If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Anthems and Protests ---
While we certainly understand the frustration by fans on all sides of the discussion, we have decided to keep the Broncos Country message boards separate from politics. Recent events have brought the NFL to the forefront of political debates, but due to the highly emotional and passionate discussion it tends to involve, we think it’s best to continue to keep politics and this forum separate. Yes, the forum is meant for discussion, but we’d like to keep that discussion to football as much as possible.
With everything going on in our country, it would be nice to keep our complaints and cheers purely related to football here. If you feel passionately, there are plenty of other outlets available to you to express your opinions. We know this isn’t the most popular decision, but we ask that you respect it.
Thank you for understanding.
--Broncos Country Message Board Staff
That list just absolutely ended itself with Brady at 90
Then Von at 68 n Chris Harris 63 or something...I went no further
Just making themselves look stupid
How so? It is just based off of performances last year. Brady had a pretty bad year, especially for his old standards, and so did Von. Harris was ranked above some pretty big names.
Heck, if you look at it in terms of ranking the entire NFL, Harris was ranked 64 of 1696 players.
"The names have all been announced and the 2013 version of PFF’s Top 101 is done, so here’s a look at them all in one place with links to the individual Top-10 pieces and rest of the segments on down."
7 Broncos on the list: Peyton Manning, Louis Vasquez, Demaryius Thomas, Terrance Knighton, Von Miller, Chris Harris Jr., TJ Ward.
"Manning sat atop the PFF quarterback grading all year, a significant distance clear of the next best passer – Drew Brees. He smashed the single-season touchdown record with 55 passing scores and the league was so focused on that chase that most people missed entirely the fact he put the single-season passing yardage figure even further past the 5,000 barrier, once seen as unbreakable.
Despite those 5,477 yards and 55 touchdowns Manning threw just ten interceptions and finished with a passer rating of 115.1 as he executed a master class in how to lead an offense. The Denver Broncos boasted an all-time great unit on offense, scoring a record number of points in the season and managing to get four different receivers into the end zone ten or more times.
To make things even more ridiculous, Manning did all this at the age of 37 — drawing on his years of experience to operate at the peak of his craft at an age when most quarterbacks are breaking down and bowing out."
Leave a comment: