1. Time to throw out QBs' postseason win-loss records
If there has ever been a time to take every quarterback's postseason win-loss records, put them on an island and obliterate them with a 100-megaton nuke, Godzilla style, that time is now.
Aaron Rodgers is 7-6 in the postseason, a .538 winning percentage. Mark Rypien has a .714 postseason winning percentage. Trent Dilfer's is .833. Jake Delhomme's is .625. Mark Sanchez's is .667.
That's right, Mark Freaking Sanchez has a better postseason record than Rodgers.
We all know, of those players, who the best quarterback is. Yet we obsess over quarterback win-loss records, especially postseason ones. We talk about them all the time. Drool over them. You'll hear about Tom Brady's record, and Peyton Manning's, plenty this week. Just remember...Rodgers is 7-6.
You watch what Rodgers did against Arizona—one of the best performances any quarterback has ever had in the postseason—and his wins and losses become especially meaningless.
Said former NFL quarterback Steve Beuerlein on CBS Sports' NFL Monday QB this week:
It's unbelievable when you look at what this guy has done. It's not just the Hail Mary. It's the 4th-and-20 [the play before] with the game on the line, he delivers a laser to [Jeff] Janis to pick up the first down and give his team a chance at the end zone and the Hail Mary…He made the Hail Mary throw under pressure. He knows he's going to get hit. He gives Janis a chance to go up and make the play. Most guys only have one of these in their career…He continues to prove that he's such a unique quarterback.
I've said it before: Brady is the best ever, but one day, he will be replaced as the best ever by Rodgers...
...by Rodgers...who has a .538 postseason winning percentage.
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Mike Freeman wrote: