1. None of this changes the fact that in every year but one Stabler failed to win the Super Bowl. Sooner or later, he hit a team he couldn't beat.L.C. Greenwood wrote:Stabler was much better than Anderson in the playoffs, with five standout performances, not counting nearly beating the Steelers in '72. Ken Anderson managed just two playoff wins, some of his numbers came when he was trailing by double digits.bachslunch wrote:I don't agree with this. I think Anderson will be elected as a Senior eventually, and rightly so. Any edge Stabler may have in postseason play (and given that he only won one SB, not sold on how big that edge is) is at least offset and probably surpassed by Anderson being much better in career regular season stats adjusted for era -- rankings by folks such as Stuart and Rasaretnam show Anderson near the top of the heap surrounded by HoFers, while Stabler is at the periphery at best alongside folks like Joe Theismann. And Anderson merits some pioneer/innovator status boost as the first successful West Coast type QB.L.C. Greenwood wrote:
Don't know if Anderson will ever get in, Stabler's edge in the postseason makes him a better QB in my opinion. Anderson has good stats, but rarely led the Bengals from behind, and that played out in the playoffs.
As a result, I see Stabler as marginal and Anderson as a no-brainer and thus more deserving.
2. Giving Stabler an implied nod for nearly winning the Immaculate Reception game while ignoring Anderson's play in his Super Bowl loss strikes me as unfair. Anderson lost the game to perhaps the best QB ever at the top of his game in a last minute drive for the ages, and one might perhaps argue that the Cincy defense let him down.
3. Even if we assume Stabler was "much better" than Anderson in the postseason, I contend that Anderson's numbers adjusted for era are significantly better than Stabler's -- which is what all attempts I've seen to rank QBs this way suggest. And I value the edge Anderson has in stats over any supposed postseason edge Stabler has (What hurts Stabler's regular season numbers is having 4-5 fine seasons vs. 9-10 that were mediocre to bad).
4. Let's assume for the sake of argument that Anderson was unsuccessful in the postseason. If lack of postseason success were a HoF deal breaker, you'd have a good point. But that's in fact not the case. None of Jurgensen, Tittle, Moon, Tarkenton, Kelly, Marino, or Fouts did well in the postseason, yet all are in the HoF.