GINeric
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Franchise QB helps, but as you imply, complimentary factors also apply.
Dilfer won because the Ravens D only gave up 152 total yards, had four sacks and four Int's.
Foles won because he had a well-balanced offense with good skill position players, stud o-line, and a D-line that came through when needed most.
Stafford never won in Detroit because of crap GM'ing/roster construction, poor drafts, and an owner that let it go on for too long.
Josh Allen has to play hero ball in tough games because his offensive roster is not quite good enough.
Jackson, after watching his playoff games again on NFL network, likes to make bad passes and bad decisions at the worst times in games. So many weapons and defense and fails to come through when needed most.
Kelly never won because, to be honest, his teams overall were just worse than his opponents. And one kicker blew it...but he's part of the team. Back then the NFCE was a juggernaut.
Marino only had two legit years where he had a team good enough to win the Super Bowl. The front office rarely got it right with a GM and coaching. **Cough Cough Jerry**
But on the other hand, in the recent Super Bowls won by Mahomes and Hurts, both QB's put on clinics with near mistake-free football in their wins and balanced defense--smothering in Philly's case. That's what a franchise QB is expected to do in the big moments. Their playoff records don't lie. They also had superior coaching.
Well the intelligent people definitely agree with your posts. I'm just making the point that it's a team game and always will be a team game.
For some reason, Dak and Romo are the only quarterbacks in history to be held accountable for the failures of a whole team. Other quarterbacks get excuses but not Romo and Dak. This isn't boxing. No quarterback can win anything without a team effort and great coaching.