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The Greatest Back-up Midfielder in NFL History

Ảnh của tác giả: Gihu TeeGihu Tee

Here are the greatest backup quarterbacks in NFL history. In an effort to exclude overqualified QBs, only passers who started less than a third of their team's games were eligible.


Derek Anderson

The Browns 2.0 was 2 to 22 in the knockout stages, but its latest near miss featured Anderson. Romeo Crennel substituted for Charlie Frye in the Week 1 loss in 2007; Anderson started the next 15 games. His first start: a 51-45 Browns conquest with five touchdowns. The 2005 sixth-round pick ended that season with 29 TD passes - the second most in Browns history - and a Pro Bowl spot. After Brady Quinn failed to replace Anderson as Cleveland's starter, he subsequently became Cam Newton's backup for seven seasons. His 2-0 start in 2014 was crucial to the 7-8-1 Panthers' playoff run.



Charlie series

Batch set consecutive winning records as the Lions starters in 1999 and 2000, coming off the bench in '99 to lead them to the knockout stages and help them out. crossed the post-season limit in 2000. But the 0-12 game in Detroit that started at '01 led to the Batch's release and preceded one of the longest backup QB runs in NFL history. Batch signed with the Steelers in 2002 and stayed for 11 seasons, playing until the age of 38. The Pennsylvania native signed seven contracts with the Steelers, weathered numerous challenges with his QB2 role and led Pittsburgh to six wins in nine games - including a 2-0 scoreline for a 2005 team that needed both wins to be able to participate in the Super Bowl parade.


Zeke Bratkowski

Bratkowski's 1950s and early 60s intercepts with the Bears and Rams didn't justify his second-round draft spot, but a move to Green Bay in 1963 both changed the midfield midfield's trajectory provided important coverage to Bart Starr of the Packers. Bratkowski participated multiple times in the Packers' next NFL peat three from 1965-67, with the team winning 8-1 when he started or matches where he replaced Starr in single-point games. He threw 248 yards in a Packers' Western Conference playoff win over the Colts in 1965 and beat former teammate Roman Gabriel in a victory over the Rams in December 1966.


Bubby Brier

Though Brister had more than three running seasons as a starter for the Steelers, culminating in Chuck Noll's final playoff spot in 1989, the 16-year-old veteran had a second NFL career that stretched with as a backup of the 1990s. In Philadelphia, Brister replaced Randall Cunningham for the first time after his mid-season ACL tear in 1993, starting eight games with a TD-INT score of 14-5 . His most notable backup job, however, came at the age of 36 in Denver. John Elway missed four games in 1998; Brister threw 10 TD passes and kept the Broncos unbeaten through December. Denver scored more than 30 points in three of those games, and Brister has helped an all-time great team repeat as the winner. champion.


Cody Carlson

Backing up Warren Moon for seven seasons, Carlson mostly kept the Oilers' high-powered car on the road. Houston reached the knockout stages from 1987-93. Four of those seasons featured at least one Carlson win from the start. The Oilers won 10-4 at the hands of Carlson, a third-round pick from Baylor, from 1988-93. Carlson made six relief starts in 1992, two posting games at 300 yards and four quarter-final wins. He led three wins that season. While Carlson failed as Moon's successor in 1994, he was a steady reserve throughout the Oilers' quality period.


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