In Super Bowl XI, with the score 10-0 Raiders and six minutes left in the first half, Tarkenton threw 50 yards downfield to Ahmad Rashad, who had gotten behind the defenders. Rashad dropped the pass and it was in his hands.Evan wrote:Mike Phipps had a career record of 38-31-2 as a starter, and never struck me as having a particularly strong arm.
To me, the answer to this question is Fran Tarkenton. I remember reading Tarkenton said that in his prime he could throw the ball about 59 yards in the air. He retired having won more games as a starting QB than any other QB in history.
Late in his career, from 1974 on, the results of injuries and various injections (see the MMQB interview with him this week - http://mmqb.si.com/2014/12/05/nfl-fran- ... n-iii-rg3/) limited him to throwing the ball about 10 yards in practice, and about 40 yards on game day, mostly due to adrenaline. If Chuck Foreman, Ed Marinaro and Rickey Young hadn't come along to catch all those dumpoff passes, I don't know what he would have done.
The film I've seen on Tarkenton late in his career showed him to often overthrow on long passes (the 1975 Playoff against Dallas in particular), and I wonder if he kind of over-adrenalized when he saw Gilliam running open, and overthrew him, not having been able to actually practice the timing of any long passes during the week. Also I wonder if with an overthrown long pass he wanted to send a message of sorts to the defense that his arm wasn't dead, just so they would have to defend the deep pass and not just crowd the intermediate zones.
A forgotten play from Super Bowl XI.