Actually most playoff losses by a single player (Peyton Manning) is pretty impressive for a QB. That means he at least got his teams to the playoffs enough times to get that records.
Yeah, people forget that you can only get one playoff loss a year. The losses other QBs were getting that kept them out of the playoffs...not presented here.
@@siler7That and first round byes aren't counted as wins, thus you end up with narratives like "X oNlY HaS X PlAyOfF WiNs..." Attaching wins/losses to QBs in general is nonsense.
Exactly. Like having the most super bowl losses. Only 2 teams a year get there.. Losing a super bowl is a pretty amazing season. He'll, as a Lions fan, I'd love to get to the super bowl but we can't even make a friggin playoff or have a winning season more than once a decade if that
@@Dr-Jan-itor You seemingly don't understand how stats in sports work? And as a bonus have misunderstood the original comment - he is actually praising a player for being in this list.
My favorite. At the end of the first game of the season, Johnny manziel the starting QB for the Browns had less passing yards than the backup safety of the Steelers who threw one pass on a fake punt.
Archie would have been with any other team at that time he would have been one of the greats. It happens to be with the Saints. That had a really bad ownership at the time and a bad team overall. But he did raise two very good QBs sons
It’s like someone like Cristiano Ronaldo or Messi if they had the record for most “missed shots”. When you have so many opportunities to play, your numbers are going to be high af. The stat doesn’t mean much unless you bring a “per game average” into the mix.
@@LeftJoystick Aaron Rodgers will have played the same amount of seasons next year. He isn’t even in the top 20 of any of those lists. Don’t get me wrong, him playing a long time does contribute a lot. But there are multiple quarterbacks who played the same amount of time who either didn’t make those lists, or didn’t rank as high. Like Tom Brady who has played multiple years longer than Farve did, but only ranks #6 in most career fumbles, and isn’t even on the list for most INTs thrown.
Favre was actually quite good at ball security in his prime when he had good players around him. In 1995 he had 38 touchdowns, 13 interceptions. In 1996, he had 39 touchdowns, 13 interceptions. That was really good for those years when you consider the defenders were allowed to contact the receivers much more than today. (In fact, the Packers were the league leader in turnover differential in 1996, which included 26 interceptions by the defense.) Then when he was on another good team in 2009, he had 33 touchdowns and 7 interceptions. The problem was he often didn't have good players around and was trying too hard to win games by himself. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't. (In the end, he only had 2 losing seasons out of 19 seasons of play.) Considering his style of football and that he played for as long as he did, it's not surprising his interception total piled up (and fumbles when he didn't have protection, which was most of his years in Green Bay). But he wasn't quite the turnover machine people think he was. They tended to come in bunches in games that were lost causes (and the terrible one in the playoffs against New Orleans that most people remember).
Makes me think of the Raiders from the late 90's early aughts. People dunked on them for drafting Janikowski in the first round, but when you looked at the completion percentage they had on field goals and points after for multiple years prior, something had to change.
My DC native mother has been telling me legends about Curt Knight for years. He was so truly, remarkably, awful that even after all these years she still remembers him vividly. 😂😂😂
@@khamjaninja. I learned from the Secret Base Falcons documentary that teams would sometimes just have their punter do double duty and kick field goals if their regular place kicker got hurt. The Eagles got boned by this in the 1978 playoffs (missed two PAT's early on and a last-second field goal kick that would have won the game), and IIRC, Dallas also had a punter doing double duty as a kicker, but that guy at least had experience with kicking.
@@Gungho73 Plus, there's the entertainment value of having a fat guy who liked to party as your kicker. If Janikowski had walked out to kick a FG w/ a cigarette is his mouth and a beer in his hand I wouldn't have been shocked. He would've fit in w/ the classic 70s Raiders teams. BTW, is there any other organization that has ever picked a punter (Ray Guy) and a kicker (Janikowski) in the first round?
Tom Brady currently has a playoff record of 35-12 and has a good chance to tie manning for most playoff losses this year. The most impressive “bad” record by far.
If my W/L record is about 75% in the playoffs, I'd be quite proud to hold the most losses for a QB in playoff history. Also means most wins, and probably by a huge margin at that.
They had the second-best offense and second-best defense in the AFL that year (so the picks weren't even too much of a burden on the defense); matched the Dallas Texans (who ranked first in each category) for the best record in the AFL; then lost the championship game to them by only a field goal in double overtime... and Blanda threw five picks in that game. I would love for someone to do a deep dive on how the hell this was a viable game plan for them. It's hard to find complete game footage. And it's not like they refused to punt - I checked! Not to say there were no "arm punts," but to throw 42 picks in a 14-game season without adverse effects, you would assume they were mostly arm punts. Also, no pick sixes...
@@JWD1992 They had the best yardage offense and 2nd best scoring offense despite the interceptions. And despite leading the league in turnovers forced, they still had a negative turnover differential. The sportswriters had to have seen this being a problem.
I was at the game where Eli threw three picks that were returned for touchdowns. (He threw another one that was returned to the five) . Fun fact, we wound up winning the Super Bowl that year. Against a Patriots team that never lost a game. Insane.
2008 is probably the most incredible year in the NFL that I can remember. My dad is a Cowboys fan, my grandpa is a Packers fan. There where so many times Tom Brady managed to win against very good teams. Watching him walk into the locker-room at half-time in tears because of the NYG pass rush is a moment I'll never forget.
@@neoprofinthat year in general was crazy for football, not just pro. CFB had crazy rankings and the infamous Appalachian State-Michigan game. Or was that 2007?
@@ChampionUmbra fr..like yea he was never an NFL superstar but made All Pro as a returner and played 11 seasons in the NFL..that’s actually hard to do..
The record for Shortest Missed Field Goal is literally unbreakable now; the goalpoasts have since been moved back 10 yards to the back of the end zone, where in 1972 it was on the goal line, making the shortest field goal attempt even theoretically possible only 11 yards. Also, that 103 points scored by the 1977 Buccaneers is even more pathetic for two reasons; first, that's barely more than a touchdown+PAT per game, and second, even in the 1982 season, where only 9 games were played, every team still scored more points than that, compared to the 14 that were played in 1977. Truly legendary incompetence from the Buccs.
In practical terms, the shortest possible is actually 18 or 19 yards for a placed kick. If we're talking drop kicks, then you might get away with 17 or even 16 yards, but the last time a drop kick was done in an actual game was in Week 17 of the 2005 season by Doug Flutie.
I think the actual shortest field goal that can be taken these days is either 18 or 19 yards. I don't know if they'd count 18 and 1 inch as 19 or not. The kicker is about 8 yards back from the line of scrimmage, so that adds to the attempt yardage.
I'm stunned that the 1986 Eagles record of *104 sacks* given up isn't on here. That absolutely destroyed the previous record of 70, set by the '68 Falcons. And the second-most of all-time is still only 78 ('97 Cardinals). 104 sacks is unimaginable.
Thanks for reminding me. So glad the Eagles picked Kevin Allen over Jim Lachey in '85. 😒 BTW, of their 11 losses or ties that year, 8 of them were by 7 pts or less. How many would they have won if they just had a semi-competent offensive line?
And this is why Randall Cunningham deserves to be in the Hall of Fame, just for managing to not only win but develop a new skill set for quarterbacks to have, just to compensate for that garbage offensive line
1:10 is hilarious. I never knew he dropped so many in the NFL. At Michigan, he had this bizarre thing where he would drop the easiest passes you could imagine and then proceed to have an absurd contested catch rate, snatching insane jump balls in double coverage. Playing catch in the yard with my brother we would say the other "Braylon'd it" if we dropped an easy one.
You know its bad when the announcer said " Cant kill nothing. Cant find nothing dead." Most have been horrible to go 0-26. No one really wants any of these records. Was fun to watch. Great video
0:45 I know the 2021 Jags were close to breaking that record, but I truly think if Jacksonville had played straight up without Urban Meyer they wouldn't be here up on this list
Archie Manning is one of those players that you just look at and go "what if?". Yes, he had a terrible win percentage, but he played almost his entire career for the "Ain't" the worst team in football, then went to houston where it didn't get much better. And it's not like he was a bad player, he was really good in college.
@@Channel-23s has nothing to do with him as a player lmaoo just cuz gave alot or picked very low dm ur good, his field play proves he was shit, he only has his seed to make up for his failure
Being a Chicago bears fan from childhood and only ever seeing my team go to 1 super bowl, and losing… along with everything that came after… has been painful… but I can take solace in the fact that they did NOT appear in this video. And that last one made me smile as I didn’t know about that. 73 - 0 wow lol!!
The Bears have had 11 winning seasons in my lifetime and five of them happened when I was too young to care about football. I genuinely can't remember if I've ever seen two in a row, it feels like we suck for four or five years and then randomly have one really good one that we can never follow up on. I know some teams have it worse (eternally thankful I'm not from Cleveland or Houston) but sweet christ it is constant misery and frustration.
The Peyton Manning one means he was on teams that made the playoffs at least 13 times. I think I could live with that record. Also, the 2016 Raiders still won that game in overtime despite record setting penalties. Excellent video. Thank you for having actual footage to go with the records
@@villafilms5909 they’re not saying he’s a bad player they’re just saying it’s a record that no one wants to break. I have a feeling peyton manning did not want to lose that many playoff games
Peyton Mannings 13 playoff losses is not really a "bad" stat. It means he has been to the playoffs at least 13 times and we know he won 2 super bowls so that makes 15 playoff appearances. And 2 of his losses were in the super bowl. If anything that 13 playoff loss stat really just shows how good he was.
Oh it shows how good he was, no doubt. But if you've the heart of a champion, those losses have to hurt...second Lombardi is probably a nice remedy, though. I for one hope Aaron Rodgers has four more years in the tank so he can break that record.
Peyton was basically a Aaron Rodgers then. See this is why guys like Tom Brady and even Montana are better then guys like them. Not saying Rodgers or Manning are bad they’re very good just saying that’s what separates the top two QBs to ever play the game from the rest. Montana has less SB wins but he did win all 4 when he made it. Peyton loss 2 out of his 4 appearances one being a but whooping against the same team Tom beats in SB 49. Tom lost 3 SBs sure but the fact he’s been to ten it really covers those losses
@@dkmetcalf6722 Tom Brady and Joe Montana are the exceptions to the rule. You can't compare every quarterback to them because anyone else comparatively will look like a bad QB. You have to admit Peyton belongs in the top 10 QBs of all time.
@@dkmetcalf6722 Super Bowl wins doesn't mean you're the best QB. It means you played on better teams. Trent Dilfer and Joe Flacco have won Super Bowls as QBs. No one is ever mentioning either of them in conversations about the greatest QBs of all time.
@@goahead3995 He's not really overrated, and I'm a Bears fan. Dude was a gunslinger, that played in a different game formula most of his career. His stats are average looking if you look at the last 20 years of QB play, but he only snuck into the tail end of that. His Int % actually isn't terrible, especially for his contemporaries, he played a long career and threw a lot of passes.
its also amazing that they got it wrong text wise in the video but the audio has the right yardage of 554 yards. Brady would've broken the record in super bowl 52 if they completed the hail mary attempt at the end of the game.
A dropped pass on 3rd down by Leonard Harris killed the drive that would have probably allowed Warren Moon to beat the record in 1990. They still got the ball with over 2 mins left but only handed the ball off to run out the clock.
They specifically in the text say "net passing yards" which is not the same as base passing yards. Net passing includes sacks so the video was correct in both the text and audio...
I don't know if David Carr would've been a franchise altering type QB with a better line, but few could perform behind that siege unit. 76 sacks is brutal on any player, let alone one with the responsibility for bringing a team out of the dirt in the same state as the Cowboys. Felt very much like the Tim Couch situation.
@@vanillabadboy4469 A lot of histories QB's would've adored even having the career Brunell had (playoff success/upsets, winning seasons in the lead seat, pro bowler and a well liked backup for New York while winning a ring as a backup elsewhere). I'm sure Carr would've taken that outcome in a heart beat vs the beating he took in Houston. Or at the very least, the one Matt Schaub had with the Texans.
And the funny thing, Len Dawson was great, 7 fumbles in a game or not. "In the AFL, Dawson led the league in completion percentage seven times, passer rating six times, and passing touchdowns four times. He was named Most Valuable Player in 1962 and selected to six AFL All-Star games. Dawson also guided the Chiefs to three AFL championships and the franchise's first Super Bowl title in Super Bowl IV, of which he was named MVP."
I think the -7 passing yards by the Titans in 2009 vs Patriots is unbelievable. It's hard to keep the other team under 0 passing yards in a video game and has only happened 3 total times in NFL history.
@@Tubalcain422 I mean a QB can only throw as much as the Coach tells him to, and Bill Belichick only called 3 passes and the Pat's won cuz of their rushing attack
@@pronkb000 Yeah, right now, the theoretical shortest FG distance is 18 yards (ball at the 1), although almost no team will kick from the 1 and will almost always go for the TD.
The craziest thing about the Buccaneers only scoring 103 points all season in 1977 is that over half of those points came from only two games! (33-14 vs Saints and 23-30 vs Seahawks)
The year Blanda threw 42 picks his team was 11-3 in first place and made the playoffs which is absolutely mind blowing he averaged over 3 turnovers a game in the 14 game season wow
That was AFL football. Especially the early Houston Oilers. Look him up and see how many pass attempts (and TD's) he had that season. I'm not sure what the numbers are, but I'm sure they're very high. A lot of attempts, a lot of TD's and a lot of INT's.
@@GrimLime I did look it up, but after I posted the message. 42 interceptions, 27 TD's, almost 200 pass attempts and 3000 yards. It wasn't his best year, but they did make the title game which they lost to Dallas Texans in OT on Tommy Brooker's field goal.
That record of most INTs returned for a TD in a game is missing one entry. In 2002, Brett Favre threw 6 INTs against the Rams in the Divisional round. 3 of those were returned for a touchdown. I don't know if you forgot that, but I figured I'd mention it down here.
Ref the 1940 title game. "Despite the score, the Redskins had the great “Slinging Sammy” Baugh on his way to a Hall of Famer career. After the butchering by the Bears, a reporter asked Sammy about an early pass that one of his teammates had missed in the end zone. Would that play have made a difference if the ball had been caught? Baugh honestly replied yes, “It would have been 73-7.”
As a dolphins fan I remember watching the game in the thumbnail, probably the ugliest game of football I’ve ever watched. I believe the final score was 10-7 and the only touchdown the dolphins scored was a punt return from Jarvis Landry. It was week one of the 2015 season and the dolphins got Ndamakong Suh and a bunch of other guys in the off-season and were expected to make some noise, but once that 38 yard loss happened I knew it was gonna be a long season and it was.
It was 17-10. Hard to believe that a defense can force a 38 yard loss on one play and still find a way to lose the game. If I was a fan of either team, I’d be embarrassed
But it was Tannehill who started the cascade that caused the 38 yd loss. Why did they put Fitz in the Thumbnail? Fitz is like a hero everywhere he has ever played.
1:26 I **knew** we’d get this record. Happens so often. That’s why the Vikes aren’t allowed near cereal or soup, if they get close to the bowl they choke.
I can't think back that far, but I bet the Jets that year had a short yardage specialist who'd come in to score the TD's, which is probably why Gaines never got one.
And they entered the league in 1960. So after 61 seasons, the Vikings average a playoff appearance once every couple of years. That's not bad at all. No Super Bowl wins either. But hey...glass half full
I think it’s the way many of them were lost. Four Super Bowl losses in less than ten years with what was supposed to be the best team in the NFL half of the time, the Hail Mary to Drew Pearson, the inability to get over the hump with the Herschel Walker debacle, the NFC Championship game against the Falcons, getting shut out by the Giants two years later, the Brett Favre interception in field goal range against the Saints in, you guessed it, the NFC Championship game, Blair Walsh missing a game winning 27 yard field goal against the Seahawks in the wild card game, and getting smothered in the NFC Championship game in Philadelphia when they were favored to win and the Eagles were without their starting quarterback, unable to ride the momentum from the one playoff game in which they inexplicably didn’t choke, all with the chance to be the first team in NFL history to play in the Super Bowl in their home stadium. Sorry for the rambling, run-on sentence there; the whole thing is sickening to me. I’m a Vikings fan, and that’s why I drink
@@nicholasselke5214 Everyone blames Case Keenum for that philly blowout but I really disagree. The defense got SHREADED by Nick Foles. This put the offense in way more pressure then they had any chance to deal with. Especially with the oline getting SMUSHED every play. The two most important elements to a mediocre QB team, and they sucked bad at both of them that game.
Makes sense that Big Ben got sacked the most. He's been in a division with the Ravens his whole career, a team known for defense and the greatest defensive trio of the millennium in Ray Lewis, Terrell Suggs and Ed Reed. That's not even considering how many times he had to face elite rushers like Von Miller, Dwight Freeney, Vince Wilfork, among others in the playoffs. And that's not mentioned that in the AFC he'd go against JJ Watt, Yannick, Jared Allen, Justin Houston, Robert Mathis, Jason Taylor, Junior Seau, and Demarcus Ware. That's a brutal bunch.
@@jjsteel43 that too. But on top of that the ups and downs of yhe line and elite pass rushing of the AFC through most of the career couldn't have helped.
It's amazing how polarizing Brett Favre's career was. Yeah, he had the most passing yards and passing TDs at one point, but also has the most INTs (which will probably never be broken). Live as a gunslinger die as a gunslinger
Gunslinger? So just chucking the ball left and right imprecisely makes him a Gunslinger? To me, the term Gunslinger has a positive undertone. Favre is total opposite of that.
I love this kind of sports trivia. I had no idea my Seahawks held the record for fewest yards gained in a game, but those 1979 Hawks were pretty bad lol. I can believe it.
Kinda hard to completely judge Darnold though. Think of how poorly his teams have been; he is 17-32 as a starter. But one thing everyone forgets is that his teams are a paltry 1-15 without him. Seems like a bit of a quarterback issue but the teams surrounding him and the coaching seem to be significantly bigger problems. Keep in mind that it’s the Jets and the Panthers though. Adam Gase was way in over his head and currently, so is Matt Rhule
It still blows my mind as a packers fan the difference between how often Favre threw ints vs how often Rodgers does. It's like they're from different planets
6:08 Considering the Broncos have 3 SuperBowl wins and the Pats have 6, they'll probably be fine. The Bills and Viks have 4 SuperBowl appearances, but no wins. That's so much worse.
The most pick-6's given up in a game - KC Chiefs served up 4 pick-6's to the Seahawks in a 45-0 blowout in 1984. They went for 90, 76, 58 and 56 yards. The Seahawks gave up the most sacks to a single player in a game to those same Chiefs in 1990 when Derrick Thomas sacked Dave Krieg 7 times...but the Seahawks won the game on a last second TD pass to Paul Skansi.
Awesome video, was surprised I didn't see the Ryan Lindley game on here. For those not familiar, in 2015 the Cardinals, who had been dominated the league that year in the regular season, 9-1prior to all the injuries, in the final 6 weeks before the end of the season had their QB 1, QB2, and I think even their developmental prospect QB3 all go down with season ending injuries forcing the team to sign Ryan Lindley, a former late round cards draft pick, as well as an exceptionally inaccurate QB which is why they'd cut him before the season began, but because he'd been with them previously, and it was near the end of the season, was the only player available who knew the play book well enough to run anything but a vanilla offense for them. Despite all the talent around him, running out a fourth string QB, one who struggled to play well enough to stay on practice squads, as your starter in the play offs went as well as you'd expect. He threw multiple picks, averaged an impressively bad 2.9 yards per completion on the handful of tosses he did complete (mostly during garbage time), and the Cardinals finished the game with 78 yards of total offense, which remains the fewest yards in an NFL play off game to this day. Honestly the stats really don't even properly convey how hilariously bad this game went, lots of good video clips out there of Lindley in a clean pocket tripping over his own feet as he tries to step up to throw the ball, or bobbling snaps that hit him right in the chest for several seconds before finally just short of pushing the ball forward through the air to no one.
Looks like Denver broke the record for total yards allowed in a game immediately after seeing this video. Old record - 676 Lions, New record - Miami 726
most playoff losses... isnt really a bad one........ your making the playoffs atleast, depressing... but one issue im sure many teams/players would like to have
If the Vikings had a few Super Bowl wins mixed in there us Vikings fans would probably be a lot happier and something like that a lot easier to swallow.
Some of these records can only be obtained with a long career. Most playoff losses mean you've won a lot if games & hope springs eternal that next season ...
Corey Dillion doesn’t get talked about enough. You wanna talk about a guy carrying his team and getting no credit for it. Look no further. Possibly the most underrated HB in league history right next to Fred Taylor.
I'm a Bengals fan, and always had a lot of respect for Dillon. He got the reputation for being a sorehead, but I knew it was because he was a great player on terrible teams. It's funny how he no longer was a sorehead when he got on a good team.
As an Oilers/Titans fan for decades now, it doesn't surprise me that they blew the biggest lead of all time. That sounds exactly like something we would do.
When I was about 16 yrs old (1986) I used to work at a Dunkin donuts on the Ohio turnpike plaza, Franco Harris come in, me being a Browns fan I really didn't like the guy but I ask him for a autograph anyway, he just brushed me off and looked at me like get away from me kid, so now I really didn't like him, he was a pretty big dude though
I had the good fortune to play with franco on an ESPN game show in the early 90s. He was pretty cool, before the taping we all wandered around with him as he wanted to try out all the sports challenges set up around the studio, just like a little kid at a toy store.
A few records that actually aren't so bad when you look for the silver lining: Most career interceptions or fumbles lost? Brett Favre, Tony Dorsett, and Franco Harris did enough good to have such long careers that they could set those more ignominious records. Most Super Bowl losses? The Patriots also have the most Super Bowl wins. A record 11 Super Bowl appearances by one team is nothing to sneeze at, especially when they win more of them than they lose. (Of course, throwing a pick-six on his first NFL pass, as I believe Favre did, is something to laugh at. LOL! I also believe Favre's first NFL completion was to himself.)
some of these bad records are the consequence of being on a constant high level for a very long time. change the total stats into percentages and we would be able to see the whole truth ... ofc in some cases! :)
I agree. Same as MLB - all time stikeouts as a hitter (Reggie Jackson), grounded into double play (Albert Pujols), caught stealing (Rickey Henderson), walks as a pitcher (Nolan Ryan).
Can we talk about how the 49ers in 1978 had 63 Turnovers. Last season with 17 games. The team with the highest Turnovers was the Cowboys with 20. Now imagine 3 times that. Christ.
Those narrators from the 60s and 70s found the most eloquent ways to essentially say "they sucked".
*Curt Knight nervously waited for his moment of glory. It never came.* LOL
@@fromthehaven94 Yeah, I LOL'ed at that one.
Almost thought he said "As a result, the whole team sucked" outright, but he in fact said, "suffered". Lol
The Arizona team was low & abott like Tumbleweed 😂😂
That dude said about the Buccaneers they can't kill anything and can't find anything dead I'm done LOL
Actually most playoff losses by a single player (Peyton Manning) is pretty impressive for a QB. That means he at least got his teams to the playoffs enough times to get that records.
Yeah, people forget that you can only get one playoff loss a year. The losses other QBs were getting that kept them out of the playoffs...not presented here.
@@siler7That and first round byes aren't counted as wins, thus you end up with narratives like "X oNlY HaS X PlAyOfF WiNs..."
Attaching wins/losses to QBs in general is nonsense.
And that Brett Favre guy. He was on the list 3 times. How did he even have a career . 😁
Exactly. Like having the most super bowl losses. Only 2 teams a year get there.. Losing a super bowl is a pretty amazing season. He'll, as a Lions fan, I'd love to get to the super bowl but we can't even make a friggin playoff or have a winning season more than once a decade if that
@@Dr-Jan-itor You seemingly don't understand how stats in sports work?
And as a bonus have misunderstood the original comment - he is actually praising a player for being in this list.
My favorite. At the end of the first game of the season, Johnny manziel the starting QB for the Browns had less passing yards than the backup safety of the Steelers who threw one pass on a fake punt.
That’s absolutely crazy!🤣
nice jem there didn't remember that
Manziel didn't play. Brian Hoyer was the starter for the Browns.
Fewer.
@@siler7 less in this scenario is not grammatically incorrect
I like how they stacked Archie, Peyton and Eli's "achievements" back to back to back.
Father like Sons 😂
In software coding, we call that "Elegant Data Structure(s)". 😂
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist1 Happy those who seize your children and smash them against a rock. -Psalm 137:9
Archie would have been with any other team at that time he would have been one of the greats. It happens to be with the Saints. That had a really bad ownership at the time and a bad team overall. But he did raise two very good QBs sons
Brett Favre the GOAT of INTs, the GOAT of Fumbles, and the GOAT of giving the ball to the other team. Unbreakable records.
It’s like someone like Cristiano Ronaldo or Messi if they had the record for most “missed shots”. When you have so many opportunities to play, your numbers are going to be high af. The stat doesn’t mean much unless you bring a “per game average” into the mix.
@@LeftJoystick Aaron Rodgers will have played the same amount of seasons next year.
He isn’t even in the top 20 of any of those lists.
Don’t get me wrong, him playing a long time does contribute a lot. But there are multiple quarterbacks who played the same amount of time who either didn’t make those lists, or didn’t rank as high.
Like Tom Brady who has played multiple years longer than Farve did, but only ranks #6 in most career fumbles, and isn’t even on the list for most INTs thrown.
Favre was actually quite good at ball security in his prime when he had good players around him. In 1995 he had 38 touchdowns, 13 interceptions. In 1996, he had 39 touchdowns, 13 interceptions. That was really good for those years when you consider the defenders were allowed to contact the receivers much more than today. (In fact, the Packers were the league leader in turnover differential in 1996, which included 26 interceptions by the defense.) Then when he was on another good team in 2009, he had 33 touchdowns and 7 interceptions. The problem was he often didn't have good players around and was trying too hard to win games by himself. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't. (In the end, he only had 2 losing seasons out of 19 seasons of play.) Considering his style of football and that he played for as long as he did, it's not surprising his interception total piled up (and fumbles when he didn't have protection, which was most of his years in Green Bay). But he wasn't quite the turnover machine people think he was. They tended to come in bunches in games that were lost causes (and the terrible one in the playoffs against New Orleans that most people remember).
Jamis winston is hot on his trail.
They are breakable. In fact all but 1 of these records shown are breakable. The shortest missed field goal.
It takes a lot of work to get all this together and only show the truly interesting ones. Well done, guys!
He just googles it then gets the clips
@@samkostos4520 then you do it
@@zackhicks5320 you and your momma subscribe and I will.
Fixed matches and correct scores
ruclips.net/channel/UCqcFIt8ylEniTmLpAi7nluA
@@sircartier1436 well I hope someone without a brain couldn’t do it, that’d be pretty crazy
"They've got Buzzard's Luck, they can't kill anything, they can't find anything dead." Love that line.
Dandy Don Meredith.. turn out the lights, the parties over...
That line was so fucking cold
Fucking solid gold
@@ashleighelizabeth5916 Jesus loves you and everyone
Gotta remember that one!
The fact that Curt Knight was given a second opportunity to miss 20 field goals in a year is hard to believe
I think it said he did it twice too...
Makes me think of the Raiders from the late 90's early aughts. People dunked on them for drafting Janikowski in the first round, but when you looked at the completion percentage they had on field goals and points after for multiple years prior, something had to change.
My DC native mother has been telling me legends about Curt Knight for years. He was so truly, remarkably, awful that even after all these years she still remembers him vividly. 😂😂😂
@@khamjaninja. I learned from the Secret Base Falcons documentary that teams would sometimes just have their punter do double duty and kick field goals if their regular place kicker got hurt. The Eagles got boned by this in the 1978 playoffs (missed two PAT's early on and a last-second field goal kick that would have won the game), and IIRC, Dallas also had a punter doing double duty as a kicker, but that guy at least had experience with kicking.
@@Gungho73 Plus, there's the entertainment value of having a fat guy who liked to party as your kicker. If Janikowski had walked out to kick a FG w/ a cigarette is his mouth and a beer in his hand I wouldn't have been shocked. He would've fit in w/ the classic 70s Raiders teams.
BTW, is there any other organization that has ever picked a punter (Ray Guy) and a kicker (Janikowski) in the first round?
One of those records no longer exsist as the Vikings completed a 33 point comeback yesterday against the Colts Dec, 17, 2022
Fucking vikings
The Bills Oilers game still holds that record for playoffs
@@caras2004 it said INCLUDING playoffs
@@Limegreenedragon got it
Also the record for yards given up as Denver gave up i believe 722 total yards against Miami in Week 3
Tom Brady currently has a playoff record of 35-12 and has a good chance to tie manning for most playoff losses this year. The most impressive “bad” record by far.
I’ll take 13 playoff losses along with my 7 Super Bowls any day haha
If my W/L record is about 75% in the playoffs, I'd be quite proud to hold the most losses for a QB in playoff history. Also means most wins, and probably by a huge margin at that.
@@engaginglifesmoments7657 I'm a Vikings fan. We've got the record for most post-season losses and no rings to go with it.
@@Ken_Scalettaif only we got to keep Tark'...
@@engaginglifesmoments7657 Jesus saves and loves you and everyone God bless you and your family
Funny thing about the 42 interception season from George Blanda, they went 11-3 outscoring their opponents 387 to 270
He also was the one who made almost all of the points considering he was both a qb and kicker.
Gunslinger
They had the second-best offense and second-best defense in the AFL that year (so the picks weren't even too much of a burden on the defense); matched the Dallas Texans (who ranked first in each category) for the best record in the AFL; then lost the championship game to them by only a field goal in double overtime... and Blanda threw five picks in that game. I would love for someone to do a deep dive on how the hell this was a viable game plan for them. It's hard to find complete game footage. And it's not like they refused to punt - I checked! Not to say there were no "arm punts," but to throw 42 picks in a 14-game season without adverse effects, you would assume they were mostly arm punts. Also, no pick sixes...
@@JWD1992 They had the best yardage offense and 2nd best scoring offense despite the interceptions. And despite leading the league in turnovers forced, they still had a negative turnover differential. The sportswriters had to have seen this being a problem.
Defenses could get away with more back then. Jack Kemp was another qb with a lot of Ints. But a winner nonetheless.
Reggie Bush ran for -2 yards, I ran for 0 rushing yards. Give me money, NFL GMs!
Lol
Nice you got the whole Manning family involved
Archie Manning's record isn't his fault, though--he was the only player worth a damn that the Saints had the whole time he played for them.
@@robertlevine2827 where in young Archie going to college
Can’t wait for Arch 😫
@@ericpackers1700 Texas
Elis is my favorite on the whole list! Favre, 31 pick 6s in 20 seasons. Eli, 3 in 1 game!
in 2023 the broncos gave up 726 total yards to the DOLPHINS breaking the record of 676 shown here
I was at the game where Eli threw three picks that were returned for touchdowns. (He threw another one that was returned to the five) . Fun fact, we wound up winning the Super Bowl that year. Against a Patriots team that never lost a game. Insane.
Gotta take the good with the bad with Eli. Those high highs were more than worth those low lows
2008 is probably the most incredible year in the NFL that I can remember. My dad is a Cowboys fan, my grandpa is a Packers fan.
There where so many times Tom Brady managed to win against very good teams. Watching him walk into the locker-room at half-time in tears because of the NYG pass rush is a moment I'll never forget.
@@neoprofinthat year in general was crazy for football, not just pro. CFB had crazy rankings and the infamous Appalachian State-Michigan game.
Or was that 2007?
@@wilkic2 Jesus die for everyone have a blessed day God bless you and your family
@@Babylion2311 God bless, mate
The fact that Reggie Bush ended a season with -3 yards is truly saddening
@xTop 187 His career overall wasn’t even that bad stop talking lol
@@ChampionUmbra fr..like yea he was never an NFL superstar but made All Pro as a returner and played 11 seasons in the NFL..that’s actually hard to do..
@@cantguardmark210 Right…10,000+ career all-purpose yards and 58 total TD’s. Not a bad career by any means.
Not just a season, but his career. That -3 yard season with the Bills was his last.
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The record for Shortest Missed Field Goal is literally unbreakable now; the goalpoasts have since been moved back 10 yards to the back of the end zone, where in 1972 it was on the goal line, making the shortest field goal attempt even theoretically possible only 11 yards.
Also, that 103 points scored by the 1977 Buccaneers is even more pathetic for two reasons; first, that's barely more than a touchdown+PAT per game, and second, even in the 1982 season, where only 9 games were played, every team still scored more points than that, compared to the 14 that were played in 1977. Truly legendary incompetence from the Buccs.
In practical terms, the shortest possible is actually 18 or 19 yards for a placed kick. If we're talking drop kicks, then you might get away with 17 or even 16 yards, but the last time a drop kick was done in an actual game was in Week 17 of the 2005 season by Doug Flutie.
I think the actual shortest field goal that can be taken these days is either 18 or 19 yards. I don't know if they'd count 18 and 1 inch as 19 or not. The kicker is about 8 yards back from the line of scrimmage, so that adds to the attempt yardage.
I'm stunned that the 1986 Eagles record of *104 sacks* given up isn't on here. That absolutely destroyed the previous record of 70, set by the '68 Falcons. And the second-most of all-time is still only 78 ('97 Cardinals). 104 sacks is unimaginable.
Thanks for reminding me. So glad the Eagles picked Kevin Allen over Jim Lachey in '85. 😒
BTW, of their 11 losses or ties that year, 8 of them were by 7 pts or less. How many would they have won if they just had a semi-competent offensive line?
And this is why Randall Cunningham deserves to be in the Hall of Fame, just for managing to not only win but develop a new skill set for quarterbacks to have, just to compensate for that garbage offensive line
@@MusicvidsetcKevin Allen: never has any team signed the perfect combination of bad player and bad person
1:10 is hilarious. I never knew he dropped so many in the NFL. At Michigan, he had this bizarre thing where he would drop the easiest passes you could imagine and then proceed to have an absurd contested catch rate, snatching insane jump balls in double coverage. Playing catch in the yard with my brother we would say the other "Braylon'd it" if we dropped an easy one.
He dropped a ton with the jets too
You know its bad when the announcer said " Cant kill nothing. Cant find nothing dead." Most have been horrible to go 0-26. No one really wants any of these records. Was fun to watch. Great video
Right!! I mean, can you really even call them "records"? LMFAO
0:45 I know the 2021 Jags were close to breaking that record, but I truly think if Jacksonville had played straight up without Urban Meyer they wouldn't be here up on this list
3:44 yet the Raiders still found a way to win that game😳
Won in OT on a walk off TD! Gosh those 2016 Raiders were special.
I was fuming that entire game till Seth Roberts won it
Archie Manning is one of those players that you just look at and go "what if?". Yes, he had a terrible win percentage, but he played almost his entire career for the "Ain't" the worst team in football, then went to houston where it didn't get much better. And it's not like he was a bad player, he was really good in college.
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He was also pummeled and was injured an enormous amount.
And if he was good hed make a bad team decent, archie sucked
He also a shit ton of picks too him and his two sons are top 10-14 in picks
@@Channel-23s has nothing to do with him as a player lmaoo just cuz gave alot or picked very low dm ur good, his field play proves he was shit, he only has his seed to make up for his failure
Being a Chicago bears fan from childhood and only ever seeing my team go to 1 super bowl, and losing… along with everything that came after… has been painful… but I can take solace in the fact that they did NOT appear in this video. And that last one made me smile as I didn’t know about that. 73 - 0 wow lol!!
The Bears have had 11 winning seasons in my lifetime and five of them happened when I was too young to care about football. I genuinely can't remember if I've ever seen two in a row, it feels like we suck for four or five years and then randomly have one really good one that we can never follow up on.
I know some teams have it worse (eternally thankful I'm not from Cleveland or Houston) but sweet christ it is constant misery and frustration.
@4QIcehole I was a kid in the 80s and didn't care. Wasn't until my teen years in the 90s that I started watching and by then it was too late
I became a Bears fan in '84. From nearly being a dynasty to what the Monsters have been since, it's not pleasant!
The Peyton Manning one means he was on teams that made the playoffs at least 13 times. I think I could live with that record. Also, the 2016 Raiders still won that game in overtime despite record setting penalties.
Excellent video. Thank you for having actual footage to go with the records
Fr that’s 13 playoff appearances please take that off
@@villafilms5909 they’re not saying he’s a bad player they’re just saying it’s a record that no one wants to break. I have a feeling peyton manning did not want to lose that many playoff games
Yes we did, I remember watching the game, I was so disappointed cause it was stupid flags, but, we managed the W in OT
Braylon "Butterfingers" Edwards.
Good for 1+ drop a game for two straight years. Fantastic. That is such a Cleveland thing.
Braylon "Cleveland" Edwards then? HAHAHAH
Man, putting a negative record for Archie, Peyton, and then Eli in a row. That's brutal.
And 4 rings, about a million yards passing, about TWO million TDs, and two good episodes of SNL!
@@douglasdavis8395 where did you pull those numbers from?🤨
@@douglasdavis8395 so for every half a yard there was a td
@@harivenkitachalam4156 - Yes, I was serious.
@@douglasdavis8395 Overly defensive much?
Peyton Mannings 13 playoff losses is not really a "bad" stat. It means he has been to the playoffs at least 13 times and we know he won 2 super bowls so that makes 15 playoff appearances. And 2 of his losses were in the super bowl. If anything that 13 playoff loss stat really just shows how good he was.
Oh it shows how good he was, no doubt. But if you've the heart of a champion, those losses have to hurt...second Lombardi is probably a nice remedy, though.
I for one hope Aaron Rodgers has four more years in the tank so he can break that record.
Peyton was basically a Aaron Rodgers then. See this is why guys like Tom Brady and even Montana are better then guys like them. Not saying Rodgers or Manning are bad they’re very good just saying that’s what separates the top two QBs to ever play the game from the rest. Montana has less SB wins but he did win all 4 when he made it. Peyton loss 2 out of his 4 appearances one being a but whooping against the same team Tom beats in SB 49. Tom lost 3 SBs sure but the fact he’s been to ten it really covers those losses
@@dkmetcalf6722 Tom Brady and Joe Montana are the exceptions to the rule. You can't compare every quarterback to them because anyone else comparatively will look like a bad QB. You have to admit Peyton belongs in the top 10 QBs of all time.
@@dkmetcalf6722 Super Bowl wins doesn't mean you're the best QB. It means you played on better teams. Trent Dilfer and Joe Flacco have won Super Bowls as QBs. No one is ever mentioning either of them in conversations about the greatest QBs of all time.
I feel like the 2000s Colts are one of the most underachieving teams in NFL history.
As a lifelong Bears fan who grew up watching them in the 90s and 00s, seeing Farve hold so many of these records feels good, lol
He is so overrated.
we also aren't on here at all which is great lol
@@goahead3995 He's not really overrated, and I'm a Bears fan. Dude was a gunslinger, that played in a different game formula most of his career. His stats are average looking if you look at the last 20 years of QB play, but he only snuck into the tail end of that. His Int % actually isn't terrible, especially for his contemporaries, he played a long career and threw a lot of passes.
One would think that “Most playoff losses” would closely equate to “Most playoff appearances.”
Hollywood Brown might break the most dropped passes in a few seasons if he keeps rubbing butter on his hands before games
Exactly what i was thinking lol
Dionte Johnson maybe will right behind him.
LOL!! Pretty sure he already does. LMFAO
“He’s done it all season long”, as Braylon Edwards drops the pass 💀
It's amazing that the single game passing yards record STILL hasn't been broken in 71 years.
its also amazing that they got it wrong text wise in the video but the audio has the right yardage of 554 yards. Brady would've broken the record in super bowl 52 if they completed the hail mary attempt at the end of the game.
@@toastking1649 this year wouldnt joe burrow have if the tyler boyd td counted?
A dropped pass on 3rd down by Leonard Harris killed the drive that would have probably allowed Warren Moon to beat the record in 1990. They still got the ball with over 2 mins left but only handed the ball off to run out the clock.
@@toastking1649 They didn't get it wrong. The record is for a team's passing yards. 554 was Van Brocklin's individual passing yards
They specifically in the text say "net passing yards" which is not the same as base passing yards. Net passing includes sacks so the video was correct in both the text and audio...
I don't know if David Carr would've been a franchise altering type QB with a better line, but few could perform behind that siege unit. 76 sacks is brutal on any player, let alone one with the responsibility for bringing a team out of the dirt in the same state as the Cowboys. Felt very much like the Tim Couch situation.
Carr would have been a solid starter imo. Not a great but like a Mark Brunell. Poor bastard
@@vanillabadboy4469 A lot of histories QB's would've adored even having the career Brunell had (playoff success/upsets, winning seasons in the lead seat, pro bowler and a well liked backup for New York while winning a ring as a backup elsewhere). I'm sure Carr would've taken that outcome in a heart beat vs the beating he took in Houston. Or at the very least, the one Matt Schaub had with the Texans.
And the funny thing, Len Dawson was great, 7 fumbles in a game or not. "In the AFL, Dawson led the league in completion percentage seven times, passer rating six times, and passing touchdowns four times. He was named Most Valuable Player in 1962 and selected to six AFL All-Star games. Dawson also guided the Chiefs to three AFL championships and the franchise's first Super Bowl title in Super Bowl IV, of which he was named MVP."
I think the -7 passing yards by the Titans in 2009 vs Patriots is unbelievable. It's hard to keep the other team under 0 passing yards in a video game and has only happened 3 total times in NFL history.
Mac Jones played a whole game and only had 19 yards in one game.
@@Tubalcain422 he only threw 3 times completing 2
@@Levidawgs7744 lol, yeah. Pathetic for an NFL QB
@@Tubalcain422 I mean a QB can only throw as much as the Coach tells him to, and Bill Belichick only called 3 passes and the Pat's won cuz of their rushing attack
@@Levidawgs7744 exactly. The patriots were barely winning and still Belechick didn’t trust him. Hopefully Jones does better this year.
12:00 wait, the Falcons missed a game winning 10-yd field goal? That’s so Falcons
Soo true🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
It looks so goddamn funny too
And that record won't ever be broken since they're never moving the goalposts back to the goal line.
@@pronkb000 you’re soo right man
@@pronkb000 Yeah, right now, the theoretical shortest FG distance is 18 yards (ball at the 1), although almost no team will kick from the 1 and will almost always go for the TD.
I could break all of these records
Besides the sb losses
😂🤣
You're not getting paid millions to do it though! That's the problem!
@@gjte2947 put me in a super bowl I can lose it every time
@@ethansprague2005 how u gonna get to it is what he means
The craziest thing about the Buccaneers only scoring 103 points all season in 1977 is that over half of those points came from only two games! (33-14 vs Saints and 23-30 vs Seahawks)
Yup and it was the last two games of the season. And their QBs threw for a combined 3 tds and 30 ints. Also their offense only score 7 total tds
NFL: 12:44
Matt Ryan: Allow me to introduce myself.
Brett Favre literally retired as the best and worst QB of all time😂 Gunslinger for a reason
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Sort of like Nolan Ryan. Holds a lot of good records but also some of the bad ones.
Didn't Favre have every single record a QB could have, the good and the bad, when he finally called it quits for real?
tbh if the nfl would change the total stats into percentages i guess he won't hold any of those bad records.
The year Blanda threw 42 picks his team was 11-3 in first place and made the playoffs which is absolutely mind blowing he averaged over 3 turnovers a game in the 14 game season wow
must of been an amazing defense on that team and good special teams.
@@MusMasi Had to be, or other offenses were just awful
@@MusMasi nope. They outscored there opponents by over 100+ points that same season I believe.
That was AFL football. Especially the early Houston Oilers. Look him up and see how many pass attempts (and TD's) he had that season. I'm not sure what the numbers are, but I'm sure they're very high. A lot of attempts, a lot of TD's and a lot of INT's.
@@GrimLime I did look it up, but after I posted the message. 42 interceptions, 27 TD's, almost 200 pass attempts and 3000 yards. It wasn't his best year, but they did make the title game which they lost to Dallas Texans in OT on Tommy Brooker's field goal.
That record of most INTs returned for a TD in a game is missing one entry. In 2002, Brett Favre threw 6 INTs against the Rams in the Divisional round. 3 of those were returned for a touchdown. I don't know if you forgot that, but I figured I'd mention it down here.
@xTop 187 Yes.
Also Rich Gannon threw 3 in the Super Bowl against the Bucs
@@Jiggs316 this is what i was thinking of too
So did Gannon in Superbowl 37
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That Raiders v. Chargers game had to be unwatchable. Love the announcer’s comment at the end 😂
Ref the 1940 title game. "Despite the score, the Redskins had the great “Slinging Sammy” Baugh on his way to a Hall of Famer career. After the butchering by the Bears, a reporter asked Sammy about an early pass that one of his teammates had missed in the end zone. Would that play have made a difference if the ball had been caught? Baugh honestly replied yes, “It would have been 73-7.”
Was George Blanda playing then? 😁 😎✌️
As a dolphins fan I remember watching the game in the thumbnail, probably the ugliest game of football I’ve ever watched. I believe the final score was 10-7 and the only touchdown the dolphins scored was a punt return from Jarvis Landry. It was week one of the 2015 season and the dolphins got Ndamakong Suh and a bunch of other guys in the off-season and were expected to make some noise, but once that 38 yard loss happened I knew it was gonna be a long season and it was.
It was 17-10. Hard to believe that a defense can force a 38 yard loss on one play and still find a way to lose the game. If I was a fan of either team, I’d be embarrassed
Yep, but it was always the O-lines fault for Tannehill’s mistakes, even the ones that were clearly his according to his defenders.
But it was Tannehill who started the cascade that caused the 38 yd loss.
Why did they put Fitz in the Thumbnail?
Fitz is like a hero everywhere he has ever played.
Wait until that team goes 0-17
Hopefully it's the vikings
@@Wolf_3125 Boooo!
@Gray Wolf it won’t be. When we suck instead of just being mediocre, we can’t even tank properly
Lions got that potential if they mess this draft up
@@nicholasselke5214 It's funny because it's true 🤣🤣🤣
“There’s a flag on the field, and so is David Carr” lol
No body does it better than the old school broadcasters and NFL Films. God those were the days!
1:26 I **knew** we’d get this record. Happens so often. That’s why the Vikes aren’t allowed near cereal or soup, if they get close to the bowl they choke.
LOL
Clark Gaines still holds the nfl record with most catches by a running back in a game with 17.
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I can't think back that far, but I bet the Jets that year had a short yardage specialist who'd come in to score the TD's, which is probably why Gaines never got one.
I think having most playoff losses isn’t that bad it means that the Vikings have made the playoffs 30 times.
If they had a ring it wouldn't be too bad
And they entered the league in 1960. So after 61 seasons, the Vikings average a playoff appearance once every couple of years. That's not bad at all. No Super Bowl wins either. But hey...glass half full
I think it’s the way many of them were lost. Four Super Bowl losses in less than ten years with what was supposed to be the best team in the NFL half of the time, the Hail Mary to Drew Pearson, the inability to get over the hump with the Herschel Walker debacle, the NFC Championship game against the Falcons, getting shut out by the Giants two years later, the Brett Favre interception in field goal range against the Saints in, you guessed it, the NFC Championship game, Blair Walsh missing a game winning 27 yard field goal against the Seahawks in the wild card game, and getting smothered in the NFC Championship game in Philadelphia when they were favored to win and the Eagles were without their starting quarterback, unable to ride the momentum from the one playoff game in which they inexplicably didn’t choke, all with the chance to be the first team in NFL history to play in the Super Bowl in their home stadium. Sorry for the rambling, run-on sentence there; the whole thing is sickening to me. I’m a Vikings fan, and that’s why I drink
@@nicholasselke5214 Everyone blames Case Keenum for that philly blowout but I really disagree. The defense got SHREADED by Nick Foles. This put the offense in way more pressure then they had any chance to deal with. Especially with the oline getting SMUSHED every play. The two most important elements to a mediocre QB team, and they sucked bad at both of them that game.
@@Easelgames plenty of blame to go around from that game
The “battle of ineptitude” line when showing the most combined punts sent me 😂
The most yards given up in a single game isn't by the Lions anymore. The Broncos own that record now in their 70-20 loss to Miami last season.
Kadarius Toney looking to win most dropped passes😂😭
Makes sense that Big Ben got sacked the most. He's been in a division with the Ravens his whole career, a team known for defense and the greatest defensive trio of the millennium in Ray Lewis, Terrell Suggs and Ed Reed. That's not even considering how many times he had to face elite rushers like Von Miller, Dwight Freeney, Vince Wilfork, among others in the playoffs. And that's not mentioned that in the AFC he'd go against JJ Watt, Yannick, Jared Allen, Justin Houston, Robert Mathis, Jason Taylor, Junior Seau, and Demarcus Ware.
That's a brutal bunch.
He should also have most game saving tackles for qbs in Playoffs games, 2005 Game Saving tackle.
It's more about his style of play and him holding onto the ball so long because he wouldn't give up on a play
@@joshuastar77 Rodgers had one in the 2010 NFC Championship game
@@jjsteel43 that too. But on top of that the ups and downs of yhe line and elite pass rushing of the AFC through most of the career couldn't have helped.
idk if there's an official stat, but the steelers have a history of mishandling punts that go out of the endzone for safeties.
This is a certified hood classic
It's amazing how polarizing Brett Favre's career was. Yeah, he had the most passing yards and passing TDs at one point, but also has the most INTs (which will probably never be broken). Live as a gunslinger die as a gunslinger
And most fumbles as well
@@callmewisdom that record may be broken by Daniel Jones this season
Definitely the most entertaining qb to watch imo.
Gunslinger?
So just chucking the ball left and right imprecisely makes him a Gunslinger?
To me, the term Gunslinger has a positive undertone. Favre is total opposite of that.
"Ball on the field, so is David Carr" is nasty!"😂😂
I love this kind of sports trivia. I had no idea my Seahawks held the record for fewest yards gained in a game, but those 1979 Hawks were pretty bad lol. I can believe it.
The 1979 Seattle Seahwaks went 9-7. Yes, there was the one game where they had -7 total yards, but every other game they had at least 275.
Since Panthers are going all on Sam Darnold I think that we might we the most interceptions in a single season.
Why wouldn't they use Cam Newton
@@daltontannery3243 Newton is even worse
@@MA-on9xl how is it even possible to be worse than Sam Darnold? I don't think he's even had a winning season
@@daltontannery3243 this guy just doesn’t know football, every person with a brain knows Cam is better than Darnold
Kinda hard to completely judge Darnold though. Think of how poorly his teams have been; he is 17-32 as a starter. But one thing everyone forgets is that his teams are a paltry 1-15 without him. Seems like a bit of a quarterback issue but the teams surrounding him and the coaching seem to be significantly bigger problems. Keep in mind that it’s the Jets and the Panthers though. Adam Gase was way in over his head and currently, so is Matt Rhule
Just looking at some of these records it makes it hard to believe that Brett favre is a hall of fame QB and is considered one of the best of all time.
tbf tho he had the most career games by a QB as well
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@@laurinnn wait that record Isent held bye Tom Brady?
@@zacharyadams3422 Brady holds that record by 16 games ATM.
4th in TDs and 4th in passing yards all-time. You throw it that many times you're going to throw some picks.
im pretty sure we all have broken the most yards lost on a play at LEAST once
-99 yard rush on madden because i thought a devin hester jet sweep was gonna work like that
2:38 Miami put up like 730 yards on Denver when they put up 70, Denver congrats on beating it
The video was uploaded before that
@@bismoglungisI know
What’s crazy about Oakland’s 23 penalties vs. Tampa is the fact they STILL won the game 😂😂😂
The funny thing is, I don't know how the Browns did, but when the Lions went 0-16 they had a 4-0 preseason.
You know some day eventually somebody is gonna go 0-17 lol
The Browns went 4-0 as well!
Maybe I didnt see it, but Mahomes has the longest Sack ever of 29 yards.
Bob Griese also had a 29-yard sack in Super Bowl VI.
It still blows my mind as a packers fan the difference between how often Favre threw ints vs how often Rodgers does. It's like they're from different planets
And yet, how many super bowls has Rodgers won?
I think Favre took more chances
6:08
Considering the Broncos have 3 SuperBowl wins and the Pats have 6, they'll probably be fine. The Bills and Viks have 4 SuperBowl appearances, but no wins. That's so much worse.
The most pick-6's given up in a game - KC Chiefs served up 4 pick-6's to the Seahawks in a 45-0 blowout in 1984. They went for 90, 76, 58 and 56 yards.
The Seahawks gave up the most sacks to a single player in a game to those same Chiefs in 1990 when Derrick Thomas sacked Dave Krieg 7 times...but the Seahawks won the game on a last second TD pass to Paul Skansi.
Awesome video, was surprised I didn't see the Ryan Lindley game on here. For those not familiar, in 2015 the Cardinals, who had been dominated the league that year in the regular season, 9-1prior to all the injuries, in the final 6 weeks before the end of the season had their QB 1, QB2, and I think even their developmental prospect QB3 all go down with season ending injuries forcing the team to sign Ryan Lindley, a former late round cards draft pick, as well as an exceptionally inaccurate QB which is why they'd cut him before the season began, but because he'd been with them previously, and it was near the end of the season, was the only player available who knew the play book well enough to run anything but a vanilla offense for them.
Despite all the talent around him, running out a fourth string QB, one who struggled to play well enough to stay on practice squads, as your starter in the play offs went as well as you'd expect. He threw multiple picks, averaged an impressively bad 2.9 yards per completion on the handful of tosses he did complete (mostly during garbage time), and the Cardinals finished the game with 78 yards of total offense, which remains the fewest yards in an NFL play off game to this day.
Honestly the stats really don't even properly convey how hilariously bad this game went, lots of good video clips out there of Lindley in a clean pocket tripping over his own feet as he tries to step up to throw the ball, or bobbling snaps that hit him right in the chest for several seconds before finally just short of pushing the ball forward through the air to no one.
I thought the cardinals got destroyed by the panthers in the nfc championship game in 2015?
"Careeer INT/sacks" is more attributed to longevity.
the real reason Brady unretired: he couldn't let Ben have the most sacked record
How did those guys even play in those enormous pads they had in the 80s? It's no wonder they fumbled so much back then.
Looks like Denver broke the record for total yards allowed in a game immediately after seeing this video. Old record - 676 Lions, New record - Miami 726
It’s absolutely hilarious that even with the legacy the Mannings have left behind, all three of them are on this list 😂
The Lions would gladly take the Vikings "Most playoff losses" record. hahaha
The missed 10-yard field goal is a record that can never be equaled or broken.
To think they were up 20-7 heading into the fourth and that field goal could have won them the game 23-21 ‼️
@@3kmek937 their whole history is just them blowing leads
Thank you for uploading this video and it took you guys a lot of work to put this together and show the interesting ones good job
The Oilers are off the hook for blowing a 32-point lead. The Colts blew a 33-point lead!
most playoff losses... isnt really a bad one........ your making the playoffs atleast, depressing... but one issue im sure many teams/players would like to have
If the Vikings had a few Super Bowl wins mixed in there us Vikings fans would probably be a lot happier and something like that a lot easier to swallow.
Some of these records can only be obtained with a long career. Most playoff losses mean you've won a lot if games & hope springs eternal that next season ...
Yep and who knows? Get the right circumstances and you can win it all. But you can't do that if you aren't there.
Corey Dillion doesn’t get talked about enough. You wanna talk about a guy carrying his team and getting no credit for it. Look no further. Possibly the most underrated HB in league history right next to Fred Taylor.
I'm a Bengals fan, and always had a lot of respect for Dillon. He got the reputation for being a sorehead, but I knew it was because he was a great player on terrible teams. It's funny how he no longer was a sorehead when he got on a good team.
Love the old school NFL Films narration. I could listen all day.
I loved Pat Summerall's narrations .
As an Oilers/Titans fan for decades now, it doesn't surprise me that they blew the biggest lead of all time. That sounds exactly like something we would do.
Now it’s Matt Ryan again 😂
If not counting the oilers loss to Buffalo then Cleveland has that one
When I was about 16 yrs old (1986) I used to work at a Dunkin donuts on the Ohio turnpike plaza, Franco Harris come in, me being a Browns fan I really didn't like the guy but I ask him for a autograph anyway, he just brushed me off and looked at me like get away from me kid, so now I really didn't like him, he was a pretty big dude though
I had the good fortune to play with franco on an ESPN game show in the early 90s. He was pretty cool, before the taping we all wandered around with him as he wanted to try out all the sports challenges set up around the studio, just like a little kid at a toy store.
A few records that actually aren't so bad when you look for the silver lining: Most career interceptions or fumbles lost? Brett Favre, Tony Dorsett, and Franco Harris did enough good to have such long careers that they could set those more ignominious records. Most Super Bowl losses? The Patriots also have the most Super Bowl wins. A record 11 Super Bowl appearances by one team is nothing to sneeze at, especially when they win more of them than they lose. (Of course, throwing a pick-six on his first NFL pass, as I believe Favre did, is something to laugh at. LOL! I also believe Favre's first NFL completion was to himself.)
some of these bad records are the consequence of being on a constant high level for a very long time.
change the total stats into percentages and we would be able to see the whole truth ... ofc in some cases! :)
I agree. Same as MLB - all time stikeouts as a hitter (Reggie Jackson), grounded into double play (Albert Pujols), caught stealing (Rickey Henderson), walks as a pitcher (Nolan Ryan).
@@barra333 You forgot career pitching loses (CY Young ). I see what you saying.
3:56 If you ask all NFL fans which team holds the single-game penalty record, 90% would have guessed the Raiders (the other 10% would guess Philly)
“This is the battle of ineptitude” (7:11 most punts) 😂
I swear to God, Brett owed some bookies millions of dollars...
Tom Brady can match Peyton Manning post-season lost record this year and might be able to break it next year!
One of those records that doesn't tell the whole story. You don't break or set that record without showing up.
@@KMcNally117 Same as the Bills' four straight losses in the SB. It takes a real good team to lose four straight Super Bowls.
Big Ben is so underrated
Most sacked QB and won 2 rings during that time, along with having a bunch of other records
Awesome video BTW
War eagle
@@ericpackers1700 ?
Its the perfect record for the vikings to have with the playoff losses. Sums 'em up perfectly
"Curt Knight nervously waited for his moment of glory... it never came" 🤣💀
Matt Ryan has entered the chat
Can we talk about how the 49ers in 1978 had 63 Turnovers. Last season with 17 games. The team with the highest Turnovers was the Cowboys with 20. Now imagine 3 times that. Christ.
Was 78 a 14 or 16 game season?
That's the one record that stood out the most to me. What a terrible season they endured. Thought the Lions would own that, hehe
1978 was the first season that the NFL played a 16 game season.
I'd gladly take 5 super bowl losses if it came with 6 super bowl wins. Hell, the Bears have only MADE 2 super bowls.
3:06 the immediate change of tone by the commentator after Peyton threw the pick just breaks my soul
"battle of inaptitude"
new vocabulary for me😂😂