Last week
Tom Brady, quarterback for the National Football League’s New England Patriots,
helped the Patriots into their sixth Super Bowl during his career. The week
before Peyton Manning, quarterback for the Denver Broncos and formerly of the
Indianapolis Colts, saw his team eliminated from the playoffs in their first
game. This has been taken by some observers as further support for the argument
that Brady, who has been in three Super Bowl winning teams compared to Manning’s
one, is the better quarterback, including by Bill
Simmons.
I disagree.
Most of my reasons actually accord fairly well with the arguments put forward
in this Salon
article by Allen Barra. But here is why I think Manning has been the better
quarterback, or at least about even.
First up, I
put little weight on the argument that Brady holds an 11-5 edge in games
between their teams. For one thing, Brady and Manning’s teams do not just play
each other; there is the rest of the league where their performances matter as
well. Second, as important as quarterbacks are, the head-to-head record tells
me more that Brady has been in a better team. Third, Brady and Manning aren’t even on the field at the same time;
they each face off against the opposing team’s defence, not each other.
I put
slightly more weight, but still relatively little, on Brady having more Super
Bowl wins. Again, it mainly just tells me that Brady’s teams have been better,
not that Brady himself has been better. Now, given how important the
quarterback is to an NFL side, the fact that Brady has been involved in winning
three Super Bowl tells me that he is probably really, really good. But I
prefer a measure that can abstract a bit more from the effects of his
teammates.
For example,
Manning has been voted five times the NFL’s Most Valuable Player, to Brady’s
two times. Sure the MVP voting is quite subjective, but that tells me that more
often football observers have considered Manning as more crucial to his team’s
success. Interestingly in working out which quarterback ‘won’ each year,
Simmons gives 2003 and 2004 to Brady, even though Manning won the MVP in both
years, probably on the basis that the Patriots won the Super Bowl. But voters
clearly judged Manning the better individual player, so Brady’s triumphs seem
more reflective of team success.
Manning also
has a slightly
better career passing rating, at 97.5 to Brady’s 95.9. While a passer
rating is not the be-all and end-all – and it is itself partly dependent on a
QB’s teammates – it does capture many of the major statistics used to evaluate
one quarterback against another (touchdowns, completions, yards gained, and
interceptions). David Berri’s QB Score, which takes into account what
quarterbacks do with their legs as well, rates Manning
even higher.
Brady
proponents though can always point to Brady’s great playoffs win-loss record to
Manning’s so-so one. This argument was addressed recently at Fivethirtyeight,
and while it showed Brady has been the better playoff performer, Manning’s
playoff record is still somewhat better than if his teams had instead had an ‘average’
quarterback.
It is pretty
close though, and perhaps my argument is as much that Brady is not clearly
better as that I think Manning just shades him. But basically I think it is
only Brady’s three Super Bowl wins in four years – certainly not a small
achievement, by the way – that has stopped the consensus from favouring Manning.
On the other hand, maybe I just like Peyton
Manning more.
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