Matt Ryan cracks the top 10 in career passing touchdowns

Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan added to his Hall of Fame resume on Sunday, tying NFL legend Fran Tarkenton with his 342nd career touchdown pass during the first half against the Buccaneers.

Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan added to his Hall of Fame resume on Sunday, tying NFL legend Fran Tarkenton with his 342nd career touchdown pass during the first half against the Buccaneers.

Ryan is now tied for the No. 10 spot on the NFL’s all-time passing touchdowns list.

No retired player with over 300 passing touchdowns has been left out of the Hall of Fame. Ryan now has 24 touchdowns to go to catch the Eli Manning for ninth on the list.

Atlanta currently leads Tampa Bay, 17-0, at halftime.

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Six iconic Vikings named to list of best NFL players to wear each jersey number

Fran Tarkenton was listed as the best player to wear No. 10. Jared Allen? He was No. 69. See who else made it here!

Minnesota has had plenty of iconic players through the years, and some players were so prolific they were listed as the best to wear their respective numbers.

Our friends at Raiders Wire compiled a comprehensive list of the best NFL player to wear every single jersey number. The Vikings were well represented with six players, who were most well known for being on Minnesota, cracking the list. Players like Brett Favre, Gary Zimmerman and Donovan McNabb also made the ranks, but had more memorable seasons on different teams.

Here were the Minnesota players, followed by a brief explanation for each.

Fran Tarkenton

Tarkenton claimed the No. 10 on Raiders Wire’s list. Inducted into the NFL Hall of Fame, he was named to Pro Football Reference’s list of first-team All-Decade for the 1960s and second-team All-Decade for the 1970s.

He was a quarterback who was known for making plays with his feet. He said, via Pro Football Hall of Fame, that “I scramble because I’m good at it, because I can twist and dodge those big pass rushers better than most guys and we get a lot of touchdowns that way.”

He spent time with the Giants, but was most well known for his seasons with the Vikings.

Eli Manning should be a Hall of Famer for the same reasons Joe Namath is

Eli Manning won’t be Hall of Fame eligible until 2025, but his resume for Canton is similar, if not better than Jets legend Joe Namath.

What makes a player a Hall of Famer? Is it his stats, his rings (or lack thereof), his accolades, or a combination of all three? These are the questions voters will ponder over the next five years before Eli Manning is eligible for the Football Hall of Fame, and it will be debated by fans and analysts alike until then.

Manning, set to announce his retirment Friday, owns a resume that is solid on its surface. He owns decent — albeit not gaudy — numbers, having won exactly 50 percent of his games. He went to four Pro Bowls and won two Super Bowls in his 16-year career witht he Giants. Some will say that’s enough to make the Hall. Others will laugh at that notion and compare him to contemporaries like Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Brett Favre and his brother, Peyton – all of whom are no-brainer Hall of Famers and were far better quarterbacks.

As the Manning Hall of Fame debate moves forward, here’s something to consider: his legacy is eerily similar to Jets legend Joe Namath’s, who is already enshrined in Canton.

Namath finished his career with fewer than 30,000 passing yards, a sub-.500 record, a 50.1 percent completion percentage and only 173 career touchdown passes. He ranks 64th in all-time passing yards, 178th in all-time completion percentage and 65th in passing touchdowns.   

Namath didn’t put up Hall of Fame numbers during his 12-year career. A lot of that can be attributed to his era and playing part of his career in the AFL, but other Hall of Fame quarterbacks from that era like Frank Tarkenton and Bob Griese finished with better stats after the 1970 AFL-NFL merger. Tarkenton, Griese and other inductees like Johnny Unitas, Sonny Jurgensen, and Len Dawson all finished their careers with better stats than Namath. Only Griese had more titles, though.

Manning currently sits seventh all-time in career passing yards (57,023) and passing touchdowns (366). Obviously, Manning played when quarterbacks threw significantly more than they did during Namath’s time, but outside of his two Super Bowl MVPs, he doesn’t have many personal accolades and his numbers lack when compared to his era’s elite. Namath, meanwhile, won back-to-back AFL Player of the Year awards from 1968-69.

This where one of the unwritten prerequisites of the Hall of Fame applies to Manning and Namath: Does Player X help tell the history of the sport?

For Namath, the answer is obviously yes. His grandiose Super Bowl guarantee combined with the Jets’ upset win over the NFL’s Baltimore Colts catapulted him to stardom. His celebrity status created an aura of intrigue and he played a crucial role in legitimizing the smaller AFL before its eventual merger with the NFL. He will forever be a part of NFL and Jets lore.

The same applies to Manning, at the very least least when it comes to telling the story of the organization he played for.

Much like Namath, Manning’s road to both his Super Bowl wins are the biggest reasons for his potential enshrinement. Neither the 2007 Giants nor the 2011 squad was behemoths of the NFC. Both played on Wild Card weekend, clawed their way to the Super Bowl as underdogs and, thanks to Manning, found ways to beat dynastic Patriots teams. Manning’s late-game scramble and the subsequent helmet catch by David Tyree in Super Bowl XLII will be remembered as one of the most amazing plays in Super Bowl history, and the game-winning touchdown to Plaxico Burress later in the drive ended the Patriots’ quest for 16-0. Four years later, Manning once again orchestrated a Giants comeback over the Patriots, this time with an 88-yard touchdown drive with less than four minutes to play.

Manning wasn’t otherworldly for his entire career, but he shined when the brightest lights were on him. He may not have the stats or the awards or even the skill that make him a slam-dunk candidate but he played consistently well enough and dominated in the moments that mattered most. That’s enough to earn a gold jacket. If that means he isn’t a first-ballot, so be it. Namath wasn’t enshrined until eight years after he retired.

Manning will partly be remembered for his meme-able face, quiet demeanor and mind-boggling interceptions, but the two rings he earned will always top the list.

Because of that, Manning will wind up in the Hall of Fame just like Namath. It’s just a matter of when.

Can you guess the NFL’s all-time top 10 for touchdown passes?

If you watched Drew Brees’ record-breaking performance on Monday Night Football – and, realistically, even if you didn’t – you know who the NFL’s top two (well, probably top three) quarterbacks are when it comes to all-time touchdown passes. But can …

If you watched Drew Brees’ record-breaking performance on Monday Night Football — and, realistically, even if you didn’t — you know who the NFL’s top two (well, probably top three) quarterbacks are when it comes to all-time touchdown passes.

But can you correctly name QBs No. 4 through No. 10?

Find out.

(Stats, as of Monday, Dec. 18, 2019, courtesy of Pro Football Reference)

(Photo by Derick E. Hingle-USA TODAY Sports)

1. Drew Brees (541)

(Photo by Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports)

Drew Brees in position to surpass Tom Brady, Peyton Manning and break TD record

New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees can make football history on Monday Night Football, and surpass both Tom Brady and Peyton Manning.

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Fortune kept giving New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady opportunities, but he just couldn’t seize them. When New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees missed five games with an injury to his throwing hand, sidelining him from their race to unseat Peyton Manning as the NFL’s all-time leader in touchdown passes, Brady failed to take control of the race and held the door open long enough for Brees to catch up to him.

Again, in Week 15, Brady had a shot at breaking the record before Brees. He was playing one of the NFL’s worst teams a day before Brees would take the “Monday Night Football” stage, and just needed rack up some scores on the lowly Cincinnati Bengals. But he couldn’t get it done.

Now, Brees is set to star in prime-time and surpass Brady and Manning both. Brees will take the field against the Indianapolis Colts with 537 career touchdown passes to his credit, trailing Brady (538) and Manning (539) for the record. A single passing touchdown will tie him with Brady. Two will match the mark with Manning. Three or more rewrites the NFL record books.

The enormity of this record can’t be summed up just by comparing Brees to those two all-time greats, though. Before Brett Favre broke the record Dan Marino set in 1999 (ending his career with 420 career passing touchdowns; Favre shattered that total with 508), the record stood for nearly a decade. When Marino broke it himself, he did so after Fran Tarkenton retired with 342 career touchdowns passes — back in 1978. It took 17 years for anyone to best the mark Tarkenton established.

And it might take that long for anyone to break the record Brees could set, once it’s all said and done. Though he’s tied with Brady for now, they could both retire in the next year or two and not shock anyone. Whoever ends up winning this record will hold onto it for a long, long time. Many of the active quarterbacks behind Brees and Brady are closer to retiring themselves than playing in their prime. Here’s how the standings shake out among them, with ages in parentheses:

  1.  Tom Brady (42), 538 touchdown passes
  2. Drew Brees (41 in January), 537 touchdown passes
  3. Philip Rivers (38), 395 touchdown passes
  4. Eli Manning (39 in January), 366 touchdown passes
  5. Ben Roethlisberger (37), 363 touchdown passes
  6. Aaron Rodgers (36), 362 touchdown passes
  7. Matt Ryan (34), 319 touchdown passes
  8. Matthew Stafford (31), 256 touchdown passes
  9. Russell Wilson (31), 224 touchdown passes
  10. Joe Flacco (35 in January), 218 touchdown passes

Of the names on that list, only Rodgers, Ryan, Stafford, and Wilson feel like they may have the staying power (and secure starting jobs) to challenge Brees (or Brady) someday. But even that’s pushing it; if each of them averaged 30 touchdown passes a year (a tall order considering only two quarterbacks have done so this year, with two games remaining), here’s how old they would be when they get to 540 or more career passing touchdowns:

  • Aaron Rodgers (42, six years)
  • Matt Ryan (42, eight years)
  • Matthew Stafford (41, ten years)
  • Russell Wilson (42, eleven years)

So, yeah: if there’s any realistic challengers to the throne Brees (or Brady) will one day sit on, it will take them almost a decade or more to close the gap, and that’s with them playing at a sustained, high level. That isn’t a guarantee especially for players with frequent injury issues (Stafford), or who are stuck in run-first offenses (Wilson), or who are simply cursed to never win anything due to playing for the Atlanta Falcons (Ryan). Maybe Rodgers catches up, but he doesn’t feel like the type of fanatical competitor who will want to continue playing football deep into his forties.

That’s just added motivation for Brees to go out and break Manning’s record (which was Favre’s record, and Marino’s record, and Tarkenton’s record), and cement himself among the greatest quarterbacks to ever spin a football. Sure, it’s not something that will be actively on his mind during the game, but this record and the implications it carries have to be something Brees is aware of. As his career continues winding down and becoming the stuff of legend, it’s records like this that will pad out his Hall of Fame-worthy resume. Saints fans should take every opportunity to enjoy Brees and what he’s done while he’s still wearing shoulderpads.

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