Hawktawk wrote:Great point about the pre salary cap era
RiverDog wrote:Yeah, especially back in the 60's and earlier. Even the stars actually had to work for a living. Same with the coaches. And that doesn't even include all of the incidental stuff, like training, medical procedures like knee surgeries, etc. Brady had ACL surgery in 2008. Had that injury occurred in the 60's, it's extremely unlikely that he would have been able to play another year, let alone 14 more years. Is it fair to compare Gale Sayers and Adrian Peterson given that both of them had knee surgery during their careers, Sayers never coming close to returning to form and a premature retirement while Peterson had another 5+ productive seasons?
RiverDog wrote:Yeah, especially back in the 60's and earlier. Even the stars actually had to work for a living. Same with the coaches. And that doesn't even include all of the incidental stuff, like training, medical procedures like knee surgeries, etc. Brady had ACL surgery in 2008. Had that injury occurred in the 60's, it's extremely unlikely that he would have been able to play another year, let alone 14 more years. Is it fair to compare Gale Sayers and Adrian Peterson given that both of them had knee surgery during their careers, Sayers never coming close to returning to form and a premature retirement while Peterson had another 5+ productive seasons?
Aseahawkfan wrote:Doesn't change no QB has seven rings. Most players don't come back from ACL surgery and do too well even now. Just more of an example of the kind of discipline and consistency Brady exhibits above and beyond his peers to be the GOAT. The fact he is playing at 45 and still relatively healthy is more of an example of that discipline and focus that others are unlikely or unwilling to do.
It was far easier to stockpile talent and hold dynasty teams together before Brady. That makes Brady's seven rings even more unlikely in the modern day than it was in the past, not less. It was easier to do what Brady has done in the pre-salary cap era. That is why in the modern era the closest to him has 2 rings, while the closest to him in the pre-salary cap era has 4 rings.
Brady has played against all manner of players of any race, so no argument about certain race of players don't get to play. He's gone against the best QBs of his era with Peyton Manning being his primary rival. He's gone against Kurt Warner. And every great QB out there. Gone against our legendary defense. He's done it for two decades going on three.
So still not sure what you're arguing. If anything it was far easier to excel back in the olden days when the athletes weren't as good so it was easier to stand out, you could stack talent like certain teams did like the Steelers and Cowboys due to no free agency, and the overall talent pool was concentrated on certain teams.
What Brady has done is unprecedented in football and as time goes on will prove to be one of those crazy records like Dimaggio's 56 game hitting streak or the Celtics 8 championship streak. He'll be on the list of unbreakable sports records as the years wear on. Seven rings is nuts. Never thought anyone, much less a QB, would get seven rings or go to the Super Bowl 10 times. It's an absolutely insane statistic that no other QB is even close to.
c_hawkbob wrote:Not quite accurate. As we are comparing across eras you have to include Otto Graham and Bart Starr who also have 7 total titles each.
c_hawkbob wrote:So NFL Championships weren't really NFL Championships until they started calling them Super Bowls eh?
c_hawkbob wrote:So NFL Championships weren't really NFL Championships until they started calling them Super Bowls eh
obiken wrote:Come on, the kind of pounding Brady would have taken back in the 80's and 90's no way he would have played QB for 23 years it just wasn't done. So yeah, NFL Titles do matter. You can minimize the Pats and Brady and you can also over hype them as well. I got Hawk friends that hate the Pats and Brady and admire them. To me they were the model of the salary cap era, they had a great QB that took pay cuts, and an owner that was pliable. Bob who did we fear more, Elway or Brady? Elway by far! He was simply the toughest, single offensive weapon I ever saw. Name me a guy that could throw a ball one way, while running the other way, on a 70 yard dead rope. Actually I was only 10 when Jim Brown quit, and he was like a man among boys, he was in MHO the GOAT.
Aseahawkfan wrote: Elway was in the same division as us. Of course you can say you feared Elway more than Brady since we didn't really have anyone like Brady to deal with but Elway.
obiken wrote:Oh come on, Teams win titles. I am not saying Brady is mutt food guy, but the old AFC West was way tougher than the AFC East. Tommy always had good Defenses, good interior lines, good RB's that Elway never had till he got Davis. IF he would have had Davis for just 5 of those years Elway would have eaten our Defense for breakfast. Moreover, the rules have changed, you cant touch a WR now and you know it. No doubt both QB's did way more with less, than any of the greats like Bradshaw, Griese, or Montana. (The 3 Amigos, give me a break.) The Pats never compared to the great teams of all time ala Fins, Steelers, 9ers, or the Cowboys, those teams were stacked. It was a perfect storm. Mahomy, I want to see one time where he is leveled like Elway, Bradshaw, Montana, or McMahon.
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