Tier 1
1. Rodgers
2. Brady
3. Luck
4. Big Ben
5 P. Manning
6. Brees.
1. Rodgers
2. Brady
3. Luck
4. Big Ben
5 P. Manning
6. Brees.
T-1. Aaron Rodgers | Green Bay Packers
Average rating: 1.0 | Change in rating: +3.7%
2014 Rank: T-1
Rodgers tied with Brady in the voting as a unanimous Tier 1 choice, but he gets top billing based on feedback from voters. A personnel director with NFC North experience called him "unequivocally" the best in the league. An offensive coach who studied every offensive snap for Green Bay and New England last season called Rodgers better than Brady by a noticeable notch.
"I hate playing against him," a defensive coordinator said.
There is a lot to like about Rodgers if you don't have to face him. He seems unflappable. He saves plays with his legs. He ranks as arguably the game's best back-shoulder fade thrower. He possesses superior vision when forced to move. And he knows where his receivers are going to be in a pinch. These are some of the qualities one veteran coach rattled off.
"From the time he decides to throw the ball to the time it comes off his hand is the quickest in the NFL by a lot," this coach said. "Tony Romo is also quick, but Rodgers throws spirals down the field that carry. Romo will do it and it will float. Rodgers doesn't even have to try. He is so explosively quick. He can hold the ball longer and he knows it."
It's no revelation seeing Rodgers atop a list of NFL quarterbacks, so I pressed this offensive coach for additional details.
"Andrew Luck has the best technique and Rodgers is a little more toesy [in his stance], but it makes no difference because Rodgers is so lightning quick and so accurate and confident of where the ball is going to go," he said. "There is an attention to detail there that Mike McCarthy coaches and gets everyone to understand the importance of. Rodgers cuts everything loose all the time because he knows where everyone is going to be. It does not feel like a defeat to him to run it or throw the 2-yard check-down. He throws it joyfully because he knows he is moving the offense. There is also never any drama, ever. That is another best part of him. He does not say much, but he is so focused and so passionate that he gets it done with his eyeballs."
T-1. Tom Brady | New England Patriots
Average rating: 1.0 | Change in rating: +3.7%
2014 Rank: T-1
None of the voters had reservations about placing Brady into the top tier as the quarterback's 38th birthday approaches, and likewise, none raised Deflategate as a factor in voting.
"Brady is still on another level because he just mentally dominates every game, every time," an offensive coach said.
Brady struggled early last season when his line faltered and his best receiving target, Rob Gronkowski, was still rounding into form following injury. But he didn't let a brutal outing against Kansas City in Week 4 define his season.
"K.C. knocked the s--- out of him and you could see he got frustrated in that game," a personnel director said. "He came back the next week against Cincinnati and was unbelievable. I was like, 'Holy s---, this guy is unreal.' He is still a 1. He is doing it with very average weapons other than Gronk."
Another personnel director said he thought Peyton Manning might have suffered a meltdown by now if forced to go through as many weapons as Brady has over the years. This director hailed Brady for functioning at a high level with Wes Welker, Julian Edelman and even undrafted free agents at receiver.
"If anybody is a 1, he is a 1," the director said. "I do not know if we could name all the guys who have started at the skill positions for them over the past three years. I'd probably leave out three guys."
The Patriots have had 25 different players start at running back, wide receiver or tight end since 2012, counting playoffs. That ties for the fifth-highest total in the league and is above the 20.9 average. The number is 15 for Manning's Denver Broncos, the second-lowest figure in the NFL (Philadelphia, 14). Brady has had 12 different wide receivers start over that span, the second-highest figure in the league (Jacksonville, 14). Denver has had six, tied for the league low.
"He is still a 1," a head coach said. "His command is there. He still has the arm strength and accuracy. He never was a great move guy, but he still makes a play or two with his feet as needed."
3. Andrew Luck | Indianapolis Colts
Average rating: 1.14 | Change in rating: +23.8%
2014 Rank: 5
Luck went from a disputed Tier 1 QB one year ago to a resounding choice after again carrying a weak roster to the postseason.
"Luck didn't get a 1 from everybody?" a GM asked. He was incredulous. "You want to talk about a guy who makes the team? He is Michael Jordan. Their defense sucks. Every game, he has to outscore everybody. He is the epitome of a 1. If I was to draft tomorrow any player in the NFL, it would be Andrew Luck one, Aaron Rodgers two."
The five voters who placed Luck in the second tier cited a few reasons. Some thought Luck needed to do a better job protecting the football. Others pointed to Luck's underwhelming resume in the postseason. Luck also benefits from playing in a weak division. (One defensive coordinator's response: "Those five guys didn't play against him.")
"It is almost like we are giving him the benefit of the doubt just in terms of numbers, but he has won games," another GM said. "Yes, he is in an easy division, but he won, even as a rookie. They would not win without him."
Some quarterbacks with winning records benefit from top-flight defenses and/or strong running games. Luck has won even with the Colts being especially weak in those complementary phases.
"I don't know who didn't give Luck a 1, but he is better than all of them," a head coach said. "He is as smart as Peyton, he is as accurate as Brady, he is tougher than Ben and he is as athletic as RG III."
Even those who thought Luck deserved a second-tier vote at this point felt as though he would ascend into the top tier before long.
"Luck is one of the great pressure performers in our league," a personnel director said. "He might have spells where accuracy is not great, but when the chips are on the line, he performs. For a young quarterback to survive some of the hits he has taken behind that line, not everyone would have done that. He is strong. He has an even head, which you have to have to be special at that position. I'd be surprised if soon we're not talking about him in same breath we talk about Aaron."
4. Ben Roethlisberger | Pittsburgh Steelers
Average rating: 1.37 | Change in rating: +25.7%
2014 Rank: 7
Roethlisberger ascended into the top tier after ranking with Philip Rivers atop the second tier one year ago. His ability to carry the Steelers without support from a strong defense raised Big Ben's profile for some. A head coach said he thought Roethlisberger would have belonged in the top tier for most of his career if the Steelers had run a more wide-open offense earlier in his career.
"He throws to win games by himself and he can do it every week," an offensive coach said. "He could throw for 350 every week. I did not give him his due until I really saw this past year, with the average defense and only one top receiver, getting it done every week and keeping his interceptions down."
An evaluator with coaching experience who saw Roethlisberger play live twice last season moved him into the top tier on his ballot.
"He is back to standing there, shrugging off the blitz, sliding over, making the pass, over and over," this evaluator said. "He threw for over 600 yards with six touchdowns against Baltimore. When you can do that against what has been a good defense historically, that is a 1, and I don't want to play him."
Roethlisberger has topped 630 dropbacks in each of the past two regular seasons, while averaging 37.3 pass attempts per game, up from 29.6 per game previously in his career. Roethlisberger also has the playing strength and arm to carry the offense in poor weather.
"Ben can beat you in any part of the country," a head coach said. "Who was in a more productive offense last year? The productivity is unbelievable. He is clearly a 1 to me."
A defensive coordinator placed Roethlisberger among the 2s because he thought consistency over time was an issue.
"I could see why people would say he is a 1," this coordinator said. "On some days, I could see it. I would see him spending more time in the 2 category, and that is why I put him there."
5. Peyton Manning | Denver Broncos
Average rating: 1.43 | Change in rating: -37.6%
2014 Rank: T-1
Some of the voters who placed Manning in the top tier did so reluctantly because they questioned whether he could still carry an offense for a full season given what they saw as obviously diminished throwing ability.
"I'm going to give him the lowest 1 that there is," one voter said.
A GM who placed Manning in the top tier added this disclaimer: "I can see people saying he is a 2. The arm strength is such an issue. It is all about how you play in January, in the cold weather and big games."
A head coach who placed Manning in the second tier said he no longer thought Manning could lead a team to a championship without getting considerably more help than he has needed in the past. Still, voters expressed amazement over Manning's ability to play at such a high level in recent seasons after enduring a career-threatening neck injury. And he still received enough votes to remain in this category.
"Until they lose and don't go to the playoffs, he is a 1," a defensive coach said, "because he is the one winning all the games. He has gotta be a 1. He is one of those guys, too, that the people around him play at a much higher level because of him."
One defensive coordinator pointed to Manning's 2014 stat line -- 4,727 yards passing with 39 touchdowns and a 101.5 passer rating -- while asking what more a quarterback needed to do for voters to place him in the top tier. One counter: Manning's late-season struggles. He had 10 interceptions over the final eight regular-season games, tied for third-most in the NFL.
"I think he is a clear 2," another defensive coordinator said. "It's arm strength, mobility, everything. He is still smart and that will never change, but you have to get the ball there, too."
6. Drew Brees | New Orleans Saints
Average rating: 1.49 | Change in rating: -43.1%
2014 Rank: T-1
Brees nearly fell out of the top tier even though his 71.6 Total QBR score in 2014 was the third-highest mark of his nine-year tenure with the Saints. Some thought he deserved another year as a 1 because the team's struggles last season had more to do with a diminished supporting cast on both sides of the ball.
"Brees was one of the hardest," an offensive coordinator said. "He doesn't throw as well. His lower body is not as good. He's been nicked up a little bit. He is just losing his juice. Things have to be perfect for him to be himself."
The consensus was that Brees had fallen off and that he was sliding into the second tier if he hadn't quite reached it at this point. His drop from a 1.04 average rating among voters in 2014 to a 1.49 average this year marked a 43.1-percent decline, the largest for any of the 27 returning starters.
Voters acknowledged the diminished weaponry around Brees. A coach who studied the Saints this offseason said it was striking to see Brees "hung out to dry" playing for a team that no longer had as many opportunities to shift into its four-minute offense while protecting leads.
"Physically, he is a 2, but I think you have to give him a 1 because he can carry a team," a head coach said, still thinking through his decision. "He may dip into the 2s this year. When guys get older and start getting hit, especially guys with vision problems, they start playing a lot faster, almost too fast, and panic shows up. I saw some of that in Drew last season."
By the end of the conversation, the head coach had talked himself out of putting Brees in the top tier. "I'll tell you what," he said, "give him a 2 because I think he has just kind of come out of the 1 category."
Average rating: 1.0 | Change in rating: +3.7%
2014 Rank: T-1
Rodgers tied with Brady in the voting as a unanimous Tier 1 choice, but he gets top billing based on feedback from voters. A personnel director with NFC North experience called him "unequivocally" the best in the league. An offensive coach who studied every offensive snap for Green Bay and New England last season called Rodgers better than Brady by a noticeable notch.
"I hate playing against him," a defensive coordinator said.
There is a lot to like about Rodgers if you don't have to face him. He seems unflappable. He saves plays with his legs. He ranks as arguably the game's best back-shoulder fade thrower. He possesses superior vision when forced to move. And he knows where his receivers are going to be in a pinch. These are some of the qualities one veteran coach rattled off.
"From the time he decides to throw the ball to the time it comes off his hand is the quickest in the NFL by a lot," this coach said. "Tony Romo is also quick, but Rodgers throws spirals down the field that carry. Romo will do it and it will float. Rodgers doesn't even have to try. He is so explosively quick. He can hold the ball longer and he knows it."
It's no revelation seeing Rodgers atop a list of NFL quarterbacks, so I pressed this offensive coach for additional details.
"Andrew Luck has the best technique and Rodgers is a little more toesy [in his stance], but it makes no difference because Rodgers is so lightning quick and so accurate and confident of where the ball is going to go," he said. "There is an attention to detail there that Mike McCarthy coaches and gets everyone to understand the importance of. Rodgers cuts everything loose all the time because he knows where everyone is going to be. It does not feel like a defeat to him to run it or throw the 2-yard check-down. He throws it joyfully because he knows he is moving the offense. There is also never any drama, ever. That is another best part of him. He does not say much, but he is so focused and so passionate that he gets it done with his eyeballs."
T-1. Tom Brady | New England Patriots
Average rating: 1.0 | Change in rating: +3.7%
2014 Rank: T-1
None of the voters had reservations about placing Brady into the top tier as the quarterback's 38th birthday approaches, and likewise, none raised Deflategate as a factor in voting.
"Brady is still on another level because he just mentally dominates every game, every time," an offensive coach said.
Brady struggled early last season when his line faltered and his best receiving target, Rob Gronkowski, was still rounding into form following injury. But he didn't let a brutal outing against Kansas City in Week 4 define his season.
"K.C. knocked the s--- out of him and you could see he got frustrated in that game," a personnel director said. "He came back the next week against Cincinnati and was unbelievable. I was like, 'Holy s---, this guy is unreal.' He is still a 1. He is doing it with very average weapons other than Gronk."
Another personnel director said he thought Peyton Manning might have suffered a meltdown by now if forced to go through as many weapons as Brady has over the years. This director hailed Brady for functioning at a high level with Wes Welker, Julian Edelman and even undrafted free agents at receiver.
"If anybody is a 1, he is a 1," the director said. "I do not know if we could name all the guys who have started at the skill positions for them over the past three years. I'd probably leave out three guys."
The Patriots have had 25 different players start at running back, wide receiver or tight end since 2012, counting playoffs. That ties for the fifth-highest total in the league and is above the 20.9 average. The number is 15 for Manning's Denver Broncos, the second-lowest figure in the NFL (Philadelphia, 14). Brady has had 12 different wide receivers start over that span, the second-highest figure in the league (Jacksonville, 14). Denver has had six, tied for the league low.
"He is still a 1," a head coach said. "His command is there. He still has the arm strength and accuracy. He never was a great move guy, but he still makes a play or two with his feet as needed."
3. Andrew Luck | Indianapolis Colts
Average rating: 1.14 | Change in rating: +23.8%
2014 Rank: 5
Luck went from a disputed Tier 1 QB one year ago to a resounding choice after again carrying a weak roster to the postseason.
"Luck didn't get a 1 from everybody?" a GM asked. He was incredulous. "You want to talk about a guy who makes the team? He is Michael Jordan. Their defense sucks. Every game, he has to outscore everybody. He is the epitome of a 1. If I was to draft tomorrow any player in the NFL, it would be Andrew Luck one, Aaron Rodgers two."
The five voters who placed Luck in the second tier cited a few reasons. Some thought Luck needed to do a better job protecting the football. Others pointed to Luck's underwhelming resume in the postseason. Luck also benefits from playing in a weak division. (One defensive coordinator's response: "Those five guys didn't play against him.")
"It is almost like we are giving him the benefit of the doubt just in terms of numbers, but he has won games," another GM said. "Yes, he is in an easy division, but he won, even as a rookie. They would not win without him."
Some quarterbacks with winning records benefit from top-flight defenses and/or strong running games. Luck has won even with the Colts being especially weak in those complementary phases.
"I don't know who didn't give Luck a 1, but he is better than all of them," a head coach said. "He is as smart as Peyton, he is as accurate as Brady, he is tougher than Ben and he is as athletic as RG III."
Even those who thought Luck deserved a second-tier vote at this point felt as though he would ascend into the top tier before long.
"Luck is one of the great pressure performers in our league," a personnel director said. "He might have spells where accuracy is not great, but when the chips are on the line, he performs. For a young quarterback to survive some of the hits he has taken behind that line, not everyone would have done that. He is strong. He has an even head, which you have to have to be special at that position. I'd be surprised if soon we're not talking about him in same breath we talk about Aaron."
4. Ben Roethlisberger | Pittsburgh Steelers
Average rating: 1.37 | Change in rating: +25.7%
2014 Rank: 7
Roethlisberger ascended into the top tier after ranking with Philip Rivers atop the second tier one year ago. His ability to carry the Steelers without support from a strong defense raised Big Ben's profile for some. A head coach said he thought Roethlisberger would have belonged in the top tier for most of his career if the Steelers had run a more wide-open offense earlier in his career.
"He throws to win games by himself and he can do it every week," an offensive coach said. "He could throw for 350 every week. I did not give him his due until I really saw this past year, with the average defense and only one top receiver, getting it done every week and keeping his interceptions down."
An evaluator with coaching experience who saw Roethlisberger play live twice last season moved him into the top tier on his ballot.
"He is back to standing there, shrugging off the blitz, sliding over, making the pass, over and over," this evaluator said. "He threw for over 600 yards with six touchdowns against Baltimore. When you can do that against what has been a good defense historically, that is a 1, and I don't want to play him."
Roethlisberger has topped 630 dropbacks in each of the past two regular seasons, while averaging 37.3 pass attempts per game, up from 29.6 per game previously in his career. Roethlisberger also has the playing strength and arm to carry the offense in poor weather.
"Ben can beat you in any part of the country," a head coach said. "Who was in a more productive offense last year? The productivity is unbelievable. He is clearly a 1 to me."
A defensive coordinator placed Roethlisberger among the 2s because he thought consistency over time was an issue.
"I could see why people would say he is a 1," this coordinator said. "On some days, I could see it. I would see him spending more time in the 2 category, and that is why I put him there."
5. Peyton Manning | Denver Broncos
Average rating: 1.43 | Change in rating: -37.6%
2014 Rank: T-1
Some of the voters who placed Manning in the top tier did so reluctantly because they questioned whether he could still carry an offense for a full season given what they saw as obviously diminished throwing ability.
"I'm going to give him the lowest 1 that there is," one voter said.
A GM who placed Manning in the top tier added this disclaimer: "I can see people saying he is a 2. The arm strength is such an issue. It is all about how you play in January, in the cold weather and big games."
A head coach who placed Manning in the second tier said he no longer thought Manning could lead a team to a championship without getting considerably more help than he has needed in the past. Still, voters expressed amazement over Manning's ability to play at such a high level in recent seasons after enduring a career-threatening neck injury. And he still received enough votes to remain in this category.
"Until they lose and don't go to the playoffs, he is a 1," a defensive coach said, "because he is the one winning all the games. He has gotta be a 1. He is one of those guys, too, that the people around him play at a much higher level because of him."
One defensive coordinator pointed to Manning's 2014 stat line -- 4,727 yards passing with 39 touchdowns and a 101.5 passer rating -- while asking what more a quarterback needed to do for voters to place him in the top tier. One counter: Manning's late-season struggles. He had 10 interceptions over the final eight regular-season games, tied for third-most in the NFL.
"I think he is a clear 2," another defensive coordinator said. "It's arm strength, mobility, everything. He is still smart and that will never change, but you have to get the ball there, too."
6. Drew Brees | New Orleans Saints
Average rating: 1.49 | Change in rating: -43.1%
2014 Rank: T-1
Brees nearly fell out of the top tier even though his 71.6 Total QBR score in 2014 was the third-highest mark of his nine-year tenure with the Saints. Some thought he deserved another year as a 1 because the team's struggles last season had more to do with a diminished supporting cast on both sides of the ball.
"Brees was one of the hardest," an offensive coordinator said. "He doesn't throw as well. His lower body is not as good. He's been nicked up a little bit. He is just losing his juice. Things have to be perfect for him to be himself."
The consensus was that Brees had fallen off and that he was sliding into the second tier if he hadn't quite reached it at this point. His drop from a 1.04 average rating among voters in 2014 to a 1.49 average this year marked a 43.1-percent decline, the largest for any of the 27 returning starters.
Voters acknowledged the diminished weaponry around Brees. A coach who studied the Saints this offseason said it was striking to see Brees "hung out to dry" playing for a team that no longer had as many opportunities to shift into its four-minute offense while protecting leads.
"Physically, he is a 2, but I think you have to give him a 1 because he can carry a team," a head coach said, still thinking through his decision. "He may dip into the 2s this year. When guys get older and start getting hit, especially guys with vision problems, they start playing a lot faster, almost too fast, and panic shows up. I saw some of that in Drew last season."
By the end of the conversation, the head coach had talked himself out of putting Brees in the top tier. "I'll tell you what," he said, "give him a 2 because I think he has just kind of come out of the 1 category."
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for the next 10 years.