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Best football players you've ever seen (32 minimum games watched)

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  • Best football players you've ever seen (32 minimum games watched)

    I haven't watched a lot of afc games in my life or even non division teams, so my list is gonna look more like a nfc central/north list than a true best of the best.


    1. Reggie White
    2. Tom Brady
    3. Aaron Rodgers
    4. Barry Sanders
    5. Randy Moss
    6. Adrian Peterson
    7. Brett Favre
    8. Jerry Rice
    9. Charles Woodson
    10. Larry Allen


    4 packers
    2 vikings
    1 Patriot
    1 Lion
    1 49er
    1 cowboy


    A lot of that is me not watching enough football, but off the top, those are the best players I've watched enough to make an informed opinion
    Formerly known as JustinHarrell.

  • #2
    OFFENSE

    QB Brady/Rodgers
    RB Barry Sanders
    WR Jerry Rice
    TE Tony Gonzalez
    OG Larry Brown
    OT Anthony Munoz
    C Mike Webster


    DEFENSE

    DE- Reggie White/Bruce Smith
    DT- Mean Joe Greene/Alan Page
    LB Lawrence Taylor/Ray Lewis
    CB- Deon Sanders/Rod Woodson
    S- Ronnie Lott/Ed Reed


    SPECIAL TEAMS


    P- Ray Guy
    K- Morten Anderson
    TERD Buckley over Troy Vincent, Robert Ferguson over Chris Chambers, Kevn King instead of TJ Watt, and now, RICH GANNON, over JIMMY JIMMY JIMMY LEONARD. Thank you FLOWER

    Comment


    • #3
      Walter Payton, Barry Sanders, Reggie White, Brian Urlacher, Brett Favre, Aaron Rodgers, Sterling Sharpe, Chris Carter to name a few.

      Comment


      • #4
        I think kittle is gonna make the list some day.

        Ed Reed, Deion, Ray Lewis
        Formerly known as JustinHarrell.

        Comment


        • #5
          AR really has been nice for Packer fans. No matter how I dice it, he’s on the list for me, even with so many great players.
          Formerly known as JustinHarrell.

          Comment


          • #6
            Absolutely must go by Position (all players at their peak).

            QB Marino- best release ever. Almost impossible to sack him due to that release.

            RB Walter Payton- Catch a screen, get tough yards, pick up a blitz. No weakness in his game

            WR Jerry Rice- All achievements are prequelled with "other than Jerry Rice"

            TE Gronk- Crushing run blocker, top notch receiver. No one else did both as well.

            G- Larry Allen, John Hannah-Just bullies. Both of them.

            OT Tony Boselli, Jonathon Ogden, Anthony Munoz-Can't leave any of them off the list.

            C Dwight Stephenson-I grew up watching him direct traffic. Brilliant player.


            DEFENSE

            DE- Reggie White, Bruce Smith-Both impossible to run on, both crushed the pocket.

            DT- Randy White, John Randle- White was the first player I ever saw dominate from the middle. Randle had an engine that did not quit.

            Edge- Lawrence Taylor- don't take my word for it, ask Joe Theisman

            MLB- Mike Singletary- Leader of the most dominant D I ever saw.

            CB- Deon Sanders, Darrell Green- Neither were great in run support, but Revis Island had nothing on these guys

            S-Ronnie Lott, Nick Collins- Yes, I loved Collins. Him and Lott were similar. Fast, great centerfielders, but rock solid run support.
            The only time success comes before work is in the dictionary -- Vince Lombardi

            Comment


            • #7
              damn. I typed for 15 minutes, hit back space, and lost it all.

              Nitschke/Butkis co-#1 defense, also Reggie White, Deacon Jones, Lawrence Taylor, Ronnie Lott, Bob Lilly, and Joe Greene

              Jim Brown, O.J., Gayle Sayers , Jim Taylor, Emmett Smith, and Barry Sanders (in that order) best RBs

              Aaron Rodgers, Favre, Marino, Unitas, Tarkenton, Starr (in that order) best QBs

              Randy Moss, Rice WR

              John Mackey TE
              What could be more GOOD and NORMAL and AMERICAN than Packer Football?

              Comment


              • #8
                If i stick to 20 games minimum
                Qb Rodgers (by a mile at peak. By a bit at career)
                Rb Sanders (with faulk and as backup but i dont think i have seen 20 of his games)
                Wr1 Sharp (sooooo underrated. Stupid knee joints)
                Wr2 Calvin Johnson (thank god he retired early)
                Wr3 Moss (thank god he was a putz)
                Te gonzalez (i think i have seen 20 of his games. If not sharpe)
                Ol. To hard to seperate with the 20 game distinction. I would have all packers unless i spent more time yhan i have for this.

                Dt White (pure dominance like rodgers at his peak). Sapp (who lived down to his name)
                De White (yes he desereves two imo) peppers (underrated imo)
                Ilb lewis urlacher
                Olb cameron wake (im including his cfl time. It was dominant.) Cm3 (biased)
                Cb woodson. Hayward (underrated)
                S collins. Butler. Both belong in hof.
                All tyrannies rule through fraud and force, but once the fraud is exposed they must rely exclusively on force.

                George Orwell

                Comment


                • #9
                  The 2 best players I ever watched were:
                  Jim Brown & Dick Butkus
                  Who Knows? The Shadow knows!

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by The Shadow View Post
                    The 2 best players I ever watched were:
                    Jim Brown & Dick Butkus
                    Funny, as I read down the posts in this thread, the thought that came to me was that two players stood out head and shoulders above all the others I have seen: #1-Jim Brown and #2-Dick Butkus.
                    Brown was clearly #1 over Butkus, but Butkus stands out over all the others I have seen, too.

                    Having watched 60 years of football, it has changed tremendously, but the basics stay the same. You can not directly compare players today to players 50 or 60 years ago because they are asked to do so many things differently than before. But you can compare players today to their contemporaries, and players of yesteryear to their contemporaries; then ask yourself who separated themselves the most in their comparisons. Brown and Butkus were so much better than the players of their times, that they clearly rise to the pinnacle of the best I have ever seen.

                    John Mackey has always been the best TE I have seen.
                    Lawrence Taylor was unbelievable, uncontrollable at times
                    Mike Webster the best center, Jim Ringo not far behind.
                    Deion Sanders the best coverage CB, not sure about the best for overall CB play.

                    I can't give Reggie White the nod, because I rarely saw him play before he came to GB, so he doesn't fit the criteria. By that time, he was not as good as earlier in his career, not withstanding his SB performance and some of his ragdoll throws of blockers while he was in GB. Players I saw a lot of who stand out in my mind are Alan Page (unblockable), Merlin Olson and , I hate to say.... Warren Sapp as DTs and Deacon Jones, Howie Long and JJ Watt at DE.

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                    • #11
                      You're old patler. Most of us never saw Butkus or Brown play. The oldest guy on my list is John Hannah and probably Randy White. Those were my very young years watching football. My other problem is that todays players are very one dimensional and specialists. It limits them in the rankings. And a lot of current players I probably have only seen 10 games or so if they aren't in our division, or NFC at a minimum. As such my list is from 1978 to 2000 roughly.
                      The only time success comes before work is in the dictionary -- Vince Lombardi

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Maybe a little bit of bias, but not much - Nitschke was just as good as Butkis, and nobody but nobody has ever been better on D than either of them.

                        Jim Brown, yes, nobody ever better, but Gale Sayers and O.J. were right there with him, probably the two scariest with the ball in their hands ever - way better than Barry Sanders or anybody else since.

                        Reading above, I forgot Calvin Johnson - I shoulda included him, and I had J.J. Watt in my post that got erased but forgot him in my redo.

                        Also, maybe a little bit of bias, but I've never seen a better Corner than Herb Adderly. Who was that Packer #1 pick in the 80s who messed up his neck? He just might have been that good too if he'd lasted longer.
                        What could be more GOOD and NORMAL and AMERICAN than Packer Football?

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by texaspackerbacker View Post
                          Maybe a little bit of bias, but not much - Nitschke was just as good as Butkis, and nobody but nobody has ever been better on D than either of them.

                          Jim Brown, yes, nobody ever better, but Gale Sayers and O.J. were right there with him, probably the two scariest with the ball in their hands ever - way better than Barry Sanders or anybody else since.

                          Reading above, I forgot Calvin Johnson - I shoulda included him, and I had J.J. Watt in my post that got erased but forgot him in my redo.

                          Also, maybe a little bit of bias, but I've never seen a better Corner than Herb Adderly. Who was that Packer #1 pick in the 80s who messed up his neck? He just might have been that good too if he'd lasted longer.
                          Tim Lewis is the CB you are thinking of, and yes, he looked like he could have been a special player.

                          Another CB who might have been even better, but for injuries, was Willie Buchanon. Started out immediately as a unique talent, then broke his ankle 2 of the first four years and never seemed quite the same after that. Still had a very good career, a few pro bowls and All-Pro recognition, but had started out like he would be exceptional.

                          As much as I liked Nitschke, Butkus was better, in my opinion.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by bobblehead View Post
                            You're old patler.
                            Now that's stating the obvious!


                            Originally posted by bobblehead View Post
                            Most of us never saw Butkus or Brown play. The oldest guy on my list is John Hannah and probably Randy White. Those were my very young years watching football.
                            That's why I decided to throw in my two cents worth. Bring in a couple more decades worth of players. Within the context of the game as it was played then, Brown and Butkus really stood out as players very different than even the best of the rest.



                            Originally posted by bobblehead View Post
                            My other problem is that todays players are very one dimensional and specialists. It limits them in the rankings. And a lot of current players I probably have only seen 10 games or so if they aren't in our division, or NFC at a minimum. As such my list is from 1978 to 2000 roughly.
                            I agree. That's why I explained how I reached my conclusions, and why I couldn't name White as one. Never saw him much in his prime.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Patler View Post
                              Tim Lewis is the CB you are thinking of, and yes, he looked like he could have been a special player.

                              Another CB who might have been even better, but for injuries, was Willie Buchanon. Started out immediately as a unique talent, then broke his ankle 2 of the first four years and never seemed quite the same after that. Still had a very good career, a few pro bowls and All-Pro recognition, but had started out like he would be exceptional.

                              As much as I liked Nitschke, Butkus was better, in my opinion.
                              I don't remember the context, but even Nietschke stated that Butkus was better, or at least hit harder.

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