This will be the first segment in a triad of rankings as we
gear up for the 2012 season. First I’ll
rank the quarterbacks, then the top 100 players, and lastly the teams from 32
down to 1, factoring in everything from free agency to rookies to scandals . Here we go.
QB Rankings
1. Aaron Rodgers, Green
Bay Packers
Backup: Graham Harrell
It seems pretty clear that Rodgers has supplanted Brady and
Brees at the top. He compiled the best regular season ever, with a 122.5 passer
rating, a 15-1 record, 45 TDs and only 6 picks. He’s entering his prime, he’s
got plenty of weapons, and should be the favorite to win his second straight
MVP.
2. Tom Brady, New England
Patriots
Backup: Brian Hoyer
If Welker doesn’t let that pass bounce off his fingertips,
Brady is a four-time Super Bowl champ.
He may be 34, but I wouldn’t fret about his age just yet.
3. Drew Brees, New
Orleans Saints
Backup: Chase Daniel
No Sean Payton, no Robert Meachem, and an “extremely
frustrating” contract situation …but for the time being, I’m not worried. As
long as he’s got Sproles, Graham and Colston, he should be good for 5,000 yards
and 40 TDs.
4. Peyton Manning, Denver
Broncos
Backups: Caleb Hanie, Brock Osweiler
No way of knowing if he’s healthy until the games are
played, but Peyton has earned the benefit of the doubt.
5. Matt Stafford, Detroit
Lions
Backup: Shaun Hill
Backup: Shaun Hill
I’m not going to apologize for all the mean things I said
about Stafford over the last two years. I was right at the time; Stafford
actually did suck and did have a chubby face. But last year something clicked about midway
through the season, and his last four games were pure magic. He always possessed
the physical potential to dominate, but last year the mental element kicked in
and he ended up throwing for 5,000 yards, which I still can’t believe. The only
hesitation I have about ranking Stafford in the top 5 is that the Madden Curse
will devastate our entire offense, but, I actually think Stafford will put
together a pretty great season even with Calvin missing 6-10 games. After all, he’s UNFLAPPABLE!
6. Eli Manning ,
New York Giants
Backup: David Carr
Still kind of a dope, but 2011 was by far his best season,
as he cut back on INTs, became more efficient, transformed the Giants into a
passing team without anyone noticing, and simultaneously turned Victor Cruz
into a star. Then, he caught fire in the playoffs and legitimately outplayed
Rodgers and Brady. And he was pretty
dang funny on SNL.
7. Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh
Steelers
Backups: Byron Leftwich, Charlie Batch
Big Ben is very average in most ways. He’s not accurate, he
doesn’t make smart decisions in the pocket – something most QBs learn after 8
years in the pros, and his arm strength is overrated. But he has two qualities
that no other quarterback has – he’s as big as a linebacker, and he’s more clutch/lucky in the 2-minute drill than anybody.
8. Cam Newton , Carolina Panthers
Backup: Derek Anderson
Backup: Derek Anderson
I’m taking a proactive stance on Cam Newton. There aren’t more than seven teams happier with
their current QB situation than the Panthers.
9. Phillip Rivers, San
Diego Chargers
Backup: Charlie Whitehurst
After three straight seasons with a 100+ passer rating,
Rivers dropped to 88.7 during an inexplicably atrocious 8-8 season. Now he loses his favorite receiver and
probably won’t ever have a healthy Antonio Gates again. Lots of trouble in San Diego . But then again,
an 88.7 passer rating is better than most.
10. Tony Romo, Dallas
Cowboys
Backup: Kyle Orton
Statistically, Tony Romo was a top 5 quarterback last year –
3rd in completion percentage, 4th in rating.
But losing 4 of the last 5 games to end the season and miss the playoffs
was dreadful. Romo seems to be lacking some kind of intangible mental
toughness. Nonetheless, Dallas has to feel better about their
quarterback situation than the next 22 teams, especially with one of the best
backup QBs in the league.
11. Joe Flacco, Baltimore
Ravens
Backup: Tyrod Taylor
The self-proclaimed “best quarterback in the NFL” kind of
sneaks in at 11 for lack of a better option.
His 44-20 regular season record is very impressive, even when you
consider he’s on an elite team with an elite defense.
12. Matt Ryan, Atlanta
Falcons
Backup: Chris Redman
After a promising start to his career, Ryan has hit a plateau
as a good but not great QB who excels at home, struggles on the road, and
stinks in the playoffs. I don’t know if
he can shake that reputation anytime soon, but having one of the best duos of
receivers in Julio and Roddy will help.
13. Michael Vick, Philadelphia
Eagles
Backups: Trent Edwards, Mike Kafka
There’s a lot of good mixed with a lot bad. Vick extends the play like no other, he ran
for more yards than Felix Jones, he makes electrifying plays and he sells
tickets. He also gets injured, turns the
ball over, throws erratically, and murders dogs. Vick’s statistical decline from 2010 to 2011
was brutal – 30 TDs down to 19, 6 INTs up to 14, and a 62.6% completion
percentage down to 59.8%. What a
difference a $100 million dollar contract makes, huh?
14. Matt Schaub, Houston
Texans
Backup: TJ Yates
If his foot heals completely, Schaub jumps up to 11. But I
would be severely worried about that foot if I were a Texan fan.
15. Andrew Luck, Indianapolis
Colts
Backup: Drew Stanton
Call me crazy, but I think there’s a real chance that Luck
finishes the season as the 4th best quarterback in the NFL. Remember, he would
have been the #1 pick last year, ahead of Newton . Of course, there’s also a chance that he
totally stinks, so ranking him at 15 is a safe bet..
16. Andy Dalton – Cincinnati
Bengals
Backup: Bruce Gradkowski
Let’s get a few things straight: Andy Dalton shouldn’t have been a Pro Bowler
last year, and Cincinnati
shouldn’t have made the playoffs last year. The Red Rifle had a nice little
rookie year, but people really got out of hand. He made the Pro Bowl because of
no less than four injuries, and he still shouldn’t have made it; and Cincy only
made the playoffs because the Jets and Chargers imploded and nobody else was
any good. Dalton ’s okay, and he probably won’t regress,
but my hunch is that Bengals’ fans think they have a future superstar and
that’s just not the case.
17. Josh Freeman – Tampa Bay
Bucs
Backup: Dan Orlovsky
Watching Freeman’s QB rating plummet from 95.9 to 74.6 was
like a bad Bruce Willis movie: you could totally take your eyes off it. It was just sad, and barely interesting. I doubt
he’ll ever replicate his 25 TD, 6 INT season, but he should be a whole lot
better with Vincent Jackson and Carl Nicks on the offense.
18. Alex Smith – San Francisco 49ers
Backups: Colin Kaepernick, Josh Johnson
I’m not buying it. The
chances of Smith playing all 16 games again and only throwing 5 interceptions
is about .000001%. More likely, he’ll
throw 10 or more picks, he’ll cost the Niners 3 or 4 games, and his inevitable
regression will directly cause San Fran to miss the playoffs. I just haven’t figured out yet which NFC West
team will swoop in and take the division.
19. Jay Cutler – Chicago
Bears
Backup: Jason Campbell
Sure, the Bears were 7-3 with Cutler last year and 1-5
without him. Plenty of people have used
that data to argue for Cutler’s greatness. But that’s absurd, for one simple
reasons: Matt Forte missed 5 of those 6 games!
Forte is the Bears’ offense, not Cutler.
For all his physical talent, Cutler is still a pompous douchebag with no
leadership skills or chemistry with his teammates. That kind of stuff matters. Nobody likes him.
20. Sam Bradford – St.
Louis Rams
Backup: Kellen Clemens
21. Mark Sanchez – New
York Jets
Backup: Tim Tebow
This is where we officially begin the QB controversies. Although Sanchez will be the week one
starter, the Tebow chatter will be omnipresent. And rightfully so. Tebow can’t
throw worth a crap, but he can win you games, and he’s the biggest name in the
NFL right now. Rex Ryan is all about the
spotlight, and this will be Rex’s last season as the head coach if the Jets
don’t make the playoffs, so you can bet he’ll milk Tebowmania as long as he
can.
22. Ryan Fitzpatrick – Buffalo
Bills
Backup: Vince Young
For just one game, I’d rather have Fitz than the six guys
ahead of him on this list. But you’ve
got to factor in the six-year, $59 million atrocity and what it does to the
future of Buffalo ..
Fitzpatrick is the highest-paid player in Bills history – a history that
includes Bruce Smith, Jim Kelly, Thurman Thomas …. yikes. It’s safe to say that
Fitz’s disaster of a contract will be one of the primary reasons that this
franchise moves to Toronto
in 3 years.
23. Jake Locker – Tennessee
Titans
Backup: Matt Hasselbeck
The jury’s still out on if Locker can be a serviceable
starter, but having a reliable backup gives the Titans stability at the QB
position. My gut feeling is that Locker is significantly better than people
realize, and will be better than Dalton
by the end of this season. But let’s see.
24. Kevin Kolb – Arizona
Cardinals
Backup: John Skelton
I’m not quite ready to give up on Kolb, though everyone in Arizona seems to
be. He only played 9 games with the
Cards last year, and they protected him with the league’s worst O-line. He’s
got the physical tools and he’s got a good head on his shoulders, and now he’s
got Michael Floyd next to Larry Fitzgerald.
I’m not saying he’s my fantasy sleeper, but I don’t completely hate him
either.
Tie.
25. Robert Griffin – Washington
Redskins
Backups: Kirk Cousins, Rex Grossman
26. Christian Ponder – Minnesota Vikings
Backups: Sage Rosenfels, Joe Webb
Tons of upside, tons of downside. Most of the teams remaining on this list only
have downside.
27. Matt Flynn – Seattle
Seahawks
Backups: Tavaris
Jackson, Russell Wilson
After winning what was dubbed as the “Flynn Sweepstakes” and
giving their new quarterback a 3-year deal, Pete Carroll thought it was a good
idea to announce that the competition for the week one starter is wide open between
Flynn, Tavaris, and third-round pick Russell Wilson. What an idiot.
28. Matt Cassel – Kansas City Chiefs
Backup: Brady Quinn
It’s hard to believe there are four teams in worse shape
than Matt Cassel and Brady Quinn. But it’s true.
29. Matt Moore – Miami
Dolphins
Backups: Ryan Tannehill, David Garrard
It’s nearly impossible to take a QB with the 8th overall
pick and not start him, but I think Ryan Tannehill is bad enough to warrant
such an exception. Also, Matt Moore is not getting nearly enough credit for
taking over an 0-4 team and finishing 6-10 with an 87.1 passer rating. While
it’s true that all 6 of his wins were against bad teams, that’s still 6 wins. Moore is the better QB,
but Tannehill will probably start.
30. Carson Palmer – Oakland Raiders
Backup: Matt Leinart
Revisionist history is always fun. The Raiders gave up their
2012 first round pick (turned out to be Dre Kirkpatrick) and their 2013 2nd
round pick for Palmer, who was in his thirties and mulling retirement. Their reasoning was that with a 4-2 record,
they were pretty much on the doorstep of the Super Bowl, and all they needed
was that one final piece at quarterback. Then, in Palmer’s first game (a 0 TD,
3 INT catastrophe which the Raiders lost 28-0 at home), Darren McFadden broke
his foot and ruined the Raiders’ season.
Palmer then went for 13 more INTs and a 4-6 record to narrowly miss the
playoffs. A really hideous stat - Palmer was 7th in the league in INTs, but
25th in attempts.
31. Brandon Weeden – Cleveland
Browns
Backups: Colt McCoy, Seneca Wallace
After missing Flynn and Griffin and not drafting Tannehill, it
appeared the Browns would stick it out for another year of Colt McCoy and try
to find their franchise quarterback next year. That was the right move. And then, they took Brandon Weeden with the
22nd pick. Weeden is the same age as Aaron Rodgers, who is seven years into his
career. Weird. Now Cleveland
has pretty much ensured another 5 years of mediocrity at best.
32. Blaine Gabbert – Jacksonville Jaguars
Backup: Chad
Henne
According to the Football Outsiders website, Gabbert’s 2011
season was the fifth worst season any QB ever had. I can’t find the list, so I’ve got to assume
the other four were all Joey Harrington. Gabbert led the league in fumbles and
was third in sacks, and that’s on an offense that was the fourth most run-heavy
in the NFL. He completed a lower percentage of his passes than every single QB
in the league except for Tebow, and the Jags went 5-11 with two of those wins
against the Colts. There’s every reason to believe the Gabbert Era in Jacksonville won’t even
last two full years.
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