Psst, those Steelers teams had 5 Hall of Famers on offense...Well, there are basically 2 types of defenses: There are the "GOAT" level defenses that basically won SBs on their own, e.g., 70s Steelers,
Shots firedIn '74 and '75 Bradshaw won 6 playoff games.
Since their founding 47 years ago in 1968 the Bengals have won 5 playoff games.
Deal with it.
Which is a fucking joke.Psst, those Steelers teams had 5 Hall of Famers on offense...
Andy Dalton: Pro Bowler. Ben Roethlisberger: Not a Pro Bowler.In '74 and '75 Bradshaw won 6 playoff games.
Since their founding 47 years ago in 1968 the Bengals have won 5 playoff games.
Deal with it.
Dalton is literally in because Roethlisberger was voted in but isn't going to play=P He's an injury replacement.Andy Dalton: Pro Bowler. Ben Roethlisberger: Not a Pro Bowler.
The Pro Bowl is still relevant, guys.
Receiver stats are REALLY a product of their area though. For reference, Swann's career was from '74-'82...If you just look at the Passing yardage leaders for those seasons, before Dan Fouts led the league 4 straight seasons from '79-'82 (3 of those topping 4,000 yards), the highest passing yardage total of any QB was 3,468 by Tarkenton. The previous 4 years 3,200 was the top number. Compare this to guys throwing for 5k nowadays like it's candy. The top passer in the league hasn't thrown for less than 4,500 since 2006 now.Lynn Swann never even broke 1,000 yards. Shit, the fucker never even broke 900. On top of that, he played a whopping 9 seasons. He's a stellar 107th in career receiving TDs.
I realize some players/stats were a product of their era, but people like Swann and Harris being in the HOF (especially Harris, seeing as how run-happy teams were then) is yet further proof of how goddamn good that defense was. It even tuned average players on theother sideof the ball into HOFers. Stallworth is the only guy who I'd say even has a leg to stand on in that discussion.
Brooks and Sapp are already in, and Lynch is a finalist this year. Barber should be a sure lock too once his five years comes up. The only real questionable one is Rice.People sleeping on 2002 Tampa D? Sapp, Brooks, Simeon Rice, Lynch, Ronde Barber.
Edit: Not saying all are in the Hall btw, or even that all would be Hall-worthy or be considered, just that I hadn't seen them mentioned and they were a great D with a ton of recognizable names.
As much as it kills me to say so I don't think Rivers or Romo will make the HoF. I think both will have to win a Superbowl to have a shot.Speaking of ancient history, does any team have 3 true HoF tier QB's who played most of their career there besides Green Bay? Starr, Favre, and Rodgers. And Arnie Herber, whoever the fuck that is. I'm not giving too many fucks about 1930's QBs. Was listening to Rich Eisen and they were talking about the Pack QBs and it made me think of it.
The ones with 2(now or probable) that come to mind.
Colts seem like the obvious next possibility. Unitas is in, Peyton will be, and Luck is pretty good at quarterbackening. Still too early though.
Dallas had Staubach and Aikman and I suppose Romo has an outside chance. Especially if he manages a Super Bowl before his spine explodes out his anus at midfield.
Niners with Montana and Young. Still too early to totally write off Kaepernick's HoF chances, but it's unlikely. Y.A. Tittle played the bulk of his career in SF, those teams were shit and he's better known for his last few years in NY. Still, definitely 3 who played most of their career there.
Dolphins had Griese and Marino.
Steelers with Bradshaw and probably Ben, though not a shoe-in at this point.
Chargers have Dan Fouts and I guess Rivers has an outside shot.
Oh, Rams had Norm Van Brocklin and Bob Waterfield back in the day. Add in the possibility of Kurt Warner and that's 3.
OK, good talk everyone.