Matthew Stafford thinks a QB will throw for 6,000 yards with new 17-game season

Matthew Stafford doesn’t know if he could throw for 6,000 yards but he doesn’t care. He just wants to win.

There have been 12 instances in NFL history where a quarterback threw for 5,000 yards. Drew Brees did it five times in his career, while Peyton Manning holds the single-season record with 5,477 yards.

Matthew Stafford has one 5,000-yard season on his resume and another with 4,967 yards, and he could very well eclipse both of those numbers in 2021 now that the league moved to a 17-game schedule. It’s also possible that someone will throw for 6,000 yards for the first time ever.

Stafford wouldn’t be surprised if someone did it, even saying he thinks a quarterback will.

“I don’t even want to think about that number. That’s crazy. I’m sure somebody will. I don’t know who led the league in passing last year, but I bet it’ll happen,” he said Tuesday.

Will it be him?

“I don’t know, maybe. But I don’t care if it is or not. I just want to win,” he replied.

In order for someone to top 6,000 yards passing, he would have to average 353 yards per game. In Manning’s record-breaking 2013 season where he threw for 5,477 yards, he averaged 342.3 yards – 47 yards more than he ever averaged in a single other season.

So is it possible? Absolutely. Brees averaged 320 yards per game five times on his own. With how pass-heavy the league has become, no one should be surprised if someone breaks the 6,000-yard mark.

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