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Catchers are the quarterbacks of the baseball world, so this week's thread/poll will address the greatest catchers since WW II, as well as the greatest NFL quarterbacks ever. Some, like myself, privilege those passers who played in passing eras, others may simply value those who were the best of their time. There are no restrictions here. However, it will give us a chance to shine light on those more admirable NFLers during this tumultuous period of Rice, Peterson, and Dwyer.
Greatest Catchers (Buster Posey could eventually shoot to #3)
1. Johnny Bench. The easiest slam dunk number one. The epitome of excellence in catching.
2. Ivan Rodriguez. The sublime defensive catcher and the only other viable number one.
3. Yogi Berra. The workingman's Bench. Great leader, winner, and player. Nothing funny about his game.
4. Gary Carter
5. Carlton Fisk
6. Roy Campanella
7. Yadier Molina
8. Joe Mauer. Injuries marred a possible HOF career. Excellent lefty hitter and defender.
9. Ted Simmons. Lethal hitter, ho-hum defender.
10. Thurman Munson. The Captain. Heart of the great 70's Yankees teams.
Greatest Quarterbacks
1. Joe Montana. Moderate physical skills, but still the greatest leader and defense reader at the position, ever.
2. Peyton Manning. Second to Joe in defense reads, but much more physically gifted.
3. John Elway. Arm, mobility, and smarts...and two SBs
4. Steve Young. Scarily efficient, potent runner, and rifle arm. Montana's shadow still shades his excellence
5. Tom Brady.
6. Drew Brees. Small, but the height of efficient accuracy. Keenly smart winner.
7. Dan Marino Most lethal release from the pocket ever. No SB's are not his fault.
8. Aaron Rodgers. He could finish his career at number 3; he's that efficient and smart.
9. Johnny Unitas. The best of the previous era. Passing stats underwhelming, but undoubted winner.
10. Brett Favre. Never saw multiple coverage he didn't like, but he was still a warrior at the position.
Greatest Catchers (Buster Posey could eventually shoot to #3)
1. Johnny Bench. The easiest slam dunk number one. The epitome of excellence in catching.
2. Ivan Rodriguez. The sublime defensive catcher and the only other viable number one.
3. Yogi Berra. The workingman's Bench. Great leader, winner, and player. Nothing funny about his game.
4. Gary Carter
5. Carlton Fisk
6. Roy Campanella
7. Yadier Molina
8. Joe Mauer. Injuries marred a possible HOF career. Excellent lefty hitter and defender.
9. Ted Simmons. Lethal hitter, ho-hum defender.
10. Thurman Munson. The Captain. Heart of the great 70's Yankees teams.
Greatest Quarterbacks
1. Joe Montana. Moderate physical skills, but still the greatest leader and defense reader at the position, ever.
2. Peyton Manning. Second to Joe in defense reads, but much more physically gifted.
3. John Elway. Arm, mobility, and smarts...and two SBs
4. Steve Young. Scarily efficient, potent runner, and rifle arm. Montana's shadow still shades his excellence
5. Tom Brady.
6. Drew Brees. Small, but the height of efficient accuracy. Keenly smart winner.
7. Dan Marino Most lethal release from the pocket ever. No SB's are not his fault.
8. Aaron Rodgers. He could finish his career at number 3; he's that efficient and smart.
9. Johnny Unitas. The best of the previous era. Passing stats underwhelming, but undoubted winner.
10. Brett Favre. Never saw multiple coverage he didn't like, but he was still a warrior at the position.