Ranking this millennium's 17 quarterback draft classes

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CGI_Ram

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http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap30...this-millenniums-17-quarterback-draft-classes

Ranking this millennium's 17 quarterback draft classes

With the 2017 QB draft class spawning intrigue -- and immense uncertainty -- Marc Sessler found himself pondering all of the quarterback cliques of recent vintage. Which groups took the league by storm? Which went bust? Here are the rankings of each QB class since the turn of the millennium.

17) 2007

Round 1: JaMarcus Russell (No. 1 overall), Brady Quinn (No. 22)
Round 2: Kevin Kolb (No. 36), John Beck (No. 40), Drew Stanton (No. 43)
Round 3: Trent Edwards (No. 92)
Round 4: Isaiah Stanback (No. 103)
Round 5: Jeff Rowe (No. 151), Troy Smith (No. 174)
Round 6: Jordan Palmer (No. 205)
Round 7: Tyler Thigpen (No. 217)
Undrafted: Matt Moore

We begin our journey in grim territory. The 2007 NFL Draft was "headlined" by JaMarcus Russell, arguably the most severe quarterback bust of the century, a first overall whiff that set the Raiders back years. The 6-foot-6, 265-pound LSU star produced a grotesque 7-18 mark as a starter and finished 2009 -- his final year in the league -- as the worst passer in football. Russell netted $31.5 million in guaranteed loot, while the Raiders, in return, were handed a raging headache. Same goes for the Browns, who reached for Brady Quinn at No. 22, only to turn around three years later and trade him to the Broncos for fullback Peyton Hillis -- who at least managed to sneak onto the cover of "Madden." Only eternal backups Drew Stanton and Matt Moore remain from a flatlining class that handed us John Beck, Trent Edwards and the overhyped Kevin Kolb. High-level busts and zero reliable starters makes this the worst crop of them all.

16) 2013

Round 1: EJ Manuel (No. 16)
Round 2: Geno Smith (No. 39)
Round 3: Mike Glennon (No. 73)
Round 4: Matt Barkley (No. 98), Ryan Nassib (No. 110), Tyler Wilson (No. 112), Landry Jones (No. 115)
Round 7: Brad Sorensen (No. 221), Zac Dysert (No. 234), B.J. Daniels (No. 237), Sean Renfree(No. 249)

Teams were stunned when the desperate Bills reached for EJ Manuel with the 16th overall selection. Seen by most as a project with potential, the Florida State product was a turnover-prone flop in Buffalo -- a player Doug Marrone replaced with Kyle Orton before Rex Ryan signed Tyrod Taylor to avoid leaning on Manuel. This class lacked a true first-round prospect, while the only second-rounder -- Geno Smith -- has been an on-field wild card best known for catching a fist to the jaw from his own teammate. With both players already toiling as backups on second teams, it's up to Mike Glennon to save this collection of backups, flameouts and low-level patches.

15) 2002

Round 1: David Carr (No. 1), Joey Harrington (No. 3), Patrick Ramsey (No. 32)
Round 3: Josh McCown (No. 81)
Round 4: David Garrard (No. 108), Rohan Davey (No. 117)
Round 5: Randy Fasani (No. 137), Kurt Kittner (No. 158), Brandon Doman (No. 163), Craig Nall (No. 164)
Round 6: J.T. O'Sullivan (No. 186), Steve Bellisari (No. 205)
Round 7: Seth Burford (No. 216), Jeff Kelly (No. 232), Ronald Curry (No. 235), Wes Pate (No. 236)
Undrafted: Chad Hutchinson, Shaun Hill

The 2002 rep with the most long-term value? Josh McCown, who remains a quality -- if wholly injury-prone -- backup. While David Carr never lived up to the status of being the No. 1 overall pick, his situation reminds me of what happened to Tim Couch in Cleveland: A young quarterback is tossed into the fire on a wanting expansion team struggling to find its way. David Garrard had some flashy moments with the Jaguars, while Shaun Hill -- an undrafted arm -- is still kicking around as a backup. This class was also yanked to earth by two first-round nightmares, Detroit's Joey Harrington and Washington's Patrick Ramsey, who combined for a 28-51 record with the teams that mistakenly chose them. For diehards, this class also gifted us the undrafted enigma Chad Hutchinson.

14) 2010

Round 1: Sam Bradford (No. 1), Tim Tebow (No. 25)
Round 2: Jimmy Clausen (No. 48)
Round 3: Colt McCoy (No. 85)
Round 4: Mike Kafka (No. 122)
Round 5: John Skelton (No. 155), Jonathan Crompton (No. 168)
Round 6: Rusty Smith (No. 176), Dan LeFevour (No. 181), Joe Webb (No. 199), Tony Pike (No. 204)
Round 7: Levi Brown (No. 209), Sean Canfield (No. 239), Zac Robinson (No. 250)

You could argue that Sam Bradford was a major factor in the current collective bargaining agreement including a rookie pay scale. Bradford's weighty, six-year, $78 million contract came packed with a ridiculous $50 million in guarantees. As an unconvincing Offensive Rookie of the Year winner, the snakebitten signal caller missed 25 games over his final two seasons in St. Louis because of disastrous knee injuries. Some of his best play came last season in Minnesota, but it's not enough to save a class sprinkled with career backups -- Colt McCoy and second-round bust Jimmy Clausen -- and one massively memorable first-round reach in Tim Tebow, who operated as a worldwide sensation during a magical run with the Broncos in 2011 before flaming out entirely and winding up as a minor league baseball player.

13) 2009

Round 1: Matthew Stafford (No. 1), Mark Sanchez (No. 5), Josh Freeman (No. 17)
Round 2: Pat White (No. 44)
Round 4: Stephen McGee (No. 101)
Round 5: Rhett Bomar (No. 151), Nate Davis (No. 171)
Round 6: Tom Brandstater (No. 174), Mike Teel (No. 178), Keith Null (No. 196), Curis Painter (No. 201)
Undrafted: Brian Hoyer

I'm tempted to rank this class above the 2006 crop that handed us Jay Cutler and Vince Young, simply because I prefer Matthew Stafford over anyone from that group. There's just nothing else happening here, though, unless you're swayed by the early-career success of Mark Sanchez. He generated a handful of special moments during back-to-back trips to the AFC title game with the Jets but was fully exposed as a starter by 2011, when Gang Green tried to lean on his arm. Josh Freeman was a wild first-round flameout, while the Dolphins scored negative points for using the 44th pick on Pat White, who never started a game for Miami -- or anyone -- under center. Brian Hoyer's had a few nice stretches -- and one appallingly bad playoff game.

12) 2006

Round 1: Vince Young (No. 3), Matt Leinart (No. 10), Jay Cutler (No. 11)
Round 2
: Kellen Clemens (No. 49), Tarvaris Jackson (No. 64)
Round 3: Charlie Whitehurst (No. 81), Brodie Croyle (No. 85)
Round 4: Brad Smith (No. 103)
Round 5: Ingle Martin (No. 148), Omar Jacobs (No. 164)
Round 6: Reggie McNeal (No. 193), Bruce Gradkowski (No. 194)
Round 7: D.J. Shockley (No. 223)

This class boils down to what you think about Jay Cutler. While the strong-armed passer logged 139 starts, his 51-51 regular-season record with the Bears is apt. He put together plenty of big plays -- some of his throws are pure beauty -- but we'd struggle to come up with Cutler's top-five list of inspiring come-from-behind victories. He never came close to morphing into a transcendent player at the position, but he soldiered on long after fellow first-rounders Vince Young and Matt Leinart were history. Leinart -- the USC megastar -- looms as one of the most disappointing pro passers of our time. Tarvaris Jackson and Charlie Whitehurst were nothing special, but the latter gets points in this space for his incredible flowing mane and ability to snag the songstress Jewel as a paramour.

11) 2016

Round 1: Jared Goff (No. 1), Carson Wentz (No. 2), Paxton Lynch (No. 26)
Round 2: Christian Hackenberg (No. 51)
Round 3: Jacoby Brissett (No. 91), Cody Kessler (No. 93)
Round 4: Connor Cook (No. 100), Dak Prescott (No. 135), Cardale Jones (No. 139)
Round 5: Kevin Hogan (No. 162)
Round 6: Nate Sudfeld (No. 187), Jake Rudock (No. 191), Brandon Allen (No. 201), Jeff Driskel(No. 207)
Round 7: Brandon Doughty (No. 223)

The tricky part of this exercise boils down to handling the newer classes. If Dak Prescott and Carson Wentz grow into decade-long starters, this group shoots up the list without much debate. These two quarterbacks have the power to change the NFC East for years to come, but we need to see Wentz, especially, take steps during his sophomore campaign. Jared Goff can only get better after a grisly rookie season. His progress -- or further regression -- only adds to the wild-card nature of this class. Paxton Lynch is intriguing, while Cody Kessler has the feel of a reliable No. 2. The Jets have a lot of explaining to do after swinging on Christian Hackenberg in the second round, only to hide him away in the NFL's version of the witness protection program. Fear not: The former Nittany Lion will be thrown into the unmerciful fire this autumn in Florham Park.

10) 2014

Round 1: Blake Bortles (No. 3), Johnny Manziel (No. 22), Teddy Bridgewater (No. 32)
Round 2
: Derek Carr (No. 36), Jimmy Garoppolo (No. 62)
Round 4: Logan Thomas (No. 120), Tom Savage (No. 135)
Round 5: Aaron Murray (No. 163), AJ McCarron (No. 164)
Round 6: Zach Mettenberger (No. 178), David Fales (No. 183), Keith Wenning (No. 194), Tajh Boyd (No. 213), Garrett Gilbert (No. 214)

This class is all over the map, with high-profile starters and unforgivable draft mistakes mixed into one chaotic stew. An MVP candidate before his injury last season, Derek Carr looks like one of the brightest young quarterbacks around. Jimmy Garoppolo is highly prized by the Patriots and is a future NFL starter. Blake Bortles is another reminder that we can't judge these players too early. He heads into his fourth season fighting to save his job after the wheels fell off in 2016. Some of Bortles' mechanical issues appear fatal to a long career. Entirely different issues sideswiped Johnny Manziel, another haunting, awful quarterback selection by the Browns. Tom Savage and AJ McCarron are backup types who will be around for years, while the future is unknown for Teddy Bridgewater. Had the Vikings passer not been stung by a ghastly knee injury, the 2014 class would be higher on this list.

9) 2000

Round 1: Chad Pennington (No. 18)
Round 3: Giovanni Carmazzi (No. 65), Chris Redman (No. 75)
Round 5: Tee Martin (No. 163)
Round 6: Marc Bulger (No. 168), Spergon Wynn (No. 183), Tom Brady (No. 199), Todd Husak (No. 202), JaJuan Seider (No. 205)
Round 7: Tim Rattay (No. 212), Jarious Jackson (No. 214), Joe Hamilton (No. 234)
Undrafted: Billy Volek

You could argue this group should rank higher ... or much lower. While it's littered with nonsensical names who barely made a blip on the radar, the 2000 class also boasts the greatest quarterback of the 21st century -- and, for me, all time. Brady completely overshadows the group's only first-rounder, Chad Pennington, but the former Marshall star was the best thing the Jets have seen at the position since Y2K and produced nicely throughout most of his 11-year career. An anonymous sixth-rounder, Marc Bulger went on to start 95 games for the post-Kurt Warner Rams over eight seasons. It's incredible that the 49ers made Giovanni Carmazzi the second quarterback off the board with Brady -- a Bay Area resident -- still available, but the blame falls on every single team in the NFL who failed to recognize what the future Patriots star would become. Pennington, Carmazzi, Chris Redman, Tee Martin, Bulger and Spergon Wynn all found homes before fate intervened to pair Tommy with Bill Belichick.

8) 2011

Round 1: Cam Newton (No. 1), Jake Locker (No. 8), Blaine Gabbert (No. 10), Christian Ponder(No. 12)
Round 2: Andy Dalton (No. 35), Colin Kaepernick (No. 36)
Round 3: Ryan Mallett (No. 74)
Round 5: Ricky Stanzi (No. 135), T.J. Yates (No. 152), Nathan Enderle (No. 160)
Round 6: Tyrod Taylor (No. 180)
Round 7
: Greg McElroy (No. 208)
Supplemental draft: Terrelle Pryor (Round 3)

Another class filled with juicy talent and devastating, franchise-altering busts. The Panthers wisely ignored their selection of Jimmy Clausen the previous April, going all in on Cam Newton with the No. 1 pick in the draft. With an MVP award and Super Bowl appearance under his belt, Newton has lived up to the pedigree while making Carolina a relevant franchise. His success is offset by a trio of first-round disasters -- Jake Locker, Blaine Gabbert and Christian Ponder -- which would be enough to shuttle this class down the list if it weren't for the supporting cast. Andy Dalton is imperfect, but he's led the Bengals to the playoffs five times, while sixth-rounder Tyrod Taylor has blossomed into a starter. Colin Kaepernick's career is on the downswing, but he brought the Niners within one completed pass of a Super Bowl title and was seen by many as the most exciting quarterback in football for a two-season stretch.

7) 2015

Round 1: Jameis Winston (No. 1), Marcus Mariota (No. 2)
Round 3: Garrett Grayson (No. 75), Sean Mannion (No. 89)
Round 4: Bryce Petty (No. 103)
Round 5: Brett Hundley (No. 147)
Round 7: Trevor Siemian (No. 250)

This class has potential to be remembered as a special bunch based entirely on its two first-rounders. Jameis Winston of the Bucs and Tennessee's Marcus Mariota have just begun to leave their mark for a pair of franchises with bright futures. Trevor Siemian, a seventh-round pick by Denver, would go much higher in a re-draft after developing into a starting-level quarterback with plus arm talent. Brett Hundley has dazzled in the preseason but nowhere else, while Bryce Petty was something of a raging flop for the Jets last season.

6) 2008

Round 1: Matt Ryan (No. 3), Joe Flacco (No. 18)
Round 2
: Brian Brohm (No. 56), Chad Henne (No. 57)
Round 3: Kevin O'Connell (No. 94)
Round 5: John David Booty (No. 137), Dennis Dixon (No. 156), Josh Johnson (No. 160), Erik Ainge (No. 162)
Round 6: Colt Brennan (No. 186), Andre' Woodson (No. 198)
Round 7: Matt Flynn (No. 209), Alex Brink (No. 223)

From here on out, every class is tasked with producing at least two starters with playoff experience. The 2008 group gave us Matt Ryan -- today, coming off the best season of his career -- and Joe Flacco, who led the Ravens to a win in Super Bowl XLVII with an insane month of pristine postseason play. Both quarterbacks have been durable starters who give their teams a comprehensive solution at the most important position in sports. The names fall off a cliff from there, with Chad Henneunderwhelming as a starter and Brian Brohm serving as a second-round disappointment. Matt Flynn offered hopeful moments but failed to become a QB1.

5) 2001

Round 1: Michael Vick (No. 1)
Round 2
: Drew Brees (No. 32), Quincy Carter (No. 53), Marques Tuiasosopo (No. 59)
Round 4: Chris Weinke (No. 106), Sage Rosenfels (No. 109), Jesse Palmer (No. 125)
Round 5: Mike McMahon (No. 149), A.J. Feeley (No. 155)
Round 6: Josh Booty (No. 172), Josh Heupel (No. 177)

Another class armed with two bona fide starters. Both Michael Vick and Drew Brees changed perceptions of how the position could -- and should -- be played. Vick's rare scampering ability and off-the-charts athleticism refocused the league on the potential of running quarterbacks. It's impossible not to wonder how Vick's career would've progressed without his dog-fighting scandal and subsequent prison stint -- though he did make one more Pro Bowl with Philly in 2010. Brees, meanwhile, serves as a constant reminder that shorter quarterbacks aren't always a minus. In his case, Brees has operated as a top-three superstar ever since he landed with the Saints, winning a storybook Super Bowl for New Orleans and making that offense a treat to watch every single season. The class had its issues, too, with second-rounders Quincy Carter and Marques Tuiasosopo fading fast. Chris Weinke doesn't help, finishing with a 2-18 record as a starter, while A.J. Feely is remembered as a mere patch in Miami.

4) 2012

Round 1: Andrew Luck (No. 1), Robert Griffin III (No. 2), Ryan Tannehill (No. 8), Brandon Weeden(No. 22)
Round 2: Brock Osweiler (No. 57)
Round 3: Russell Wilson (No. 75), Nick Foles (No. 88)
Round 4
: Kirk Cousins (No. 102)
Round 6
: Ryan Lindley (No. 185)
Round 7: B.J. Coleman (No. 243), Chandler Harnish (No. 253)

Had all gone right, this class had a chance to be remembered as equal to the all-star cast from 2004 -- maybe even 1983. Andrew Luck was a plug-and-play Pro Bowler from Day 1, while Robert Griffin III, in his first season, was the most exciting quarterback in football. A knee injury changed his trajectory forever, but Griffin was also quickly exposed as a pocket passer. Today, he might be done for good. That ugly pick aside, the Redskins ultimately found their starter in the same draft by nabbing Kirk Cousins in the fourth round. In Round 3, the Seahawks altered their franchise forever by taking a chance on Russell Wilson. Dinged by some for his diminutive stature, Wilson won the starting job in camp and tugged Seattle to a Super Bowl win during his sophomore campaign. Toss in Ryan Tannehill and this emerges as a wildly productive class, even amid the wreckage of Griffin, ultra-bust Brandon Weeden and the underwhelming duo of Nick Foles and Brock Osweiler. (OK, Foles did enjoy one magical season in Philadelphia under Chip Kelly.)

3) 2003

Round 1: Carson Palmer (No. 1), Byron Leftwich (No. 7), Kyle Boller (No. 19), Rex Grossman (No. 22)
Round 3: David Ragone (No. 88), Chris Simms (No. 97)
Round 4: Seneca Wallace (No. 110)
Round 5: Brian St. Pierre (No. 163)
Round 6: Drew Henson (No. 192), Brooks Bollinger (No. 200), Kliff Kingsbury (No. 201)
Round 7: Gibran Hamdan (No. 232), Ken Dorsey (No. 241)
Undrafted: Tony Romo

The best passer in this class wasn't even drafted. Tony Romo was brought to Dallas when former Cowboys assistant Asshole Face pitched him to Bill Parcells. The rest is history, with Romo taking the starting job from Drew Bledsoe in 2006 and never looking back. Heavily critiqued early in his career for the occasional high-profile gaffe, Romo ultimately leaves the game as one of the NFL's most reliable quarterbacks. He never won a Lombardi, but that falls on the Cowboys as much as Romo. We haven't even mentioned first overall pick Carson Palmer, who has proven to be well worth the selection, with some of his best work coming late in his career with the Cardinals. Byron Leftwich gave the Jaguars44 up-and-down starts, while Kyle Boller and Rex Grossman were largely a ponderous annoyance. That said, Grossman is the only passer from this class to start on the game's biggest stage, helping guide Chicago to Super Bowl XLI, where the Bears were blown to pieces by Peyton Manning's Colts.

2) 2005

Round 1: Alex Smith (No. 1), Aaron Rodgers (No. 24), Jason Campbell (No. 25)
Round 3: Charlie Frye (No. 67), Andrew Walter (No. 69), David Greene (No. 85)
Round 4: Kyle Orton (No. 106), Stefan LeFors (No. 121)
Round 5: Dan Orlovsky (No. 145), Adrian McPherson (No. 152)
Round 6: Derek Anderson (No. 213)
Round 7
: James Kilian (No. 229), Matt Cassel (No. 230), Ryan Fitzpatrick (No. 250)

The first round produced a pair of long-range starters in Alex Smith and Aaron Rodgers. We all know how Rodgers fumed while watching 21 teams (the Vikings and Cowboys each picked twice in the top 23) pass him by before the Packers added him to a roster already equipped with Brett Favre under center. That chance to sit and learn helped Rodgers, who went on to win a Super Bowl and emerge as one of the most talented quarterbacks of all time. With what we know now, Rodgers should have gone ahead of Smith, but the ex-Niners and current Chiefs quarterback has produced an uber-solid career and a commendable record of 79-56-1. This class offered unusual longevity. Matt Cassel and Ryan Fitzpatrick draw snickers today, but good luck finding better value from quarterbacks picked in the seventh round. This group also gave us Derek Anderson and the whirlwind known as Kyle Orton. It's crazy to think that Washington was forced to settle for Jason Campbell one pick after Rodgers went to Green Bay.

1) 2004

Round 1: Eli Manning (No. 1), Philip Rivers (No. 4), Ben Roethlisberger (No. 11), J.P. Losman (No. 22)
Round 3: Matt Schaub (No. 90)
Round 4
: Luke McCown (No. 106)
Round 5: Craig Krenzel (No. 148)
Round 6: Andy Hall (No. 185), Josh Harris (No. 187), Jim Sorgi (No. 193), Jeff Smoker (No. 201)
Round 7: John Navarre (No. 202), Cody Pickett (No. 217), Casey Bramlet (No. 218), Matt Mauck (No. 225), B.J. Symons (No. 248), Bradlee Van Pelt (No. 250)

The gold standard for quarterback classes of the 21st century. The 2004 collection of signal callers boasts four Super Bowl wins, while the group's big three -- Eli Manning, Philip Rivers and Ben Roethlisberger -- can all make cases for the Hall of Fame. The trio's 558 regular-season starts also tell the tale of ironman passers who can be counted on game after game and year after year by their teams. The Chargers and Giants will always be linked together because of the trade that sent Manning to New York and Rivers to San Diego. The swap worked out for both clubs, while Pittsburgh's Big Ben -- a college quarterback from Miami of Ohio -- has tortured the Browns for selecting tight end Kellen Winslow II sixth overall instead of him. The first round also included a titanic bust in J.P. Losman, but third-rounder Matt Schaub and fourth-rounder Luke McCown are still active. If this class came around every year, the quarterback crisis at the bottom of the league would never exist.
 

CGI_Ram

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  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
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The 2012 class has 4 current starters in it. May not all be studs, but that's stronger than the 2003 class, IMO.
 

DaveFan'51

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A lot of really UGLY QB's so far this Millennium so far, with only a hand full of exceptions! IMHO!
 

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desperate_junkies.jpg


It is spoken about every new off-season.
Drafting a quality long term QB in the NFL is like finding a needle in a haystack. When an NFL franchise is fortunate enough to find one, their hopes for a Super Bowl appearance becomes increasingly more possible.


Looking back at the quality NFL Quarterbacks Drafted from

2000 to 2017 and their Career Statistics



2000
Round 6 (No. 199) Tom Brady still playing
Att 8,224 Comp 5,244 Comp% 63.8 Yards 61,582 YPA 7.5 TD 456 INT 152 Rating 97.2

Round 6 (No. 168) Marc Bulger Retired
Att 3,171 Comp 1,969 Comp% 62.1 Yards 22,814 YPA 7.2 TD 122 INT 93 Rating 84.4
_______________________________________________________________
2001
Round 1 (No. 1) Michael Vick Retired

Att 3,217 Comp 1,807 % 56.2 Yards 22,464 YPA 7.0 TD 133 INT 88 Rating 80.4

Round 2 (No. 32) Drew Brees still playing
Att 8,758, Comp 5,836 Comp% 66.6 Yards 66,111 YPA 7.5 TD 465 INT 220 Rating 96.3
_______________________________________________________________
2002- No quarterbacks in this class ended up as quality starters long enough to qualify
_______________________________________________________________
2003
Round 1 (No. 1) Carson Palmer still playing

Att 6,040 Comp 3,777 Comp% 62.5 Yards 44,269 YPA 7.3 TD 285 INT 180 Rating 88.0

Round (UDFA) Tony Romo career stats Retired
Att 4,335 Comp 2,829 Comp% 65.3 Yards 34,183 YPA 7.9 TD 248 INT 117 Rating 97.1
_______________________________________________________________
2004
Round 1 (No. 1) Eli Manning still playing

Att 6,825 Comp 4,072 Comp% 59.7 Yards 48,214 YPA 7.1 TD 320 INT 215 Rating 83.7

Round 1 (No. 4) Philip Rivers career stats still playing
Att 5,917 Comp 3,811 Comp% 64.4 Yards 45,833 YPA 7.7 TD 314 INT 156 Rating 94.7

Round 1 (No. 11) Ben Roethlisberger career stats still playing
Att 5,932 Comp 3,804 Comp% 64.1 Yards 46,814 YPA 7.9 TD 301 INT 160 Rating 94.1

Round 3 (No. 90) Matt Schaub Retired
Att 3,274 Comp 2,093 Comp% 63.9 Yards 24,867 YPA 7.6 TD 133 INT 90 Rating 89.1
_______________________________________________________________
2005
Round 1 (No. 1) Alex Smith still playing

Att 4,108 Comp 2,536, Comp% 61.7 Yards 27,846 YPA 6.8 TD 157 INT 91 Rating 85.3

Round 1 (No. 24) Aaron Rodgers still playing
Att 4,657 Comp 3,034 Comp% 65.1 Yards 36,827 YPA 7.9 TD 297 INT 72 Rating 104.1
_______________________________________________________________
2006
Round 1 (No. 11) Jay Cutler Retired

Att 4,491 Comp 2,782 Comp% 61.9 Yards 32,467 YPA 7.2 TD 208 INT 146 Rating 85.7
_______________________________________________________________
2007- No quarterbacks in this class ended up as quality starters long enough to qualify
_______________________________________________________________
2008
Round 1 (No. 3) Matt Ryan still playing

Att 5,064 Comp 3,288 Comp% 64.9 Yards 37,701 YPA 7.4 TD 240 INT 114 Rating 93.6

Round 1 (No. 18) Joe Flacco still playing
Att 4,742 Comp 2,915 Comp% 61.5 Yards 32,639 YPA 6.9 TD 182 INT 117 Rating 84.5
_______________________________________________________________
2009
Round 1 (No. 1) Matthew Stafford still playing

Att 4,285 Comp 2,634 Comp% 61.5 Yards 30,303 YPA 7.1 TD 187 INT 108 Rating 86.8
_______________________________________________________________
2010
Round 1 (No. 1) Sam Bradford still playing

Att 2,844 Comp 1,773 Comp% 62.3 Yards 18,667 YPA 6.6 TD 98 INT 57 Rating 84.5
_______________________________________________________________
2011
Round 1 (No. 1) Cam Newton still playing

Att 2,928 Comp 1,710 Comp% 58.4 Yards 21,772 YPA 7.4 TD 136 INT 78 Rating 86.1

Round 2 (No. 35) Andy Dalton still playing
Att 3,060 Comp 1,920 Comp% 62.7 Yards 22,214 YPA 7.3 TD 142 INT 81 Rating 89.1

Round 6 (No. 180) Tyrod Taylor still playing (late bloomer?)
Att 851 Comp 530 Comp% 62.3 Yards 6,257 YPA 7.4 TD 37 INT 14 Rating 92.3
_______________________________________________________________
2012
Round 1 (No. 1) Andrew Luck still playing

Att 2,651 Comp 1,570 Comp% 59.2 Yards 19,078 YPA 7.2 TD 132 INT 68 Rating 87.3

Round 3 (No. 75) Russell Wilson still playing
Att 2,281 Comp 1,476 Comp% 64.7 Yards 18,193 YPA 8.0 TD 127 INT 45 Rating 99.6

Round 4 (No. 102) Kirk Cousins still playing (late bloomer?)
Att 1,556 Comp 1,025 Comp% 65.9 Yards 12,113 YPA 7.8 TD 72 INT 42 Rating 93.6
_______________________________________________________________
2013- No quarterbacks in this class ended up as quality starters long enough to qualify
_______________________________________________________________
2014
Round 1 (No. 3) Blake Bortles still playing (last year to prove himself?)

Att 1,706 Comp 1,003 Comp% 58.8 Yards 11,241 YPA 6.6 TD 69 INT 51 Rating 79.6

Round 1 (No. 32) Teddy Bridgewater (injured might not return to the league?)
Att 849 Comp 551 Comp% 64.9 Yards 6,150 YPA 7.2 TD 28 INT 21 Rating 87.0

Round 2 (No. 36) Derek Carr still playing
Att 1,732 Comp 1,055 Comp% 60.9 Yards 11,194 YPA 6.5 TD 81 INT 31 Rating 87.9

Round 2 (No. 62) Jimmy Garoppolo still playing (highly touted backup)
Att 94 Comp 63 Comp% 67.0 Yards 690 YPA 7.3 TD 5 INT 0 Rating 106.2
_______________________________________________________________
2015
Round 1 (No. 1) Jameis Winston still playing

Att 1,102 Comp 657 Comp% 59.6 Yards 8,132 YPA 7.4 TD 50 INT 33 Rating 85.2

Round 1 (No. 2) Marcus Mariota still playing
Att 821 Comp 506 Comp% 61.6 Yards 6,244 YPA 7.6 TD 45 INT 19 Rating 93.8

Round 7 (No. 250) Trevor Siemian still playing (could lose starting job to P.Lynch)
Att 289 Comp 486 Comp% 59.5 Yards 3,401 YPA 7.0 TD 18 INT 10 Rating 84.6
_______________________________________________________________
2016
Round 1 (No. 1) Jared Goff still playing

Att 205 Comp 112 Comp% 54.6 Yards 1,089 YPA 5.3 TD 5 INT 7 Rating 63.6

Round 1 (No. 2) Carson Wentz still playing
Att 607 Comp 379 Comp% 62.4 Yards 3,782 YPA 6.2 TD 16 INT 14 Rating 79.3

Round 1 (No. 26) Paxton Lynch (fighting for starting job with T.Siemeian)
Att 83 Comp 49 Comp% 59.0 Yards 497 YPA 6.0 TD 2 INT 0 Rating 79.2

Round 4 (No. 135) Dak Prescott still playing
Att 459 Comp 311 Comp% 67.8 Yards 3,667 YPA 8.0 TD 23 INT 4 Rating 104.9
_______________________________________________________________
2017
Round 1 (No. 2) Mitchell Trubisky
(rookie might play at some point)
Round 1 (No. 10) Patrick Mahomes (rookie will learn behind A.Smith)
Round 1 (No. 12) Deshaun Watson (rookie could earn starting job?)

Round 2 (No. 52) DeShown Kizer
(rookie could earn starting job?)
Round 3 (No. 87) Davis Webb (rookie will learn behind E.Manning)
Round 3 (No. 104) C.J. Beathard (rookie will learn behind B.Hoyer?)

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TK42-RAM

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I was reading an old magazine yesterday, the Pro Football Weekly 2001 season preview.

Patriots Quarterbacks .... "The Patriots like what they saw from Tom Brady as a rookie and feel he has a future. However, while a little more mobile than Bledsoe, he is no Steve Grogan."
 

Adi

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There is no science to scouting these qbs, I feel it all comes down to the situation they are put into . Coaches that force an offense on a young qb seem to fail, smart coaches mold an offense to fit that qbs strengths.
 

DaveFan'51

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I was reading an old magazine yesterday, the Pro Football Weekly 2001 season preview.
The Pro Football weekly was a great weekly News paper when it was still in business. It went Bankrupt and now can only be found on-Line. But it's not the same staff sadly!
 

TK42-RAM

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The Pro Football weekly was a great weekly News paper when it was still in business. It went Bankrupt and now can only be found on-Line. But it's not the same staff sadly!

I used to love the old Football Digest magazines -- we didn't get much NFL news down here and I used to request it from my local Newsagent. I probably have 50 of those things in a box somewhere at home.

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