Ness wrote:Oh and Warner? Just...no. Guy seems like a nice, good guy. But I think he got in partly because of his story of going from rags to riches, being nice, and also now working within the media to a large capacity. He had three great years from 1999-2001. Then he messed up his hand, played awful in 2002. Marc Bulger replaces him full time by 2003. Warner then goes on to have five straight lackluster seasons of football before finally rebounding in 2007 to 2009. Warner was at a point in his career where he was fighting for a starting job with Matt Leinart, whom the Cardinals had drafted one year after signing Warner.
There is the doughnut in Warner's career from 02-06, that is undeniable, and his career was also short because he was 28 before he got the starting job in St. Louis, however:
-He led one of the most diverse and prolific offenses in pro football history,
-He had (at the time) two of the greatest passing seasons ever, which still 15 years later still look really impressive
-He was a 2 time NFL MVP. A list of all other players who have won multiple AP NFL MVP's - Peyton Manning (5), Brett Favre (3), Steve Young (2), Joe Montana (2), Steve Young (2), Aaron Rodgers (2).
-He took two franchises who had been perennially weak (the Rams from 1990-1998 and the Cardinals from seemingly forever to 2007) and turned them into Cinderella teams who made the Super Bowl.
-He played in three Super Bowls, and the three names at the top of the list of most yards passing in a Super Bowl are Kurt Warner, Kurt Warner, and Kurt Warner.
-He won one of the three Super Bowls, lost the other two in the final minute of the game.
-Four Pro Bowls, two time first team All-Pro.
-9-4 record as a starter in the postseason, with a 31-14 TD-INT ratio.
Warner played 11 years in the NFL, and he had six full-time seasons. In those six seasons (99-01, 07-09), he accomplished the above. I think at his peak (99, 01, 08), he was one of the ten best QB's ever. He is a deserving Hall of Famer.