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Member Since: 2/16/2003

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Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Greatest Quarterbacks of the Last 26 Years

So, with Brett Favre retiring, I thought I would give my list of the best quarterbacks of all time - except, I haven't seen many of the "greats" play; and I've seen little footage on many of them.  So I thought it would be better for me to limit myself to the greatest quarterbacks since 1981, the year of my birth.  So, here's the list, sans Unitus, Tarkenton, Graham, Staubach and Starr:

(Edit: I was in a hurry and forgot Dan Marino and thought better of my Favre ranking :P)

6. Steve Young - Perhaps Steve Young would have been number one on the list if he hadn't had such a short career - he started in only about eight seasons, having to back up Joe Montana for years and starting his career in the USFL.  Anyway, the man was probably the top quarterback of all time in regards to throwing on the run.  Plus, he's got a Super Bowl ring and maybe the greatest Super Bowl performance ever to his credit (six touchdown passes against San Diego, if I'm remembering correctly).

5. Tom Brady - If anything, this past year keeps Brady behind Manning in my book.  Manning did more with less last year in getting to the Super Bowl. Then again, you still can't argue with the three rings.  My biggest knocks on Brady?  His numbers aren't nearly Manning's - and when he finally had the weapons and put up monster numbers last year, he couldn't win the big one.  Of course, he's still got years to go and could win a couple more Super Bowls.

4. Peyton Manning - I put Peyton slightly ahead of Brady because of his career numbers.  He also controls the offense which has to be the overall best in the NFL in the past 6-8 years.  He also finally got the Super Bowl win last year.

3. Brett Favre - Favre is here for several reasons: been to two Super Bowls and won one; won three consecutive league MVP awards; strong numbers year in and year out; and his toughness.  He isn't higher because of inconsistency: near the beginning and near the end of his career, Favre through tons of interceptions; he had a tendency to make some awful decisions because of his confidence in his abilities; and he also can't claim to have shown up in all the big games.

2. Dan Marino - The man broke just about every passing record possible and still has records that stand today in a much more passer-friendly league.  And though he never won a Super Bowl, he did go to one and put up outstanding numbers without ever having a good running attack and without a great wide receiver (Mark Clayton was okay, but certainly not great).  He might have the quickest release of all time and he was the only person who stood in the way of my '85 Bears and undefeated season.

1. Joe Montana - Four Super Bowls and zero losses.  Just as I was about to have to admit that Brady might actually finally be in the same class as Montana, Joe Cool j and Bradshaw remained the only QBs to be 4-0 in the big game.  To top it off, Montana also had some amazing comebacks (including one huge Super Bowl comeback against Boomer and the Bengals), continued to play well even after he left the 49ers and still is second or third all time in quarterback rating.  Never a fiery leader, he was still able to just win and win and win.

Honorable mentions: John Elway (overrated), Jim Kelly, Phil Simms (underrated), Troy Aikman


Monday, November 12, 2007

Barbacoa

This is my first xanga entry in four months - so much has happened, one would think it would be about:

       A) Impending fatherhood
       B) Our new home
       C) Other significant life changes (including my new part-time job with Florida's education agency)

But no, this entry is about none of these monumental events.  This entry is about burritos.

If you leave your business card in a fish bowl at the Chipotle on Stassney, you can win free burritos for you and eight of your co-workers.  Whenever Jenny and I go there, we leave our cards.  Well, during lunch today, Jenny got a call saying she won!

Then a half hour later, I listened to a message on my machine saying that I had won, too.

I called the manager and found that it was no mistake.  We'd won 18 free burritos. 

Maybe this will be enough to turn Jenny from the dark side (Freebirds) for good.

I can't wait...


Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Currently Reading
Ten Thousand Sorrows : The Extraordinary Journey of a Korean War Orphan
By Elizabeth Kim
see related

Ungrace

Question: What's the biggest reason that Christianity is looked down upon by so many Americans and other westerners today?

Answer: Simple, its because of the Christians themselves

A lot of westerners and atheists do not believe in the God because of intellectual, reasoning and otherwise scientific reasons.  I think that many of these ideas can be assuaged if are able to intelligably speak about science, reasoning, philosophy and history, and if unbelievers could read the Bible with an open heart and mind (many I know refuse to do this step, either purposely or not).

That leads to what I believe is the biggest reason that many in the western world will not believe in Christ: its because of the Christians.  We are representatives of Christ who, unfortunately, live lives of ungrace for all the world to see.  And we paint a picture of Christianity that isn't pretty.  In fact, its quite ugly.  And it misrepresents our God.

Like it or not, people pay a whole lot more attention to the sinful things we do than the good things.  And in an ungraceful world, it is not the unbelievers who should show grace to us when we fail; it is US who must demonstrate grace to others by being lovely to the unlovely, by doing the right thing even when it hurts and by being set apart in a hurting world.

But the tricky thing is to balance our lives, which are to be lived righteously, with the idea of grace.  I didn't experience the ungrace that many have growing up in churches, but I've read a lot of testimonies about the harshness others have grown up with.  Some of those testimonies are of believers, most of whom came to know Christ because they experienced God's true grace; others are not believers and have become bitter and angry at a bitter and angry institution.

One thing we must never lose sight of is grace.  Because when we lose sight of grace, we lose sight of Jesus.  And without grace, there is no gospel message, and all that we Christians live for is gone.  We can tell others we are Christian and do "Christian things," but its all very hollow without grace.

After all, its grace that makes the difference. Without grace, we are left with law - something that weighs us down, makes us feel guilty and puts us under the wrath of God.  With grace, we enjoy the perfect love that casts out fear and that accepts us, no matter how broken we are.


Thursday, May 10, 2007

If you haven't yet, I'd highly recommend anyone reading this to watch the ABC News: Kirk Cameron vs. Atheists - gives both Christans and non-Christians alike a lot to think about and be challenged with:

http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/story?id=3148940

As Christians, I feel like we need to be more bold and share our faith - Luke 8:16: "No one lights a lamp and hides it in a jar or puts it under a bed. Instead, he puts it on a stand, so that those who come in can see the light."


Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Movies

I don’t watch many movies anymore.  When I was a teenager, I would sometimes watch five or more a week!  But as I’ve aged, I have become impatient with spending so much time spent just watching a screen.  I’m very picky about which movies I watch now, because I’d rather spend my time doing other things. 

 

But I can’t deny the affect movies have had on my life.  Not only have they fed my imagination, which my wife believes is overly evolved, but they’ve really changed the direction of my life, several times.  And they’ve pulled emotions out of me that I rarely feel.

 

Here are some of the movies that have influenced my life:

 

The Joy Luck Club

How Asian of me, right?  Well, if you know me well enough, you know that I’m a fraud.  I may (or may not) look the part of a Korean, but everything inside of me screams out, “WHITE!”  Of course, since I’m half-Caucasian, that’s not unexpected.  The first time I really identified with being Asian was through watching this movie (and later, reading the book).  The story has to do with mothers and daughters, but I still identified with each character, whether by their actions and feelings resounded within me or by seeing my own mother’s sacrifice and background resonating in the mother characters. 

 

Dead Man Walking

Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins and Sean Penn drive me crazy.  But I can’t deny this movie of theirs had an instant impact on my life.  Just like that, after watching this film (preceded by watching various reports on the life of the sister upon whom the movie is based), I became an anti-death penalty proponent.  I still am of that persuasion.  But more importantly, I saw the power of grace and forgiveness.  It’s funny that one of God’s first major assaults of grace on my heart came through a film starring two outspoken left-wingers, and directed by a third.  God works through anyone He chooses!

 

Braveheart

This is the perfect man’s movie, right?  It was the first heavily violent film that I’d seen in its entirety (Bonnie and Clyde having been my first taste of graphic violence in short bits), plus it has a way of tugging at a man’s heart strings.  This film had me captivated – I could not think of anything else for weeks.  To me, the best filmmaking is the kind that grabs the heart and squeezes it for all its worth.  I think that’s why most of us would rather watch, say, Finding Nemo rather than a movie like The English Patient, which was of amazing “artistic” value, but of little sentimental worth.

 

Saving Private Ryan

I’ve seen four movies in my life that I can say were truly intense – Braveheart, Saving Private Ryan, The Passion of the Christ and United 93.  This film was the first of these I saw in the theatre.  During the D-Day sequence, I was gripped to my chair, wanting to close my eyes but unable to look away.  I think that if your father is a veteran, you come out of this movie with very different thoughts than the typical moviegoer.  Both my dad and grandfather served in war, and no movie I’ve seen makes me feel the sacrifice (and build patriotism in me) as much as this one.

 

The Passion of the Christ

This is the only movie that has ever made me cry.  Thank you for the cross, my friend.

 

There are many, many others that have affected me.  In fact, I think I must have a compartment in my brain responsible for remembering most every line from most of the movies I’ve seen (useful for Trivial Pursuit, but not for much else).  Mostly, good films have great entertainment value and make me, for lack of a better word, happy.  But every once and a while, a film will come by to make you think about yourself and the world differently, that will impact your life, or that will take you on a ride and refuse to let you go.

 

Most of us have different movies that do this for us.  What are yours?

 

There's better writing than this on the same topic at the Christianity Today website: http://www.christianitytoday.com/movies/commentaries/moviesthatchangedmylife.html

 



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