Aaron Rodgers will be first QB with 300 TDs before 100 interceptions
Posted by Michael David Smith on July 6, 2017, 10:43 AM EDT
AP
Ten players in NFL history have thrown 300 or more touchdown passes. Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers is poised to become the 11th — and the first to do so before throwing 100 interceptions.
The Packers front office refuses to surround Rodgers with the talent needed to win a championship. Another wasted HOF QB with just one SB win. All they care about is their amusement park and money.
"Never, never ever support a punk like mraynrand. Rather be as I am and feel real sympathy for his sickness." - Woodbuck
But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.
-Tim Harmston
If he wanted to win, he would throw the ball to the opposition more.
Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
I wonder how much of this is ARod and how much a reflection of how NFL offenses have changed in recent decades. Right now ARod's TD-to-INT ratio looks like a complete outlier among the historical elite of NFL QBs (30% better than his closest competitor), but that's in comparison to guys who for the most part started their careers a decade or more earlier. Of the 20 best single season TD:INT performances in NFL history, 18 of them have come in the last ten years. Ten years from now, when guys like Derek Carr get added to this list, things might look a little different. ARod will still be elite in this department but the gap probably won't be as huge as it is today.
Ted has done a good job of surrounding ARod with offensive talent... the problem is, as always, the Packers longtime bugaboo, i.e they are completely clueless about how to scout, draft, develop, coach, and play defense.
By the time Rodgers retires it will be approx. 30 years with 2 HOF QB's and only 2 titles... that has to be considered an organizational failure.
wist
Rodgers is careful with the ball, and there's nothing at all wrong with that. He's almost like the polar opposite to Brett Favre, who was often careless with the ball.
When you look at that list, both John Elway and Fran Tarkenton were interception machines. They made Brent Favre look careful in comparison.
Hoosier makes a good point - this could also be in part about rules changes. When ol' Fran was playing (and driving me nuts as a kid; from his scrambles against the Pack came my trademark scream "TACKLE THE SUNUVABITCH!"), the defense could practically mug a receiver (and there was no five yard zone; they did it all over the field) and stickum was mandatory equipment for defensive backs. Plus QB's in those days got hit like everyone else, so with no rules to protect them it's possible that created some ill-advised throws in order not to get body-slammed.
I think interceptions are too great of a mistake to justify by saying a QB needs to take more chances. When Rodgers trusts a receiver, he'll throw it into a small window. I much prefer Rodgers's style to Favre's.
"The Devine era is actually worse than you remember if you go back and look at it."
KYPack