on this list.
honorable mention for best qbs to never win a Superbowl Philip Rivers
Good catch. I'd say Donovan McNabb also
Boomer Eisason, Johnny Unitas honorable mention of best to never win a Superbowl.
"Honorable mention" my ass. Rivers needs to be listed here ahead of Marino.
And Unitas won a ring for Super Bowl V, even if he was injured and taken out of the game in the 2nd quarter
@@fletchbg Put Rivers in the 80s and 90s and he would be just an average player.
Archie Manning, Bernie Kosar, Ron Jaworski, Jim Hart.
Goes to show how it truly is a team game.
Warren moon was the tightest perfect spiral QB most of the time I’ve ever seen
Yeah, he threw a pretty pass.
Too many ints , guess passer in alot of ways
@@Ryan-gw1ob still a pretty looking int guess😂
Trent Dilfer really went in an interview and said Brady's achievements aren't impressive because of "how the game has changed" as if Brady didn't play at the same time as Dilfer lol
I'm pretty sure he's talking about the changes during Brady's career since Dilfer left the game. Trent was drafted in 1994. Brady was drafted in 2000. Dilfer played in the 90s, Brady didn't.
So is Dilfer diminishing Brady’s 7 rings because the league has become MORE quarterback-dependent? I’m thinking maybe Trent is a tad bit jealous cuz his name only comes up as a Super Bowl qb on lists like this one.
@@latarribell4152 it's not just QB dependant because of the new offensive gameplans, also the rules changes about the QB protection, now the defense can't hit or tackle like before because of the penalties
@@ezequielmartinez238 I’m familiar with the rule changes. Yet the Jets were unable to make the playoffs because they had all the pieces except they whiffed(again) on a qb. As stacked as the ‘9ers were, they couldn’t survive having to go to their 4th string qb, and once he got hurt, the NFC chip was unwatchable. Mahommes lost Hill to Miami, yet has his team in the Super Bowl and another MVP award under his belt. Bears are in a position to rack up draft picks from a qb-hungry team if they stay with Fields and build around him. For Odin’s sake, their was still a sizable market for Tom Brady at 45 coming off,what for him, was a down year before he decided to retire(again).
@@latarribell4152 The league isn't becoming more "quarterback dependent." There's never been more RB, WR, and TE coming out of college. Players who become day 3 picks or go undrafted would be day two or even day one picks twenty years ago.
The league is more quarterback-friendly. There's a difference. Just like how the ground game was more important prior to the WR contact changes in 1980 that make the league more WR-friendly. Teams can still find success through the old avenues. There's just new avenues that exist that, frankly, are easier to pursue because it requires less-talented teams.
Fun fact: Trent Dilfer was undefeated as a starter for the Ravens that season. He salvaged the season for the Ravens, as Tony Banks led the Offense to a 4-4 record at mid season. He damned near pissed away the season despite having one of the greatest defenses ever to step on a field
I dont care what anybody says. Tony romo not winning a supebowl is a travesty. He was a damn good qb that never got the team he needed
ehhhh i don't think you can really put him in the top 5 beside dudes like
Rivers
Marino
Tarkenton
Kelly
Matt Ryan
That year Jeff Hostetler played great in the playoffs & the Superbowl . His lifetime stats weren't great but that year when Simms went down he carried us. Just shows that statistically you're right but in reality you don't know what you are talking about.
Tarkenton "...one of the first true great pocket passers"? Seriously? I think you meant he was the first scrambling quarterback. The coach of the Vikes, Norm Van Brocklin and a great pocket passer, feuded with Tarkenton. That feud led to Bud Grant being hired, Tarkenton being traded for a ton of high draft picks, building the foundation of the four Super Bowl teams. Tarkenton rejoined the Vikings and was on three of their Super Bowl teams.
"...one of the first true great pocket passers" Right whoever said that doesn't know football. Fran was a great pocket passer because he was a grat QB. But he could run too, and scramble as well, and survive which most running QBs don't do.
Keep up your fantastic videos, God bless you
So this whole list is basically saying that it’s a team game.
Phillip Rivers needs an honorable mention here
"Philip Rivers needs to be included here ahead of Dan Marino."
There, fixed it for you
@@fletchbg “Philip Rivers never carried a team single handed like Dan Marino did without a running game or defense, so he should be ahead of Rivers.”
There fixed it for you.
No he does not.
@@fletchbg not
These are all great choices although I don't know if I'd say Joe flacco belongs on the list of worst to have won the Super bowl though. I do think Philip Rivers and Tony Romo would be great quarterbacks to put on the list of best that didn't win.
It's been years since I've watched a TPS video and it looks like it's done differently. Haven't heard this narrator before but he sounds good, and the editing style looks different in a good way
Johnson only won 1 Super Bowl as a starter. Also he wasn’t bad the season they won the Super Bowl and had a very high quarterback rating.
Troy Aikman.
Dude was stacked with talent around him. Any halfway decent QB would have thrived in that system. Put him on a team that wasn't filled with all star talent and he would have sucked.
And he went 1-15 in his rookie year.
Troy aikman was one of the most accurate passers in the NFL look at his stats and you will be surprised.
and Peyton Manning broke the Rookie Interception record a record btw that still stands to this day your point ?
@@LordBarros
In Jim McMahon's defense, he played QB with a reckless linebacker mentality and didn't protect his body( and he more than often liked to party a bit too much for his own good)...If only he would have played it a bit more safe and taken better care of himself he could have been a little more than an above average QB...But, that just wasn't meant to be. I can say that as a diehard Bears fan, if the game was on the line and Da Bears needed a big play it always felt like Mad Mac, with his attitude, cockiness,and reckless abandon (he headbutted his linemen while they were wearing a helmet and his hard ass head was uncovered, hated to slide and would rather take on a LB or hard-hitting DB like Ronnie Lott and take the hits) had the ability to deliver that big play and pull one out when it was needed the most. It didn't always workout that way, but with him there was always the belief that 'we aren't done yet and until the clock has 00:00- we are still in it'.. The audacity to go at a LB or heavy hitting SS rather than slide or run out of bounds endeared him to Bear fans but definitely didn't do his career or body any favors at all.. It was quite a ride and gave the teenage me some great memories of living in Chicago, being a diehard Bear fans, and watching Mac play like only this moment,this play, and this game matters, and let's worry about tomorrow in the morning because it's the here and now that he was playing for.. That often breeds excitement in the moment,but definitely doesn't do much for career longevity and the "what might have been, what could have been" if only he would have had a little more respect for his body will always be a great "what if" for old school Bears fans... Oh well, those were great days to be a Bears fan, and to watch that crazy bastard play...lol. Now, sadly, Jim is paying off those checks that his body and style of play wrote for him so long ago, but it definitely wasn't boring when he was lined up under Center because with him-nothing was off the table and anything might, and probably would, happen... But, that just my simple half-assed observation and opinion from over 30 long years ago.....
yea that 85 bears were so stacked you could literally have put any QB in history and they would have won that Superbowl
Dan Marino is no 1 on best that never did
undisputed the first qb to ever break 50,000 and 60,000 passing yards in a career
he held the Number 1 spot for all time passing yards for 12 years before he was finally passed by Bret Farve
Love the video still wish Dan the man got his ring
Me 2 im in ohio im a dolphins fan 43 years old been a fan 4 33 years
Another worst to win: Eli Manning, and he did it TWICE!!!
I'm so grateful that Fran Tarkenton made 'the list'. He was the first quarterback I really liked to watch play the game.
yea deserved really unlucky to go 0-3 in Superbowls
and sadly he's most well known for Superbowl wise
for throwing a Pick 6 to Old Man Willie
@@kurtpunchesthings2411, really?
So that's what he's MOST known for, eh?
How about having Staubach so desperate that Roger 'The Dodger' had to invent 'The Hail Mary' pass?
Or maybe knocking America's Team out of the 1973 NFC championship game?
For me, I'll never forget those home field games at the old Metropolitan Stadium.
Especially when warm weather teams came to single digit temperature!
i said " superbowl wise " @@martyemmons3100
Great list.
In 1999 there was trade rumors that Dan Marino was gonna go to the Minnesota Vikings and that would’ve been something special
with Randy Moss and Chris Carter
and Robert Smith i think Dan Marino would of been the missing piece to get to the Super Bowl and maybe win it
Solid list except Jim McMahon. He won 25 games in a row as a starter at one point.
I agree. McMahon won 70% of his starts and was one of the toughest guys to ever play QB. I feel he was a little too exceptional to go on the list, despite not having great statistics.
Feel good that you brought up Marino. It's like what am I crazy? He was the best. Hate to think it all comes down to a ring. This is a right on segment. Can't wait to see if some others, even my own guys, mediocre, but got the ring. Yup, you got him, Hostetler. I am amazed. You even got Fouts. I seen him in a shootout with Montana. They both were high yardage and Dan was over 400 yds. San Fran won. Joe threw for 360 yds, abouts.
As a Lions fan, I had a lot of love for Matt Stafford and was happy as hell when he won, keeping him off any of these future list. I can only think of any of the Marino's, Kelly's Etc being given the opportunity to go to better teams and win their Superbowls. Like, Marino on the 1992 Lions with Barry Sanders for instance, or the Late 80s Bears? That would be a fun hypothetical game to play.
Another fun hypothetical game for the Lions to play would be a playoff game
I will not tolerate Joe Flacco slander! His SB run was one for the ages
I think Phillip Rivers and Matt Ryan are at least honorable mentions
I think Rivers was better than Fouts.
1 thing that seems to reoccur is that a lot if not all the “worst” QB’s to ever win, had a all star cast supporting them!!!
Kosar is one of the best that never won a Superbowl.
I luv the fact that you're showing luv to Warren moon one of the greatest ever with some of the worst luck it really makes up for the fact that you didn't make Eli Manning the worst to win two
He really is the worst to win two, isn't he!
@@brad-corfman yes hell yes
No way I'd put McMahon on the worst to win. His stats weren't great, but his leadership and charisma were. I think you nailed the greatest not win.
I agree. McMahon on that list is nuts.
tbf the problem wasn't Mcmahon it's that the 85 bears were so Disgustingly stacked and Overpowered he looked mid in comparison
be honest Superbowl 20 ? the only thing people remember from that game was the Fridge scoring that TD in Garbage time when they were already winning by over 30 points LOL
i mention this moment because it's relevant to the Seahawks superbowl
guys this
this is why you should have handed it off to Marshawn Lynch
9 years later and i still can't believe the Seahawks didn't run the ball
Worst to Win:
Jim Plunkett
-Career TD-INT Ratio: 164-198,
-Career Passer Rating: 67.5
-Won 2 Super Bowls with the Raiders
Best That Never Won:
Randall Cunningham
-Career TD-INT Ratio: 207-134
-Career Passer Rating: 81.5
-Career Rushing TDs: 35
-Never played in, or even won, a Super Bowl (Closest he came to the Super Bowl was in 1998 with the Minnesota Vikings, who lost to the Atlanta Falcons in the NFC Championship Game)
Bob Griese needs to be on this list for multiple he was as the quarterback. They had a three headed monsters in the backfield and no name defense was lights out great.
True. Earl Morrall is the QB that took them to their perfect season.
Calling Flacco one of the worst QBs to ever win a Super Bowl is laughably stupid. Nick Foles, Doug Williams, Mark Rypien, Jim Plunkett, Joe Theismann, and Joe "I wanna kiss you now" Namath all need to be on the list well before Flacco.
Marino is the best that never won hands down. Possibly the greatest qb talent we've ever seen he was putting up all time great stats by modern day standards in 1984
Throwing 5000+ yards in the 80s might be one of the best accomplishments in football history
AMEN
He was the 1st one that came to my mind when I read the title of the video.
Best meaning stats, but how about results - showing composure and leadership getting your team past the conference championship more than once or twice. That's Kelly #1. Lamonica tied with Marino for 5th.
What other Super Bowl did Brad Johnson win besides 02 with Tampa? Didn’t they say two super bowls in the video?
I'd have to disagree with your worst picks list on Flacco and McMahon. Statistically, Joe Flacco has posted better numbers than Troy Aikman over the same period of time. It could be argued that what Flacco lacked in his career was a hall of fame running back and receiver to make a consistent deep playoff run/super bowl run. McMahon's problem was that he was always hurt. If you look at the Bears from 84-86 they're a contender who could have won another bowl game but in both 84 and 86 McMahon was out with season ending injuries (a lacerated kidney in 84 and a separated shoulder in 86).
Better choices for worst starting QBs would be Doug Williams who was streaky and for his career completed less than half of his passes and was Jay Shroeder's backup for most of the year, a similar scenario to Hostetler. The other is Plunkett who benefit was able to get two super bowl wins with a hall of fame running back (Marcus Allen) Pro Bowl Tight End (Todd Christensen) and a defense that was loaded with pro bowl and hall of fame players.
At the time Flacco won his ring, he was most certainly considered a very good QB. At that point he was 54-26 in the regular season and 9-4 post-season. It’s everything after that which has tarnished his resume.
Did they change how to pronounce Jeff Hostetler's name?
Highly annoying the way they pronounce it.
Can u do mock draft 3.0
As far as How did Jim Kelley not win a SB? How did his teams never win? Had some studs on that team. Just went up to a better team in the big dance.
And thanks for mentioning Moon. As an Oiler fan since early 70s till they moved he was the funnest QB to watch. Don't think I missed a single game of his career here
Nick Foles should easily be in the worst QB's to win it over Flacco.
Dan Marino is the epitome of football is a team sport.
Dilfer was actually a pretty good qb, he was held back early in his career in Tampa due to the ultra conservative Dungy style of football. He goes to Baltimore and with an offensive minded head coach and wins a super bowl. No coincidence there.
Moreno had the Michael Jordan effect he played against Joe Montana and countless other good quarterbacks and great teams that were better offenses than the dolphins defense Yes Dan carved everybody up but if the defense can't stop nothing and don't make a difference remember Dan was sitting records in his 30-year while somebody's guys that takes all these years to do it so it's just one of those things that happened he had the effect of he had to play against teams that destroyed the defense
Love your video TPS
Doug Williams should be on this list He was not really a good quarterback Starting with Tampa Bay and was a backup until half way through the Superbowl season They won because forgotten one game wonder Timmy Smith ran for a record 204 yards 🤨
Surprised Doug Williams didn't make the list. Though he did win the Super Bowl. And considering he had a fairly great career. Though he played his first 5 years as a Buccaneer he made the playoff 3 times the only other time he played in the NFL was with the Redskins. Where he come in during the playoffs and won the Super bowl. He did play 1 more season with the Redskins going 4-6. So 6 whole seasons led his team to 3 playoff births and won the Super bowl. But his stats run weak after that partially with Tampa which wasn't known at the time to be an offensive team but great defensive team. He did have to run for his life there. And relievers used to çlaim to not like receiving passes from him because it felt like being shot by a shotgun.he has a career r9% completion rate 100 tds 93 ints.
Great Video
Eli Manning didn't make the list? Trent Dilfer 2.0
It should be noted that Warren Moon was only the starting QB his last 4 seasons in Edmonton. Tom Wilkinson was the starter in 1978.
Another one is Mark Rypien. He was good, but not great… still has a SB ring
Don't kid yourself! He earned that ring with no one carrying him! Easily top 5 greatest Washington QBs
As a lifelong bucs fan I immediately called out Trent dilfer and Brad Johnson. Both so bad but solid for the amazing d we had and for Trent he got lucky to be on an amazing Baltimore team
I would take McMahon off the list and replace him with Mark Rypien. Other than that, your list is on point. Drew Bledsoe deserves an honorable mention, but I can't pull someone off your list to replace him.
I remember Dilfer bouncing a screen pass to a back in the SB. Unrushed. Un hurried. Back was wide open in the flat.
Just horrible as a qb.
Pretty good at hand-offs though. 👍👍
Such a shame for Jim Kelly, the closest he ever came to win was against a backup QB
"against a backup QB"
He was playing across the ball from LT, but act like he had an easy time.
@@mikemiken1963 it wasn't a dig at the Giants I am a giants fan, they had LT, Carson and Banks, it's just funny how he couldn't catch a break
Thank you for saying “…a historic defense…” instead of “an historic.” We hear you and we appreciate it.
7:37 he better thank God he did a FULL flip. That coulda been so much worse
As an Eagles Fan, I was waiting for Nick Foles to get the nod for one of the worst to win.... We can't get any respect 🤣😂
Yep Nick (1) and Donovan (0)... Amazing
Eli Manning deserves a mention for sure...
The Giants won that SB over the undefeated Patriots because of the Giants D.
As best. Def.
Eli was extremely Inconsistent, after that legendary defense retired, he had one winning season and got blown out in the wildcard round
The main reason Eli is a HoF is cause he’s the little brother of Peyton Manning. I still love Eli as a commentator, person, and NFL personality though. Same goes for Peyton.
That is just non-sense...think about it...2 Superbowl's it takes a team. Eli had a D but you have to have a QB and receiver's and special teams. Talent was equally distributed in that organization. ONE maybe a fluke... TWO Nope!!
Flacco was a damn good QB. Not many threw a better deep ball
As a fan of a team that had to play him twice a year, you are not wrong! Deep ball, play action, he was brilliant. And I hated every minute! 😀
Nick Foles belongs on this list.
Honestly, Joe Flacco’s 2012 playoff run might be the best I’ve ever seen from a QB. Should’ve probably put Joe Namath over Joe Flacco.
Flacco was rewarded with a great defense
Tony Romo should be on the list of best QBs to never win. He holds numerous team and league records, multiple Pro Bowl nods, and always had the Cowboys contending for the division title or the playoffs. But he also had historically bad defenses that he had to constantly overcome. He led Dallas to over 30-35 points so many times yet Dallas lost those games because the defense gave up more and the blame fell to Romo. In fact, in 2012, Dallas had the worst defense in NFL history, yet Romo still had them contending for the division title at the end of the year. Plus in 2014, the league screwed Dallas against GB when they admitted that Dez Bryant had caught that ball and the refs got it wrong. Dallas, no doubt, would've beaten Seattle in the NFC championship game since they beat them earlier that year in Seattle and gone on to SB 49. I could list so many examples, but Romo never gets his due credit.
Honorable mention to Danny White and Tony Romo.