wpr
  • wpr
  • Preferred Member Topic Starter
4 years ago

And the best Packer quarterback of all time. I think there is a certain tendency among modern analysts to both minimize the accomplishments of the past and to underrated champions. The first is understandable. Football changes from era to era unlike almost any other sport, and the game as it was played in the 1960s bears only a passing resemblance to the game today.
The second is the result of a modern skepticism born of a mistrust of quarterbacks like Eli Manning  and, going back a bit, Terry Bradshaw. That skepticism is warranted as many commentators still focus on “ringz,” but it’s worth keeping in mind the Montanas among the (Eli) Mannings. Bart Starr, first of among legendary Packers , is much closer to the former than he is given credit for.
Starr was the greatest leader a team could ask for: humble to a fault, happy to spread credit to his teammates, and not flashy. Flashy here will be represented by QBSLG, or more simply, Yards per Completion. Joe Namath existed for celebrity, and his game reflected it before his knees abandoned him. Most quarterbacks of this era did. Starr always seemed like someone’s dad, or failing that, their older brother, and his game reflected it as well. I’ve adapted QBOPS for modern QBs as well as for college QBs, and there is no reason it cannot also tell us the tale of the classic era. Here is what you need to know about Bart.
I limited the sample to quarterbacks who actually pass, including anyone from 1950 to 1975 who threw over 1750 passes. If you go down to 1500 it doesn’t impact much, and nothing at the top. What it shows you is that Starr does suffer for lack of flash, finishing 20th with a good, if not great QBSLG at .670. That’s fine, it’s not who Starr was. But if you enjoy watching Aaron Rodgers  play now, with his incredible care for the ball, dotted by occasional huge strikes and unerring accuracy, you should have more respect for Starr than you probably do.

In this sample, Starr was first in QBOPB with .339, just edging Sonny Jurgensen, Len Dawson, and Fran Tarkenton. Importantly, his QBSLG is higher than everyone just mentioned, and it is not until you get to Otto Graham that someone surpasses him. The problem with Otto was the picks. The problem with a lot of these guys was the picks. Interceptions were not as big a deal 60 years ago, but they had the same negative impact they do today, and here we punish Starr for being conservative instead of praising him for being a forward-thinking genius. By raw QBOPS Starr is 13th, just barely trailing Unitas, however when we adjust for interceptions in QBOPS+, he soars to first.
The fact is that Starr was one of the most accurate passers of his day, and smart enough not to take the risks of his contemporaries. If his Yards per Completion were more along the lines of modern game managers, some criticism might be warranted, but the fact is that Starr barely sacrificed anything in this category while completing passes at an unprecedented rate, and providing the Packers with extra possessions in an era that did not appreciate them properly. Combine all of this with his incredible post-season success , and the fact that they ran a fundamentally pass-based offense for the time, and it’s ridiculous that he is often left out of the discussions of all-time greats.
Brett Favre  was great, but he was a bit of an accumulator and he had his problem with picks. Favre only appears at the top of lists that require longevity. Rodgers’  story isn’t finished, but his second act finds him sacrificing too much explosiveness for his fear of turnovers.
Only Starr managed the balance of winning all of his titles, doing so with uncanny accuracy, hitting his big plays to legends and drunks alike, and maintaining passing records to this day. Starr appears among the greatest counting-stat quarterbacks and among the greatest rate stat quarterbacks, and he should appear on any honest list of top ten quarterbacks ever. If your list includes Otto Graham or Johnny Unitas, Starr was better. Y.A. Tittle, Joe Namath, or Fran Tarkenton? Starr was better.
Compared to his contemporaries, no Packer quarterbacks are his equal, and only the truly elites of their era compare.

Continue Reading @ PaulNoonan 

PaulNoonan wrote:



We've gone down this road a few times already. But we have time these days.

It's difficult if not impossible to compare different eras. The rules have changed so much.

Starr probably doesn't get as much credit as he deserves. He wasn't renowned for throwing a lot of passes. Why would you when he had THAT backfield? Nevertheless, he was a field general to the max. He called most of his own plays. Yes they did signal in plays from the sideline but nothing like today.

In the end it's great to have 3 HoF QBs in GB.
Edit- Sorry I forgot Arnie Herber.
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Cheesey
4 years ago
It was such a different time.
Players didn’t run off to other teams like they do now.
Bart Starr also wasn’t protected like today’s QBs. The opposition tried to knock him out of games, not just sack him.
One of my favorite memories of Starr was, that on third and one, he often dropped back and passed. With the RBs he had, he knew that more often than not he could complete a pass for lots more yards then a running play would achieve.
Plus he was such a great and humble man off the field. When I met him when I was security at the Lombardi golf classic, he made me feel like I was an important part of the “team”. Not just some grunt.
There aren’t many athletes like that today.
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earthquake
4 years ago
https://www.ninersnation.com/2008/1/27/141118/206 

I think it's safe to say Tom Brady has surpassed Starr's greatness at this point (even if he has a worse playoff winning percentage), but there is still a solid argument to be made that Starr is a top-3, or at worst top-5 QB of all time. Yes, better than Favre, Rodgers, Manning, Marino, and really anyone not named Brady or Montana - those guys can make a pretty good argument for themselves..

https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2019/05/28/bart-starr-is-still-the-nfls-all-time-most-efficient-postseason-passer/ 
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porky88
4 years ago
I think Bart Starr probably had one of the 10 greatest careers an NFL QB ever had. However, under that same standard, Terry Bradshaw had one of the 10 greatest careers. Is Bradshaw one of the 10 best? I would say no. That's why I think there's a gap in the argument of using Starr’s winning percentage and/or postseason success to conclude he’s one of the 10 best. That same argument is valid for a player like Bradshaw. You can’t pick and choose when to use it or not use it.

What elevates Starr (and is often overlooked in these arguments) is his work ethic, knowledge of the game, and leadership. These are the attributes that I think elevate Starr certainly beyond Bradshaw and potentially into the top 10.

Starr did not throw the ball as well as Dan Marino did nor could he extend plays like Steve Young could. He also did not have the arm strength of John Elway or Brett Favre. Starr put in work outside of the field that allowed him to makeup for any physical misgivings (and then some).
Consider a player who was not selected high in the draft but had the drive and work ethic to succeed. This player used that drive to become a student of the game and set an example to his teammates. This player also played his best football during the most critical junctures of games and led game-winning drives in championship games. A true steward of the game, this player became a leader who players respected and wanted to play with. Which modern QB does this sound like? I would say Tom Brady. Which pre-Super Bowl era QB does this sound like? I would say Bart Starr.

Now, I’m not saying Starr’s on Brady’s level. I don’t think that. But I do think Starr in today’s game would have the drive to succeed in ways that other gifted QBs do not. The drive to succeed and will your teammates to victory is what elevates leaders. In this case, it elevates QBs – who are maybe less physically gifted than others – to greatness.

earthquake
4 years ago

I think Bart Starr probably had one of the 10 greatest careers an NFL QB ever had. However, under that same standard, Terry Bradshaw had one of the 10 greatest careers. Is Bradshaw one of the 10 best? I would say no. That's why I think there's a gap in the argument of using Starr’s winning percentage and/or postseason success to conclude he’s one of the 10 best. That same argument is valid for a player like Bradshaw. You can’t pick and choose when to use it or not use it.

Originally Posted by: porky88 



I think Bradshaw deserves consideration for top 10. I'm not sure if I would put him up there, but he should be in the conversation.

That said, Bradshaw and Starr were not the same guy. Starr was Aaron Rodgers-esq efficient at times in the 1960's, posting three seasons with passer ratings over 97. Starr, up until this season (Mahome's broke it by a couple points), owned the NFL record for playoff passer rating at a mind-boggling 104.8. Again, he set this in the '60s! For reference, Bradshaw, for all of his success a decade later, posted an 83. Aaron Rodgers is #5 all time at 100. Tom Brady sits at 89.8.

There's only two other QB from the 60's that even make the top 50 : Daryle Lamonica (#37 - 77.9) and Len Dawson ( #38 - 77.4). Amusingly, these are the two QB's that lost to Starr's Packers in the first two super bowls.

I think how efficient, dominate, and clutch Starr was in his prime is up there with Don Hutson's performance. They both defined the way their positions should be played, and they did it decades before the rest of the league caught on.

Yeah, Starr played on some pretty good teams. But so did Bradshaw, Brady, Manning, Elway, and most of the QBs one would care to name. Joe Montana played much of his career with Jerry Rice, the greatest WR of all time.


What elevates Starr (and is often overlooked in these arguments) is his work ethic, knowledge of the game, and leadership. These are the attributes that I think elevate Starr certainly beyond Bradshaw and potentially into the top 10.

Starr did not throw the ball as well as Dan Marino did nor could he extend plays like Steve Young could. He also did not have the arm strength of John Elway or Brett Favre. Starr put in work outside of the field that allowed him to makeup for any physical misgivings (and then some).
Consider a player who was not selected high in the draft but had the drive and work ethic to succeed. This player used that drive to become a student of the game and set an example to his teammates. This player also played his best football during the most critical junctures of games and led game-winning drives in championship games. A true steward of the game, this player became a leader who players respected and wanted to play with. Which modern QB does this sound like? I would say Tom Brady. Which pre-Super Bowl era QB does this sound like? I would say Bart Starr.

Now, I’m not saying Starr’s on Brady’s level. I don’t think that. But I do think Starr in today’s game would have the drive to succeed in ways that other gifted QBs do not. The drive to succeed and will your teammates to victory is what elevates leaders. In this case, it elevates QBs – who are maybe less physically gifted than others – to greatness.



Yeah I agree with most of this, and there there are a lot of similarities to Starr and Brady. Brady is the modern day Bart Starr. Starr's intangibles, plus his incredible penchant for winning important games, makes him one of the top 3 QBs of all time. Not because he was the most talented football thrower, but rather despite the fact he wasn't.
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KRK
  • KRK
  • Veteran Member
4 years ago

Starr and Brady. Brady is the modern day Bart Starr. Starr's intangibles, plus his incredible penchant for winning important games, makes him one of the top 3 QBs of all time. Not because he was the most talented football thrower, but rather despite the fact he wasn't.

Originally Posted by: earthquake 

Largely true. That notwithstanding:[list][*]Starr never lose a Super Bowl[*]Starr has a better playoff record[*]Starr has a better QBR[/list]I will be curious to see how Brady does at TB.
In Luce tua Videmus Lucem KRK
porky88
4 years ago

Largely true. That notwithstanding:[list]

  • Starr never lose a Super Bowl
  • Starr has a better playoff record
  • Starr has a better QBR[/list]I will be curious to see how Brady does at TB.

    Originally Posted by: KRK 

  • Starr also played in a league with 14 teams - not 32Reached just 2 SBs opposed to 9 from Brady
    Starr did lose an NFL Championship
    His career rating ranks 15 points lower than Brady

    Had Brady played under the playoff rules of the ‘60s he would have 9 titles credited to him with 4 championship losses.

    I am not curious how Brady does. His legacy is as secured as Starr’s would have been had he played elsewhere. Brady, like Starr, is one of the best for reasons outlined in this thread. Brady, like Starr and other great QBs, will eventually see his skills fade. My hope is fans appreciate the greatness of Brady, Starr and all great players regardless of their personal fandom.
    KRK
    • KRK
    • Veteran Member
    4 years ago

    Starr also played in a league with 14 teams - not 32
    Reached just 2 SBs opposed to 9 from Brady
    Starr did lose an NFL Championship
    His career rating ranks 15 higher than Starr’s.

    Originally Posted by: porky88 


    [list=1][*]so what, that means it was less dilution of talent as there is now.[*] yes he did lose an NFL championship but he won five.The Super Bowl point is hardly relevant since they were only two Super Bowl Starr could’ve played in and he won them both![*]Starr’s playoff passer rating is the highest in history, higher than Brady’s[/list]Don’t get me wrong. Brady is a terrific quarterback... definitely one of the greats. But as far as I’m concerned Starr was the best playoff quarterback ever.
    In Luce tua Videmus Lucem KRK
    porky88
    4 years ago

    [list=1]

  • so what, that means it was less dilution of talent as there is now.
  • yes he did lose an NFL championship but he won five.The Super Bowl point is hardly relevant since they were only two Super Bowl Starr could’ve played in and he won them both!
  • Starr’s playoff passer rating is the highest in history, higher than Brady’s[/list]Don’t get me wrong. Brady is a terrific quarterback... definitely one of the greats. But as far as I’m concerned Starr was the best playoff quarterback ever.

    Originally Posted by: KRK 

  • Starr played until ‘71. He could have played in more Super Bowls, but I get what you’re trying to convey. He was 2 for 2 in his opportunities, while Brady is 6 for 9. I would add that the sample size is vastly different and can be schewed in ways to support both. For example, would Starr’s playoff rating be as high if he played in as many games as Brady? Nobody knows definitively.
    Do not mistake my appreciation of Brady as criticism of Starr. The appreciation of these QBs are not mutually exclusive. I respect both. Any chance I get to see footage of Starr I consider it a treasure.

    However, comparing the eras they played in is apples and oranges. The league is vastly different in many ways (e.g., rules, schemes, philosophies, recruitment, prejudices), so you cannot compare the eras objectively. We get too caught up on lists and settling on who is No. 1. Regardless of where they “rank” on lists, these are two all time greats that any young QB would be wise to study.
    KRK
    • KRK
    • Veteran Member
    4 years ago

    However, comparing the eras they played in is apples and oranges. The league is vastly different in many ways (e.g., rules, schemes, philosophies, recruitment, prejudices), so you cannot compare the eras objectively. We get too caught up on lists and settling on who is No. 1. Regardless of where they “rank” on lists, these are two all time greats that any young QB would be wise to study.

    Originally Posted by: porky88 

    Great point...and one of the reasons this is one of those fun to argue this stuff.

    It is arguably much easier to throw now than back in the day.

    When I get into these discussions with friends/family, I occasionally argue that all things being equal, i.e. rules, teammates, etc., I would probably take Dan Marino in his prime over any other quarterback...possibly with the exception of 12.


    In Luce tua Videmus Lucem KRK
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