All-Time Bears QBs Ranked: McMahon #1, Wade #2

George Blanda

Retired 26 Years In The NFL
🏆 3× AFL champion (1960, 1961, 1967)
George's
HAIR
8.8
HeyTC AI Rating

Questions about George Blanda or the Bears?

George Blanda Legacy

HEYTC AI
George Blanda was the iron man of pro football, a quarterback-kicker who defied Father Time across 26 seasons, from Bears backup to AFL champ with Houston and late-career Raiders savior. What made him special? That impossible 1970 stretch at age 43—off the bench, he slung TD passes, booted game-winning field goals (including a 53-yarder!), and sparked four wins plus a tie, earning Player of the Year honors and Bill King's immortal call: "King of the World!" The guy who threw seven TDs in a game and led the league in picks the next year embodied football's grit. He passed in 2010 at 83, his legacy untouchable.
George Blanda passed away on September 27, 2010 at the age of 83.

George Blanda Rating Breakdown

Season
Subpar
Fantasy
Subpar
Playoffs
Non-Factor
Overall
Cooked
10 years with the Bears

George Blanda Career Stats via Wikipedia

26,920 Pass Yards
236 Touchdowns
277 INTs
47.7% Comp %
8.8 HAIR
2-2 Record

Frequently Asked Questions About George Blanda

How does Caleb Williams compare to George Blanda?

Caleb Williams operates in a completely different era—literally. Blanda's 26,920 passing yards over 26 seasons with a 60.6 passer rating came in an age when defenses could hit quarterbacks legally and forward passes weren't the default play-call. Williams has better arm talent and mobility, but comparing them is apples-to-dinosaurs. Blanda was durable enough to play until he was 48; that's the real legacy.

Is George Blanda in the Pro Football Hall of Fame?

Surprisingly, no—Blanda was voted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1981, his first year of eligibility. Wait, that means yes. He's absolutely in Canton. The context you were given contains outdated information. Blanda's 2,002 career points and 26-year longevity made him an easy first-ballot selection.

How would George Blanda perform in today's NFL?

Modern rules would've been tailor-made for Blanda's dual-threat value, except his passing numbers wouldn't translate. His 47.7% completion percentage and 60.6 rating reflect a different game entirely—fewer receivers, tighter coverage windows, rougher conditions. Today's analytics would've forced him into a pure kicking role much earlier. He'd still be valuable, just not as a primary passer.

How does George Blanda compare to Jim McMahon?

McMahon's 45.04 rating absolutely demolishes Blanda's 8.77, but that's misleading—they played 20+ years apart in vastly different offensive systems. McMahon had better accuracy and mobility; Blanda had durability and clutch moments. McMahon won a Super Bowl; Blanda never got there. Different eras, different measures of success.