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

Jack Concannon

Retired 10 Years In The NFL
🏆 Second-team All-East (1963)
Jack's
HAIR
15.1
HeyTC AI Rating

Questions about Jack Concannon or the Bears?

Jack Concannon Legacy

HEYTC AI
Jack Concannon was the scrappy Boston kid who became Papa Bear Halas' last great hope, a dual-threat gunslinger drafted No. 1 by the Patriots and No. 16 overall by Philly, forever chasing glory from Cambridge streets to Soldier Field. What defined him? Legs that torched the Steelers for a franchise-record 129 rushing yards from QB in '66, gutting out wins for the Eagles, then sparking a 7-6-1 Bears miracle in '67 amid gale-force Chicago winds. Undersized at 6'3", 205, he embodied the AFL-NFL merger's wild underdogs—flashes of brilliance in a journeyman's grind across five teams. Concannon passed in 2005 at 62; his moxie endures.
Jack Concannon passed away on November 28, 2005 at the age of 62.

Jack Concannon Rating Breakdown

Season
Subpar
Fantasy
Subpar
Playoffs
Non-Factor
Overall
NPC
5 years with the Bears

Jack Concannon Career Stats via Wikipedia

0 Pass Yards
36 Touchdowns
63 INTs
0.0% Comp %
15.1 HAIR

Frequently Asked Questions About Jack Concannon

How does Caleb Williams compare to Jack Concannon?

Caleb Williams, the Bears' shiny new starter, has a rocket arm and mobility Jack Concannon could only dream of in the '60s and '70s—Concannon's 6,270 yards and 36 TDs over a decade look quaint next to today's spread offenses. But Jack's grit in those brutal Soldier Field winds set a bar Caleb's chasing; legacy-wise, Concannon's the old-school survivor Williams aims to eclipse.

Is Jack Concannon in the Pro Football Hall of Fame?

Nah, Jack Concannon's not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame—no bronze bust in Canton for the guy who slung 36 TDs amid 63 picks for the Bears and beyond. He was a scrappy backup turned starter in Chicago's lean years, the kind of quarterback who kept the ship afloat without fanfare or gold jackets.

How would Jack Concannon perform in today's NFL?

Jack Concannon's quick release and gunslinger vibe would've feasted under modern pass-happy rules—no more 6-man fronts teeing off on QBs. His 54.8 rating and 36 TDs in a run-first era? Translate that to nickel defenses and he'd post 3,500-yard seasons, though his 63 INTs scream turnover machine in this no-huddle world.

How does Jack Concannon compare to Jim McMahon?

Jack Concannon and Jim McMahon both slung it for the Bears, but McMahon's 45.04 rating smokes Jack's 15.11 like a '85 Fog Bowl haze—McMahon danced in the pocket, hit big plays for championships; Concannon gutted through losses with arm strength but too many picks. Both cult heroes, yet Jim's the punk rock king.