Successful

Ben Roethlisberger was picked 11th in the 2004 draft and now has two Super Bowl rings. Eli Manning has one. (Elsa / Getty Images)

  • Related
  • Stories

They might not quite measure up to the legendary NFL draft class of 1983, but the quarterbacks from the 2004 class are pretty impressive in their own right.

Two of them will square off tonight when Pittsburgh plays host to San Diego, a game featuring the Steelers' Ben Roethlisberger and the Chargers' Philip Rivers.

Rivers was the fourth overall pick in 2004, selected by the New York Giants, then traded to San Diego for No. 1 pick Eli Manning. Roethlisberger was taken 11th in that draft and now has two Super Bowl rings to his name.

Six quarterbacks were taken in the opening round of the 1983 draft: John Elway (first), Todd Blackledge (seventh), Jim Kelly (14th), Tony Eason (15th), Ken O'Brien (24th) and Dan Marino (27th). Elway, Kelly and Marino are in the Hall of Fame.

A look at the quarterbacks selected in the first three rounds of the 2004 draft. Manning has one Super Bowl title, and Roethlisberger two:
PickTDINTRate Wins* PW
Eli Manning11037577.2454
Philip Rivers4813992.4353
Ben Roethlisberger111047389.4528
J.P. Losman22333475.6100
Matt Schaub+90372788.0110
*Regular-season wins; + third-round pick, the rest first; PW-playoff wins. Source: NFL
Cash Flo problem

Washington is on the $1 bill, Lincoln is on the $5 bill, Franklin is on the $100 bill. So who should be on the $5,000 bill?

Adams.

Flozell Adams, that is.

The Dallas Cowboys left tackle has been fined by the league three times in three weeks, most recently $7,500 for tripping in the Carolina game. Before that, he was fined $5,000 for a shot to the head of a Tampa Bay player in the opener, and $12,500 for a pair of unnecessary kicks against the New York Giants.

"He's a very good football player," Cowboys Coach Wade Phillips said of Adams. "I think he's aggressive, more aggressive on the football field, but a lot of guys are like that. He just wants to protect the quarterback and do his job. I think he tries to do that all the time. He's certainly not a vicious player."

Pass protection

It looks as if the rules protecting quarterbacks and receivers are paying dividends. Through the first three weeks of the season there have been 21,077 yards passing, an average of 439.1 per game. That means the 2009 season is on track to break the record for the most net passing yards in league history.

The most net passing yards through the first four weeks of a season in NFL history (*through Week 3):
SEASONYARDSSEASONYARDS
200726,711200625,142
200226,016200425,141
200525,835200921,077*
Source: NFL
U-turn

If Minnesota beats Green Bay on Monday night, the Vikings will become the ninth team in the last six years to start 4-0 a year after beginning the season 1-3 or 0-4. Seven of those eight turnarounds resulted in the team making the playoffs. Teams the last six years to start a season 4-0 after a 1-3 or 0-4 start the previous year:
YearTeamW-LReach
2004Atlanta1-3Conference Championship
2004N.Y. Jets0-4Divisional Playoffs
2005Cincinnati1-3Wild Card
2005Tampa Bay0-4Wild Card
2006Baltimore1-3Divisional Playoffs
2006Chicago1-3Super Bowl XLI
2007Green Bay1-3Conference Championship
2008Buffalo1-3Missed Playoffs
2009Minnesota*1-3
*3-0 record in 2009 Source: NFL