All time great QBs: Miami Dolphins Hall of Famer cracks top 30

All time great QBs: Miami Dolphins Hall of Famer cracks top 30
The Phinsider The Phinsider

Another one will probably land higher on the list.

SB Nation is putting together a list of the 30 best quarterbacks of the NFL’s Super Bowl era. While we all know one Hall of Fame quarterback who will make the list somewhere near the top of the rankings, but a Hall of Fame passer who we might have expected to be overlooked in a bout of recency bias actually did make the list. Bob Griese made the rankings as the 29th-best quarterback of the Super Bowl era.

A key member of the Dolphins three-Super Bowl appearance, two championship run in the early 1970s, Griese was selected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1990. Selected in the first round (fourth overall) of the 1967 Draft, Griese spent 14 years with Miami. He threw for 25,092 yards during his career, completing 56.2 percent of his passes with 192 touchdowns and 172 interceptions. He was selected to eight Pro Bowl and was twice a First-Team All-Pro selection.

Griese won Super Bowls VII and VIII with the Dolphins, avenging their Super Bowl VI loss. The Dolphins completed the league’s only Perfect Season with the Super Bowl VII victory.

SB Nation brought together a panel of 13 voters to complete their list. Included among the voters were Jarrett Bailey, SB Nation; Tyler Dunne, Go Long; Eric Edholm, NFL Media; Doug Farrar, Athlon Sports; Arif Hasan, Wide Left; Dan Hanzus, Underdog; Sam Monson, The 33rd Team; Steve Palazzolo, The 33rd Team; Gregg Rosenthal, NFL Media; Aaron Schatz, FTN Fantasy; Marc Sessler, Underdog; Mike Tanier, Too Deep Zone; and Matt Verderame, Sports Illustrated.

Just behind Griese on the list was former Detroit Lions and current Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford. The initial release of the countdown included quarterbacks 30 to 21. Len Dawson, Johnny Unitas, Ken Stabler, Ken Anderson, Joe Namath, Lamar Jackson, Philip Rivers, and Josh Allen were included in the list. Each quarterback’s high and low rankings and an explanation from one of the panel members about the quarterback’s rankings was published along with the list.

Griese was ranked as high as 19, but was also not included on at least one list. Mike Ranier wrote of Griese, “Imagine Sean McVay and Matthew Stafford were one guy. That’s Bob Griese. Yes, he was a product of a system, a supporting cast, and an era. But Griese also called his own plays. His statistics are ordinary because he knew he didn’t have to throw very often to win. Griese evolved into one of the NFL’s most efficient passers as the 1970s wore on, and Don Shula’s tactics evolved with him, paving the way for Dan Marino and the passing explosion of the 1980s. Griese was always just a little injured, however, and his career ended just as the schedule expanded and the passing-friendly rule changes of 1978 were taking effect. Griese is easy to dismiss when you look at his stat lines, but impossible to ignore once you realize how different pro football...