NFL's most unbreakable records

  • To unlock all of features of Rams On Demand please take a brief moment to register. Registering is not only quick and easy, it also allows you access to additional features such as live chat, private messaging, and a host of other apps exclusive to Rams On Demand.

Mojo Ram

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
22,938
Name
mojo
http://www.nfl.com/photoessays/0ap3000000415162/nfls-most-unbreakable-records

Jim Reineking NFL.com.
On Sunday, Peyton Manning set a new career mark for most TD passes, topping a record set four years ago by Brett Favre, who broke Dan Marino's record eight years after it was established.

Did you follow all of that? Marino retired in 1999 with 420 career TDs. Favre broke that record in 2007, set his career mark of 509 in 2010, and then saw it extinguished in 2014 by Manning.

That's a nice little record worthy of adulation (for which Manning received plenty), but it doesn't register among the NFL's most unbreakable all-time records. Take a look at the list below.

Derrick Thomas (7.0 Sacks in 1 game)
In a 1990 game against the Seattle Seahawks, Thomas sacked quarterback Dave Krieg seven times. That record has stood for more than 20 seasons because since then, only three times has a player gotten within a sack and a half of that total. One of those times was Thomas (with six in 1998 against the Oakland Raiders). The New York Giants' Osi Umenyiora had six in a game against the Philadelphia Eagles in 2007. The San Francisco 49ers' Aldon Smith had 5.5 sacks against the Chicago Bears in 2012. Sacks didn't become an official NFL statistic until 1982.According to legend, Norman "Wild Man" Willey has a 17-sack game for the Philadelphia Eagles against the New York Giants at the Polo Grounds in 1952.

Marvin Harrison (143 receptions in 2002)
In 2002, it was as if the Indianapolis Colts were playing "Madden" and only throwing passes to Harrison in orde to boost his stats to otherworldly levels. Harrison's next-closest competitor for the NFL's receptions lead that season was Hines Ward, who had 31 fewer catches.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers (26 straight losses 1976-1977)
Free agency and the salary cap have helped spawn an era of parity and competitive balance (though a few teams find ways to rise above and remain annual contenders), which would make for what the expansion Buccaneers experienced in 1976 and continued into 1977 very unlikely in the modern NFL. The best part of this run of ineptitude was the Buccaneers' creamsicle uniforms and coach John McKay, who was alwayswilling to provide a witty sound bite ("Well, we didn't block, but we made up for it by not tackling.").

George Blanda (26 NFL Seasons)
Blanda is one of only two players in NFL history whose career spanned four different decades (John Carney -- 1988-2010 -- was the other). Blanda, who played both as a quarterback and kicker, made his NFL debut in 1949 for coach George Halas' Chicago Bears and finished it in 1975 for coach John Madden's Oakland Raiders. Blanda's lengthy NFL career included an American Football League MVP award in 1961 for leading the Houston Oilers to the league championship, and then at the age of 43 won an NFL MVP award in 1970 for last-minute heroics in five consecutive games.

San Francisco 49ers (18 consecutive road wins from 1988-1990)
Winning on the road in the NFL is tough business. Doing so for a stretch of two-plus seasons is nearly impossible, unless you're the talent-laden 49ers of the late-1980s, early-1990s. The 49ers won the Super Bowl following the 1988 and 1989 seasons, and were vying for a rare three-peat during the 1990 season. With teams routinely gunning for defending Super Bowl champions at every chance they get, it's amazing what the 49ers were able to pull off and this accomplishment only speaks to their status as one of the NFL's all-time greatest dynasties.

Brett Favre (297 straight games by QB)
Favre's streak is so impressive that the record that stood before was 116 games, set by Ron Jaworski in 1984 (that's more than 11 seasons shorter). Peyton Manning has come the closest to Favre's mark, starting 208 consecutive games from 1998 through 2011 (5 1/2 seasons short of Favre's mark). Favre replaced an injured Don Majkowski in 1992, remained the team's starter for 16 seasons before spending a season with the New York Jets and two more with the Minnesota Vikings. In that time, 238 other quarterbacks have started in the NFL (the Packers' long-time rival, the Chicago Bears, alone had 22 different starters).

Jim Hardy (8 interceptions in one game)
Hardy might have had the most dramatic up-and-down start to a season. In the 1950 season opener, Hardy had arguably the worst day a quarterback ever had (and that's saying something given the likes of Ryan Leaf and JaMarcus Russell once roamed the pro gridiron). Hardy threw eight interceptions in a 45-7 loss for his Chicago Cardinals against the defending NFL champion Philadelphia Eagles. The next week, Hardy threw six touchdown passes in a 55-13 win for the Cardinals over the Baltimore Colts. At the time, it tied an NFL record for most touchdown passes in a game with Sammy Baugh and Johnny Lujack.

Paul Krause (81 career interceptions)
Krause's career got off to a fast start, as he led the NFL with 12 interceptions. Sixteen seasons later, Krause retired as the NFL's all-time interceptions leader, besting Emlen Tunnell's career total of 79. Of recent vintage, Rod Woodson came the closest with 71 interceptions. Ancient warrior Charles Woodson is the active leader with 58 interceptions, having attained that total in 17 seasons.

Don Hutson (29 Points in one quarter)
Hutson is arguably the greatest receiver of all time, and his greatest individual performance might have come on Oct. 7, 1945. During a 57-21 win over the Detroit Lions at State Fair Park stadium in Milwaukee, Hutson scored four touchdowns in the second quarter and added five PATs for a 29-point quarter. Hutson, however, fell short of the single-game scoring record, held by Ernie Nevers, who had 40 points (six touchdowns and four PATs) for the Chicago Cardinals against the Chicago Bears in 1929.

Willie "Flipper" Anderson (336 receiving yards in 1 game) :snicker:
In a 31-30 Detroit Lions win over the Dallas Cowboys in Week 8 of the 2013 season, receiver Calvin Johnson had a game for the ages, catching 14 passes for 329 yards and a touchdown. He came within seven yards of matching Anderson's record from 24 years earlier. In a 20-17 overtime win for the Los Angeles Rams over the New Orleans Saints, Anderson had 15 receptions for 336 yards and a touchdown (a game-tying score in the fourth quarter that forced the overtime).

Jerry Rice (career receiving records)
The records set by Rice during his spectacular 21-year NFL career are too numerous. So, we've placed these marks in one spot. Rice holds nearly every significant career receiving record, including receptions (1,549), receiving yards (22,895), touchdowns (197) and most 1,000-yard receiving seasons (14).

Eric Dickerson (2,105 rush yards in single-season) :snicker:
In 2012, Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson came within 10 yards of toppling one of the NFL's most prestigious records, Dickerson's single-season rushing yardage total of 2,105 (Peterson finished with 2,097). Dickerson set the record in just his second NFL season, averaging 131.6 yards a game and 5.6 yards per carry. In three of his first four seasons, Dickerson rushed for 1,800 or more yards.

Emmitt Smith (18,355 career rush yards)
In his 15 seasons in the NFL, Smith rushed for 1,000 or more yards in 11 of those seasons. He led the league four times, all within a five-year stretch during the Dallas Cowboys' reign of terror during the 1990s. Smith was the latest in a long lineage of the NFL's greatest backs to conquer this prestigious record, before Smith, Walter Payton held the mark. Before Payton, Jim Brown was the record-holder. Before Brown, it was Joe Perry. Before Perry, it was Steve Van Buren. Before Van Buren, it was Clarke Hinkle. And before Hinkle, it was Cliff Battles.

Don Shula (347 coaching victories)
Entering Week 8 of the 2014 season, New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick owns 204 wins as a coach. Belichick -- who is the winningest active NFL coach -- would have to average 10 wins a season for the next 12 years to catch Shula's record. Belichick will be 74 years old in 2026. Shula's record could stand for perpetuity. Impatient front offices, fanbases and media make lenghty coaching careers a rarity. A down season could result in a change at coach and the requisite rebuilding project commences. In his 33 years as coach, Shula was at the helm of just two teams: The Baltimore Colts and Miami Dolphins. Shula's teams made the playoffs 19 times (that's also a record). He coached in six Super Bowls (another record) and won two. During his 33 seasons, he earned a winning percentage of .678, the sixth-best mark for anybody who coached for 10 or more seasons.

Otto Graham (10 Championship appearances in 10 straight seasons)
Gather around boys and girls, and let uncle Jim tell you a tale about a magical time when the Cleveland Browns were the most dominant force pro football had and will ever see. No freaking way, you say? It might be hard to believe, but it's easy if you try. Under the guidance of Otto Graham and groundbreaking coach Paul Brown, the Browns dominated not one, but two professional football leagues. After winning all four championships of the AAFC, the Browns then authoritatively entered the NFL. The Browns played in the NFL championship game in six consecutive seasons, winning four times. That's 10 consecutive years of reaching the championship game, and Graham was quarterback for all 10.
 

CGI_Ram

Hamburger Connoisseur
Moderator
Joined
Jun 28, 2010
Messages
48,176
Name
Burger man
There are some doozies on the list... But this one is insane:

Jim Hardy (8 interceptions in one game)
 

Mojo Ram

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
22,938
Name
mojo
  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
  • #3
I actually think that among all those "untouchable" records, Dickerson's 2,105 gets eclipsed eventually...and unfortunately.
 
Last edited:

Mojo Ram

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
22,938
Name
mojo
  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
  • #5
That Favre record is pretty amazing when you consider the way he played the game.
 

Mikey Ram

Hall of Fame
Joined
Oct 20, 2014
Messages
3,398
Name
Mike
There are some doozies on the list... But this one is insane:

Jim Hardy (8 interceptions in one game)

Can't disagree and yeah, quite a list...I'm kind of thinking that we will NEVER see one QB lead the same team to the championship game 10 consecutive times...I also think Dickerson's record is the most likely to fall...
 

LazyWinker

Pro Bowler
Joined
Jun 19, 2014
Messages
1,662
Name
Paul
Norm Van Broklin's record isn't listed. It hasn't been broken yet. Peyton must be doing something wrong if he can't pass for more than 554 yards in a game.
 

paceram

Pro Bowler
Joined
Jul 29, 2010
Messages
1,732
http://www.nfl.com/photoessays/0ap3000000415162/nfls-most-unbreakable-records

Jim Reineking NFL.com.
On Sunday, Peyton Manning set a new career mark for most TD passes, topping a record set four years ago by Brett Favre, who broke Dan Marino's record eight years after it was established.

Did you follow all of that? Marino retired in 1999 with 420 career TDs. Favre broke that record in 2007, set his career mark of 509 in 2010, and then saw it extinguished in 2014 by Manning.

That's a nice little record worthy of adulation (for which Manning received plenty), but it doesn't register among the NFL's most unbreakable all-time records. Take a look at the list below.

Derrick Thomas (7.0 Sacks in 1 game)
In a 1990 game against the Seattle Seahawks, Thomas sacked quarterback Dave Krieg seven times. That record has stood for more than 20 seasons because since then, only three times has a player gotten within a sack and a half of that total. One of those times was Thomas (with six in 1998 against the Oakland Raiders). The New York Giants' Osi Umenyiora had six in a game against the Philadelphia Eagles in 2007. The San Francisco 49ers' Aldon Smith had 5.5 sacks against the Chicago Bears in 2012. Sacks didn't become an official NFL statistic until 1982.According to legend, Norman "Wild Man" Willey has a 17-sack game for the Philadelphia Eagles against the New York Giants at the Polo Grounds in 1952.

Marvin Harrison (143 receptions in 2002)
In 2002, it was as if the Indianapolis Colts were playing "Madden" and only throwing passes to Harrison in orde to boost his stats to otherworldly levels. Harrison's next-closest competitor for the NFL's receptions lead that season was Hines Ward, who had 31 fewer catches.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers (26 straight losses 1976-1977)
Free agency and the salary cap have helped spawn an era of parity and competitive balance (though a few teams find ways to rise above and remain annual contenders), which would make for what the expansion Buccaneers experienced in 1976 and continued into 1977 very unlikely in the modern NFL. The best part of this run of ineptitude was the Buccaneers' creamsicle uniforms and coach John McKay, who was alwayswilling to provide a witty sound bite ("Well, we didn't block, but we made up for it by not tackling.").

George Blanda (26 NFL Seasons)
Blanda is one of only two players in NFL history whose career spanned four different decades (John Carney -- 1988-2010 -- was the other). Blanda, who played both as a quarterback and kicker, made his NFL debut in 1949 for coach George Halas' Chicago Bears and finished it in 1975 for coach John Madden's Oakland Raiders. Blanda's lengthy NFL career included an American Football League MVP award in 1961 for leading the Houston Oilers to the league championship, and then at the age of 43 won an NFL MVP award in 1970 for last-minute heroics in five consecutive games.

San Francisco 49ers (18 consecutive road wins from 1988-1990)
Winning on the road in the NFL is tough business. Doing so for a stretch of two-plus seasons is nearly impossible, unless you're the talent-laden 49ers of the late-1980s, early-1990s. The 49ers won the Super Bowl following the 1988 and 1989 seasons, and were vying for a rare three-peat during the 1990 season. With teams routinely gunning for defending Super Bowl champions at every chance they get, it's amazing what the 49ers were able to pull off and this accomplishment only speaks to their status as one of the NFL's all-time greatest dynasties.

Brett Favre (297 straight games by QB)
Favre's streak is so impressive that the record that stood before was 116 games, set by Ron Jaworski in 1984 (that's more than 11 seasons shorter). Peyton Manning has come the closest to Favre's mark, starting 208 consecutive games from 1998 through 2011 (5 1/2 seasons short of Favre's mark). Favre replaced an injured Don Majkowski in 1992, remained the team's starter for 16 seasons before spending a season with the New York Jets and two more with the Minnesota Vikings. In that time, 238 other quarterbacks have started in the NFL (the Packers' long-time rival, the Chicago Bears, alone had 22 different starters).

Jim Hardy (8 interceptions in one game)
Hardy might have had the most dramatic up-and-down start to a season. In the 1950 season opener, Hardy had arguably the worst day a quarterback ever had (and that's saying something given the likes of Ryan Leaf and JaMarcus Russell once roamed the pro gridiron). Hardy threw eight interceptions in a 45-7 loss for his Chicago Cardinals against the defending NFL champion Philadelphia Eagles. The next week, Hardy threw six touchdown passes in a 55-13 win for the Cardinals over the Baltimore Colts. At the time, it tied an NFL record for most touchdown passes in a game with Sammy Baugh and Johnny Lujack.

Paul Krause (81 career interceptions)
Krause's career got off to a fast start, as he led the NFL with 12 interceptions. Sixteen seasons later, Krause retired as the NFL's all-time interceptions leader, besting Emlen Tunnell's career total of 79. Of recent vintage, Rod Woodson came the closest with 71 interceptions. Ancient warrior Charles Woodson is the active leader with 58 interceptions, having attained that total in 17 seasons.

Don Hutson (29 Points in one quarter)
Hutson is arguably the greatest receiver of all time, and his greatest individual performance might have come on Oct. 7, 1945. During a 57-21 win over the Detroit Lions at State Fair Park stadium in Milwaukee, Hutson scored four touchdowns in the second quarter and added five PATs for a 29-point quarter. Hutson, however, fell short of the single-game scoring record, held by Ernie Nevers, who had 40 points (six touchdowns and four PATs) for the Chicago Cardinals against the Chicago Bears in 1929.

Willie "Flipper" Anderson (336 receiving yards in 1 game) :snicker:
In a 31-30 Detroit Lions win over the Dallas Cowboys in Week 8 of the 2013 season, receiver Calvin Johnson had a game for the ages, catching 14 passes for 329 yards and a touchdown. He came within seven yards of matching Anderson's record from 24 years earlier. In a 20-17 overtime win for the Los Angeles Rams over the New Orleans Saints, Anderson had 15 receptions for 336 yards and a touchdown (a game-tying score in the fourth quarter that forced the overtime).

Jerry Rice (career receiving records)
The records set by Rice during his spectacular 21-year NFL career are too numerous. So, we've placed these marks in one spot. Rice holds nearly every significant career receiving record, including receptions (1,549), receiving yards (22,895), touchdowns (197) and most 1,000-yard receiving seasons (14).

Eric Dickerson (2,105 rush yards in single-season) :snicker:
In 2012, Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson came within 10 yards of toppling one of the NFL's most prestigious records, Dickerson's single-season rushing yardage total of 2,105 (Peterson finished with 2,097). Dickerson set the record in just his second NFL season, averaging 131.6 yards a game and 5.6 yards per carry. In three of his first four seasons, Dickerson rushed for 1,800 or more yards.

Emmitt Smith (18,355 career rush yards)
In his 15 seasons in the NFL, Smith rushed for 1,000 or more yards in 11 of those seasons. He led the league four times, all within a five-year stretch during the Dallas Cowboys' reign of terror during the 1990s. Smith was the latest in a long lineage of the NFL's greatest backs to conquer this prestigious record, before Smith, Walter Payton held the mark. Before Payton, Jim Brown was the record-holder. Before Brown, it was Joe Perry. Before Perry, it was Steve Van Buren. Before Van Buren, it was Clarke Hinkle. And before Hinkle, it was Cliff Battles.

Don Shula (347 coaching victories)
Entering Week 8 of the 2014 season, New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick owns 204 wins as a coach. Belichick -- who is the winningest active NFL coach -- would have to average 10 wins a season for the next 12 years to catch Shula's record. Belichick will be 74 years old in 2026. Shula's record could stand for perpetuity. Impatient front offices, fanbases and media make lenghty coaching careers a rarity. A down season could result in a change at coach and the requisite rebuilding project commences. In his 33 years as coach, Shula was at the helm of just two teams: The Baltimore Colts and Miami Dolphins. Shula's teams made the playoffs 19 times (that's also a record). He coached in six Super Bowls (another record) and won two. During his 33 seasons, he earned a winning percentage of .678, the sixth-best mark for anybody who coached for 10 or more seasons.

Otto Graham (10 Championship appearances in 10 straight seasons)
Gather around boys and girls, and let uncle Jim tell you a tale about a magical time when the Cleveland Browns were the most dominant force pro football had and will ever see. No freaking way, you say? It might be hard to believe, but it's easy if you try. Under the guidance of Otto Graham and groundbreaking coach Paul Brown, the Browns dominated not one, but two professional football leagues. After winning all four championships of the AAFC, the Browns then authoritatively entered the NFL. The Browns played in the NFL championship game in six consecutive seasons, winning four times. That's 10 consecutive years of reaching the championship game, and Graham was quarterback for all 10.

Well, all I can say is that I seriously doubt I will ever see any of the above records broken in my lifetime (Except for Dickerson's single season rushing record which won't surprise me to see that record broken within the next 10 years (Hopefully, I live that long!)!
 

DaveFan'51

Old-Timer
Rams On Demand Sponsor
Joined
Apr 18, 2014
Messages
18,666
Name
Dave
Norm Van Broklin's record isn't listed. It hasn't been broken yet. Peyton must be doing something wrong if he can't pass for more than 554 yards in a game.
I think this one^ is safe too! I don't think even Manning could pull that off, in today's League!
 

kurtfaulk

Rams On Demand Sponsor
Rams On Demand Sponsor
Joined
Sep 7, 2011
Messages
16,004
.

where's the favre career interception record? No way anybody gets anywhere close to that.

.
 

kurtfaulk

Rams On Demand Sponsor
Rams On Demand Sponsor
Joined
Sep 7, 2011
Messages
16,004
.

I just looked it up. 336 interceptions. Wow. That's more than most qbs career td throws.

.
 

LesBaker

Mr. Savant
Joined
Aug 23, 2012
Messages
17,460
Name
Les
Automatic Otto's record is the one that will never be broken......... if there is one on that list that stands forever that will be the one
 

SierraRam

Recreational User
Joined
Mar 17, 2014
Messages
2,254
I'd say Otto Graham is safe too, but Shula's record is flat out ridiculous. 347 wins!!! Go 16-0 for 20 straight seasons and you'll still come up short.
 

Prime Time

PT
Moderator
Joined
Feb 9, 2014
Messages
20,922
Name
Peter
8 int's in one game and Flipper Anderson's 336 yards in one game would be real tough to break. And as Sierra mentioned, Shula's 347 wins seems impossible to pass. Belichick is the closest of living coaches with 204 and he's getting a bit long in the tooth.

Btw what's the record for most idiotic calls and non-calls by a referee crew in one game or over one season? Bet the NFL doesn't keep track of that. Inquiring minds want to know.