1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Thursday “NFL-QB-Changing of the Guard–Not Yet”

Posted by on November 5th, 2020  •  0 Comments  • 

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“Old Dogs–Not Going Away”

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Time out from all things Election and all things Covid.

We get to the midseason of the NFL schedule, with Society in chaos.  The never ending controversies over the Election continue.  The sadness of the scoreboard over the Covid deaths everywhere.

But there will be NFL games again this weekend, and there will be tremendous performances from quarterbacks.

Russell Wilson of Seattle has 26-touchdowns on the year. Aaron Rodgers, Lamar Jackson and the new breed young bucks, Joe Burrow, Kyler Murray, Justin Herbert continue to put on big performances each Sunday.

But equally impressive are what the senior members of the quarterback class are doing.

Time is marching on, but  Tom Brady, Philip Rivers, Drew Brees and Ben Roethlisberger are not ready to head to the twilight of their careers.  Still games to be played before they embark on a trip to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

The New York Times took a look at the NFL’s great QBs, as  head to the Autumn of their lives.

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Updated 1:35 p.m. ET

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With a combined age of 85 years and 30 days, Tom Brady and Drew Brees will be the oldest pair of starting quarterbacks in N.F.L. history when the Tampa Bay Buccaneers host the New Orleans Saints in Sunday night’s marquee matchup. The previous record of 84 years and 243 days was set by Brady and Brees when the Saints and Buccaneers squared off in the regular season opener. The pair will set another record in the likely event that they meet in the playoffs.

Brady (43) and Brees (41), along with Ben Roethlisberger (38) of the Pittsburgh Steelers and Philip Rivers (38) of the Indianapolis Colts comprise the N.F.L.’s quarterboomers, a generation of still-spry living legends who can teach the league’s whippersnappers a thing or two, at least so long as they are perched behind fortresslike offensive lines and supported by star-studded rosters.

These 40-ish quarterbacks should not be mistaken for creaky has-beens who are merely coasting on their reputations. The Buccaneers, Colts, Saints and Steelers have a combined 23-6 record through Week 8. Brady is tied for third in the N.F.L. with 20 touchdown passes, while Roethlisberger is tied for seventh with 15. Brees and Brady rank seventh and ninth, respectively, in the league in efficiency rating. Brady and the others are keeping their teams near the front of the playoff chase while outperforming many would-be challengers 10 to 20 years younger.

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