http://www.nfl.com/photoessays/0ap3...ranchise-historical-countdown-from-no-32-to-1
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PhinFan1968 To 2020, and BEYOND! Club Member
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No love for Pennington, eh?
Was only one year but he was really good in that year.
I love the "revisionist history" angle about John Elway. So true.Tin Indian, Fin-Omenal, RevRick and 3 others like this. -
I don't agree with putting the Chargers ahead of the Dolphins here, I have to say.
Considering both Ryan Tannehill and John Hadl are tag-alongs to a more talented pair...which pair do you take? Dan Marino and Bob Griese? Or Dan Fouts and Philip Rivers? I think that's a pretty easy answer.
Has the Redskins trio too high as well, IMO.
I think the top four are what they are but the Dolphins could be as high as top five once Tannehill gets going a little more.CashInFist, Fin4Ever and btfu149 like this. -
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PhinFan1968 To 2020, and BEYOND! Club Member
Serious question, because I really don't know (too young at the time), but was Griese a standout QB amongst his peers or was he just a solid/good guy on a great team? My memory is they had a sickening running game and that was the pillar of the offense, but I haven't went back and watched games or anything.
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edit: brain fart. I was thinking of the team passer ratings where Miami was #1 in 72, but Griese was injured much of that year.
My recollection though is that Griese was generally in the top 10 in terms of passer rating through the Shula years.PhinFan1968 likes this. -
PhinFan1968 likes this.
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IMO Tannehill is already a very efficient passer. My hope is that we can use a ground it out run game and defense similar to what we did in 72 to replicate some of that success.PhinFan1968 likes this. -
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Not only was Griese an accurate passer and he could throw the deep ball there are a couple of other qualities that escapes most pundits attention.He was a good scrambler in broken plays and he was the best QB I have seen at the off cadence count .He got so many cheap first downs that way .It helped.
Morrall was a great backup but he would not have taken the team to a SB IMO .They needed a young cerebral Griese for that.PhinFan1968 likes this. -
Griese was at the end of his career when I was a toddler, so I never saw him play. I also know that the 70s were a totally different league on offense and what teams could do and tried to do. That being said, compared to his peers, was Griese truely a hall of famer on his own merit, without the benefit of the running game and defense? Meaning, could he take a team on his back and win games via the passing game when it called for it? I don't know, I'm asking. Rarely something thats been talked about, as much as I've read about the Fins. I'm perpetually disgusted by how much weight team success is given to QBs. One guy can only do so much when surrounded by crap, and we all know that an above average QB can win big when surrounded by big talent.
PhinFan1968 likes this. -
Griese should have been the Heisman winner the year before he was drafted.Steve Spurrier won it that year
He was a very complete QB .Not many measurables but he was cerebral in understanding what Shula wanted to do.He was accurate ,tough under pressure ,could scramble and throw the deep ball and he was good at reading defenses. What else does a QB need to do.PhinFan1968 likes this. -
Falcons - Chris Miller was a MUCH better QB than dog killer ever was. Not even close.
Chiefs - Montana only played 25 games in a KC uniform. Putting him on the list is nonsense. I'd say DeBerg belongs in that spot.
Beyond that, not a lot that you can say are clear oversights. I would personally argue the Fins belong ahead of the Steelers. Marino clearly outclasses Rothlisberger, Griese and Bradshaw are very similar, and Tannehill is absolutely better than Neil O'Donnel. I was a teen in the Pittsburgh market in the 90s and saw almost every game he played. He was NOT the reason the team won as many games as they did. The Redskins and Rams have players on their lists that play so long ago that its hard to even compare them to current guys.gunn34 and PhinFan1968 like this. -
PhinFan1968 likes this.
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Griese had a stronger arm than Pennington and the impression I recall, and it is only slightly hazed by the aura of those long gone days, is that he was just overall more crisp and sharp than Pennington.
Bob was not the gunslinger that Dan was, but it was probably around 94 or 95 before the scales in my mind tipped towards Dan being the better quarterback of the two. Bob was just sooo damned smart on the field. He called all the offensive snaps.RevRick and PhinFan1968 like this. -
PhinFan1968 To 2020, and BEYOND! Club Member
Thanks for all the info on Griese guys.
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BayAreaFinFan likes this.
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Yeah, Woodley was streaky. He could scramble a bit and there were more than a few designed rollouts for him to throw on the run which he was not too shabby at doing. Had a good arm, generally, but was prone to Fiedleresque bouts of inaccuracy. As already stated, Shula, at first hesitantly, and over time, freely, substituted Strock. It seems he'd start Strock a few times as well and pull the same switch. Between the two of them, one of them would be able to move the team - not uncommonly, with a hot hand.
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IMO, Fiedler's biggest problem (much more my time frame of expertise), well aside from his lack of talent, was that he seemingly always thought that he was much better than he really was. Leaving first downs on the field to go for the bigger play, and failing more often than not. We had so many drives end around mid field in those days because of his bone headed decesions. Had he just taken the shorter pass that was open or made a shorter run for a first down when the middle of the field was open, it was all good, but he kept tossing the ball deep down the field and ending the drive.
I am so, so much happier with RT17's style of play compared to what we had in those days.