2018 NFL Power Rankings: Biggest QB Teases For All 32 Teams
By Erik Lambert
To be fair Norm Snead landed himself on a bad football team when the Philadelphia Eagles got him in 1964. They expected him to be the savior despite clear evidence that it wasn’t going to be the case. Snead never had a winning record in Washington and had 49 interceptions in his final two seasons as a starter there. A cooler head would’ve seen it was doomed to fail.
Yet for seven years the Eagles hung on. They kept giving Snead opportunities. He even managed to make a Pro Bowl in 1965, but he never managed to produce a winning record. In the end, he threw 111 touchdowns with 124 interceptions. Could Snead have been better had the team put more talent around him? It’s impossible to know.