29. Tony Romo
It might shock you to know that, among all retired NFL quarterbacks, Tony Romo has the highest career passer rating. It’s also the highest career passer rating for any QB who never played in a Super Bowl, which is the part of Romo’s legacy that may keep him out of the Hall of Fame.
He never had much luck in the playoffs but his career numbers in statistics like yards per pass attempt and completion percentage — he ties Peyton Manning in the latter category — are among the best ever. In roughly the same number of seasons, Romo’s numbers are better than fellow Cowboys great Troy Aikman, but he had the misfortune of playing without the Hall of Famers his predecessor did.
28. Norm Van Brocklin
As one of the biggest stars of the NFL in the 1950s, Norm Van Brocklin led both the Los Angeles Rams and Philadelphia Eagles to championships within a decade. Van Brocklin’s career only lasted for 12 seasons but he made nine Pro Bowls in that time, proving he was easily one of the game’s most respected players. Like Namath, his career numbers pale in comparison to today’s passers but “The Dutchman’s” big arm led to an incredible 8.2 yards per pass attempt for his career, which is the third-best mark in history.
27. Philip Rivers
Playing in the era of Brady, Manning and Brees — and spending his entire career with a team (the Los Angeles Chargers) that gets almost no national coverage — has hurt the visibility of Philip Rivers, but his consistently great numbers put him up there with the all-time icons.
Currently, Rivers sits at sixth all-time in passing yards but will undoubtedly climb that list as his career continues. Rivers has thrown for at least 3,000 yards every season since 2006, and has topped the 4,000-yard mark in 11 of those 12 seasons. His lackluster performances in the playoffs have hurt his overall legacy but the fact that he hasn’t missed a start since 2006 is mind-boggling.
If Rivers finally wins a Super Bowl, he’ll soar even higher on this list.
26. Fran Tarkenton
One of the most reliable passers in NFL history, in 18 NFL seasons, Fran Tarkenton finished in the league’s top-10 leading passers 17 times.
He only led the league in passing yardage once and it was in his final season at the age of 38, when he turned in a career-high 3,468 yards. A legendary Minnesota Vikings star, Tarkenton led that franchise to three of the four Super Bowls it has ever reached, unfortunately losing in all of them. When he retired, Tarkenton owned nearly every major record a quarterback can have: pass attempts, completions, yards, touchdowns, rushing yards and wins.
25. Warren Moon
After unequaled success in the Canadian Football League, where he won five championships, Warren Moon went on to have a great career in the NFL despite having virtually no playoff success.
Moon threw for more than 3,000 yards every time he played a 16-game season and topped the 4,000-yard mark four times. Moon’s gun-slinging style led to a fair share of interceptions and an average career passer rating but he was extremely popular, being named to nine Pro Bowls. Moon currently sits at 10th all-time in NFL career passing yards and 10th all-time in game-winning drives led.
If he hadn’t spent six years playing in the CFL, it’s scary to think what his final NFL totals would’ve been.
24. Jim Kelly
For eight out of 11 of his NFL seasons, Jim Kelly passed for at least 3,000 yards and averaged about 3,200 yards per season for his career. He also led the Buffalo Bills to the Super Bowl four times, which means he made it to the big game in more than one-third of all the seasons he played. Of course, the Bills lost all four times and Kelly didn’t play at his best in them, but he clearly had a gift for winning in the regular season and playoffs.
23. Kurt Warner
Always dangerous, especially in the biggest games, Kurt Warner is 1-2 in Super Bowls but turned in three of the all-time greatest quarterback performances in the big game.
Warner’s career was injury plagued — he only played a full, 16-game season three times — but he led some of the most explosive offenses in recent memory, including the “Greatest Show on Turf” with the St. Louis Rams. He was named NFL MVP twice and his career completion percentage of 65.5 is the highest of any current Hall of Famer and is currently fourth best in league history. He averaged 385 yards passing in his three Super Bowl appearances and his 1,156 career yards gained are second only to Tom Brady in Super Bowl history.
22. Sonny Jurgensen
Arguably the league’s earliest long-ball passer, Jurgensen was a legend with the Eagles and Redskins who posted a career losing record as a starter but was still a marvel. He led the league in passing yardage five times, topping 3,000 yards in all those seasons, and was a touchdown machine. His 255 career passing touchdowns total still put him at 19th all-time, despite playing during the so-called “dead-ball era,” when running backs ruled the league.
While with the Eagles in 1960, he won his lone NFL championship, handing Vince Lombardi’s Packers their only playoff loss ever.
21. Donovan McNabb
Severely overlooked because he never won the big game, Eagles legend Donovan McNabb is one of only four quarterbacks in NFL history to collect 30,000 passing yards, 200 passing touchdowns, 3,000 rushing yards and 20 rushing touchdowns — and all of them are on this list.
He’s tied with Jim Kelly as the QB with the most playoff wins with no ring and finished his career with more passing yards and a better passer rating than that Hall of Famer. In 2004, McNabb had one of the greatest seasons a quarterback has ever had, becoming the first ever to throw for more than 30 touchdowns and less than 10 interceptions. For some reason, he’s still not in the Hall.
About The Delite
Somtimes it can feel like the world is full of negative news. Luckily, there is still a lot of good in the world. There are amazing people doing incredible things. Our goal is to help showcase some of these positive, inspiring stories in order to bring a smile to your face.