Top 10 Quarterbacks Of The 70s

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  • čas přidán 15. 05. 2020
  • Today's list breaks down the ten best QB's of the 70s. This episode originally released in 2012. I do NOT own the rights to this video.
  • Sport

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @acharleyhorse1
    @acharleyhorse1 Před 4 lety +66

    Bert Jones was the Real Deal. As they said, if not for injuries, he would have easily made the Hall OF Fame.

  • @mikeivey7167
    @mikeivey7167 Před rokem +85

    Roger Staubach, A Naval Academy Graduate, Heisman Trophy Winner, Vietnam Veteran, and all around very humble Human being. Without him there is a very high probability that the Dallas Cowboys would Not be Americas team! Great player.

  • @kevincohen251
    @kevincohen251 Před 2 lety +65

    Born and raised in Baltimore, I hear still hear stories about Bert Jones from my dad. He was 13 during his 1976 MVP season, always tells me how the Colts would run into the Steeler or Raider wall every year. When you hear a guy like Belichick praise him, you knew the guy could play.

    • @Kidapollos5910
      @Kidapollos5910 Před rokem +5

      I'm an LSU grad (82) and the stuff Bert did is legendary. He also had some amazing siblings. They all went to college on scholarships (mostly athletic), and his brother "Hoss" was a fighter pilot and flew with the Thunderbirds.

    • @jefferyroy2566
      @jefferyroy2566 Před rokem +6

      As a Dolphins fan back then, I HATED Bert Jones. That was because the bastard was so good. His great connection with Roger Carr, who was Biletnikoff with more speed and no stickum, was tragic in its brevity. Just like Bert. As an appreciator of great players, they were deadly for too short a time, and that's a shame.

    • @EmmaBonn96
      @EmmaBonn96 Před rokem

      It’s a good thing he ran into the Steelers in 76 77
      Section 1 would’ve died if he didn’t

    • @ciAMkia
      @ciAMkia Před rokem +1

      ​ @Kidapollos5910 No shyte? Now that is impressive! That's the combat veteran side of me talking. But, I was a Bert Jones fan too. I was born in Maryland, so I had to like the Colts.

    • @sacredfire536
      @sacredfire536 Před 8 měsíci

      bellichek is a weirdo and a cheater and always has been and i really dont understand why everyone thinks hes anything but that. people wanna act like he knew brady was gonna come out and win like that. bellichek was a partial season away from getting fired from the perennial dumpster fire that the patriots were. its been 2 going on 3 years now my man. i know you made this comment last year but its time to start questioning that boys legacy. he is not a genius, he is in fact a lottery winner.

  • @johnmassoud930
    @johnmassoud930 Před 4 lety +224

    I'm a big Redskins fan, but Kilmer should not be ahead of Ken Anderson. Anderson was amazing.

    • @blackcobra9465
      @blackcobra9465 Před 4 lety +11

      @John Massoud I totally agree with u on that wholeheartedly coz I'm a Redskins fan as well.

    • @johnliberty3647
      @johnliberty3647 Před 4 lety +24

      Agreed and I am a Redskins fan too and I agree. I am shocked at how many people forget how good Ken Anderson was. Some even have forgotten who he was.

    • @bouncingczechs
      @bouncingczechs Před 4 lety +15

      I'm a Cowboys fan and I agree. Anderson was insane.

    • @blackcobra9465
      @blackcobra9465 Před 4 lety +2

      @@bouncingczechs Cool

    • @peteparadis1619
      @peteparadis1619 Před 4 lety +7

      Kilmer threw end over end passes in NO.. He was garbage the games I saw there

  • @caiusKeys
    @caiusKeys Před rokem +44

    As a 49ers fan, recognize that Staubach is a legend.

    • @robertdore9592
      @robertdore9592 Před rokem +3

      Dammed straight from a UK raider

    • @brickstine202
      @brickstine202 Před rokem +3

      And as a Cowboys fan, Joe “Cool” and Steve Young were money, and pure class.

    • @miamibeachsunnydays8274
      @miamibeachsunnydays8274 Před 3 měsíci +1

      If roger had beaten pittsburgh in both of those super bowls, He would have been mentioned in the same breath as joe montana if not better,

    • @miamibeachsunnydays8274
      @miamibeachsunnydays8274 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Roger Starbuck is living proof you don't need to have a lot of Super Bowl rings to be considered the goat.

    • @caiusKeys
      @caiusKeys Před 3 měsíci

      @@miamibeachsunnydays8274 What he did after leaving the league makes him a legend as well: Great family man, successful businessman, and took care of his old teammates too. Also, when Montana was asked about QB goats, he said, "What about Danny (Marino)?" Even though he doesn't have the rings, he was a great QB. Also what about Terry Bradshaw? He has four rings too, and he played in Pittsburg, which was not easy.

  • @diggsfather
    @diggsfather Před 4 lety +101

    “it’s a crime [Ken Stabler’s] not in the hall of fame.”
    he is now

    • @mountainofeverest3861
      @mountainofeverest3861 Před 4 lety +13

      Lester Hayes now the slighted Raider w/out a Hall induction. 13 interceptions in 1 season, Best bump n run corner of all time. Had his own Nike poster before Jordan. Hayes was to Cornerback what Butkus and LT were to Linebacker. You had to be a badass in the era of Man2man coverage.. Hayes was the Man.

    • @sattvikpapanasam5687
      @sattvikpapanasam5687 Před 4 lety

      Ain't no crime anymore

    • @dwightlove3704
      @dwightlove3704 Před 4 lety +5

      @@sattvikpapanasam5687 The NFL has a beef against the Raiders

    • @sattvikpapanasam5687
      @sattvikpapanasam5687 Před 4 lety

      If you want to put that way sure but I'm a Giants fan and the only team I have beef with is the Eagles

    • @dwightlove3704
      @dwightlove3704 Před 4 lety

      @@sattvikpapanasam5687 And Dallas

  • @Sabercats12
    @Sabercats12 Před 4 lety +87

    Ken Stabler was one of the quarterback of the decade, the opponents knew never to leave time on the clock during his tenure.

    • @whataboutrob442
      @whataboutrob442 Před 4 lety +3

      He sucked in Houston.

    • @randyhanson4973
      @randyhanson4973 Před 4 lety +11

      @@whataboutrob442 He went to Houston in 1980

    • @whataboutrob442
      @whataboutrob442 Před 4 lety +4

      @@randyhanson4973 I know, that's why I said he sucked in Houston. 28 ints to only 14 TDs

    • @randyhanson4973
      @randyhanson4973 Před 4 lety +8

      @@whataboutrob442 Top 10 QBs of the 70's. Stabler's last good season was 1979 with the Raiders. He was never the same after he left Oakland.

    • @aracelyemmett3493
      @aracelyemmett3493 Před 3 lety +3

      @@whataboutrob442 He also sucked in New Orleans. Both teams were coached by Bum Phillips.

  • @glenn7152
    @glenn7152 Před rokem +5

    Stabler was the king"
    of the 2 minute drill
    back in the day
    Montana once said,he
    use to study Ken doing
    his 2 minutes.
    And said,he was a master at
    It"

  • @joeseddit
    @joeseddit Před 4 lety +38

    Bert Jones was badass. Dude had a cannon for an arm.
    Stabler was badass too. He’d be #1 on my list. The epitome of “just win, baby”.
    24:42-“guts of a burglar”- That’s right. One of my favorite Stabler plays was a walk-off TD pass in a playoff game against Bert Jones and the Colts. The game is in overtime, the Raiders move the ball to within Field Goal range, and instead of running a play to line up the ball for the kicker, Stabler drops back and throws a TD pass to Casper in the corner of the end zone. Game over.

    • @Ken5244
      @Ken5244 Před rokem +7

      Not just overtime -- double overtime. As John Madden said, if that game had been a Super Bowl, it would be considered the greatest game in NFL history. He's probably right. It was one for the ages. And I agree, Stabler was the best QB of the 70s. Staubach and Bradshaw were close behind, but Kenny would be my pick if I were starting a team back then.

    • @billrayburn2775
      @billrayburn2775 Před rokem +3

      The Ghost to the Post game

    • @weirddave622
      @weirddave622 Před rokem +1

      I was at that game. I was a kid, but I still have the Colts AFC east champions pennant on my wall. It's stained because some drunk asshole on the ramps of Memorial Stadium pissed on it. Still a treasured memento, although now that I think on it...ewww.

    • @augustineminimbi5668
      @augustineminimbi5668 Před rokem +1

      Ghost to the Post, the sharpest play in Raider history. And I'm a Steelers fan.

  • @DC4L99
    @DC4L99 Před 4 lety +41

    Good list and Roger Staubach is the best qb of the 70s. The fact he didn’t even start until he was 29 years old, and accomplished what he did is amazing.

    • @sammygaudino8906
      @sammygaudino8906 Před rokem +3

      Bradshaw was 4_0

    • @CannabisAvenger
      @CannabisAvenger Před rokem

      @@sammygaudino8906 Exactly

    • @leepassmore7032
      @leepassmore7032 Před rokem +1

      Conveniently forgotten is that Roger had back-to-back NFC Championship games where he didn't lead the Cowboys to a single touchdown.

    • @RH-xs8gz
      @RH-xs8gz Před rokem

      And a 12th round draft choice at that.

    • @RH-xs8gz
      @RH-xs8gz Před rokem +4

      @@sammygaudino8906 no, the Steelers defense was 4-0

  • @billyhill7630
    @billyhill7630 Před 4 lety +13

    good list. I miss 70's football. The baseball diamond in the field, dust flying up, qbs getting hit without flags.

  • @willmoore8708
    @willmoore8708 Před rokem +8

    As a former Steeler fan of the 70s, I always held my breath whenever Stabler threw that ball.

  • @robertglass7841
    @robertglass7841 Před rokem +4

    Bert Jones was a beast if it wasn't for injuries he'd be in the hall of Fame fact he could throw it over 80 yards fact.

  • @seekanddestroy7343
    @seekanddestroy7343 Před 4 lety +14

    Nice to see Zorn get a Best of the Rest. Even though he was in the latter part of the 70's, still pretty cool.

  • @flyernesss
    @flyernesss Před 4 lety +23

    Kenny Anderson was amazing.....too underrated and too underappreciated.

    • @BrotherApexx
      @BrotherApexx Před 3 lety

      Thank you!

    • @timg2088
      @timg2088 Před 3 lety

      I absolutely agree! Should be in the HOF. No question about it. One of my favorite players as a kid. And I was a Dolphins fan

    • @aracelyemmett3493
      @aracelyemmett3493 Před 3 lety

      @@timg2088 They forgot to tell the sad ending of his comeback with LA Rams.

    • @jdog34505
      @jdog34505 Před rokem +1

      He needs to be in the HOF

    • @toma.4808
      @toma.4808 Před 9 měsíci

      Hof worthy

  • @mhhmmhhm3301
    @mhhmmhhm3301 Před 4 lety +39

    Ken Stabler is the PERFECT embodiment of what a raiders QB should be in every trait.

    • @aracelyemmett3493
      @aracelyemmett3493 Před 3 lety +2

      Stabler threw a ridiculous amount of interceptions and hung around with a guy with mob ties. He just was in one Superbowl and never deserved to be in the hall of fame. Although an interesting character and a fun guy to be around if you like top party he is not hallworthy. His career stats are poor.

    • @67marlins81
      @67marlins81 Před 2 lety +1

      @@aracelyemmett3493 Bingo. Plus now the raiders are pretty much a failed franchise and the joke of the league. Even people who don't follow football laugh at the raiders.... pathetic from the owner all the way down to the staff & players.

    • @johnselwitz5362
      @johnselwitz5362 Před rokem +4

      @@67marlins81 I don’t like the Raiders but they did just make the playoffs despite the incident with Gruden. The Jets or the Jaguars are the jokes of the NFL.

    • @joeseddit
      @joeseddit Před rokem +2

      @@aracelyemmett3493 I found this stat on wikipedia: "Stabler's five consecutive appearances in conference championship games (from 1973 to 1977) remained a record for NFL quarterbacks for almost 40 years, until Stabler's record was surpassed by Tom Brady in 2016".
      I didn't go to any lengths to verify but it sounds right. I also haven't verified my guess that his winning percentage as starter is comparable to the "hallworthy", so I could be wrong I suppose. I don't remember him throwing many interceptions with the Raiders but it doesn't surprise me. He wasn't all that great the first three quarters as I remember- probably shaking off a hangover which addresses your party guy reference. But I also remember that what seemed like every Sunday (just about the time Mom was calling us to supper dammit) he was leading the Raiders to a late game winning drive in the afternoon game.

    • @aspenrebel
      @aspenrebel Před rokem

      Grrrrrr!! Pats fan.

  • @wessimons5028
    @wessimons5028 Před 3 lety +14

    One of my favorite soundbites: Billy Kilmer on the sideline with the Saints

    • @macofalltrades6396
      @macofalltrades6396 Před 2 lety +3

      You could hear so clearly how miserably furious he was. The Saints were going down, but he wasn't about to go down quiet. I was never a Skins fan but I have great, great respect for Kilmer.

  • @josephmcfarland8442
    @josephmcfarland8442 Před 4 lety +17

    Saw Bert Jones and Kenny Anderson in an Epic game, week two 1976 28-27 Colts

  • @micahjohnson4302
    @micahjohnson4302 Před rokem +16

    Tarkenton held all major passing records longer than any quarterback in history.

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 3 měsíci

      @@liversuccess1420If the Rams had one of the top five guys they could’ve won two Super Bowls with the rest of their team in my opinion

  • @frankrizzo4460
    @frankrizzo4460 Před rokem +8

    Bert Jones definitely had a cannon arm, I remember watching a game he over threw the receiver and it dented the padding along the sidelines.🏈

  • @Elbanditoful
    @Elbanditoful Před 4 lety +10

    RIP Phillis George a great NFL journalist, at a time when not many women were in the professional football field of journalism and on a major network like CBS

  • @sonnycorleone3251
    @sonnycorleone3251 Před rokem +4

    I was a 1970's kid and I am glad Bert Jones made the list. He was very good. Along with the obvious ones here like Ken Stabler, Roger Staubach, Terry Bradshaw etc. Good job with this!

  • @r.williamcomm7693
    @r.williamcomm7693 Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you Isaac Green!! Top 10 70s QBs was great. I watched all of them play live on TV & 2 in stadiums. Great video.

    • @isaacgreen3273
      @isaacgreen3273  Před 4 lety

      You're welcome. Which two did you see?

    • @TonyArceneaux-uu3cf
      @TonyArceneaux-uu3cf Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@isaacgreen3273If Bert Jones and Jim Hart had better teams would they go to the NFL Hall of Fame?

  • @geemac7267
    @geemac7267 Před 4 lety +9

    I grew up in the 70s and loved Roger Staubach and Dan Fouts.

  • @Joseph-cu8lg
    @Joseph-cu8lg Před rokem +11

    Sipe, Grogan, Ferguson, and Pastorini all had some great spurts

  • @theshield8744
    @theshield8744 Před rokem +6

    I wasn’t a Colt fan but Love Me some Burt Jones. One of The most underrated QB’s in NFL History.

  • @gaineyjohnson6628
    @gaineyjohnson6628 Před 4 měsíci

    This really was a fun one. Great post because it is so incredibly fun. The subject is great and the presentation was well done. Thanks for sharing.

  • @kyleshiflet9952
    @kyleshiflet9952 Před 3 lety +14

    I agree as much as I love Stabler and Bradshaw I agree Roger "The Dodger" Staubach was the Quarterback of the 70s and is one of the best in history

    • @robertglass7841
      @robertglass7841 Před rokem +1

      But staubach never beat the Steelers in the Superbowl. The steel curtain. Nobody mentions Terry Bradshaw? How many rings 3 or 4

    • @robertglass7841
      @robertglass7841 Před rokem +1

      Plus Fran Tarkington from the Vikings even though he never won the super bowl he's in the hall of Fame.

  • @dumisatonyjohnson8145
    @dumisatonyjohnson8145 Před 3 lety +20

    Bert Jones was the John Elway of the 70s
    They were MVP caliber QBs who could throw it and run it (on occasion) in a physical era of pro football 🏈
    He’d be a HOF legend if he never suffered a shoulder injury
    Today’s NFL QBs are lucky

    • @diegozamudio9691
      @diegozamudio9691 Před 2 lety +4

      Bert Jones = andrew luck of my generation

    • @JJJBRICE
      @JJJBRICE Před 2 lety +3

      Bert Jones was a second generation NFL player . His father Dub Jones was an end for the early 1950s Paul Brown / Otto Graham Cleveland Browns . I halfway expected Bert Jones ' son to make the NFL . I am aware of several other father/son combos who played in the NFL . I still waiting for a three generation , if any of you football fans know of any please reply .

    • @arthurhall8238
      @arthurhall8238 Před 2 lety

      @@diegozamudio9691 Umm...no

  • @paulellington1505
    @paulellington1505 Před 4 lety +57

    Bert Jones and Andrew Luck. Two Colts franchise quarterbacks that had their bodies betray their careers.

    • @DepressionShaman
      @DepressionShaman Před 4 lety

      Johnny Unitas retired early too. He could've played several more years.

    • @paulellington1505
      @paulellington1505 Před 4 lety +1

      Yea but they shipped him to San Diego as soon as he started to show his age.

    • @keithclark7266
      @keithclark7266 Před 4 lety +13

      @@DepressionShaman Too early? He played his final season with San Diego at age 40. He played during a time where you could hit the quarterback high or low in or out of the pocket, and as hard as you can.

    • @DepressionShaman
      @DepressionShaman Před 4 lety +3

      @@keithclark7266 Oh okay. Didn't know that.

    • @Lawomenshoops
      @Lawomenshoops Před 4 lety +3

      Um, no, Bert Jones played for the BALTIMORE COLTS. Luck played with indyNOPLACE. Two different franchises.

  • @buffchic13
    @buffchic13 Před 4 lety +7

    I'm learning sooooooooo much from your uploads. Thank you so much 🤘🏾🤘🏾🤘🏾

    • @isaacgreen3273
      @isaacgreen3273  Před 4 lety +3

      You're welcome.

    • @buffchic13
      @buffchic13 Před 4 lety +2

      @@isaacgreen3273 I just started following football a few yrs ago and I found your channel. You have increased my knowledge. Thx.

    • @isaacgreen3273
      @isaacgreen3273  Před 4 lety +2

      Glad to help out.

  • @jefferyrobertson7520
    @jefferyrobertson7520 Před 2 lety +11

    My favorite quarterback of the 70s Dynasty Terry Bradshaw and Roger Staubach totally amazing 🏈

  • @georgeorwell4534
    @georgeorwell4534 Před 4 lety +77

    When measuring Roger Staubach, you have to understand the era and the Dallas Cowboys. While they had talent, they were perennially losing the big game. Staubach changed that. He made Dallas winners. To change a losing history to one of being a winner is one of the hardest things to do in professional sports, and he deserves number 1.

    • @kaledafif7972
      @kaledafif7972 Před 4 lety +2

      Strongly agreed!!

    • @dolphignition7176
      @dolphignition7176 Před 4 lety +2

      I disagree - I think he's a system quarterback - couldn't make a move by himself without Landry commanding him nor him going to Landry before making a move!

    • @TDL-xg5nn
      @TDL-xg5nn Před 4 lety +5

      Cowboys won their first super bowl with Craig Morton at QB.

    • @capcitymediagroup831
      @capcitymediagroup831 Před 4 lety +4

      Here's my thing.....The Cowboys with Roger were good but remember they lost a 3 superbowls in the 70s one by way of the Colts and 2 by the Steelers....Roger had great comeback games but lost alot of NFC games....the Steelers won 4 chips in 6 years today if they did that Bradshaw would be considered the greatest...remember also the dolphins were dominate the Raiders were dominate Vikings were dominate in the 70s all who there qbs are on this list i woulda put Bradshaw #1 Roger #2 Stabler #3.......its like they never mention Art Monk as a great receiver but he has 3 Super bowls, probowls and owned all the receiver records during the era of Jerry Rice....Jerry is considered the 🐐 rightfully so but its not many other receivers who had the numbers and played as good as Monk besides Rice....Bradshaw aint the greatest but that 70s era he won 4 rings you cant argue with that

    • @tuckercarlsonsmicropenis1283
      @tuckercarlsonsmicropenis1283 Před 4 lety +7

      I hate the Cowboys, but Roger The Dodger (or, as my friend liked to call him “Gay-jer the Major”) is NOTHING LIKE a “system QB”, Montana was more of a SQB than Staubach ever was - no, I’m NOT calling Montana a SQB - but Staubach was more like the great Fran Tarkentin than people seem to want to admit, except Staubach never got the rep of never winning the big game...too many of Staubach great plays came on broken plays, off-schedule throws, scrambles, dodging sacks...for him to be considered a SQB.

  • @PlumbNutz
    @PlumbNutz Před rokem +5

    I remember watching Jim Hart in what was probably his last year coming back from a serious leg injury. You could see on the television set that one leg was noticeably skinnier than the other leg! It was pretty crazy that he was out there playing like that but he was getting it done.

    • @toma.4808
      @toma.4808 Před 9 měsíci

      Jim was phenomenal. The fact that he accomplished all he did as a Cardinal is impressive. His longevity is also a testament to his fortitude. It's a shame he's not a hofer. His name is often overshadowed by other great qbs like Bradshaw and Staubach who were able to lead their teams to the promised land

  • @sisleymichael
    @sisleymichael Před rokem +6

    While in Vietnam, Staubach contacted the Cowboys, and he asked them to send him another crate of footballs so he could practice. They said, we just sent you a crate, what happened to them? His answer? They got hit with a mortar. After Roger left football, I was a college senior Army ROTC cadet and met him up near Horseshoe Bay in Texas on a little country road. We both were out early in the pre-dawn running. At a road juncture, his route took him left and I went right. We conversed for a good 15 minutes. One funny guy and such a REAL human being. He shook my hand and wished me luck and said always remember your oath. As a Texan and Cowboys fan, of course he gets my vote for #1.

    • @bradcolorado8149
      @bradcolorado8149 Před rokem

      0-2 against Terry Bradshaw in the ultimate test of a QB. Bradshaw had to play against the Oilers, and Staubach had no one tough in their division in the 70's, Giants, Redskins, Eagles weren't great until the 80's. Terry Bradshaw is far and above the best

    • @zippitydoodads9947
      @zippitydoodads9947 Před rokem

      Duck Fallas

    • @zippitydoodads9947
      @zippitydoodads9947 Před rokem

      @@bradcolorado8149 oh STFU. QBs don’t play against each other

    • @bradcolorado8149
      @bradcolorado8149 Před rokem

      @@zippitydoodads9947 so you're saying the QB who scores more points in a game than the other doesn't actually win the game??? I'm confused

  • @sonsofliberty75
    @sonsofliberty75 Před rokem +3

    Seeing that bomb from Kenny Stabler to Dave Casper, which was known as ghost to the post, literally gave me chills

  • @Mr.56Goldtop
    @Mr.56Goldtop Před 2 lety +6

    Fun facts, in college Billy Kilmer was a single wing halfback and running quarterback. A 1962, his second season in the pros, a serious car accident ended his days of running the football. He was also the back who fumbled the ball on Jim Marshall's wrong way return for a safty in 1964. He took the 1972 Redskins to the Super Bowl after leading the NFL in TD passes and a passer rating of 84.8. They lost the Super Bowl to Miami, but only by the score of 14 - 7. However Kilmer threw a pass to a wide open Jerry Smith in the end zone, but the pass hit the cross bar and bounced away. That TD would have made it 14 - 14, and then, who knows. Consequently the following year the NFL moved the goal posts to the back of the end zone.

  • @MrNategee67
    @MrNategee67 Před 4 lety +15

    Roger The Dodger Staubach was The 1970’s,he made The Dallas Cowboys GLAMOROUS and the most exciting team especially from 1975 to 1979 of ANY era and really why they’re so popular today.

    • @z-z-z-z
      @z-z-z-z Před 4 lety

      MrNategee67 - quite a few people do not know, after graduating college at navy, he served four years in the navy; spent some time in vietnam. he retired at the top of his game, due to concussions, after the 1979 season (the highest quarterback rating in history, up to that point)...

    • @algini12
      @algini12 Před 4 lety +2

      MrNategee67 The Cowbows most popular today? Steeler games have better ratings. We also travel better than others, and consistently fill up other team's stadiums with our fans. How fun and wacky is it to see terrible towels, waving in 2 thirds of the seats in Arizona? Bars in towns with no teams, have half the bar on Sundays for the Steelers, the other half for the rest of the league games. You can have your glamour. We'll take Steeler Nation.

    • @robgbaby
      @robgbaby Před 4 lety +1

      @@algini12 cowboys are clealry the most popular team. The Steelers having higher rates games is a lie. The Cowboys are constantly in primetime, #1 in ratings, merchandise and these sports channels cant stop talking about em no matter how good or bad they are.

    • @algini12
      @algini12 Před 4 lety

      @@robgbaby all those fans waving terrible towels in other teams's stadiums in no lie. Even a thousand miles away. It's a visual fact. Half the sports bars Steelers, other half other teams, even in states that have their own teams. And you're wrong on the ratings. We rank higher.

    • @Ethan-Hensley
      @Ethan-Hensley Před 4 lety +2

      algini12 lol no you don’t. Dallas rates higher. And it’s not even close.

  • @imeddiewilson1572
    @imeddiewilson1572 Před 4 lety +23

    Ok. I'm a dolphins fan and I'm with the "what?!?!" Guy putting griese ahead of stabler. Hell it was Earl morral that QB the fins to perfect season

    • @dolphignition7176
      @dolphignition7176 Před 4 lety

      Fins up! 💪🐬💯

    • @sludge4125
      @sludge4125 Před 4 lety +6

      Morrall was the starting quarterback for 11 of the Dolphins 17 wins.

    • @aracelyemmett3493
      @aracelyemmett3493 Před 3 lety +1

      Eddie you are a rare honest Dolphins fan.

    • @plightfoot8491
      @plightfoot8491 Před rokem +1

      It’s kinda hard to QB with a broken leg but he came in at the final game and brought them back from being behind and won the game called his own plays and was the smartest Q B of the time came back in 73 and only lost 3 games

    • @freddyjefferson5164
      @freddyjefferson5164 Před 8 měsíci

      Grieve started in the super bowl

  • @jmgarcia61
    @jmgarcia61 Před 4 lety +32

    The thing nobody talks about is how so many QBs in the 70s called their own plays. (And Griese was the best at it.)

    • @DepressionShaman
      @DepressionShaman Před 4 lety +2

      Staubach never did. LoL Tom Landry's system forbade it.

    • @jmgarcia61
      @jmgarcia61 Před 4 lety +5

      @@DepressionShaman People always said how dumb Bradshaw was and how smart Staubach was...but TB called his own plays to beat RS both times they met.

    • @DepressionShaman
      @DepressionShaman Před 4 lety +5

      @@jmgarcia61 Terry Bradshaw wasn't dumb, but he was no genius either. His stats left much to be desired and if Jackie Smith hadn't dropped a touchdown pass in Super Bowl XXIII, Roger would have at least three rings. The reason why Roger never called his own plays is because Tom Landry created Dallas' whole offense and defense from scratch and felt he knew which plays to run in any given situation. Terry Bradshaw called his own plays in large part because he and Chuck Knoll didn't have the greatest working relationship and didn't want to create a sideline distraction. Put Roger on that team and they have five rings in the seventies easy. Put Bradshaw on the Cowboys and I doubt we'd have even one. Bradshaw wasn't anything special bro. Tell me of any QB from 4-10 that couldn't win on those Steeler teams.

    • @jmgarcia61
      @jmgarcia61 Před 4 lety +4

      @@DepressionShaman Not saying anything one way or another about TB as a QB, just that the knock on him for being dumb was incorrect.

    • @DepressionShaman
      @DepressionShaman Před 4 lety +4

      @@jmgarcia61 TB wasn't dumb. He suffered from crippling depression and social anxiety. I know a thing or two about that. People didn't understand how that affects a person back then. Hell, they still don't today.

  • @dcbandnerd
    @dcbandnerd Před 4 lety +10

    Burt Jones is a heartbreaking case - not only because of his injuries but because of the affect it had on football in Baltimore. If he stayed healthy, maybe the Colts keep winning, the city can justify building a new stadium for the team, and maybe the stay in Baltimore.

    • @Lawomenshoops
      @Lawomenshoops Před 4 lety +2

      Not as long as that drunk bastard owned the team! If you're the city, would you spend millions on a stadium, when the drunk bastard owner is looking to other cities?

    • @zippitydoodads9947
      @zippitydoodads9947 Před rokem

      Hopefully the Orioles will follow the Colts to Indianapolis. Fire up them Mayflower moving vans!

    • @jakegodman
      @jakegodman Před rokem +1

      @@zippitydoodads9947 troll

  • @dfaircloth30
    @dfaircloth30 Před 3 lety +6

    Kilmer started his career in San Francisco in 1961 and came back from having his legs crushed in a bad auto accident.... talk about tough as nails

  • @cordalebrown2799
    @cordalebrown2799 Před 4 lety +16

    Phyllis George. R.I.P

  • @roncolept
    @roncolept Před rokem +3

    Favorite story about Staubach: During his four years active duty with the Navy, he took his 30 days of leave every year so he could attend Cowboys training camp. That means he did not get to have any extended time with his family, and was physically worn out going back to his unit in combat. Who else on this list can claim any comparison to grit and commitment?

  • @67marlins81
    @67marlins81 Před 2 lety +4

    Thanks for the honorable mention for Dante Pastorini at 28 minutes.....one of my two boyhood idols along with Terry Bradshaw.

    • @houstonrebel4449
      @houstonrebel4449 Před 2 lety +1

      I met Pastorini when I was 7 years old at an Astros game. Him and Roger Staubach were my childhood idols.

  • @tonyarceneaux286
    @tonyarceneaux286 Před 3 lety +5

    Roger Studach should get the nickname Captain America because he was in the Navy.

  • @loganglenn817
    @loganglenn817 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The unintentional comedy of these glitched fade outs is better than the video’s content.

  • @usajj2146
    @usajj2146 Před 4 lety +1

    Captain America #1!!! Let's go! This list was definitely a hard one to rank, but a really good one. Thanks for bringing the great content, keep it up!

  • @keithclark7266
    @keithclark7266 Před 4 lety +26

    The Baltimore Colts, led by Bert Jones at Quarterback, from 1975 (10-4), 1976 (11-3), and 1977 (10-4), were one of the best teams in the AFC. They had 2 obstacles(2 major problems)in their way: The Black n Gold and the Silver n Black. In 3 consecutive playoff games, Baltimore lost to Pittsburgh 28-10 in 1975, 40-14 in 1976, and in 1977 lost in double overtime to the Raiders 37-31 in a game they should've won.

    • @cristiandelvillar3121
      @cristiandelvillar3121 Před 2 lety +1

      Love that you described the 77 game instead of just saying “Also, Ghost to the Post” 🤣

    • @andrearel3703
      @andrearel3703 Před rokem

      Dolphins were 10-4 in 75' and 77' and should've gone to the playoffs instead of the sorry ass Colts.

  • @buffalobraves9
    @buffalobraves9 Před rokem +14

    A couple guys not even mentioned were Joe Ferguson and Steve Bartkowski. Both great QB’s.

    • @comfortat
      @comfortat Před rokem

      Don't bogart that joint, my friend. 😛
      They were good, not great. I understand you want to include a few honorable mentions, though.
      Peace

    • @buffalobraves9
      @buffalobraves9 Před rokem +1

      @@comfortat So Billy Kilmer is considered great but not Joe Ferguson or Steve Bartkowski? Ok, whatever. This conversation is over.

    • @comfortat
      @comfortat Před rokem

      @@buffalobraves9 You obviously didn't see MY comments on my post. I dog out Kilmer. Scroll down/up and find my post.
      Kilmer was turrible, but as a Cowboys fan, I'm glad George Allen chose him over Sonny Jurgenson.
      Besides, I said your boys were good, and I agree that Ferguson should have made the top 10.
      Peace

    • @winstonjames2583
      @winstonjames2583 Před 7 dny

      Grogan over bartkowski in 75 on...but wat about Craig morton???

  • @good03boy
    @good03boy Před měsícem +1

    At the end of 1979 season, Terry Bradshaw had completed 51.6% of his passes for 19,918 yards in his 1st 10 seasons. He threw 147 TD passes in his 1st 10 seasons. Bradshaw threw 163 interceptions in his 1st 10 seasons. He did well, stats-wise in 1978 and '79 seasons.

  • @oscarl.ramirez3927
    @oscarl.ramirez3927 Před 4 lety

    Great Upload.

  • @bitemenow609
    @bitemenow609 Před rokem +4

    Jim Hart. Had one of the best OL in the 70s. Loved watching this team.

    • @toma.4808
      @toma.4808 Před 9 měsíci

      He was one of the more accurate qbs. Hof worthy

    • @bitemenow609
      @bitemenow609 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@toma.4808 I really loved those Cards teams. Metcalf was an exciting player.

    • @toma.4808
      @toma.4808 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@bitemenow609 sadly his name gets often overlooked because he was a Cardinal. The man had grit and he could throw a ball. Hof worthy

  • @budhall4296
    @budhall4296 Před 4 lety +17

    Bert Jones should be higher. He was a great, great player.

    • @arthurhall8238
      @arthurhall8238 Před 3 lety +1

      Exactly...he was the premier QB of the 70s...and the highest rated.

    • @LordofDublin4
      @LordofDublin4 Před 3 lety +1

      AND .... he was great in the Miller Lite commercials 😉😁

  • @charleschauffe5884
    @charleschauffe5884 Před rokem +5

    I saw Bert Jones at LSU- still cannot believe the Saints traded the #1 pick to the Colts for lineman Billy Newsome! What a gift to the Colts! If only he could have stayed healthy...

    • @brettbanta2100
      @brettbanta2100 Před rokem

      Man, the Saints made so damn many dumb decisions back then, it was laughable. I'm a lifelong Saints fan from New Orleans, remember those Aints years all too well 😊

  • @masonkinter6821
    @masonkinter6821 Před 4 lety +7

    19:55 every QB threw a lot of interceptions before the Mel Blount rule because receivers could be run straight into the ground as soon as the play starts.

  • @kevinbowen6182
    @kevinbowen6182 Před 3 lety +23

    Roger Staubach was the starter for the Cowboys for basically 8 years. He led the league in passer rating 4 times. He was second in another season. He went to four Super Bowls. He won 2. Stretched over Tom Brady's length of service, the numbers are remarkably similar. Staubach is arguably the best quarterback ever.

  • @daleeloph6888
    @daleeloph6888 Před 2 lety +3

    Bert Jones was my favorite player when I was a kid.

  • @durkadurkamohammedjihad956

    If you think about Bert Jone and Andrew Luck both had a similar career. Both replacing legends and both leaving the game early due to injuries.

  • @christannuzzo6849
    @christannuzzo6849 Před 4 lety +2

    Pretty good list. I'd change some of these rankings around but the correct players are on that list.

    • @MrJLov13
      @MrJLov13 Před 4 lety

      What would be your rankings, you have me interested so let's hear how you'd rank these QB's.

  • @dantheman5745
    @dantheman5745 Před 4 lety +10

    27:34 So sad that Phyllis George passed away this month.

  • @jameshowlett5106
    @jameshowlett5106 Před 4 lety +24

    Kenny's too low.

  • @charlesh9445
    @charlesh9445 Před 4 lety +7

    Best era in football in my opinion

    • @dwightlove3704
      @dwightlove3704 Před 2 lety

      Yes QBs earned anything they got.

    • @macofalltrades6396
      @macofalltrades6396 Před 2 lety

      Here's how tough it was in the 70's - Steve Bartkowski quarterbacked the Falcons to their first playoff berth in 1978 (and twice more in the 80s), was the best QB in team history until Matt Ryan, and not a single comment about him. He wasn't top 11, but like Manning, he was on a poor team and had a worse injury history.

  • @kyledamron
    @kyledamron Před 4 lety +12

    Stabler should be a lot higher

  • @heyitsjoe8446
    @heyitsjoe8446 Před 3 lety +3

    It’s a crime that bradshaws not number 1, 4 trips to the Super Bowl for 4 wins, 2 Super Bowl MVP, NFL MVP IN 78, 8 AFC central championships and he starred in movies alongside Burt reynolds.

  • @RickaramaTrama-lc1ys
    @RickaramaTrama-lc1ys Před 4 lety +4

    Terry was so damn much fun to watch with those Popeye Arms and he looked like a Lineman that could throw the ball. They beat on him unmercifully at first and then he opened a fresh can of whoop ass and showed them what a tough Louisiana Boy could do to ya~!! Country boys can survive~!!!

  • @MrRufusRToyota
    @MrRufusRToyota Před 4 lety +1

    Can’t argue with this list.

  • @johnliberty3647
    @johnliberty3647 Před 4 lety +26

    Fouts did have that one great season in 1979 but his best years were 80, 81,82. I would make him a 1980's QB

  • @elliotrichards4913
    @elliotrichards4913 Před 4 lety +8

    Underrated one could be John Brodie. He brought a terrible 49’ers team to playoff relevancy. I’ll be good if Tarkenton or Staubach is #1
    Let’s go Saints and Archie! If he was on a better team, he’d be one of the best ever.

    • @tomb4575
      @tomb4575 Před 4 lety +3

      More 1960's

    • @ldjackson8656
      @ldjackson8656 Před 4 lety

      Agree on Brodie. He was another one on my list. Jim Plunkett gets no mention. He really struggled in the 70's and had perhaps the greatest comeback season of all time when he won the super bowl with the Raiders in early 80's. Leadership was a bigger part of being a QB in that era. The passing game wasn't as complicated as it has been the past 30 years, and the QB was NOWHERE NEAR as "protected" back then. I can't even imagine some of the concussions these guys endured.
      Still, no Namath or even a MENTION of Dawson? Come on.

    • @ldjackson8656
      @ldjackson8656 Před 4 lety

      @Harry Engel He was also injured, but he was a great passer. More importantly, he dragged the old AFL out of the back seat of the powerful NFL and "guaranteed" a win against a team heavily favored to destroy them, and followed through. Won the big game, too--and they talk about "70's flash," my goodness, NOBODY had the "look" and lifestyle more than Broadway Joe. From the stache' to the hair to the clothes to the late night parties. They mentioned him with the Rams but his career was long over by then. No knees, and he was a running QB beforehand. And, seriously, Jim Hart in front of Joe Namath? Come on.

  • @hooverredman5167
    @hooverredman5167 Před 4 lety +9

    Ken stabler was a savage

    • @hooverredman5167
      @hooverredman5167 Před 4 lety +5

      Hector Rodriguez can you get drunk and throw 3 touchdowns against Steelers

  • @jeffstever9771
    @jeffstever9771 Před rokem +1

    Stabler was just a crafty SOB...loved Bert Jones too

  • @MartinMcCauslin
    @MartinMcCauslin Před 4 lety +1

    the 70s were just a bit before my time as far as my football interests go but I know all the names - they were legends

  • @paysonfox88
    @paysonfox88 Před 3 lety +4

    Billy Kilmer started out as a Half-back Runner in the early 60's. His transition of competent QB was remarkable. This is a guy who was taking hand offs 100 times per season and rushing for 500 yards. and they wonder how he was so tough....hahahahahaha!!!!

  • @shanelux5963
    @shanelux5963 Před 4 lety +13

    '79 - Bradshaw
    '78 - Staubach
    '77 - Stabler
    '76 - Bradshaw
    '75 - Bradshaw
    '74 - Griese
    '73 - Griese
    '72 - Staubach
    '71 - Unitas
    '70 - Dawson

    • @jgrj52
      @jgrj52 Před 4 lety +4

      Len Dawson was at his best in the 60s

    • @DepressionShaman
      @DepressionShaman Před 4 lety +5

      Unitas was knocked out of the game. Earl Morral finished the game.
      Bob Griese was injured early in 72' and missed most of the season.
      Super Bowls are a team accomplishment. Good quarterbacks are necessary, but then again so is every other position on the team.

    • @laurala101
      @laurala101 Před 4 lety +3

      Look at who was ‘74 MVP. Griese? Um, no.
      Stabler. Very consistently excellent throughout the 74-77 time period, just the very best.

    • @Miatacrosser
      @Miatacrosser Před 4 lety +4

      Who cares what happened in one fucking game. This is about the decade Shane. Playing on a winning team doesn't hold water here.
      Well I take that back. Putting Greise and Bradshaw ahead of Ken Stabler makes this list a joke. Anyone who saw them play knew Stabler should've been second or third ahead of both of them on this list. Wasn't even close.

    • @purplebondsaiyan2987
      @purplebondsaiyan2987 Před 4 lety +2

      Incorrect Bradshaw was League MVP in '78 buddy!!!!

  • @promeitheus
    @promeitheus Před 4 lety +15

    35:04 how great is this. I love Fran Tarkenton. He really steps into this throw

    • @howardcosell2022
      @howardcosell2022 Před 4 lety +2

      Should have been part of the NFL100. Fran playing 18 seasons with defenders literally trying "to kill him" is more remarkable than Brady and Brees

    • @aracelyemmett3493
      @aracelyemmett3493 Před 3 lety +1

      Tarkenton was far better than Roger Roger has a higher winning percentage but they neglect to tell you he didn't start in two of the 10 years of the 70's.

    • @aracelyemmett3493
      @aracelyemmett3493 Před 3 lety

      Tarkenton also played two years of the 70's with a horrible New York Giants team.

    • @jimwhite1061
      @jimwhite1061 Před rokem +1

      Fran was a winner plain and simple. You had to beat him he never beat himself

    • @tommylord
      @tommylord Před rokem

      ​@@aracelyemmett3493 Also: If not for the 'Hail Mary' game, the Vikings would have been in four consecutive Super Bowls. I've always felt the Vikings would have avenged the Steelers in SB X if they had not been robbed in the playoff against the Cowboys. Fran's father passed away on that day, and I believe that would have gave him the inspiration to whip Pittsburgh's ass. And I don't think the Vikes would have had any trouble with the Rams in the NFC Championship game.

  • @carlbenson6412
    @carlbenson6412 Před 4 lety +5

    I agree John! Anderson was the passing champ 3 of his 4 times in the 1970's he should be in the top 5 & the NFL Hall of Fame.

    • @unkledoda420
      @unkledoda420 Před rokem +1

      Look up Anderson's stats, for every good season he had during the 70's he had another that was nothing special ('76-'79)

    • @carlbenson6412
      @carlbenson6412 Před rokem

      @@unkledoda420 Agreed...I feel unfortunately that Kenny (Ken) won't get in now...since his teammate Ken Riley (The Rattler) may get in...for Qb's the standards are really, really, really high...as they should be. Ken played in the best era for Qb's up to that point & his bad years are hurting him. But, he did win the passing title 4 times, the MVP & held the record for accuracy in a season for almost 40 years until Drew Bree's broke it twice before he retired.

    • @toma.4808
      @toma.4808 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The only qb in the 70s that led the nfl in passing back to back

    • @carlbenson6412
      @carlbenson6412 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@toma.4808 put 'em in...unfortunately I don't think that Ken is eligible any longer for the 'old timer's vote.

    • @toma.4808
      @toma.4808 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@carlbenson6412 it's a crime he didn't get in sooner.

  • @Lawomenshoops
    @Lawomenshoops Před 4 lety +12

    I think it's still on You Tube. Bert Jones vs the Patriots in 76 or 77. He rolls to his left, so he is on one side of the field. He sees Shake n Bake Glen Dougherty, on the other side of the field, and throws a 50 yard bullet right to Dougherty! One of the greatest passes I've ever seen! Half the QB's in NFL today can't make that throw!!
    In 89 or 90, Bert Jones was in a QB Challenge. He was about 38, retired for about 6-7 years. He finished 1st in the retired players and 3rd overall. He also finished first in longest throw, 75 yards!!!

    • @chucklynch6523
      @chucklynch6523 Před 4 lety +2

      Bert Jones had about 3 great years before getting injured. At the pace he was setting he would have gone down as one of the greatest QBs of all time and be in the HOF...if not for the injury!

    • @Lawomenshoops
      @Lawomenshoops Před 4 lety +1

      @@chucklynch6523 Bert was injuried in 78 and 79. When he was healthy in 1980 and 81, he threw for more yards in both of those years than he did in his 76 MVP year. In 82 he was traded to the LA Rams, but suffered the career ending neck injury.
      The reason for the more passing yards, were the rule changes in 78.

  • @chriskies5016
    @chriskies5016 Před 4 lety +15

    Snake is about 6 spots too low

  • @dumisatonyjohnson8145
    @dumisatonyjohnson8145 Před 3 lety +2

    Ken Anderson was also the 1981 NFL MVP and led Cincinnati to a deep playoff run to SB16

  • @kevinmacdougall6665
    @kevinmacdougall6665 Před 3 lety +7

    These clowns that want to slag on Griese should watch some of his games after Csonka, Kiick, Morris and Warfield were gone.

  • @georgesouthwick7000
    @georgesouthwick7000 Před 4 lety +13

    Back then it was, in the words of Al Davis, “just win Baby”.

    • @aracelyemmett3493
      @aracelyemmett3493 Před 3 lety +1

      Al Davis was a criminal. His only redeeming quality was he handed his gangster owners their asses in court on a regular basis.

  • @daneamann6225
    @daneamann6225 Před 4 lety +2

    "You don't have Griese-what...What...WHAT........4!"
    I love that. xD

  • @tuckercarlsonsmicropenis1283

    Ken Anderson should actually be a SB champion - which would put him in the HOF without a doubt - if Forrest Gregg hadn’t had Ice-Bowl flashbacks he’d have let Anderson throw the ball at least ONCE from inside the 5-yd line. SBXVI was decided on that goal line stand by SF. I admire Joe Montana as much as anyone, and his SB stats are unimpeachable (11 TD passes, 0 INTs across 4 SB appearances), but he really should be 3-1 in SBs.

  • @SlugabedProductions
    @SlugabedProductions Před rokem +4

    Kenny Anderson the most underrated QB in the history of the game

    • @bryanjones4444
      @bryanjones4444 Před 29 dny

      Along with Fran Tarkenton you are right. Ken is an easy pick for the Hall of Fame. Look for my book coming out in about a year. I think the name will be "the REAL GOAT scoring system", or something very similar. Ken has the 15th best score among all quarterbacks since 1947 and scores higher than 13 current Hall of Famers.Tarkenton held all the passing records longer than anyone in history and only Sammy Baugh was close. Not to mention the rushing record for quarterbacks. It took him 3 tries to get inducted.

  • @icewaterslim7260
    @icewaterslim7260 Před rokem +3

    I like Tarkenton at number two despite some bad showings in the big show. I think Stabler is right behind him. I'll not argue your number one because I'm afraid I ain't got one. Bradshaw was on a talent loaded team but he was a late comer that was counted among them. For me it's a toss up for third. Being a fan of the Oakland Raiders I get to bump Bradshaw to 4th. It's admittedly a tough pick for me to decide so that's how I done it. Bob Griese at #5.

  • @jorgestramusic
    @jorgestramusic Před 4 lety +1

    I don't agree with this list and order but it's great to go thru memory lane... My childhood hero? Bert Jones!

  • @zachjohnson3573
    @zachjohnson3573 Před 3 lety

    36:30 - What song is in the background?? Some crazy guitar riffs..

  • @l.l.c.
    @l.l.c. Před 3 lety +17

    Bradshaw had the steelers defense. Period. Hell, Trent Dilfer won a Superbowl with a great defense. Staubach was 30 years old when he finally was given the starting qb spot from Tom Landry. Most qb's begin declining at that age. Roger played 8 seasons as the starter. 4 Superbowl appearances, 2 World Championships in 8 years starting at 30 years old. Oh, and he also won the Heisman Trophy while at Navy. Simply put, Staubach was not only the best qb of the 70's, but one of the best all time!

    • @bradshdy456
      @bradshdy456 Před rokem +1

      Staubach didnt play professionally til he was around 28 because of his service in the Navy that he had to complete first.

    • @aspenrebel
      @aspenrebel Před rokem

      Staubach spent 4 plus years in the navy as an officer having graduated from the US Naval Academy. Prior to going into the NFL.

    • @rustyshackleford7282
      @rustyshackleford7282 Před rokem +4

      Bradshaw outplayed Staubach in the last Superbowl they were in

    • @l.l.c.
      @l.l.c. Před rokem +1

      @@rustyshackleford7282 I believe Staubach was going against a slightly better defense than Bradshaw. The entire game turned when Staubach hit a wide open Jackie Smith in the endzone and he couldn't make the catch. I remember watching that Superbowl with my father. One the greatest Superbowls ever. Hall of Famers on both teams flying all over the field. I believe the '70s was the pinnacle of true competition for the NFL.

    • @mrtnt3462
      @mrtnt3462 Před rokem

      @@l.l.c. THE DOOMSDAY DEFENCE WAS SPECIAL BRADSHAW SHOULD BE AHEAD OF STAUBACH I DON'T GIVE A DAMN ABOUT ALL THAT OTHER NONSENSE TERRY FUCKIN HANRATTY WASN'T WINNING 4 SBS STAUBACH HAS HOFERS TOO & HIS WINS CAME AGAINST 2 FIRST TIME OPPONENTS COMPLETELY OVER THEIR HEADS DEN/MIAMI & CRAIG MORTON LEAD THE BOYS TO A SB & IF NOT FOR A GOAL LINE FUMBLE [DUANE THOMAS] THE BOYS WOULD'VE WON THE GAME!!

  • @farmasyst
    @farmasyst Před 4 lety +3

    Kenny Anderson should be in the Hall of Fame. At least the Bengals should have retired his number, because then Dalton wouldn't be putting it to shame on a weekly basis.

  • @g.r.x.racer-1737
    @g.r.x.racer-1737 Před rokem +1

    Terry Bradshaw, Bob Griese, Ken Stabler, Dan Fouts, Roger Staubach, Jim Zorn, Steve Grogan, Bert Jones, Ken Anderson, Fran Tarkenton.

  • @depaola63
    @depaola63 Před 4 lety

    @10:36 I got the chills ! My youth 🌈 also brought a tear to my 57 year old eyes 👀

  • @chrismas9448
    @chrismas9448 Před 4 lety +4

    Yeah that top five was really hard to rank. You could have the snake at 2 or bob greise at 2 or terry bradshaw at 1 or Fran at 2 or 3. Really hard to rank but fun list.

    • @DepressionShaman
      @DepressionShaman Před 4 lety +1

      My top 5:
      1) Roger Staubach
      2) Kenny Stabler
      3) Ken Anderson
      4) Fran Tarkington
      5)Terry Bradshaw [may not have had the stats, but the Super Bowls ARE relevant when you have that many.]

  • @justsayin3228
    @justsayin3228 Před 4 lety +14

    Stabler should be higher. The Raiders ruled the AFC West with an Iron Fist in the 70s and went to the AFC Championship game five times. And best winning percentage of ANY pro sports team. When they lost (or weren't cheated out of a win - meaningful look at Pittsburgh), they lost to the eventual Super Bowl Champs each time. Just win baby. Glad he finally made the HOF.

    • @neneshubby
      @neneshubby Před 4 lety +1

      Couldn't agree more.

    • @maximostiberius2324
      @maximostiberius2324 Před 3 lety +3

      Dude get over it. You should be grateful the steelers were down because of injuries in 76...or they would have won the superbowl that year as well

    • @neneshubby
      @neneshubby Před 3 lety

      @@maximostiberius2324 No they wouldn't have. Injured or not the Raiders were the best team that year. They'd already beaten a fully healthy Steeler team that season in game one. And by the way, that same year was the worst injury year in Raiders history up to that time. They lost 5 starters for the year in the pre season, mostly on defense. It was so bad they had to change their entire defensive scheme from a 4-3 to a 3-4 because of a lack of depth on the defensive line. During the season they went on to lose their kicker (who kicked the winning fg vs the Steelers in game 1) for the season and punter Ray Guy had to try to kick fg's for a game and they had to sign a kicker off the waiver wire so don't give me any whining about Steelers injuries and as I pointed out they STILL beat a fully healthy Pittsburgh in game 1. My parents were Raiders Season ticket holders all throughout the 60's and 70's and I went to tons of Raiders games in the 70's. I know that 76 season like the back of my hand. 74 (although I thought the Raiders were the better team that year) 75, 78 & 79 I'll give you. Steelers were the best but not 76.

    • @markellison1707
      @markellison1707 Před 3 lety +1

      Really? Meaningful look at Pittsburgh? Go watch the reverse field angle of the Immaculate Reception. Tatum punched the ball, and Franco caught it 3 inches off the ground. The play was called correctly. Villapiano claims he was clipped, the tight end was in front of him! If he didn't see the block coming he's either lying or blind. You lost! You lost to the Steelers in the "74" AFC title game in Oakland. How were you cheated there? Claiming they iced the field in the "75" AFC title game, just proves Madden was still bitter over the "72" loss. The Steelers were the better team in the "70's" they didn't have to cheat to beat your team, get over it!

    • @67marlins81
      @67marlins81 Před 2 lety

      The raiders have been a joke for two generations. Bye.

  • @greenbeagle13
    @greenbeagle13 Před rokem +2

    Bob Griese is still the QB on the ONLY team that had an undefeated team.

  • @BA3676
    @BA3676 Před rokem +1

    Roman Gabriel , Joe Ferguson, Craig Morton , Jim Plunkett , Dan Pastorini , Joe Namath

  • @richbarr5959
    @richbarr5959 Před 4 lety +11

    I would put Staubach at #2 behind Bradshaw, who won four Super Bowls (including two over Staubach) and called his own plays. (Full disclosure: I'm from western PA.) There are some other questionable choices as well--I mean, Billy Kilmer?--but still a much better list than the '80s version, because it was a much better crop of QBs. I was born in 1963, so I remember all these guys very well.

    • @DepressionShaman
      @DepressionShaman Před 4 lety +5

      Look at Bradshaw's statline from the whole decade. It's pedestrian for a guy with a 14-2 playoff record. Staubach meant more to the Cowboys than Bradshaw did to the Steelers. Guy was surrounded by Hall of Famers in his receiving corp, offensive line, defensive line, linebackers and defensive backs. Terry had a much higher margin for error than Staubach did. Now to be clear Staubach played with 4 HOFers himself and it's not like the Super Bowls don't mean anything, but c'mon man. Staubach had the highest QB rating of any QB of the decade, as well as forth quarter comebacks.

    • @davidrocha5480
      @davidrocha5480 Před 3 lety

      Nuh where not talking about most Superbowl wins, where talking about best QB of the 70's Rodger was better then Bradshaw in every passing category ,yes Bradshaw had 4 super bowl s but look at the team he was in ,proply one of the greatest teams to play on a field how many HOF in that offense . You put any average QB and they would win,. Staubach should be number1

    • @67marlins81
      @67marlins81 Před 2 lety +3

      @@davidrocha5480 Saying any QB could have won those 4 Pittsburgh Super Bowls really shows your profound football ignorance.

    • @67marlins81
      @67marlins81 Před 2 lety +3

      @@DepressionShaman Bradshaw #1, Staubach #2, no matter how much you want to genuflect on hearing his name.

    • @davidrocha5480
      @davidrocha5480 Před 2 lety

      @@67marlins81 thank you my friend, that's a fact jack

  • @benhaney5843
    @benhaney5843 Před 3 lety +3

    Gotta remember, qbs were still calling a lot of their own plays. So a guy like Griese should get credit for that.

  • @changhongyi2318
    @changhongyi2318 Před 4 lety

    Aye, I love qb's of the 70's, also first;)

  • @wesleyreese7647
    @wesleyreese7647 Před rokem +1

    Phyllis George was an Absolute Doll!! 😍😍😍

  • @johnhorn3344
    @johnhorn3344 Před 4 lety +13

    I think they have the right 10 guys but I would move Kenny Anderson and Bert Jones above Kilmer and Hart. I would also have Stabler ahead of Griese.

    • @searchforthestrangler5034
      @searchforthestrangler5034 Před 4 lety +1

      I agree with everything you wrote. The Kilmer over Anderson and Jones is so ridiculous..

    • @keithclark7266
      @keithclark7266 Před 4 lety +1

      Kenny Anderson had Bill Walsh as his quarterback's coach his first 5 years(1971-75) and they were running Walsh's "west coast offense" pre 1978 rule changes. When Paul Brown retired from coaching, Brown refused to name Walsh as his successor.