Wizardspride wrote:I was looking at the Super Bowl winning and losing QBs of the last 40 years or so and my takeaway is simply this:
Other than a few outliers (Tom Brady, Joe Montana etc) Super Bowl participating QBs are overwhelmingly first rounders and in many cases drafted in the top 10....top 6 actually.
This whole "trade down for picks and draft a QB later" idea sounds nice but if you actually have Super Bowl aspirations, trading down isn't where you normally find your QB.
Let's break this open shall we.
You changed it up and said top six then you're excluding Patrick mahomes who was picked at 10. which when a lot of us are talking about trading back that's what we mean trading back to 3-6-8-ect so using this as an argument for not trading back I null and void.
But let's stick with your top 6 theme here
Let's go back to 1980.
13 or 30% of the super bowl winners were top 6 picks, if you got to top ten that ups the number to about 16 or 38%. Many of these being repeating guys. So really it's like 8-9 dudes.
Plunket, sims, Aiken, young , elway, manning, manning, mahomes, Stafford.
That's top ten if you wanna go top 6 remove sims and mohones.
Let's increase this to first rounders in general.
That adds 4 names to the list taking it to 20 total and 12 individuals
Flaco, Big Ben, Doug Williams and Jim McMahon.
That's 48 percent.
Infact of the 3 Washington wins since 1980. The 3 QBs, none were top6, none were top ten and only 1 was a first rounder at 17 and the other two were a 4th and 6th.
Doug Williams, Mark Raypien and Joe Theisman.
I also did the losers
Since 1980
14 times the looser was a top ten pick. With 12 dudes, John elway lost a bunch.
Let's kick that to first round.
That kicks to about 19. Jim Kelly lost more than John elway did lol.
So the numbers don't support what you said at all. It's about half no matter which way you cut it.
So what's best for the team. This team neeeeeeeeds a lot and winning QB aren't only found in the first couple picks.
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