It's both, IMO.bachslunch wrote: The question one might ask is whether looking at QB stats that way is necessarily a bad thing. Is it "puffed up" or legit? .
All of us have our favs, and there are a few on Twitter, Chase and Ryan Michael who like the "analytics" of QBs, especially. And they, IMO, take the basic stats and repackage them in all sorts of ways and it still is some derivation of the passer rating. And that's fine. For one data points.
I only speak for myself, of course, but to ME, a HOF is more than one thing. If you debate with Viking fans that will cite you his 282 game streak and say "that is enough". I disagree. That is one "intangible" that is a great thing, but his stats are okay, his "honors" are poor, and team success is good, but not Super (pun intended).
I prefer a more complete approach. The careers that impress me have 3-4 things in which they "score" well. I call it Stats, Honors, Wins, Testimonials, Intangibles. If a guy does well in 2-3 or those he's likely a solid HOFer. If they do well in 1, then maybe not. The borderline might be 1-2 or -3 I don't know.
But for a Jim Marshall he has the streak and longevity. He may even have a testimonial or two (one of best 5 DEs I faced by some left tackle)
Gabriel, stats are okay, honors okay, wins, okay, testimonials (Bob Lilly) okay, Intangibles, good, IMO. Total = NOT HOF
Anderson stats good, honors good, wins okay to so-so, testimonials okay, intangibles? so-so. Injured a lot, not reputation for toughness, inconsistency in peak years = Not HOF
it is my view that Michael and Stuart focus on the stats and then have to recreate them in a way that puffs them up and never answer the 1976-79 54%, 79 passer rating. I mean if the key thing is the passer rating in whatever form, then why the doldrums?
If I look at a LeRoy Butler I see good stats, good honors (headed by All-Decade), wins (ring) pretty good, intangibles (played slot corner well) then I see an overall HOFer.
An Ed Reed would be great stats, great honors, great wins, great intangibles, and a first-ballot HOF
I see Anderson and Gabriel and Brodie and so on as basically the same. Call them "6s" and HOF-level is 6.5-10 on scale of 10. Maybe Anderson is a 6.2 and a Gabriel is a 6.0 and Brodie a 5.9 but all, are "6s" if you get my meaning